The evening world. Newspaper, August 22, 1919, Page 6

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BROOKLYN TOOLMEN STRIKE. syegtt wan leafned to-day that more 70 employees of the Niserm ty Works of Bush Termin lym, Nave Bevn out on strike for ies ae br Mr akers, who get sixty nm and ant nipet forty-five oat more f jerers sp 1 wh 8 100} ta maohin' cents and than 108 dw ave also demanded James Lackey, eceted the on. Oo the management to the wo CAR STRIKE PLOT “FOR 8-GENT FARE ~UPFORINQURY Witnesses Active Part in Tie-Up of Subway and Elevated. Acting District Attorney Talley pe+ Heard Took NO tion is that thousands of Interbor- | THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1919 promoting the strike, Information has reached the act- ing District Attorney that’ 206 men who refused to Join the brotherhood were discharhea lant Monday by General Manager Frank Hedley. If this is true the District Attorney is anxious to fia out how Mr. Hedley found time to take such action be- cause the strike was on and there | wasn't a wheel turning on the sy tem. Another vwomoring tre wae" "Tena, the Exquisite Model, biece of strange intornia- | ough employees did not know a strike had been deciared and reported for duty Sunday morning at their usual | posts, There they learned of tho) strike for the first time, Many sald | they did not want to: strike and Joins Almond’s11.40Party | And What’s a Party For? But Lena Was a Dead One, After All, and Judge Knew Other Gay Birds to Makg More Noise With a Live One as Late as 2 A. M., So Almond Is Let Off With the Admonition| to Go and Be No More Indiscreet in the gan to-day an investization of the charge that the Interborough staged the strike which ¢ied up the subway and elevated lines last Sunday and Monday in order to influence public opinion into favorable consideration of the project of iffereasinz the fare to eight cents. None of the Inter- Porough officials nor leaders was called and none has been subpoenaed thus far, ‘The witnesses would remain at work. It they were told by their bosses that they would have to strike or be dis- charged because the company was behind the strike, Following the strike of 1916 Prei dent Shonts of the Interboro caused to be framed a “master servant” agreement and announced thay every, employee would have to sign it. The agreement contained a | promise oh the part of the employees {not to strike to enforce the adjust- brotherhood | ment of grievances but to submit} matters In dispute to arbitration, Mr | Talley will seek to discover if these agreements were in force when the strike ‘was declared Sunday. is said | Future. Almond was out on a party. P What constitutes a party? In the old home town it means a trip to the movies, @ sly hand- holding while the fiat the Beanhouse” are £9, , veing unreeled, « S A sitio drink at the; soda fountain, and perhaps another “quick squeeze going By + “Well,” continued Judge terpolated Prosecutor Dierengo. “Il knew somepae who went out put in Bill Beirns with @ live one, site the side lines, “But,” went on His Honor, “whil Almond was out with a dead one, 1 have «liso known those who stayed as late as 2 o'clock with live ou Tobias, who has always been tolerant with youth and youth's vagaries, “it seems that this young man was ofit at an unseemly hour with a stuffed model.” / teh Evenings in| -Worse things have happened,” in- KIDNAPPED BABY’S MOTHER PLEADS FOR HIS RETURN Wentz Asks Public to Help Find Infant Taken From Carriage. Mra. Ella Wents, of No, .725 Home Street, the Bronx, to-day issued an appeal to the pubdlid to help her find her infant «on Arthur, who was kid- happed from in front of a Harlem department store on July 29th, The letter re: - “T appeal to you all th help me. If you know of anyone who suddenly had @ baby boy When they never had one before let me know so that I can investigate and seo if it is mine. “Perhaps the woman who took jittle Arthur is afraid to return him for fear that I will prosecute her. Why doesn’t she bring him to my home late at night and put him in hig car- riage and then she can go away dn- known and without guilt. “How can she bear to see him with- out knowing how she js breaking my heart and torturing my sdul? 1 can- not understand what kind of « heart ‘she has, Does not her conscience tey her*the wrong she is doing? “Little ’ Willie, my nine-year-old boy always asks me: ‘Why did they take my brother, when all these years Mrs, GETS $150 A WEEK ALIMONY, Justice Cropaey in the Supreme Conrt, Brooklyn, signed an order to-day al- jowing Mrs, Rose Dumarest of No. 417 Hast 19th Street, Flatbush, $150 0 allmony and $1,000 for ‘counsel nding the trial of her rom Rene Dumarest, a Manhattan im- porter, The’ corespondent is Bmma_ ftath, and) Mra, Damarest in her complaint alleges that her husband misconducted himselt at Mins Rath’s home in Brook- vn, at iata Hotel wiry Park, at ihe Cragamere Ino, Bilenville, N.Y. Adon other occasio —_—_— wi fees | uit for divorce GIRLS! USE LEMONS FOR SUNBURN, TAN ‘Try It! Make thie lemon lotion to whiten your-tanned or freckled ekin. eee eee eet Squeeze the juice of two lemons into a bottle ‘containing three ounces of Orchard White, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle, sunburn and tan lotion, and complexion whitener, at very, very small cost. ! Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will sup- ply three ounces of Orchard White for a few cents. Massage this sweetly F THIN-AND NERVOUS, TRY PHOSPHATE Like Plain Bitro-Phesphate te Nothing * Put om Firm, Healthy Flesh and te u hu nave 4 wand aniina demonstrated an ervous. st: a profesor tn i ‘and. Food Nutrition Voie, savers ee Pte amoun of phosphorus required for the norma) Rutten of mau iy noxioualy. undgergstt: ‘standard tex mated in many of our ae an organic phosphate known ut English spevking countries as . Through the assimile- o models. Accordingly, I am going t es suspend sentence, in the hope that the defendant will never be more in- discreet tha. last night.” e mMmittee of Kew - ket Court repaired to MoSorley's enh. web parlor. to ponder the matter, we have had none? Couldn't she get one from @-home where’ there many little bables without paj mamas? * "Won't you all hélp fragrant lotion into the face, neck, a nd hands and see how quickly: the freckles, sunburn, windburn and tan disappear and how clear, soft and white the skin becomes. Yes! It is| harmless.—Advt. SOLDIER FOUND IN PEW | HELD AS CHURCH BURGLAR Explains He Went in to Sleep, bul) ‘Pastor Says Poor Boxes Were Tampered With. A spot of light shifting about in St tha's Church, 49th Street and 7th venue, Brooklyn, at 4 o'clock this] morning attracted the attention a 4. passer by who wolw up the pastor, the James BP, McGrath, in his home across the street. Mr. McGrpth called’ Patrolman Fran- ‘cls Nolan, who lives in the neighbor- hood and the two went to the ebureh. They found the front door open. Switching on the lights, they went from | pew to pew and In one found a soldier, apparently asleep. In the pew in front of him was a loaded revolv Examination of the oor boxes showed that two of them had been tampered with, ‘The soldier Was aroused and arrested. He said ho was Private Charles Jos- eph Williams, 22 years old, 6th Field Artilitry, recently returned to Camp Upton ‘after 23 months service ovi just found the and went In to res village out-ups are en route for the) feathers, , But in New York, or even Philly, !t) is another matter, Philly rarely closes up before midnight; im fact, 12.20 haw been authentically recorded as the time for the breaking up of & “party.” And as for Now York——well, doean’t every “great American novel” | record the heroine powdering her nose outside of Joe's at 6 A.M, after an} evening of conventional thrills? | But to return to Almond. And} Kindly refrain from the usual pun, be- | cause it was no fault of his that the nut was thus christened. And, more- over, even the most dignified citizgn mfght find bimself similarly involved on. oceasion. Almond and some aix confreres started out at an early hour and passed several minutes finding whether the olf haunts were still open for business, “They did end they were. | Midrignt was in the offing, and| Almond was still “sherryin’” at ex-| actly 11.30. Almond 2nd econfreres decided that this was o pretty good old country, even df they had turned off the booze. “Let's go and call on the girls,” suggested a companjon. “Fair enough,” agreed Almond. | Second Avenue was satisfactorily negotiated for several hundred yards At a certain point Mr, N. Fink was about to be closing up the “nice goods" emporium, The fire sale had | gone fine and everything was quiet | and peaceful. Lena, the beautiful model, was out: | fide the store. It was not the| original Lena, but the plaster and straw Lena, just such a Lena as would induce one to spend $11.89 for some nice suitings and vestings in- side the store 7 But plaster and straw nothing at all to Almond. Lena and immediately her. “Hello, Lena,” he suggested politely, Lena failed to tumble. Almond leaned back freres and apologized, “It's a foggy night,” he explained, nd probably she doesn't recognize e to find him, as he is now ten weeks old, and as he was all our joy and ‘su ine in lite?” tation. Di 4 7. Perey. ee xe foods.—Advt. we Nadine Face Powder | Ac ywder of is: I pers cae acd tause oO: ‘ ing to the Hastie nd seasons oo admired. Nadine Pace Powder Is codling, re- freshing and harmless, « positive ‘pro- tection against wind, tan, eun-bur; return Soto, Leaves the skin soft and smooth ae rose petals, ‘This exquisite preparation, Nadine, beautifies millions of promi xions today. Price refunded if not entirely pleased, Sold tm Green Boxes At leading tollet counters, Tl they haven't NATIONAL TOILET COMPANY Pai gz en ene ee Fine Custom Tailoring at Worth-While Savings Three Piece Suits or Overcoats Tailored to Measure SSS Pn I SES hurch door open 2 he aid. But when he was arraigned In the Fifth Avenue court he was held by Magistrate Folwell in $1,500 on a bur- glary charge. The sexton of the church sald he locked the door last night, SHIPWORKERS TO DEMAND RAISE TO $52.80 A WEEK General Strike in New York Port Yards May Be Called Soon After Sept. 1. after Sept. 1 there may be @ rike of marine mechanics, Kkeralend allied trades which completely tle up work in ship- yards jn the Port of New York: According td J. J, McEntee, business nt of the Brooklyn union, the me- chanics have ‘been making ‘efforts for six months to avoid trouble with the ship owners, and no action will be taken until Sept. 1, when the contracts with the ship builders expire. The men Want an, increase in wages of 60 per cent, The War Labor Board's agree- ment gave the men 80 cents an hour. The pay now demanded would be $1.20 an hour, or $53.80 a week. SHIPPING FOOD FOR POLES. Clothing Also Is £250,000 Cargo Go- ing to D A $250,000 cargo of clothing and food | will be shipped to-morrow to Danzig [for destitute relatives of Americans tn Poland. goods will be handled by Am n Relief Administration, to be shipped on ‘the | p Shortaville by the Blavonian Trading Corporation, an organization ft by Polish America: Other Why We Can Offer Such Wonderful . Values Ww*. buy all our woolens di- rect from the mills in such great quant#ies that we secure advantages impossible to the small tailor. Re cleared mine comp If you are embarrassed by a pimply, blotchy, unsightly complexion, try Resi- nol Ointment and Resinol Soap reeudariy Yor a week and sec if they do not beginto make a blessed difference in your sldn, Resinol Soap and Resinel Ointment are sold by alf drag. \ gists. Try them and see how beneficial they are not only tor the skin but for the hair, tee, oie St ae SSNS 30.00 35.00 40.00 ready to wear dealers and so called ex- taildrs ure selling clothes at. extremely igh prices, we are offering our wonderful selea~ tion of woolens which we bought long ago—at the oli prices—a fact that saves you considerable money on every, garment 'E operate our own tailor- ing shops where skilled men working on the week work basis concentrate their entire at- tention on real tailoring. W® fo,o die Dusinces on the basis of small profits—a fact that attracts more than 200,- v0 men annually to our stores, great savings we q@ Why pay the small tailor an exorbitant price when LL the je by in 0 e . A meee, cene, weneiens 06s we offer perfect tailoring satisfaction for about half the tatlor’s price. are passed along to you. ‘No smali profiteering here. DD to this wonderful saving the fact that we tallor every garment in our own davileht shops and you will immediately reallze why wé are doing such a tremendous business. q Why buy ready-made clothes when you can have them made to measure by us for less money VEUSIRS. “(S Boon meant He lamped recognized SSS = @ You owe it to yourself to See our altractive variety of new woolens. —Have Your Winter Overcoat Made By Us NOW— A very large stock of overcoatings will be offered at the old low prices—affording remarkable savings no prudent man can overlook. Where the | RIVCHIEs GORNEIL Stores Are: NEW YORK CITY STORES: 1387 Broadway, Bet. 37th and 38th Sts. 1514 Third Ave., Near 85th St. 251 ith Ave., Near 23d St. ol th Ave., Bet. 43d and 44th St 2331 Eighth Ave., 1 door above 125th St. 143 West 20th Street (Headquarters). —_——— BRONX: ,403 E. 149th St., Nr. 34 Ave. We to his con- CREDIT TERMS tv ALL ‘Terme Apply Also to New York, New Jersey, Long Island and Connecticut SS m Btu Lena remained mute. “wéu, if you're going to be 80 atuck-up about It, I'l teach you a thing or two,” declafed Almond Wherewith he embraced Lena, and informed her that she was a mem- ber of the party, The voyage along Second Avenue progressed. Everything was going well when ‘Third Street was reached, By that time, Mr. N. Fink 2 had discovered the desertion of Lena and game in pursuit, And the cop was also watching and walting for any- thing that came along. Shortly Almond himself in the cooler, was safely locked in N. Fink Not long after, Almond discovered himself before Judge Tobias in the grand old temple of justice, charged "with disorderly conduct. His em- ployer, a leading man of the district, was also there to youch for his char- acter, “Do you think it proper ‘or a young man to be on the streets at 11.407" | asked His Honor. “f disapprove,” said the employer, “put he (sa nice boy.” DENIES CONTRACTORS YIELDED TO PAINTERS Alfred B Joy, secretary-treasurer of | the Allied Master Painters’ Association, | to-day made public statement in| which he denied his organization or the United Painters’ and Contractors’ As- | sociation, had given in to the demands of the striking painters. “We are not fighting the five day eure OF TABTh | week or the eight hour day.” said Mr, Gola 14 Porcelain = Orowns Joy, “but, merely are holding out Bee OE ee ge ane tails fp [againet certain additional, conditions) at Reasonable Price: which the strikers have, wedged Into/| aT |thelr demands. If we were to agree) jto certain of these conditions it would | jbe suleld We ate standing pat now! funtil the strikers, members of District | Council No, 9, Brotherhood of Painters, | ‘ome to thelr senses,” Among these “suicidal conditions” re~ ferred to by Mr, Joy, is the alleged at} mpt on the part of the strikers to » the employer place shop steward on every job. ‘Phe shop steward, according to Mr. Joy, Is to be chosen by the painters’ he ie ' yf by cored STORES IN BROOKLYN: 104 Flatbush Ave. S*harker Buliduvel, 1370 Broadway, Near Gates Ave. 700 Broadway, 1 Block from Flushing A‘ 5001 Fifth Ave., Cor. 50th St. (Bay Kidgo). OPEN ALL DAY | saTuRDAY Til 10 P.M, | TN SI PSS IC SS n_ Walnut Dining Room: ) Newark: 196 Market St., Near Broad St. 'T, CHINA eeeers TOR? Union Hill: 267 Bergenline Ave., Jobn St. of Fe ING TABLE, 6 feet extension; av White Enamel ra tien for Banishing Hairs \ Foreign Language Records for September on Sale. Write for Catalog. 2 (Beauty Topics) With the aid of a delatone paste, it is an easy matter for any woman to remove every trace of hair or fuss from face, neck and arms. Enough of the powdered delatone and ‘water is mixed into a thick paste and spread on the hairy surface for about 2 min- utes, then rubbed off and the skin” washed. ‘This completely removes the / ise hair, but to avoid disappointments, / » get the delatone in an original pack- age HEARTBURN or heaviness after meals are most an- noying manifestations of acid-dyspepsia. Ki-MOIDS pleasant to take, neutralize acidity and help restore normal digestion. , MADE BY SCOTT & COWNE MAKERS OF SCOTT'S EMULSION and Clara the store of iealthy j Healthy Babies *~“ Every true mother realizes the fact that her baby's health de- pends upon her own, that the very vitalityot her child is influenced by her own physicat condition. 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