The evening world. Newspaper, October 23, 1916, Page 4

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nc PEACE-PROSPERITY STARTS ANEW ERA poscani| [UNI QUTOMLY CommECTS Workingmen Know Whom SKIN DISORDERS) to Thank for Their Unex- Let your own ski tell you how woa- ampled Affluence, derfully efficient Poslam ia, how ensily and quickly it drives away Pimples, heals Eczema, disposes of Music foothen and allays inflammation, A MEMBERSHIP Address, .. | GAIN HERE, $50,000,000.) altaeg wwe Socialists Feel the Good Times} ti. good times” anid Edward J. éltton the morn In- and Turn Toward Presi- Cryan, President of the Bronte Work- Flames complisions are cleared tm this Age ors’ Association. “Even tho seasonal Uriet Une dent Wilson. trades have boon benefited elther by fn any eruptions dire: voluntary increase awarded by the eoployer# or substantial —gaina brought about by the Initiative of labor unions, In most cases business not only warranted @ liberal dintrt- bution to the workers, but the very Nte of business, fair and uprieht | methods, demanded that the work- Poslam Soap ta the safe soup for wae on the skin wtih, or apurt from, treat ment wun Poolam, Pence and prosperity have eo taken hold of the Btate of New York, from ez | the business of cleaning: windows to bad Free &, oe, raver Be see by wt aes that of the ekilled moohante, that tt !hom brought forward the “build a FOR THROAT AND LUNGS tome movement.” and the result Is an eecWcee se Increaue of 49 per cent, in the sale of | man be met more than half way. In Beckman’ rnc iis) ie Wosinan ante ed tate and a corresponding Increase In the | there has been a steady advancemen! . pumber of homes being bullt by|and the men are taking advantage of Alterative Jworkinemon, In some of the skilled | the prosperity to put thelr savings ; trades, where abnormal wasea pre-| where they will bring the best re Hite Woties Ani anit ti ahs 1, workers living out of town may | a Most of them are buliding Ua oj be weon driving to their daily labor} jin renabouts, “It tun’t alone the all year round ‘The voluntary increases given by 15 per cent, of the employers in New SUNDAT WORLD WANTH WORK WONDERS To extend the service we render to the consumer, we have inaugurated a direct sales plan by which patrons can receive Grade B Milk Pasteurized at 8 cents per quart. If patrons will take the trouble to call at any of our branches or stores as listed below, bringing their own containers, they will be served with Borden’s Grade B Milk Pasteurized for Eight Cents Per Quart. The price of this grade of miik de- livered et your home in quart bottles is 10 cents per quart. Borden’s Farm Products Division AAACN AVA VIU TUN YAW AAAI 0 MDOT List of Stations Where Borden’s Grade B Milk Can Be Secured At Eight Cents Per Quart MANHATTAN & BRONX NEW JERSEY 311-15 East lith St, 75 Prince St., Elizabeth 400 West 29th St, 589 Broadway, Bayonne 227 East 34th St, 163 State St., Hackensack 213 West 84th St, 91 Washington St., Hoboken 176 East 116th St, 641 Montgomery St., Jersey City 173 Manhattan St. 25 Fourth Ave., Newark 2276 Second Ave, 63 South 14th St., Newark 342 East 133d Se, 181 Central Ave., Passaic 448 East 180th St, 479 Broadway, Paterson 8th St. and 6th Ave, (Jefferson Market) 421 Sycamore St., Plainfield 207 East Broadway 12 Goodwin Ave., Ridgewood Hudson Terminal Building 315 Broadway, Union Hill 123 Rivington St, Tr 78 Orchard St. STATEN ISLAND 37 First Ave. 385 Jersey St., New Brighton, S, I, 702 Van Duzer St., Stapleton, S, I. 147 West Houston St, 1424 St, Nicholas Ave, OUT-OF-TOWN 760 Courtiandt Ave, 737 Broadway, Albany 78 Main St., Yonkers 339 Niagara St., Buffalo 212 Huguenot St., New Rochelle 60 Crary Ave., Mount Vernon 11 Factory Place, Port Chester 86 Bronson Ave., Rochester 742 State St., Schenectady 121 East Onondaga St., Syracuse 131 Main St., Tarrytown 26 Pain St., Troy 42 Tracy St., Utica 60 Hamilton Ave,, White Plains 385 Fairfield Ave,, Bridgeport, Conn. 78 Union Place, Hartford, Conn, 128 Washington St., South Norwalls 492 Atlantic 5t,, Stamford, Conn, BROOKLYN 849 Metropolitan Ave, 98 Sterling Place €002 Fort Hamilton Ave, 390 Liberty Ave, 942 De Ka'b Ave, 2380 Graverend Ave, 15 Farrington St,, Flushing, L. I, 65 Stoinway Ave., Long Leland City 760 Van Wyck Ave., Jamaica 954 Fiatbuch Ave, 1840A Coerge St, Ridgew: 77 Seige! St, ood QUILL UY MOI LLIN TI Cut out this coupon, fill out and mail to the Housewives’ Protective Association, Evening World, Post Office Box 1354. I desire to enroll my name as a member of The Evening World’s Housewives’ Protective Association. Inclose 2-cent stamp and membership token will be mailed. APPLICATION Oct. 1916 industries that have been affected by! York State since April 1 of the | jeot year, excluding munitions burl- neas, total clove to $50,000,000 @ year, | according to reporta being gathe: | by the various employers’ associa- ona throughout the State, and in New York City the total increase to [the -vorker in “overtime work,” j which in most instances means dou- ble pay, will reach approximately $1,000,000 for aim months beginning June 1 and ending Nov, 1, “This amount Is scattered over only | & fow of the important trades,” gait Frank J. Lowry, statistician for a) & roup of employers’ apsooiations, which is }under a separats neadiag lof the commonest bivor tn eon {with aumo of the Sndustrica we r reoont bas jumped from $1.40 Janunty to $2% on Oct. 1, and [ocarly every inmance the Jump hid | to be met because Work is #0 plentiful [that no man ead be out of a job tod (he plain Tayurer autickly goes co (tke man bidding bighest for his were vice.” | LABOR UNIONISTS AND BOCIAL- | 1675 FEEL THE GOOD TIMES. "It the bight cost of iiving baun't jumped up wo many points,” ob.! served Henry Keuiherston, puilding i would giadly suv- tride deieg«te, sevsonal induet nylpg the {act the high coet of Iving, tha period in the last Atty years, Morris Hillquist, Socialist, who ex- pects to be a member of the next | Congress, frankly admits that tho pence and prosperity wave has made itself felt In the ranks of the Soctal- ist Party, So many of the Socialists of the country have been directly af- fected by (he warless prosperity that! ; they Intend to volce thelr opinion in j® polltical way, “Yes, | grant you,” Mr. Hin. ‘there may be two hundred igang or more Sucialists who will I intend to vote idate, Mr. Ben- but 1f 1 had to make a cholce ween the two men of the other parties, I should certainly vote for Mr. Wilson, But Iam not so sure that the Socialists who will vote for Mr. Wileon are all workingmen, [| am Inclined to think they are largely | professional men. I don’t deny, how. ever, that there are many good rea- sone why workingmen should be at- | tracted to Mr, Wiison, There is no denying peace and prosperity, And I don’t think It ls all due to the muni. ‘ions business. ch HUGHES LED IN THIS VOTE. | A straw vote polled during the Inst] weok at Columbia College on the Presl- | dential candidates, and which closed | Yeaervay, gave adi Jusnes @ sid-vow jority, ‘Tae count for Mr. Hughes waa | President Wilson poued 1,451) for Woman Suffruse were ainet 82% for those opposed were cast by both wonon {quit And men of the Various schools and de- pauruments of i Cow fe The faculty voted for Presi- “Fatherlohn’s Medicine | Gives Us Strength” One Mother's Idea of How To! Keep Her Chil-. dren Well and Strong, She Pralsos Father me John's Medicine As, a Tonle aud Body- | | | “Father John's Medicine certainly builds one up and & given you strength,” writes Alice Dough- erty, Ro D. No. 15, & Groton, N. Y., ine recent letter, Cons tinuing she soys, “I was wll rua down last winter whea I beganteking lather Joun's Medic 1 felt fi hod used it. 1 also rive it to my wrenee and 1, wnd it has been a benefit. to them." aie "| jence, they should not have clothed the RRONX PICK habit. shook down $6,000 spector. PHILADELPI for live lobster, La and lobster to din WHILE CALIFORNIA RANCHER was puzzling over how to harvest crop of walnuts, storm came and THE REST DOUBLE of President Wilson In Colo- rado 19 @ man named Hughes—a Denver Post Office in- JERSEY WIFE SLAYER announces he will wear his dress sult at the trial grabbed dog's paw Lobster Killed with club. my CHICAGO WOMAN who seated herself in barber umm chair and d nded a shave locked up. POCKET won freedom by promising Magistrate to wear gloves hereafter to cure himself of worth for him, IA restaurant kitchen, Cat Jumped sbeter's claw grasped tabby's tail, Cat ing rl'a dog busy, Lobster , tables and diners upset, Ch biG B | OF GRE (Continued from First Page.) its first colonization, to reguiate hack: bakers, millers, wharfingers, &o., and in go doing to um of charge to be made for services rendered, “To thie day etatutes are to be found in many of the States upon some or all of these subjects; and we think it has never yet been successfully contended that such legislation came witnin any of the constitutional prohibitions against interference with private property. "Vhey entered upon their business and provided themselves with the weans to cary ik ou subject ty this condition, If they did not wish to submit themselves to such intorfer- public with aa Interest tn their con- cerns. The same principle applies to them that does to the proprietor of a hackney carriage, and as to him it has never been supposed that he was exempt from regulating statutes or ordinances because be had purchased bis horses and carriage and estab- lished his business betore the statute or the ordinance was adopted. “It is insisted, however, that the power of property is entitled to a Teasonable compensation for ite use, even though it be clotbed with a pub- Uc Interest, and that what is reason- able is @ judicial and not & legisia- tive question. JUDICIAL POWERS WHERE LEGISLATURES FAIL. “As bas already been shown, the Practice has been otherwise. ta coun- ties where the common law prevails it has beca customa. from time im- memorial for the Legislature to de- clare What shall be # reasunable com- ensation under such circumstances, or perbaps more properly speaking to fix @ minimum beyond which any charge mace would be reasonable. “Cndoubtedly, in mere private con- tracts, relating’ to mutters in which the public has no ini ti But this ts becau ure hus no control ove ct. 0 too in matters which do affect the public interest, and as to which legislative control may be exercised, if there are no statutory regulations upon the subject, the courts must determine what is reasonable. The con- trolling fact is the power to regu: f that exists, the right blish the maximum of of tho means of DEALERS LOWER PRICE |feal MILK AT AGENCIES SED FOR OENOUNCING HILLQUIT IN MEETING To Dickheiser, the Socialist Candi- date Replies One Cannot Prac- tise All He Preaches, Five thousand persons feared and hooted Saul J. Diekheiser, former Demity Attorney General of New York State, yesterday afternoon when he in- terrupted Morris Hillquit’s speech and demanced five minutes on the platform | ting of the United Hebrew | $ in the New Star Casino, Park} and One Hundred and Seventh his at am TT men Tdward F. Casoldy finally Dickhelser waa given | ak. He attacked HU | iit Congressional candidate} Twelfth Distriet, for making a in the will in which he left his estate to his Hildren and not to the Socialist Party, Burns r being a stockholder In the “ 'Y. Hrothers Coal ‘or nol sign the dovlallst agre of some KO as a Jew. The J and hisses Increased In vol- ume and he was forced to leave the ““Efliqutt, in hts reply, deniod that he had made a will and sald the Socialist Party could ket along without his money, nder the present econom| og teh nue lnposmibie to "practise | what he preached.” OSBORNE OUT, SING SING FEELS NO ILL EFFECTS Men Have Usual Sunday Privileges, | but They Fear Election Will Bring Change. There was no curtatiment yesterday of the usual Sundcy privileres which | prisoners at Sing Sing enjoyed under! the regime of Warden Osborne. Some} of the members of the Mutual Welfare Learue had feared that there might be) a return to the custom of keeping them locked tn thelr ce! over the wee! A, But they were allowed erty, under th direction Warden Calvin Derrick, and the usual baseball game was played. In an excit- ing battle the M. W. L. players de- feated those of ant Metropolitan Life by a score of 6 to 4 The convicts, it was learwed from « fearful that there ta: «dr ange in the method o| a priviieges which they. @ er Osborne. They arcmed tion will have @ lot to do with their future, all lb- of Actin, man very close to all of them, and thet. thi the result of the coming elec- — | Was Governor, for @ of fasta faa ‘delisera! mis- record, ready to a palgn circulars bei Gompers, Hatributed by Mr. embers of the Bullding , which has a memb Influential ® 65,000 In Cook County, ut openly for, Tlughes at ‘ane Meeting last niet eroliitions which td hie alds ba | hat ‘id hes’ ir etx deci back up Mr W Liber! to. the cam) .0O 3 Round Trip BALTIMORE had been prepared indorsing Mr, Hughes were not ‘ade bled pnw rains d although given out ‘4 peat tala WASHINGTON ink Trades members Hughes. Aa = The Captral of the Notion Cuatome 1 SUNDAYS ‘The annual entertainm dan ot the Uniten wea November 5, December 3 spectors’ Association of the Port of New || Special Train leaves, New ‘York, Pennayi- York will be held next Frida Washtugeo OMatmore 808K. In the Lexington Opera Hou: roceeds will fo to the a: of ’. Hick ‘and benevolent fund. ‘There will be heatrical entertainment, f g.thrat followed by Pennsylvania RR, B. Altman & Co. Distinctive Sports Hats FOR WOMEN AND MISSES are a feature of interest in the Millinery Department on the First Fi Stunning effects in felt, velour and silk beaver are shown in the smartest shapes and color tones. An attractive offering in this Department for to-morrow (Tuesday) will consist of A SELECTION OF TRIMMED HATS presenting a number of the season’s smartest styles (including close-fitting and shapes), effectively trimmed. specially priced at $7.00 & larger These will be $10.00 A Sale of Limen Handkerchiefs FOR MEN AND WOMEN will offer excellent values to-morrow at the low prices quoted. MEN'S LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS Initialed ’ + per dozen $2.20 & 2.60 Plain, hemstitched, perdozen . . $2.65, 3.45 & 4.75 WOMEN’S LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS Initialed, per dozen $1.50, 1.80 & 2.50 Plain, hemstitched, per dozen, 1.25 & 2.00 With tape border per dozen 1.50 Hemstitched, with hand-embroidered corner, per dozen 2.25 regulation, implied, In fact, the common-law rule, which re- the charge to be reason- 3 itself a regulation to ithout it the owner could at will and compel id to his terme to the common la “Looking, the from whence came the right which the Constitution protects, we find that when private property is ‘affected with a public interest it coases to be juris privat! only.” Thia was Lord Chief Justice Hale 200 years ago In his treatise bus Maris, 1 Harg, Law Tracts, 78, and has been acce pted without ebjec- |tlon a# an essential element In the | of property ever since, “Property does become clothed with @ public interest when used in a@ manner to make it of publio consequence and affect the cam munity at large, When, there- fore, one devotes his property to a use in whieh the public has an in- terest, he, in effect, grants to the public an interest in that use, and must submit to be controlled by the public for the common good to the extent of the interest he hae thus created. He may withdraw hie grant by discontinuing the use; but so long as he maint. the use ubmit to control, Judge Waite then goes on to cite with approval the ease of Mobile va. law J price of loaves of bread sold In the City of Mobile, Judge Waite con. tnues “Neither is it @ matter of any moment that no precedent can bo found for # statute precisely like this, It is conceded that the bus ness is one ef recent origin, that its growth been rapid and (elqned) Mra, Alice Dougherty, Groton, an all-wround give renewed aso, Father Julin's throat troubles and (tonle and bed; strength to re Medicin: a ile Work without gerous drugs in. any fares keep a bottle im thy house cou | ptantly, Adve, ‘Yor # safe fainily medicine; for colds, | that it is already of great impor: tance, And it must be con. cod whi rect and pos “Ht progents application of a le esto biahod princt statute t relat t to compel t public an. Interest but to deol and this now dey ment of com in no atten ant thes \ ticular manne: {Yuilte (8 Alabama, N. 8, 140), In which case the Supreme Court of Alabama upheld the conatitutionaltty of a law regulating the weight and! There vera SAY GOMPERS FALSIFIED HUGHES'S LABOR RECORD | Labor Leaders in Chicago Challenge | Accuracy of Circular Sent South ern Trade Unionists. | CHICAGO, Oct. 23.—-An attack on | Samuel Gompers and his aids for @ circular sent to Southern trade unton- purporting to give the labor record aries EB. Hughes, by John Wilitama, er President of the United Brother- of Carpenters and Joiners of was made public to-day by | te jh Araertea, Jor tera Council of Cook County, |" Mr. Metz wrote Mr. Wilitams, who was Labor Commissioner of New York ——— RIWOMA HEVCR LET HER AIR GET GRAY She Kept Her Locks Dark and Glossy, with Sage Tea and Sulphur. When you darken your bair with Sage Tea and Sulphur, no one can tell, bee cuuse it's doue so naturally, s0 evenly, Vroparing this mixture, though, at hone is mussy and troublesome, For 60 cents yon can buy at any drug store the ready~ inoise preparation, improved by the ad- {dition of other ingt 4, called “Wyeth's Sage end Sulphur Com. "You just dampen a sponge or {t brush with it and draw this through one small strand ot ry ing all gray hair disap ter anuther application or beautifully | pe \ your wir, tak jtime, Ly a a ir, though no disgrace, age, and us we all de- and attractive appear © with Wyeth's Sage reparation H It is not intended for the cure vy or prevention of divease, n A. 'Metz, President of the Carpen | pur Compaund and look years younger, This rendysto: iso delightful toilet requisi medicing und not a Fifth Avuenuw, New York The May Manton Fashions -OVER DRESS WITm MIE, 8 to 14 years, HAT we know as the elip-o dress is @ very fashionabl GIRL » W one thin a» mn and so aii and attractive that it ts pi Uk to win @ ready approval, It | | @ because it ie thi newest thing out, and it will be by the mothers because it te easy make and easy to launder, whil the same time ft ma: a mart 2 This one appropriately oan be m of serge or of similar material, or Unen or of cotton gabardine or @ingham or of any washable fabric ‘ In the picture, it 1s made ree and worn with « ribl 4ash, and the guimpe ts of crepe ching, but 1t would be very pretty of plaid gingham with two narrow y arranged a» shown in the amall and with # guimpe of white let ft could be made of @ iinen or gabardine or material sort with the neck and armhole edge: alloped to ok or aquere, but for allopa th: round neck will be preferred. It te Very simple little dress, consisting o} Just (wo pieces, and it ts drawn on| over ee head, ao that no opening ii required, no buttonngies to oe mademy fasteners to ed on. th i quite separate, ound collar ai loged at the front, a made with elbow or with lo wil 7 need: | | ‘Tho May Manton Pattern No, to te cut tn sizes for girls from yours. Neo, 0245 (with basting line and added seam allowance), at THE GVENING WORTD MAY MANTON FAB. Wow Us Donald Building, 100 Weat Thirty-oecona Street toe . Gunbel Bros.). commer sixth “Avenue and ‘Thirty -aeco , New York, or sent by mail on receipt of fifteen bit in coin or stamps for each pattern ordered. on Paiitraa, IMPORTAN?T—Write your address plainly and apecity size wanted /

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