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| 16 ‘ ~NEW INJUNCTION | STOPS PICKETING. —INMILK STRIKE | Menace {o Public Welfare, Says Court, Granting Plea | of Bronx Merchant. | WALKS AWAY WITH PERFECT FOOT HONORS AT THE PALACE Silpreree Court Justice Guy to-day 4 fasued a mew injunction in connection q with the milk strike and at the same time [propounded the doctrine that while picketing {s lawful in ordinary We Wage disputes it becomes unlawful > whendver it menaces the public wel- q fare, as lie holds that tt does In the i case of milk, a vitally needed food Thig new order was obtained not bby the milk companies but by a re- fail merchant, Koppel Gottileb, No. q 711 Trinity Avenue, the Bronx, a | dealer in butter, eggs and dairy prod- nets. | He saya that soon after the { | | aay eae hid milk strike was’ declared he employed a union clerk at a wage higher than © the secretary of the Retail Grocery q and Dairy Clerks’ Union, who de- manded Umi he di e the map and wake a contract with the union He tefused, he suid, and the union began to picket his store, interfering with his trade. Justice Guy sald in granting the injunction: *qninterrupted delivery of the milk supply to the people of this city is so ‘vital for the preservation of the gen- era) health of the community, and es- pecially children and invalids, that any organized effort to interfere therewith must be regarded as an act of hostility to the public weal and such an unlawful purpose as calls for » @inary wage dispute to grant the re- | the exercise of the full authority of the courts and police authorities. | “Whatever may be the right or wrong of the present wage contro- versy,,the health of this entire com- munity cannot be made subservient thereto, Picketing and other acts! alleged against the defendants have been held not to be unlawful under ordinary conditions, but when linked | with a purpose inimical to the wel- | fare of the community they became | unlawful. “This court would hesitate in an or- | Nef asked for herein, but feels that ‘Mt is its duty to assert the full power of the court under the circumstances to protect the lives and health of the people of New York. The motion to restrain the defendants is, therefore, granted, with notice to the defendants | that any disobedience of the order will be visited with the fullest meas- ure of-the punishment within the power,of this court.” In Brooklyn the hearing of argu- menta|on making permanent the original temporary injunction against the milk wagon strikera was ad-| fourned unt!) this afternoon. Fred \J. Sterinsky, president of the Brookjyn local of the Milk Drivers’ Tnion,;said he intended to ask the State nd Federal authorities to pro- oeed against the New York Milk Con- ference Board as an unlawful con- epiracy in restraint of trade. He submitted an affidavit, in which he charged that the board, instead of Welng an organization to protect the vpublic by holding milk prices to a minimum, was really organized for profit of its members and that it ® conspiracy to maintain a maxi- + mum price for milk. Sterlnsky said the members of the Doard Mave described the union as a ‘conspiracy in restraint of trade, and yet hi not made any complaint on that babis to the Federal Department of Su or the State Attorney Gen- eral. He said the companies made a met profit of four to six cents on each bottle of milk sold. » ‘Walter Gordon Merritt, for the “eompanles, said he would cite more than 144 criminal acts perpetrated by the stfikers and their sympathizers. Ani ement, was made that the Borden Company now has a full force of employees and that there no more jobs for strikers who wish to return. The distribution of milk in New York was said to be more than 85 per pent. of normal to-day. Twenty-five Borden strikers who returned to work yesterday at the company’s Flushing branch quit the job again to-day after listening to ergumeats of pickets. Four alleged pickets charged with disorderly eonduct were held in $300 bail each fm the Flushing Court. They de- scribed themselves as Lewis Gasso, No. 75 Wan Alst Avenue, Long Island George Boyle, No, 307 14th Ave- nue, Astoria; William Theis, No. 2683 Mymaud Place, Maspeth, and Chester q Still, No. 256 12th Avenue, Astoria. Strikers trom the 48th Street branch wot the Clover Farms Company and he 7th Street branch of the Shef- ‘Bela Company planned to hold @ joint sneeting this afternoon in a former @aloon at 45th Street and lith Ave- mue. At this meeting, it was sald, ‘whother the men shall or shall not go @ bedy and ask for their old jobs mm the companies ‘terms. ‘The ret payments from the $144,- 060 strike benefit fund raised by the sunion six weeks before the strike was walled were made last night. They gmounted to $10 for each man for the two weeks the strike has been in Charles Shick, No. 918 Aldus § Street, he Bronx, and Victor Bell, No. St Brook!: : were sen- Clowkey to 7 es aires, Ses coapans ~ ‘there will be @ free discussion as to But She Wore Sensible Shoes While Growing — Teaching New Yorkers to Live Long. By Fay Stevenson. How to attain perfect bodies, perfect feet and perfect teeth— That is what the Health Exposition wishes to teach New Yorkers at the Grand Central Palace this week. The Health Department fesued its first “healt and live longer insurance policies,” the premium on which is @ “daily observance of the rules of health"—ten of them, all set down in the policy—and which expires “when health laws are broken.” Are you observing these rules? Look them over and see; 1. Sleep with window open and screened against flies and mosqui- toes. 2 2. Secure from eight to ten hours’ sleep every day. 3. Take deep breathing exe cises and plenty of outdoor re- creation. 4, Clean mouth and teeth upon rising and retiring and after each meal. 6. Take a full or sponge bath at least once a week. @ Chew food ‘thoroughly and oat slowly. 7, Keep hands and face, clothes and home surroundings ol 8 Take share of milk, green vegetables, eggs and ce- reals. Avoid tea, coffee, tobacco, highly seasoned and indigestible foods and eating between meals, 9. Have physical defects, such as bad eyesight, enlarged and dis- eased tonsils, adenoids, decayed teeth, corrected as soon as pos- sibie. 10. Be kind, courteous, consid- , cheerful and respectful to with whom you come in con- tact. And now, girls, if you want per- fect feet like those of Miss Lilyan Barnes, just Msten to this; “Out of one hundred girls whose feet were examined since the Health Exposition opened this week just two had perfect feet,” Dr. Reuben H. Gross of the First Institute of Pedi- atry told me, Dr. Gross is attending the expos- tion this week, and willingly exam- ines the feet of any young woman free whether they be perfect or im perfect, make them perfect or as near this stage as possible, but he admits there are very few women who have perfect enough feet to wear Cinder- ella’s slipper. ‘Of course, size has nothing to do with a perfect foot,” said Dr. Gross, “A perfect foot means @ good arch, toes which are flexible, no corns or callouses and nails which are proper- ly cared for.” In speaking of high heels, Dr Gross said, “They are women's worst enemy as far as health is concerned, The fiat, one-inch or military heel is the only heel for the perfect foot. “High heels will make a business 95 per cent. inefficient in her days, awaiting examination, tn the Raymond Street Jail, which time wil! be credited against the sentence. Shick and Bell pleaded guilty to » ushing several cases of milk into the He will adviee her how to etreet in Seon Cd ee Borden Com- ny’s depot at No. 150 Fifth Avenye, and breaking several - ra of perfect feet found at the New York Health Show. work. They will make her cross, cranky, unable to get on with her| employer, her folks at home or even| her sweetheart. They will give her headaches, a poor appetite because! her digestive organs are thrawn out! of shape, and give her a eallow com- | plexion because she can’t walk long | enough to keep up her circulatory system.” And just then, while the doctor was | condemning high heels, in walked, pretty little Miss Elizabeth Doyle of No, 601 West 113th Street, kicked off a high heel pump, a silk stocking and there was the prettiest little foot im- aginable. Dr, Gross looked at me and laughed. ‘It's perfect,” he said, after a short examination, It is even more perfe than the two I examined yesterday. Mise Doyle said she wae a nurs but modestly refused to tell the name of the hospital where she is con- nected. “Probably the reason J have fect a foot,” she said, because 1 always wore sensible shoes when & child, My mother never allowed my foot to be pinched or crowded when it was growing, but now J feel that I can wear any shoe I please.” Dr, Groas shook his head with “Ab, well, you'd better be careful or you'll xet a corn yet.” PERFECT TEETH IN ADULTS ARE FOUND RARE. Men, maids and children are also | tripping up to the dental department \in a pretty lively order where they | may learn how to care for their teeth. | In fact, children may have their teeth j cleaned free and little Willie, sitting jin a chair undergoing various opera- {tions with dental floss, calls out to Johnnie, hovering on the outside, to: | “Come on in an’ get 'em cleaned, | It feels good.” | “A Boy Scout, aged twenty-two, and ;® young woman of twenty-three are | the only adults who have had perfect | teeth up to date,” Dr. Edwa: ibe | bet, supervising dentist of the Health Department, told me. Perfect teeth, mean teeth which do not interfere, havo no cavities, no fillings, no crowns and healthy gums, “To properly take care of the teeth every person should be fitted with a | tooth brush, dental flloss, mouth wash {and a mirror, The rotary, or the Dr. | Fons method of circulatory motion, ‘is the best way to manipulate & tooth brush, “Diet affects the teeth immensely,” concluded Dr, Ribbet, “and the man, - NAL LOOT CHARGE | |Chapman Goes to Boston} With U.S. Agents in Effort to Prove His Innocence. Bert R. Chapman, the “mysterious) | man” teken from the Aquitania as | she was about to sail yesterday, charged with having marketed in | Boston $10,000 worth of bonds which were part of the loot of $600,000 taken by four bandits in the holdup of a Los Angeles mai} truck on March 3 last, denied emphatically to-day that | he knew anything about the robbery. Ohapman willingly waived examin- ation before C. 8. Commissioner Hitchoock and at 1 o'clock started for Boston in the custody of Post Office ‘inspectors, He protested his innocence ‘ef complicity in the robbery, said he was an automobile salesman and lived |at No. 194 Chelsea Street, East Bos- jton. He expressed his willingness to ‘pay his own railway fare to Boston, | suying that he did not want to put the Government to the expense. He clulmed to have served with the A. B. . in France. It is alleged by the postal authori- ties that Chapman, whose name, they say, was originally Cohem and then changed to Kaplan and finally to Chapman, received from one Charles Solomon a sealed envelope which he delivered to a Boston broker, receiv- {ing an envelope in turn which h» brought back to Solomon., That Chapman intends to make a fight for his liberty was betokened in the arrival from Boston to-day ‘1 his counsel, John W. Connelly. He said he had been retained by his) client's family. Chapman was arfested by Post Office Inspectors Cellar and Webster of Los Angeles and Thomas Butle: of the local staff. He had been under surveillance by Federa) agents for Beveral weeks. It is their theory that airplanes were used in transporting part of the loot from Los Angeles to Chicago and thence to Boston. They do not connect this robbery with the hold- up of the mail truck in Leonard Street, near Broadway, a short time ago, but believe the same men may have had a hand in conversion of the stolen securities, ‘Two women who were with Chap- man on the Cunard piler—Mrs. ‘Charles Solomon of No, $7 Middlesex Street, Boston, and a friend of hers —were taken to the Postal Inspector's office and released after questionin; They said they had gone to eee Chap- man off on his voyage. Mrs. Solo- mon's husband was at one time a | professional bondsman. Last June 14 the first of the stolen Property made its appearance in Bos- ton. Chapman, the postal inspectors charge, sold five C. B. & Q. Railroad bonds of $1,000 denomination each, One week later the postal authorities recovered these bonds and five $1,000 foreign bonds, ja SCHOOL UPHELD IN OUSTING “RADICAL” Goldencofl Was Expelled Seditious and Socialistic Utterances. ALBANY, Nov. 16.—The Appellate Division of the Supreme Court, third department, in a unanimous decision for THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 16 NURSE IN HIGH-HEELED SHOES —EX-SOLDIERTAKEN FIGHT TO CUTGAS FROM LINER DENIES! RATE IN JERSEY OPENS IN NEWARK Company’s Manager Admits 12 Cents Drop in Cost on One Item Alone. Henry D. Whitcomb, vice presi- dent and general manager of the PPublic Service Gas Company of New Jersey, suplpying nearly ail of Northern New Jersey, was a witness to-day Im the hearing before Public Utilities Commissioners John Treacy and Harry Bacharach at Newark to determine if the present price of gas should be reduced, Two) years ago the company was author-/ ized to increase ‘ts rate from 90 cents a 1,000 feet to $1.40, | Mr, Whitcomb admitted that the cost of gas oil, one of the chief in- gredients, had decreased, and also that the corporation was able to buy coke advantageously from the Cam- den Coke Company, one of its own subsidiaries, Mr. Whitcontb ad- mitted that the cost of gas oil had ,™ been cut about 12 cents a thousand feet since the last change in the: price to consumers, He asserted that | the company bought and manufac- tured 12 per cent. more gas than it sold to consumers. Mr, Whitcomb was asked to sent tables showing the exact c of both coal and water gas by the thousand feet for the last twelve months. 1 Edmund Wakelee appeared as coun- | sel for the commissioners, aided b: George L. Record and nk H. Som. mer of the League of Mumnicipatitie: of New Jersey and the city counsel of Newark, Paterson, Passaic and cuit. | ton. Seeger ARBUCKLE WEARY AS HIS TRIAL DRAGS) Oblivious to Wrangling of Attor- neys and Nervously Twists and Fingers His Hat. \ SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 16.—Ros:oe Arbuckle's trial has entered its third gay with the jury nearing completion and with local interest in the case waning, as evidenced to-day by empty seats in the court room. After two days speat in examining fifteen mem- vers of the venire, eleven of them, ‘n- cluding five women, have been wc- cepted tentatively. ‘The oharge against Arbuckle grows out of the death of Miss Virginlu Rappe, motion picture actress, follov’~ ing @ party in Arbuckle’s rooms in the Hote! St. Francis here last Septem- ber. The defendant, wearing the same forlorn oxpression, for the last two days has fingered his felt hat, rolie] paper wads and sat apparently ob- livious of what was transpiring, while attorneys wrangled over legal points ond put lengthy questions to prospec- tive jurors, re: IT’S DONE THIS WAY i Galle juet sufficient “grip” and “bite” in Calox —The Oxygen Tooth Powder— to remove all and mucous plac- to-day upheld the action of the Al- bany Law School in expellink: Jacob Goldencoft for alleged seditious and ‘Socialistic utterances, Goldencoff was expelled about two years ago when, it was alleged, he woman or child who wishes good teeth should eat hard food. Probably that accounts for tho @ermans vi such good teeth. Pumpernickel and rye bread are just the sort of food re- sistance the teeth need. Food with calciums and high in lime also should be eaten for perfect teeth, This means | plenty of green vegetables and milk.” ————_—. VOTE ON 50% SURTAX IN HOUSE TO-MORROW Strength of Rep May Wis for Higher Rate. WASHINGTON, Noy. 16.—<Accept- ance by the House of the Senate amendment fixing the maximum in- come Surtax rate at 50 per cent. was the “guens” to-day of some of the leaders among the Democrats and “insurgent” ican Insurgents Republicans, Chairman made seditious remarks and sym- pathized with the Socialist Assem- blymen expelled from the New York State Assembly. He recently ob- tained an order frem Supreme Court Justice Howurd directing the school to reinstate him. Action on the Appellate Division to-day closes the case unless one of the Judges signs an order permitting it to be carried to the Court of Ap- peals. DEATH OF UNIONISM FEARED BY MINERS Declare Anderson Injunction on Qheck Off Will So Result If Sustained. Fordney of the House managers, said the vote on the surtax provision would be taken to-morrow, CHICAGO, Nov, 16—Unionism of America will be dealt a death blow Rpublican jeaders generally in both | if the check off injunction tswued by the House and Senate are 0; to the 60 per cent, rate and hope to nee it reduced to at least 42 per cent. Judge A. B. Anderson in Indianapolis ie upheld, attorneys for United Mine Many of them favor an even sharper| Workers of America contended to- reduction, At their session this morn- ing the House and Senate conferees completed the first reading of the with agreement on tax revision bill, practically all amendments excep’ day in arguing before the United States CCircult Court of Appeats. “No court in the land ts endowed t] with such sweeping powers,” William those regarded ae being bound up in| Glasgow ttorney the question of the surtax rateas | tin Gane 6 ore, ALBANY, Nov. 16.~—Supreme Court |astTeement to Glasgow's statement Justice William 8. Andrews, successful |that “the injunction is bread enoagh bopublican candidate for Associate to ol Court of Appeal it tie in the recent election, according t Ret ocratic oppone' vat ing, his statement 5 9 | throughout the country.” is siatemont filed with the Seoratary ton Townsend Jcusdst:|Anderson following the mine war in miners declared. Judge Samuel Alechuler, one of the judges bearing the case, voloed his stop unionization of miners The injunction was imsved by Judge Mingo Covaty, W. Ve, ate qu festa the tees opalonen, Calo: is wet kills germs, and helps whiten and preserve the teeth. Order large ize for economy. CHOWDER TWO MEN KILLED IN 90-FOOT FALL Workmen Dashed to Ground When Scaffolding Breaks in Brooklyn. Bernard Rogers and Charlies Ander- fon, concrete workers removing forms ninety feet in the atr, were dashed to to the ground and kilted to-day when the scaffolding on which they were working broke. The men were employed on the con- struction of the elevator being built for Barge Canal Commission by the Fegels Construction Company at the Ste the foot of Henry Street, Brooklyn. With Rogers and Andereon third) man on the scaffolding, yet caught ra lived and Anderson at No. 476 Henry Street, Broklyn. ™ ee ey RULES MAGISTRATE EXCEEDED AUTHORITY County Coart Fr. vieted of Disorderly County Judge MacMahon | to-day Magistrates’ Court. was on the ground that the evidence presented In the Magtetrates’ Court did Not bear on a charge of dlsorderi: - duct and could be used, {f at all, only in support of @ chang» of assault, an of- | fenge upon which Magistrates’ Courts, | NECe the law, are not competent to) he attack by Mr. Teese upon A teal “estate “operator,” who. ‘ee! Pi rospect Place, where both lived. not assume have none," Judge MacMahon eaid, was a but he was far enough away {rom them not to en the planks upon whica thay were standing gave way. Ro t No. 75 iéth Street Lawyer Con- Brooklyn reversed the conviction of Dwight , @ lawyer, who was found guilty of disorderly conduct in Adama Street Mr. ‘Teese’s appeal Appeal to Be Taken for Slayer MeCormick. Attorney Maurice Bloch to-day served notice on District Attorney 6wann that be would move in Decemder tn the Court of Appeals at. Albany for argu- ment on an appeal for George P. MoCor- mick. thirty, No. 238 Bast th Street, who was convicted June 10 ‘last for the murder In the first degree of Edward Shannon, twenty, of No. 309 E. 1th Street, They had quarrelied over an alleged $2 gambling debt, Strike Clones Tidewater Plant. The Tidewater Ol! Company of Bayonne, N. J, announces to-day that in view of a strike of their em- Ployees yesterday afternoon they uid shut down the plant complete- ly, About 2,200 are out at the plant, following the lead of 250 men who quit yesterday morning at their lead- er’s signal, Later In the afternoon the rest of the employees held a mass meeting and voted to strike. | | A few po: positions. harges grew out of an alleged Besdine, who was Mr. tenant Jn the premises at No. Magistrates should stick to the law Surlediction awhere they 154 WEST 3ist Sheffield Farms Co. WANTED ions of route salesman remain vacant. We will engage CLEAN, ABLEBODIED, AMERICAN CITIZENS, between the ages of 21 and 35, for permanent APPLY 209 LEXINGTON AVE., N. Y. C. ST., N. ¥. C. OR ANY MAIN DISTRIBUTING BRANCH. DONNIEBROOK CLOTHES CHAIN SHIRT SHOPS 1268 BROADWAY, between 32nd and 33rd Sts. The Greatest Clothing Sale of the Season It is hardly necessary to apologize in order to give away over $75,000 worth of Men’s and Young Men’s Suits and Overcoats But the boiled down facts are:-We are overstocked. The season has been backward, and we must take this drastic step to unload. We have assembled from many of our stores broken sizes of desirable Suits and Overcoats which we have marked at Much Less Than Pre-War Prices We have made up our minds to sell and take our medicine, and we have decided to give the people of New York and vicinity a Sale that we are sure will not soon be forgotten. We have assembled our finest hand-tailored Men’s and Young Men's Suits in several lots in order to make it easy for you to Make a Quick Selection All sizes in different ranges from 33 to 46. $ 1 7:50 An excellent selection of this season’s best Selling Patterns. Suits in Brown, Blue Unfinished Worsteds; also this season’s newest craze, Black Herringbone Suits in all sizes. Single or doub’e $9 3:50 All Wool Smartly Tailored Suits, including all wool Blue Serge Suits. Every one hand tailored. Formerly priced $35 to $40. WHILE THEY LAST breasted. 1, 2, 3 button models. The finest hand-tailored Suits in Chalk Strpes, Browns, Blues and Greys. Tarlton Checks and a beautiful assortment of the finer cloths tailored in one button as well as conservative models. These are shown all over New York at from $50 to $60. WHILE THEY LAST................. $3 450 All Overcoats of the finer types have been greatly reduced. No alterations will be made on Suits at $17.50 and $23.50. New York etyle, New En; style or with the varia- tone that creep in- to the recipes in at home, is always better with a dash of that fine old flavoring Many other of this season’s finest Tailored Suits that retailed up to $65 have been greatly reduced for this sale. Sale Begins Thursday Morning —Extra Salesmen Will Be On Hand— DONNIEBROOK CLOTHES CHAIN SHIRT SHOPS AT THIS STORE ONLY 1268 BROADWAY, between 32nd and 33rd Sts.