The evening world. Newspaper, October 19, 1916, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

BAYONNE STRIKE BROKEN AS 3,000 GO BACK 10 WORK Action Follows Refusal of Standard Oil Company to Recede From Its Stand. “FOREIGNERS STILL OUT. Insist They Will Fight Until Demand for Increased Pay Is Granted. The strike of the Standard O11 employees at Bayonne, marked by much violence, was practically ended to-dily when about 3,000 of the 4,500 men who quit the plant ten days ago went back to work. This action was foreshadowed last night when the committee of strikers, which visited Standard O11 head- quarters at No. 26 Broadway, was in- formed the company stood squarely behind Supt. Hennessey in his de- termination not to grant the request. ed increase in wages. When this news reached Bayonne the English speaking workers got to- gether and decided to return to work to-day. The men still on strike are mostly Poles gnd Hungarians, They have announced their intention of re- maining out until their demands are granted, but Mayor Garvin and the other city officials are of the opinion that they will be buck in the plant before Monday. Contrary to expectations there was no disorugr in the Constable Hook section as a result of the wholesale desertion from the ranks of the strikers, None of the returning em- ployees was molested. A heaxy po- Start Tomorrow | and Keep It Up |) Every Morning | THE ‘EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1916, THREE KILLED, 40 HURT IN TEN-DAY STRIKE OF 4,500 OIL WORKERS Principal features of ten-day strike whica was broken torda 4,600 Standard Ol employee quit work and by threats forced plants employing 7,000 more men to close down, Three persons, one a woman. killed in riots, Another woman’ death indipectly due to riotin, Half a dozen runn battles be« tween armed police and armed strikers, A day and night of almost con- tinuous rioting. At least forty strikers and sym- pathizers wo mapy cas hot reported to the police. Sixty strikers arrested various offences A number of buildings destroyed by fire and repeated attempts made to set fire to huge oll tanks. Strikers seized station of Central for Railroad Company and forced company to close it for several days. More than a dozen stores and saloons broken open and loote# Several hundred citizens sworn in as spectal policemen. Thousands of dollars’ lost tof) workers and companies. lice guard had been placed in the district but not a disturbance was jorted, For the first time in a week the police discarded their rifles, foveral hundred men were waiting outside the plant at daylight, The company threw open its gates at 6.30 | and from then on until 8 o'clock a steady stream of workers passed into the plant. The 1,800 employees of the Tide- water Ol Company, who have been| forced to remain idie because of the threats of the strikers, also returned to work to. ¥. FIGHT ARE HURT IN CAR.CRASH ON | QUEENSBORO SPAN =a Bridge Car Smashed the best food, thing that money can give him. But he hasn't War Is the Salvation of Englishmen, Says Cosmo Hamilton, Holding Parents To Blame for Sins of Their Children FATHER CHASES MOTHER, AFTER English Dramatist Finds This Serious Defect Here, and Posterity Will Suffer for It, He Says— Fathers and Mothers Too Busy to Form the Characters of , Their Negtecten Childrén. By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. “The modern child is the most the most comfortable sonal comradeshi tions of life. the fashion. Yet The warning tist, novelist, 80 Mr. Hamilton wr he him to go away and rest, and so he came to this country to lecture on pre- i | Small don. He tried to re-enlist when bis i Get In the habit of drinking Lit Into Splinters by Le rger saiedness 1} glass of hot water before | ~ 8 9 “ 1 breakfast. | One Going Down-Grade Now he hag just published a new | : novel, “ 5 of the Children,"-tn ch Providence o h or We're not here long, so let's make! A motorman was badly crushed and] AH = tga sage ss) psi maieeable, Lat ua ive seven other peraons were bruised this| Mother, Mnterposes to save from Tule Ee swelk etgest well, ork well, P| afternoon in a Crash of troiley cars on| (Ur Mice Younksters. | Annouben’ well and look well. What a glorious! the Queensboro Bridge containing “a big lesson for condition to attain, and yet how very easy it is if one will only adopt the morning inside bath. Folks who are a dull and y ting headache, stuffy fre tongue, nas breath, @ can, instead, f ‘ustomed to feel pli foul stor-ach, id Jas fresh as w daisy by ‘opening ‘the slvices of the system each morning and flushing out the whole of the internal poisonous, stag- nant matter. « Everyone, whether ailing, or well, should, each morning, before breakfast, ss of real hot water in it to wash from and bowels the pri gestible waste, sour and. poisonous toxins; thus cleans’ sweetening and yurifying the entire alimentary canal before jutting more food into the stom- he action of hot water and fone phosphate on an empty stomach wonderfully invigorating It cleans out all the sour r ferm ious indi- nd phosphate is quietly a large volume of water from the blood and getting rea thorough flushing of all the” organs, The millions of people constipation, — bilious bothered — with spells, stomach trouble, — others who sallow skins, blood disorders and inside who are quarter pound of li phosphate from the deng store. This will cost very little, but is sufficient to make anyone a’ pronounced crank on the subject of inside-bathing before break- fast.—-Adv Dr. M. DEL VECCHIO The Noted Italian Writer and Doctor writer and This prominent physician wears NOKOLD val Ss the OPRANDAR 2 un- | derwear, because it is so absorbent— takes up perspiration quickly- borane it is so soft, Retains the heat; leoepe hin warm in cold winds, and free from colds when exposed to dampness, The finest Woolen underwear made for the price. At your deslers’, Look for the triangular ROYAL STANDARD NOKOLD trade mark. WATERFORD KNITTING CO., Makers , WATERFORD, N. Y, did not sce that another big car was stalled ahead of the Iittle one yntil it suddenly stopped. He put on his air- brake, he says, but it did not hold ‘Then he applied the emergency brake, but It was too The heavy Flushing crashed down on the little green relic of an- clent railroading and st splinters. Its te. shed it into motorman, Willi Island Ci Drs, Quaglia, Bullen and MeCatlum Avenue, New To guard against cou terfeits and substitutes every package and ta’ “The Bayer Cross” Rew. The tradeomark “Aspirin” Fellnble Bayer menntectu Aspirin, remember that let of the genuine beurs “Your Guarantee of all tablets ts of the t." the book ts a vivid novellzed! en Motorman Rudolph Wilder stopped| cceinon on the dangers of parental to take a passenger on a heavvy dou-lnogiect, And 1 found Mr, Hamilton ble-trucked Flushing car. As be fe-| quite ready to preach informally on sumed the journey eastward he rap-| init important tople. idly overtook a little green wooden! parentaL NEGLECT MORE car used only for bridge traffic, He THAN PARENTAL SINS. “The sins of the fathers are as nothing to their neglect, for it iq this neglect that is responsible for the sins of the children,” the tall, well groomed, well set up Englisnman assured me in the cfisp, clear voice that several years of, New York ha not dulled. “And what dos paren sins matter compared with thos i of the younger generation, in Dexhelmer, of No, 69 Kelly Avenue,| whose hands the future of your Yuodside, was crushed betwee «| sountry les? Nepeeie ae Sees nee eases Shere. bas the most Wonderful platform and the rear platform of the| gouertunity any country ever had car ahead. His legs were broken and) gijice the histury of Une world began, he was anternalfy hurt, Dr. Bruns | She ts top dog now: ci the ‘other 00) His. sobh's. top Ations are Josing the flower o} took him to St. John’s Hospital, Long An vet her opportunity en who could of Flower Hospital attended and sent home the following pa a jor Neuen one Frank Valentine E mothers not tell Fifty-ninth Street; John thy ht truth of No. 24 William Street frote generation, Where Island City; Daniel Cronin, No. osday, in this country South Thirteenth Mtre i Point; Annic Hackett, Bes Sih emy Street, 1 4 Conlot th side; Michael Me York, and Jacque hiere, No, 1206 Second Avenue ¢ hing off her chest ao! a. York. a Hiy “hut wherein do you think the mod- Mine EB a Several ern parent inost. completely Men. T osked Mr jton, And, by ‘the FAIRMONT, W. Va, Oct. 19.--An| way, be of those” wise explosion in Mine No. 7 of the Maleson YoUNK bs * who know #o mitch vbout bringing up other people's chil. en. found bim in the homelike, book lined his apartment on not t Hifty-seventh working on his haft was not in oper-, new play, °T er Women,” Andy shioned n- of b- us re, {Seb tet and mother to help him face the most Important ques- The father is so bus mother so busy spending it, that home life 1s no longer is to prepare a clean and virile generation to follow us. the most widely discussed plays presented on the Amer- ican stage. When the war came, as a loyal Englishman went into the Royal N: of the air defenses, he brought down the first Zeppelin that flew over Lon- f clean, strong | THE CHILD IS NEGLECTED MONEY SoceTy WE Thr Mit DUTY '$ Done WHen We BRINGS THE CHILD Tors neglected of human beings, He hi home, quantities of playthings, every- @ personal care, the per- p, the personal guardianship of father making money, the the first step in patriotic preparedness comes from Cosmo Hamilton, drama- Idier and exponent of preparednesi ‘ote “The Blindness of Virtue,” one of val Air Corps, Put in charg@ term of service was up, but they told a flanking the framed photographs of two English rulers, were charming’ pictures of two sturdy little Brit- shers, as well us of their attractive moter, Mrs. Cosmo Hamil "The modern parent fails in lettin, the father and mother of the futu' race, the human boy and girl, into the main stream unhumanizes unequipped, unguarded with knowl- edge of the facts of life. It is a known fact that American high schools are hotbeds of immorality— not that private schools are any bet- ter, Statistics show that 60 per cent of the boys of this generation are not Physically fit. Yet parents allow thelr children to grow up in igno: rance, to learn disgusting half-truths trom the worst sources, and then are anized that the children do not turn out well, WHEN THE CHILD MAY BLAME THE PARENTS. “A father is responsible for the Ith and morality of hi mother for the h ity of her daught: or girl who get turn on his or I them exceedingly ts great affection for chil dren in many American families, continued Mr. Hamilton. “f think that iy charming. But it isn’t en) There is great lack of discipline boy of seven says to his father, °Y won't!" And the| take time enouga Kk to be what typle his ful with toys for him Such a wey » Brows UD, thing proach when the ining has been one way te a little Mr. Hanuiton confe 4A Plea for the Y« jz er My publish | heaven’ sake cut ut | Randa,’ but [tail to see should not be as privileg Usts, architect ‘8 ly ¢ tell th benefit it |LECTURE EVERY FATHER SHOULD DELIVER TO HIS SON, | |that may 1 think Chat the futher who under- stands his responsibilities will call his son into his den a few dave before [the youngater to school and way | Now then, old chap, I'm going to tell you ‘things that you're going to tell your boy when you've got one, You're going out of the house, away from mother’ apron strings, to round one of the first big corners of life. You're my son and | believe in you, You're my son and | know that | ean trust you never to do any- thing that will make me ashamed of the name you bear, You are going to be @ man and not a hog, and when you come out of your school days you will come out clean, If any boy tries to get ou to fi to his piggishn it him, and hit him hard, D. report him, don't complain about him, but hit him. “*Y¥on may choose nee whether! you will be a weak! with filthy {habits and slack m es, Or a bettor | }man than your father” You're in |training to he a man, Never forget Jit. Never permit any boy you know to lower you to the level of a cad by underm your boiief in your mother, who ‘represents all women and girls, or your fatt n God, to whom, however confident and - | cessful you may be, you most certain. | ly will turn in all the big moments of your life Be clean. He h et He truthful Is that bargain? shake hands on it “Not until men have the moral pour- | age to tell their sons the basic facts Nov ace Responsiece !! Parewty Do NOT INSTRUCT CHL DREN of life, Cas women to tell th ters, will children be pre decent citizens and the Nation be pre- pared to hold its own. And remem- ber that the sins of the children are always visited upon the fath as well as the other way around ished Mr, Hamilton, “TAM A MAN OF PEACE,” SAYS HUGHES W MICHIGAN fells Two ‘Mudiences at Bay City It Is Improper to Say He Favors War. SAGINAW, Mich, Oct, 19.—Charles FE, Hughes delivered two speeches to-day at Bay Clty befo that packed the halls whe The nominee assailed the-Adminis- tration for the Underwood tariff and the Adamson law and repeated his denial of the charge that a vote for him meant a vote for war, “Men are going abroad in thin jand,” Mr, Hughes said, “saying that & vote for me in a vote for war, be- cause I have criticised weakness and vaccllation on the part of the Admin- istration, A vote fo® me is a vote for permanent peace based on. self- respect and the esteem and respect of others,” Me, Hughes’ time to-da Jate In leaving still more tine hi ieee: THE: CANDIDATES. Where They Are To-day They Are Saving aud 0 PRESID) WILSON arrives in train began to lone It was fifteen minutes lost Bay and Cy Chicago at noon. Lunches at Press chib Addresses Non-partisan Women's League, pre by Miss Ella Flagg Young, former Superinten of Public Schools. Principal sp of day at New Cluzen'a Alliance League at Stuck Yards. tarts for Siadew Lawn autho P.M CHARLE o third tetp valan otal ampalgning up spenk 6.0.P.DOCTORS GET QUT THE OXYGEN OF HANNA'S BRAND “$100 Worth to an Election District” Is Prescribed for Slumping Campaign. OLD GUARD ON THE JOB |Willeox Can Look After the Speakers, but They'lt Use the Tried Methods, | Praction! men and practico) methods were Introduced to-day into the Republican National campaign to head off the growing sentiment for Wilson. Chairman Willcox termed the rising tide of popular acclaim for the President a “psychological con- dition” that needed treatment. While the Chairman held con- ferences and discussed ethics and theoretical generalities of the cam- paign, the experienced political doc- tors of the Republican Ol Guard started to administer ‘a course of treatment based upon the business principles laid down by the late Mark Hanna for curing symptoms of Demo- cratic psychology among the people. William L, Ward, the boss of West- cheater; Herbert Parsons, the boss of New York; George W. Perkins, boss of the check books; Alvah Martin, esventially practical boss of Virginia, took charge of the case to-day In Re- publican hearquarters and wrote the prescription, It read as follows: “One hundred dollars’ worth of campaign oxygen administered to ach election district in New York 5 necessary. In the face of tls Wilson epidemic of danger the Old Guard has been summoned. No matter what may be the hostile feeling still existing be- tween Progressives and old line Re- publicans, they have determined to bury diXerences to save themuolves. Their new text is taken from Roose- velt'é letter to the late HM, Har- riman: "You and f are practical men.” The new plan of operations Is for Chairman Willcox to continue direct- ing the speaking campaign and de tails of all publig affairs, but the Old Guard crowd will run an underground campaign of their own to @ the critical Stetes, particularly New York Like the famous Dudley “blocks of five” campaign in Indiana, the little election district in New York Stato is to be made the unit for operations, Word has been passed down the line that the captain of each small group is to get busy Immediately and round up his voters, The dough bag has been opened and the order ls for every worker to “get busy.” Chairman Willeox to-day dented that he had been in consultation with the Old Guard leaders, Penrose, Smoot and Crane, who were reported to be quietly In New York, Cam- paign operations have now been di- vided into two parts, one visible, the other Invisible. Willeox is represen tative of the visible group and there- fore {# not to come in contact with invisible group. Vance McCormick, Democratic | tional Chatrman, denounced the operations, “The Old Guard are in the Na Ww ting Hughes they will control the | and dumninate legislation, This ix @ move to put back Into power the sume old gang, Burnes, Crane n ut | rose and Re arene 1i! his protestation swallowed “ " | thom We 4 1 Look at the condition in New York PalaGanbidata tae State. Senator Wadsworth, when in Ur cold, drtzzlin |the Legislature, fought Hughes at dresses were made t Remeen, every turn. he will gepresent the Hoonville and ne Falls old crowd in the Senate and dominate com trecmneepernevieries the State, just as Penrose: LINER UNITED STATES IN WITH BROKEN BLADE. Vennsylvania” Villa, tm Mata Owing to the fact that at BL, PAGO, Tex., Franc dropped from one of her prope Ville personally men Int in the North Sea, tho steamship| CUsthulriachie on of leat Pure eect pe week and nelzed all the supplies h Alted ‘Mtnten of (the Beandanavien*| could tay his handa on, a¢ resin to American Line, was thirteen day# en! passengers hare to-day from th Jroute botween Copenhagen and this; trlet. They alao said Villa wan in ; arriving to-day, ‘The. United | Possession of the town last Saturday ates wax detafned only ten hours ei by the Brittsh Government at Kirk: | Aged W n @ Salvide, wall Mra Margaret Gi ‘ Edith Jalkonengn, en even, of “4 in the steerage a ty to Ve | kitehen to }with an Aunt in this ¢ lied on | Care fr | Friday night. She ed at sea | Mine Gueker told saturday and the attracted |Meother Ned. pati sak for more attention had at-|monshs and had frequuntly tracted tn all he ie was — Hoy Play Dies, QUIET IN CAR STRIKE. Gordow thirteen yours old eeemes No, B14 W ¢ Hundred and F Surface Lined t jemted ALL Nhe ty-elnth Streets hurt ‘Puc while One “L” Train stored playing with couP™&nions, died of @ fra Sixty-one surface curs we erated | tured aul Test 1 Iara’ Jall last night In Manhattan without a! fainily phyaleian algn of violence 600 Weat One Hun The only strike “Incident” reported | Street by the police was at 3A. M., when two id Neinva br wine ated Weather Harean Out Warning t t phirty-ighth Street and Bighth Avenue, No one was WASHING The Weath hurt er Bures torm warn a ings as " round the Fell tn © With Co-nae wen (e* y iene d ved Pinger Nuits. es Phe Gulf storm today now eH Oct THe ; °F centres in India ne north a ; eustward with lew but th re Stive WHI Inerew uy t Margare New | Snow was reported a far south as York. | Kansas. »mplete control of the Republican] campaign now,” be said, “Their pur- pose is plain, If they succeed in would in ACTRESS RECOVERING FROM AN OPERATION FOR APPENDICITIS EDNA MAY RECOVERING FROM AN OPERATION Actress Under the Knife at man’s Hospital for Ap- pendicitis. Mrs Lewisohn, who before her marriage was Edna May, the tress, ts overing at the Woma Hospital, No. 141 West Ono Hundred and Ninth Street, from an ope Oscar for appendicitis performed yesterday afternoon. "Mrs, Lewisohn haw suffered sev. eral walnor att 9 of appendicitis,” said Mr. Lewisohn at the Plaza to- jay, “and after a particularly acpte attack (ast week decided on an ation. It was altogether success- ful and her recovery ts already as- sured.” The former actress came to America with her husband a year agq to ald tn raising funds for English war Charities, Incidentally she went Into moving ple tures, and it ls sald she earned more than $100,000 in this, manner, The money would be sent to foreign suffer- ere, it Was asserted, Lew- running tn New York ¢ ye Corpor Directors of the Hroad New York Central »day authorized i, basla ft " It tht mpany the »badly Incliding additional ec struction and. im mente SiraPtaattl Mapa Newinter, etary m Lansing Goenw ' Robert ain Riltmore thi at Wat N f resist the polls being ay and ay for that pur of State, |] ted and loose effects. Wo-| holdings: in retood the | new stock will bo issued early in the to gen- No Connection With Any Other Establishment in the Werld WORTH 43 & 45 West 34th Street Women’s & Misses’ Coats New winter models with wide sweep, belted, fite Suitable for all occasions, | At Unusually Attractive Prices Indlanapolie Makes Hughes stetent Favorite at 8 te MR. INDIANAPOLIS, Oct, continues a steady favorite om | local betting boards, Several have been taken at § to 5 and a few of 2 to 1 still lence, It is clear Hughes tinue a favorite for eee Ea odds 0 “Progress” is a watchword here. Our methods represent the result of 20 years of conscientious thought, and the application of the Tatest ace vted optical achievements. _ The Harris method of build+ ing up the largest retail optical business in the world ‘open book.” ‘Stonest values — intelligent service —satisfaction or your money back —three of the many reasons for our success, We give you highly satisfac tory eyeglass service because we understand your needs and cater to them. Harris Glasses cost $2100 or more. Leman > ~ | Wcutiats and, Coticione cep 25th Htgiete fe ti 1405 St. Nichotas A’ 2020 “Wrondware bets OO 1007 Broadway, nr. Will ASbvulton Se opposite Ase Re O83 Broad many ty ceive courteous attention n our show rooms at one time. SUITS, COATS, DRESSES, $11-$50 $5-$50—-$5-$30 | | Address Dept. 'T10 for Free Catalog 307 Fifth Ave., st¥y, N.Y. Opposite cAlpia Motel | Broadcloth, Duvetyn, Velour, Silk Lined, Interlined, Some Fur Trimmed, For Street and Motor Wear, Very Special J Velour de Laine, ) Chiffon Broadcloth, | Duvetyn, Montagnacs, Thimmed with Various Furs, Very Speciat } Cashmere Velour, Bolivia, Silk Velour, Velvet, Fur Trimmed, Very Specthi Women’s & Misses’ Coats (20. 00 Women’s & Misses’ Coats 30.00 Women’s & Misses’ Coats Seal Trimmed Velour Suit $30.00

Other pages from this issue: