T H E XT:W VORK CALL—TFESPAY. MARCH IR. 1015.
Ml Intc >rRighi c Power y.
»w The Cafr9 »«*Ol Bureau. March 16 ther step l n nicrpsl iijjfct
It jr; t h e c o m . sess ion , a p .
e c i t y | i o« t> r
commercia l been Intro-»t Madison, pport of th« ion assuring a*«aga. "•uiil c u t i l i t y
n i o n o p o l i ^ i 4 Wisconsin receives ths los of "ron-nr addit ional '"'ty of the Kin business ft< ate , even pally owned.
HZ in s ^»*# ainst the city 1 ojH>ratH>n of dmrnistratina
u pre me t mirt i ahead with * the street*
•>rk ha>fng b*. ity law wnn tnat the city
"g a n>mnaer public utiht? must first get road Comens
r the cdty to meroial plant •th the Mil
»d -Light Cots-1 Commission hat it would
li'-ste of eon-r utility was
service, th*» !te air. ny.
erroit the Ht» g business « f can sum ess trie com pan v gislature, the erection of ,t site already
ry plant built <"»n is a! read* to one of the
Apart nt Days arch 15.—A re born here a i different
heir mother . y - t w o , l a d o
o m s h o r t l y \ d g i a home. Folgta was
re she gave ton pounds
Is and one-
Five firemen aroship New Iverpool yes-need to s i s nak ing false
med to be t to be Aus-xth fireman.
na tura l i sed ded for fur-
lid rushed
larch 15. -entire family p»r home with lei. U rear*
dead when rs ; ' I reoe, ft:
baby are i*
ed was the been made.
BY MINE
Athens dis-agency here bat t le exul
ts the Qoe-h w f t fifty-
a r m o r belt, rkfsh mine. ut of eom-
the recen t been with-
• and tha t removed to Dardanel les allied fleets •e Admiral
ST,
*X AND ,M>, I M P
Rhine , " the rlie, a lways en chi ldren age he al-. So h a r d
yes terday 1m of over-e years old
cage more Mis death
r" honors Miss Mur-babooa. o*
W E E K . flower show Val Palace
eat est floral I city. Soma offered, and ty will com*
L^JJJM
wsoz. J-I AWB
R E S T I 8 V ^ 0 8 *
ug Store
IPflTTFRS* RillIUBOSETSEMRCESCAUSE
WINS ASSEMBLY
Measure to A l l o w Accused T r a c t i o n Workers to Confront I n f o r m e r s Passes Lower House.
Lower House Hastens to Recall Four Anti-
Lindsey Billls.
>\
Boy Lochinvar Defies 6fcC >ad," Runs Off With Schoolgirl Sweetheart
^
gaCRAMENTO. Marcii U.—-La.or unions won their Brat victory in the legislature yesterday when the As-gwnhly. by a vote of <iu to If*, passed tie "spotters" i ill. The measure, ln-'oliced and fathered l»y Assembly
man Ryan of San Francisco, requires (liat railroad*. I car companiea
•rporations employing sspo-dai agents shall Rive employes i-haitcd with misconduct a s oppor-ttiBity to defend themselves by i>eng esafronted with the so-called '"spotter' making the accusation.
Ryan, m hi« speech for the bi sail that he wished every member I 0{ tn. Isaemhl> could have before I him the San Francisco Bullet i s , m> nhieh wa.H run a serial story und«r
> T - 1
DE.STER. March 15.—A hurried effort on the par t of t he lower Hou^e of the Legislature to recall the four anti-Ltndsey bills from the Senate for reconsiderat ion was reported in prospect-today, a.** a result of the sudden prominent c. which has been given the measures following the arrest of Representative. W. W. Kowland and charges made by Judge Lindsay.
The four bills, providing for the naming of an extra district judge to handle the Juvenile Court work, hav*» been passed by the House. The House is said to desire to reconsider the bills, and if again voted on their de feat is predicted.
i lowland was still in jail tod*?, ha ring i»een confined in a ceil tinea Saturday night charged with perjury. The Orand Jury today will t ake up I its Investigation of the psckage >f I money handed to Howland on the floor of the House, and definite action may also be taken on the question of expelling him from the Legislature.
was run t.tlc. "The Contessiona of a Spot
.: IMG i n E I D M G E I T FHS ESPEHJUITO UPBIT ID1
i Sentl n of the Assembly,' said I f Y i a n l a v « r*f R n A k a P u m n h orj waa exposed the *J*Hr**y* Ol D O O K S , r d i n p n -
lets and All Kinds of Literature in 'Lingvo' Shown.
wftote spotter system as operated by the railroad and street railway companies litis par t icular spot ter contested in*1 he had caused i s s o c e s t m«o—conductors and other employes ®f th* roads—to «>e «Jisc|iarged without anv evidence against them, on tSJUrge* which they could not prove
Several hundred men and women last night a t tended t he first Esper-
their innocence, hecause they were | anto exposition ever held in New $a» ed the right of confronting th<dr j Vork City, .n the i^ibor Church. I i th acruset. end also t i c r teh t of pro- j street and Second avenue, where it ducing e\ iden«-e in their own behalf." • will continue tonight and tomorrow
Thv ;-Ii 1 w a s m a d e t h e s u b j e c t of j n i g h t . »spirited ncht in 'h<- I^abor and I api- . Display of books, pamphlets , maSa-laj Committee dur ing t he Janua ry ses . I s i a s s and postcards in the universal Son, wh«>n counsel for the rai l roads {"Lingvo" formed the bulk of the ex-;uvi street car companies opposed s lpos iUon . The great advance which factorable recommendat ion for the I Espersj i to is mak .ng all round the weasm ;. The onlj concession g r s s t - » globe was amply demonstra ted by the ed the corporat ions was a reduction ] mul t i tude of boohs, scientific medical, of the penalty for violation, which was made a misdemeanor with a Maximum tine of $300 and a county jail sentence. The 1 ill now goes to the f«enale. where a fur ther fight is expected.
WOULD FORGE CIO LINES NORTH CAROLINA BLOCKED SIN OIEEO WORKERS CUT, TO C I CHEAPER RIDES FROM CRIED LABOR LAWS IS FOREMEN IRE RAISED
Hoan Seeks to Reopen Case Won by Company
by Fluke.
Frew The CmlTi Milwaukee Bureau.
MILWAUKEE. March 15—City Attorney* Hoan has filed a petition witn the Wisconsin Railroad Commission, asking a rehearing of the eommis-
Trustees of National Com-1 Bitter Protests Raised Over mittee Reveal Unworthy
Move of Overman,
"North Carolina has the least effective child labor law of all the industrial States, and it was one of her Senators who blocked the way to a federal law in the Senate that has just adjourned. " This statement was
Injustice of Expense Cutting.
1
sion'a order vacating its former order | m a d e - ^ e v e n l n g at the quarterly directing; t he Milwaukee Electric - m e e t l n g o f l h e B n a r d o f Trustees of
i Railway and Light t 'ompany to sel thir teen instead of twelve tickets for
j .-•© cents, and twenty-six for $1, in-j s.ead of twenty-five.
The commission rescinded its order ! on the plea that the profits of the I railway company were decreasing, | and would not n a r r a n : a decrease in
fare. In his petition, Hoan charsrea tha t
the company's bad service is responsible lo r the decreased revenues. The industrial depression is also to blame. he e-aya. but he asserts t ha t the com-
! mission has no right to insure the j company against such depression, es-I peeially since all other businesses I must weather it without govern-| mental aid.
The case which caused the rescind 1 ing order. Hoan decliret., was brought fin the interests of the railway com
pany, and not in that of Christ Woechsner, Mayor of Cudahy, whose
, name appeared in the original peti-j t on, i iu 1 City Attorney points out
tha t Woechsner acted as a private l individual, without any au thor ty
th€ National Child i^abor Committee, a t the home of Dr. Felix Adler, by A. J . Mctvelway, Southern secretary of the committee, whose headquar ters have been in Washington ever since the Pa lmer -owen child labor bill was introduced in < odtfprses a year ago. Dr. McKelway said further:
"Thin winter the cotton manufacturers of North Carolina sm'ceeded first in de iVatin?- all child labor legitdatioa before the State Legislature. Tney packed the Committee on Mnnufa* tsiSS, to which the child labor bill was referred. Their lobby, forty strong appeared before their
From th0 CaTfi San Dicpo Bureau.
SAN DUOO, C^al.. March KV--Hu»-dieds of complaints have been registered against the action of the City Council here in euttins wares of city employes
The men whoso wages have bees cut are the di iahtvrers in th<» Water asd Sewer and similar denartnaent«*.
The foremen and superintendent** \\;,j-es tons n»t t>e,-»c rSsscad »>u the contrary, nuuiv of the salaries for the department h**3ds have been incressed. l>ut. ass r r the plea of "curtailment as IKpSSSas*** the p«>«vr fellows who do the actual work have had their wagfs cut devn to S2.«K> a day.
This is not suftVicnt to kee^ the fami Hea of these norfcera supplied with th« ordinary ne*,essitit,«. and resentment asaim't the local politicians is growinf I err hitter.
The worker* have been pointing to th# fact that the hx-al politicians misled the
ci>mraittet» to urge the astarorshte report j v..ters Into voting several mitltona of del that followed. Thcu thej beessas sJsrsMM I lara to rive to miUkmsire John 1».
sport of feileral tefSttStios, and J Upreekel* for ac the pro _ appesles to Senator Overman t-» driest it. Tnder the antiquated rules of the Seuatc, e/bea the bill was reached on the calendar, one objerttos was surhcient. to peerest ceawtdtration, and Senator liver-man objected. Thus, with Senator Over-irau contending that child labor is H State
I problem, and his inaui'f;ieturuig COSStit-uent< able to defeat State legislation, the
PHILIP
from the people of Cudahy; that he I voung children of the North Carolina cot la not a citizen of Milwaukee, and, j \on ;njUs make apical to State and to
option in vain "" therefore has no interest whatever in the effects of the commission's order.
The intimation is plain that Woechsner was merely acting as a stool pigeon for the street railway, and the . evidence would seem to bear out the intimation.
Turkey Takes Steps to Protect Aliens ir0p;monf%he
.
ATHENS, March 15. A dispstrb it Salor.ica says that Henry Morgeu-
tauii. the I'uited States Ambassador Is Turkey, h.ts demanded assuram-cs from the Turkish tcoerninent that foreigners in Constantinople will he protected and •rue- maintained if the <it\ is bombsrd-td. N'r. MorgeutbsH hsa urged all for-tis!"'fH to !>me the capital, but the eio-««> i». hampered bj the rongrstioji <>n the ttiiw.i.v*.
Ottoman authorities are taking ex-trf!iie measures tor the protection of Christians, as an outburst of fanatkaan a feared ;it any time. Daily s rviees are beiu^ hekl in the mosques and the citi-
- are there assured that Coaatanti-IH-I>'.' is not threatened, and that the I'. H.ine!>> ar»- impregnable. Despite th's tr«>ri. hev are hesrsg dug around the •ity and esj>eciall.\ at the railroad station, whei" a great number of troops are atscrntrated Fern- that the British and French will land au army are openly ex-pres>»«I
literary and educational on display 'Socialist l i terature was also shown.
Hooka and pamphle ts from every* j country in the world were shown. | Special post card collections were on i exhibit, one of them, furnished by an [ at torney, A. J . Arnold, containing I _',000 cards. Others were shown by j Joso Chant Leips, and Diont/io An-' tonia Klajin.
e odd exhibits were a py of the Communist Manifesto,
works by Wllhelm Liebknecht, and "Rules for Baseball." all done In Esperanto. A Chinese Esperanto Socialist newspaper was also shown on the special Socialist table.
Songs in Espenanto will be t he feature at tonight ' s program.
Mrs, Rockefeller Put In Archbold's Vault
"Just 16" is th«* age of Philip Hone (making days, but I^eRoy Jones, who. with t he boldness j "papa of ». Lochinvar, and the full purse of a young prince, ran off from New York City the other day with his schoolmate, Margaret Andrews, aged 17.
The two had been planning to get
papa" Jones an Andrews ins sted tha t bo*
be of legal age before setting sail o the good ship matr imony. The l a w ! was against them, too, but Philip ' heard about Tennessee, where m a r - | riage laws a re lax in regard to age. So with a bank roll of $700 th j
SROES, BUSY AFTER • B O M B FIASCO, LINE UP 40
married ever since their mud pie | eloped to Bristol. Tenn.
TO WAR[)_PEA CE The German Chancellor's Letter—What He
Ought to Do—German Trade Unions Secretary's Opinion on Peace.
Follow Up Great Detective Work by Arresting
Real Crooks.
With only the family and servants attending, the body of Mrs. John D, Rockefeller. Sr.. was yesterday placed in John I). Archbold's vault at Sleepy Hollow Cemetery, at Tarrytown. A decision regarding final disposition of the body will be ma fie later.
Rockefeller, his son and other members of the family followed the hearse. Flowers were banked inside the vault, where brief simple services were held.
Sanger Case Put Off; Raise Defense Fund
The trial of Will tain Sanger, who was arrested Jammrv l*J by Anthony Co»-utick charged with distributing a copy «*' "Family Limitation*." was postponed by joint agreement until April VL
A S| : : . •• defense fund has been *tar>"d; ••: which Leonard I>. Abbott is tbt president. A coilectios wib be taken B| all over 'he country, as Sanger's case la* won the sympathy of Ubrrty-torrri is It tlie State*.
Caught Between Cars, Banker Badly Hurt
Attempting to stand between two of the gondola-shaped Broadway cars, as they passed In opposite directions. Edwin E. Bernheimer. of the banking firm of Je rome J Danzig & Co., was badly injured a t Rector street yesterday. A policeman dragged him from under the t rucks and carried him to his office nearby. He was reported hur t internally.
That great detective work a t St. Patr ick 's Cathedral a couple of Tuesdays ago must have been the lure tha t brought about forty of the most noted crooks, thieves, murderers , etc., eU'.. in the land to th is city. For there they were yesterday, all lined up at police headquarters , forty of 'cm, and
j the police just as proud as peacocks : t ha t they had made such a rich "haul"
in one single day. The forty, there are none bet ter in
i the land, so the police say. had their pedigrees read off by Inspector Faurot
We receive daily a plethora of European news dealing with « f c y « f r *»»»*» P y fcr g g ben-events and opinions that are designed to inflame the popular mini. | probably to forestall any more "ras-
And little, very little, is allowed to pass th.it ! !««• of churches and skyscrapers, loot -, , , ' i t ,- ( ! • . . A , mgs of banks and slaughter of mil-
WOlild s h o w US t h e fee l ing Oi t h e m i l l i o n s w l o • i i o n f t i r ea" like the one tha t caused the are longing for peace. The man or woman th tt j rehjn of newspaper terror two weeks dares to talk of peace in the belligerent countries a B £ m o n j c t h o s e p r e s e n t w e r e Harry is speedily overwhelmed by an avalanche <>f abuse. Moreover, the governments are doing all in their power to prevent the ventilation of the most pressing question of the day.
The German Chancellor now assures us in a letter written to a friend that "we cannot yet discuss in detail all the questions which must l»e solved at and after the conclusion of peace. May the day soon come,'' he goes on, "when the fetters shall be struck oft" from a free conflict of opinions." These sentences probably refer to a
desire expressed by men-of all political parties in Germany to l»e free to utter their opinions on the problem of peace. That agit <-tion for the liberty of expressing oneself on the peace terms has been going on for several weeks.
successful diplomatic coup; he wou d
Owen R. I>»vejoy. general secretary of the National Child Lsssr Committee, reported on the general work of the Corn-
He ^aid: "We have helped to procure a 1-i-year limit in the cotton mills of Alabama, and a compidsory education law has just been passed in ftostfe Carolina. Important bills are still peuding in several States, notably Pennsylvania, Michigan. Illinois and Iowa. l*nit our dsfests in West Virginia ami North Carolina, and our hot fights in Arkansas and Alabama, make us realize that what we have accomplished is easy and obvious by comparison with that which remains to be done. We need the power of the Federal Government to drive child labor from its worst stroucrhobis. aud r.s soon ns the new Congress meets we <dmll begin a fresh campaign for a federal law."
Felix Adler is chairman of the Committee and the Board of Trnstees includes Jane Addams. Howell Cheney. Homer Folks. Ethvard T. Hevine. Mrs. Florence Keliev, Adolph liCwisohn and Chas. l \ NeiM.'
J . hoet tgen.
TWINS BOUJI IV STATION. Stricken on her way to the Herald
re shopping district, Mrs. Anna Rav. wife of Joseph Ray, a tailor of whitestone, L. i.. gave birth to twins ja the woman's rest room at the
sylvanla Railroad station yester-f'r J. H Brewster, the railroad
s physician, a t tended her. The new arrivals are both boys.
'FRISCO SFKCIAL MKLTfXG. * SAX FRANCISCO, March 15.—
Whether the taxpayers of this city ahatl submit to a special tax to provide a fund for advertising San Fran-tlsco more extensively is t he Issue a t • special election todav.
HAIMOWITZ BROS. Silks and Dress Goods
b u t REDUCTION SALE IN ALL SEASONABLE
MATERIALS BKON-X STORE:
871 PROSPECT AVE. coawis n\vt BTBSXI. HARLEM STORK:
1376 FIFTH AVENUE *0aTHwlST CORKS* U«TH R U M
D O W N T O W N S T O R E :
87 HESTER STREET
$18,000,000 Direct Tax Avoidable, Says Glynn
"Xonseuse" is the word which Martin II. Glynn u*ed yesterday to characterize Governor Whitman's assertion that the people of this State must be subjected to au $1S,U*UI00 direct tax. The former Governor *aya that no direct tax at all is ueeessary this year, and that a levy can be avoided next year, too, if Mr. Whitman uses his veto power judiciously.
Y. P. S. L. Meetings There will be a Y. P. S. L. organiza
tion m««etiug at 427 25th street. Gutten-herg. X. J., this evening at a o'clock. Comrades of North Hudson should brin; every possible candidate.
M i V FIGHT F O R JOBS. From The CaW»
Farreft Bureau. F A R R E L U P a . March 15.—ilea
clamoring for jobs at the gate of the American Steel and Wire Company las* night caused a fight. Police officers of the company interfered and prevented a aerlous outbreak. On* man was arrested, charged with disorderly conduct, and waa fined $5 and costs
It is hard to see why the German Government should not allow such A public discussion to be carried on, and it is still harder to see why the German Chancellor does not come forth himself to inaugura te a discussion. He could never have a better opportunity than now. 11MS he not assured the German people again and again that they a re fighting for their national existence, t h a t envious neigh-bora have sworn to destroy Germany, politically and economically.- If he now came out boldly with the declaration tha t Germany would be willing to majte peace on the basis of the political s ta tus existing before the war he could not only claim to be consistent, but also as acting in the best interests of humanity. What would happen? If the opponents of Germany accepted such a basis the terms Of peace could not be materially different from those which, in the
Feinberg, Israel Brown and Victor Diamond, safe blowers; George Gordon and Albert Sehpitza. master safe men and noted for their specialty in banks; James Mayo. Michael Gilchrist and Henry Lindman, automobile thieves; Barney Neiber and Louis Le-vinsky, just burglars; Eddie Caron, Ar thur Gantx and Thomas Stone, jew-t l iv thieves, with Fedenco Tistati and Lulgi Stone, confidence men. Gieusep-pe Clarcello is a real count and wanted for murder in Italy.
PAGE RESERVES THAW DECISION
Cotut Will Decide Today Whether have queered his opponents ' pitch, as j Prisoner Will Go Back to English cricketers say. Xew Hampshire
Unfortunately. Dr. von Be thmann- I * Hollweg is not tne man to seize su. h j Justice Page, yesterday afternoon, an opportunity. Though he is repub d announced tha t he would reserve de-to be an honest, man he is too mu< Ix ' clsion on the motion of Har ry K. of a philosopher to act with vigor. {Thaw's at torneys to send Thaw back
The feelings of German workno n i to the jurisdiction of the New H a m p -concerning an early peace find expres- ' ahire courts, following his acquittal sion in a letter addressed by the se - ) on conspiracy charges. He said he retarv of the Internat ional Paintei V ! probably would rule on the motion Federation, Otto Streine, of Hamburg, J today. Pending; his decision. Thaw to the New York Painters* Dnion 49*. | was re turned to the T o m b s The writer complains about the mis- I «_——___ representation of Germany and the I < n n K T O W T * V I V T H I H - r u r German labor movement in oth. r j C O O K TO ** 1 A* v t ™ " l A S E ' countries, asserts that no real hatrf d j ALBANY. N. Y., March 15.—Dep-exists in Germany against any of the uty Attorney General Frank Cook, countries with which Germany is s i j who co-operated with Deputy Attor-war, and says: "If the represen t - • ney General Frankl in Kennedy in the
sumir n WIRE TRAFFIC HALTED Bf SHORT CIRCUIT
With a shove upon his compressed air drill, a laborer yesterday morning tied up subway traffic and telephone and telegraph service ln the 4i2d street district for two hours. The mishap occurred at t he junction of the new and old subway system s t 42d street and Broadway.
<iTeat clouds of snioke issued from the station a t Times Square from the short circuit caused by the workman ' s drill. The Seventy avenue, Broadway and Eighth avenue trolley lines were stopped by the shut t ing off of power.
F lames developed a t the point of the accident and crept over t imbers in the excavation at Seventh avenue, drawing close to big power and telephone wire conduits. The fire depar tment quickly flooded the subway at this point, extinguishing the blaze.
A workman, seen running from an opening near 42d street with a drill, was stopped by a policeman and forced to hand over the ins t rument to a Public Service Commissioner. This drill is declared to have been the one which caused the short circuit.
About 1,000 telephones in the Bryant district were out of commission until repairs were made.
E>piet'*Stl for a water system which ha* since pgores virtually srortbhMS, Added t<- tins, Spreek'ds has received hundreds of thousands of dollars to build his rail road Is Arizr-na, f->r •. hieh no return has been revived, and fh > railroad has not eves been built, although it wa« started tie re than ten years aso.
But this •qsssdering of the psofdVa mot;ev was set all. for in the last year great amonnts of money have been spent hy the eitv for the purpose of aiding the Exposition, and will be spent this year entertaining rich visitors.
And in the meanwhile the citisens of San It̂ earo are nanny of them without work, ami thousands of others are working for a miserable $2.00 a day.
Patient Shoots Nurse Then Wonds Self
MER1DEX. Conn.. March 15.—Mk« Josephine Flanagan, a nurse s t the New Haven < ounty Tuberculosis Sanatorium here, was shot four times by a patient, Gt-orga Pinter, in a shack for men in mates t t the institution a t h o'clock this morsing. Pinter reloaded his revolver and shot himself four times.
Miss Flanaean has a chance of recovery, but Pinter, removed to the Meridon Hospital, was said to be fatally hurt Miss r ianagss is ,'¥> years old and came to the sanatorium four years ago from , New York City. Pinter is about «5 years ' old aud is married.
No reason for tne attempted mnrder H known and the physicians say Mies Flanagan cannot be questioned oaring to h o injuries.
VOTliS BONDS F O R (TTY TO GIVE WORK TO IDLE
From The- CsJ/'i Aires Bureau.
AKRON, Ohio. Msrch W.—One of the biggest s teps toward relieving the distress among the unemployed was taken here this week, when the voters approved the issuance of bonds for $600,000 for t he construction of water works to be run by the city. Work on the dams and sluice * ways and water works site will begin in thir ty days.
Try "La Metioonhise" A f l s s i OherAtosl l a b o r a
tories. Now York.
Cms, Fact ftvfa, Tvur OvBStiat «r by
Wvtto tea r»tt«*.
s e
NO DANGER OF TYPHOID IF YOU USB
HIGH-6ROUND DAIRY CO. PASTEURIZED BOTTLBD MILK
447 MADISON STREET. BROOKLYN
Thaw case, will continue into the case. Attorney General Woodbury announced today. Mr, Cook wanted to come back to Albany to take up impor tant work before the Court of
France, and Russia rejected tha t basis [ tries pressing on her from all sides, j Claims, but after he talked over the
lives of labor in the various countries now differ in their opinions on a -count of their not unders tanding ot r
opinion of all cool observers, will have position and the great danger to whit r to be signed eventually. If England, j Germany is exposed from the coun-
Young Suicide Was Bride for a Night
SCHENECTADY. N. Y., March 15.— Julia Weigle. 17, who committed suicide with gaa at a 42d street house, New York, Friday night, was the bride for a single night of Franz Wger, 58, physical instructor of the Schenectady Turn-verein. They were married by the Mayor on December 7 and the following day the bride left him to start annulment proceedings. She had been missing from her home here for two weeks.
CALLAHAN'S uo . « r Grand HATS
•sea
PEARSONS is the only Magazine
of its kind
?
he German Chancellor would j we yet agree with all real friends o i strengthen his position immensely labor tha t uninterruptedlv all mus t be with the German people. At the same I done to shorten the terrible d r ama t f
telephone with t he Attorney General It was decided tha t Mr. Cook should remain In the Thaw case.
S K I L L F R A C T T R E D BY PALL. Thomas Young, 29 years old. a pro-
l fessional golfer, living at 11 West j S-'.rd street, is in a serious condition in
Knickerbocker Hospital due to a fractured skull received when he fell from
' his own porch to the area way of the house next, door late last night.
£15!E " Peter Brew Tit WB. Tttif BrtwU, G*
IJMTOJf BXIJL. tL JL
•ILK8 AND DJRESiS GOODS LATEST nrnoTsJrwm IM
Spring and Summer Mats rials Tks L'.wran- u 4 Hrtn«d !»•*• Will Had S»ttaf»et.'«.
HAI1VIOWITZ BROS. - SSOKX tTCEX
r I ft i1 • a I IIAgXJtM IT OSS
1t7fi Pirrk Ave POST STOWS iTCmi
rW*P St
time he would have aroused to action all those peaceful elements in the allied countries, who are only waiting to assert themselves. For the first time tn his life T>r. von Bethmann-Hollweg would have brought oil a
war. and to prevent others from taking place, and that the organizatio -« of labor must be maintained: for o n v these can reach the great goal aft. r having become stil! more powerful and influential than hi ther to ."
Mayo, Love Wizard, Is Hoboken to Vote for TakenonGiiTsCharge Commissioners Todav
N I V HA YEN. Conn.. March Iftr— Virginiu* 1. Mayo, central figure in the ousdrangtilar love mystery revolvin? about th* disappearance of one of hi* stenographers, was arrested tod-ay charged with being the father of Miss Susan Wah-ler's chill. Mayo furnished bad for hi
The election of Commissioners aecor -ing to the recently adopted eommissk a form of government will be held in H— boken today. Five Commissioners are >
SVXDAY WAS ROUGH WITH MR. COMMON PEEPL'L
One m a n was killed and thi r teen persons injured In Sunday automobile accidents in and around New York. Richard Megge, a laborer, was run down and killed by an automobile truck driven by Isidor Kauffman, while crossing the Bowery a t Delan-cey s t r ee t
Four were hur t , one probably fa
16 Chums of 4 Dead Boys to Be Pallbearers
Sixteen small boys who had been the friends of the four boys killed in the gasoline explosion a t the Crews-Levlck Oil Company's works in Brooklyn will carry the bodies to the grave today. The funeral takes place s t 10 a.m. from the Lutheran Church of the Reformation, Barbey atreet, near Arlington avenue. In terment will bo in Evergreen cemetery.
This is why:— Three years ago Pearson'sdecidedto be a free magazine.
This is what it did.-— ABANDONED FANCY COVERS CUT OUT COLORED PICTURES ADOPTED PLAIN PAPER
This was the purpose:—
G R E E K S H I P HELD U p H E R E ; ASIATIC CHOLERA SUSPECTED
The Greek s teamship loanna was held up a t the Quarantine Station yea-
tally. when an automobile skidded and i terday on the repor t by Dr. O'Con-went into a ditch near lanwood, N. J. B. F . Pohle, of Camden, who was driving the car, suffered a broken knee and a rm and was severely bruised. His wife's mother, Mrs. Mary Whitman, suffered a fractured skull. be elected on a so-called n»n partisas
ticket. Fifty-one candidates sre in t l « ' * n d ! t t s f*»red she will die. Mrs field int election. 1 Pohle and a daughter wgre severely
The five £<rfalisrs a r - : George Cornit.. bruised. Pohle 's young son. also ln appearance before Jsstirn Land for trial, j president Local a w . International Loo t h « c a r - escaped uninjured.
Miss Waaler was formerly employed | shoremen's Association: Charles Kieh i,; • l ike Lillian member of _Lo«*al 3i*x Interna tion J } ~
nell, a heal th officer, tha t two of the ship's passengers were suffering with Asiatic cholera. For some t ime past all vessels arriving from Mediterranean ports have been inspected closely for signs of this disease
The malady is declared to be raging to an a larming extent in the Mediterranean cities The loanna h a s 2 50 Greek immigrants aboard.
A plain form would enable the magazine to live on its income from subr scriptions and monthly sales. It would not have to consider the effect on advertisers when it wanted to print the truth about any public question.
This was the result.'—
bj Mayo as a stenographer. May Cook, who committed suicide, aiKUef member of Mac Longshoremen's Association: Paul Klin
loss Waterbnry, the mother of two Msyo's children, both former *
of
pliers to Mayo, Miss Waaler asserted that she came under the spell of the manufacturers magnetic love charm.*.
Mavo. sh*> alleged, in a civil action brought today, ia the father of her !i-yesr-old baby, Hazel. She asked the court to force Mayo to support the child.
DYNAMITERS TO PLEAD.
LOS ANGELES, QsJL March 15.— Matthew Schmidt and David Cap Ian. accused of participation in the Los Angeles Times dynamit ing plot, were to bo arraigned In the Superior Court today to plead in the charge of murder against them. Schmidt: was arraigned in New York and Caplsn on the coast. s<r Rnrns detectives, who had been
11 n ists' Union ; t h r i <-' tian Kura, member of Local iJOG, Carp* tens and Joiaers* Union, and En j t Schlueter, member of IJOCSJ 304. Intern -tional ijougshoremen'tt Association. ^
Every class - conscious workingm* n i should vote for these five candidates, i the tir*t choice. In order to make t e ballot legal five candidates must be vot»'d for In the first choice.
8-HOUR RILL D E F E A T E D . Frost T i e Csii •
*•• Maditon Burea MADISON, Wis., March 16.—Aft* r
passing* the 'Mil requiring an eigh -hour day in all work done for t i e State tn the printing business, t he Assembly changed their mind and voted down the measure, 81 to 4S.
Assent My msn Weber and Vint. 8i -
W E GIVE 10 PER CENT ON ALL T H E
Men's, Beys9 and Children's Clothing a id Furnishings BOUGHT IN OUR STORE BY CALL READERS.
Ask for a stamped envelope, with duplicate of your purchase, and mail same to The Call.
Read our big advertisement appearing in The Call on Sundays and Fridays.
The F\ & S. Store S. E. CORNER 84TH STREET AND THIRD AYENUE.
Pearson's now prints the troth about some question which affects your welfare in every issue. It prints facts which no magazine that depends on advertising could "afford' * to print.
And, with all this, Pearsons still prints as much fiction and entertainment articles as other magazines. If you want plain facts instead of pretty pictures buy a copy oa the news stand for 15 cents, or subscribe by the year for $1.60.
By special arrangement with Pearson's we are able to make you the following clubbing offer.
* One Year subscription to Th«
Sunday Call ($2.0U) and One Year subscription to Pearson's Magazine ($1.50) at the special combination rate of $ 2 - 2 5 -
Send order accompanied by mittance to
New York Call Untitled Document
file:///C|/Documents%20and%20Settings/Administrator/Desktop/hello.html2/18/2007 11:01:03 AM
Thomas M. Tryniski 309 South 4th Street Fulton New York 13069
www.fultonhistory.com