The evening world. Newspaper, September 28, 1911, Page 1

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l Rn Fre tren nie Cnn AAA RAARARARARAAAAAAARAAAS 0 AARAAAARAAAARARN AAANAN NARNARARAAAARARDARRRRRDIS RARPPRREDDEDEDLDOLD RRA AD AARRAARAD AAA ARADO AARAAAAAAAADAARADAA PADIS BRBRDDDAADI ADDY WEATHER—Clo Fi 75 cooler EDITION. ————— to. * PRICE ONE c Copyright, 2824) by 1 Co. (The New ENT. Che " Circulation Books Open fo All bed enn World), NEW YORK, THURSDAY, | SEPTEMBER 28, 1911. 35,000 10 0 ON THE HARRIMAN LINES, PERHAPS pane ene “Inevitable,” Says Head of La- bor Federations as Demands Are Denied. TIE-UP IS SURE TO COME. Monday, at Latest, Set for Big| Walkout of Shopmen on Pacifics. em- includ- Thirty-five thousand shopmen ployed upon the Harriman ling ing machinists, pare: metal workers and black- amiths, are expected to go on strike Monday. They may walk out as early as Saturday. This action was precipated this af- ternoon by Jullus Kruttschnitt, vice- President of the Harriman lines, at a meeting in this city. ‘The men's demande are: Recognition of their unions in a fed- eration. An eight-hour day. Wage advances ranging trom 7 % per cent. Before the close of the week it is| believed that 12,000 shopmen employed ‘on the Iilinols Central will be involved in the fight labor has declared against the Harriman roads. ADVANCED RATES FAILED, WAGES MU T BE CUT, At No. 120 Broadway special meetings were held to-day of the directors of the Unton Pacific, the Southern Pacific, the Oregon Short line and the Navigation Company, which together constitute the Harriman lines, OMictals pointed to the wage advances made @ year ago, which were based upon expected advances in freight rates. “But wo never got tho increased freight rates," said a high official, “and as a matter of justice wages ought to go back again instead of going higher. Caught between the wheels of labor demands and Govern- ment rate regulation, we refuse to budge one inch from our position, which is against any wage increases At this time. REASONS GIVEN BY OFFICIALS FOR DENYING DEMANDS. After the announce correspondence was given Union Pacific offices: Davenport, Ia., Sept. to so nt, the following the out at Julius Kruttschnitt, Vice. Union Pacific Ratiway, We are officially instruc organizations thro’ agree ton the shop federations or to notify you that we have no other alternative but to give our approval and per- mission to the men on tho lines you Fepresent to quit work, We will ex- pect an answer so that we can range to meet you by noon ot Thursday next at Chio: for the purpose of making arrangements as an Send reply to Ja Davenport, Hotel, (Signed) J. W O'CONNE! telegram was The following reply made by Vice-Pr New Yor by nt Kruttsehnitt Sept, 27, Replying to M4, my prese it imposs! Chicago Thursda gram of of course Sept makes to meet you in noon, If the essentials of admit aly and considera ment of the hig! territories served by lines, the suara ospitable and g erous pens ts have not been auflicient to deter our shopmen from Is in the and terminating ag nts insuring these conditions ni rom time tn ence with t unions, ) spendin five mo evising ne and means lostroy ex montous relat! and, more ms, (Continued on Second Pa, bollermakers, car re-| ON STRIKE ON SITUA LEAVES $100,000 TO CARRY ON HER CHARITABLE WORK |Dr. Augusta Reed Before Death Designated Mrs. William G. Brown as Custodian. SHE LOVED ANIMALS. Was Also Interested in Work- ing Girls’ Hotel and Crippled Children’s Home. To the many social and club activi- tles of Mrs. William Grant Brown, president of the Federation of Women's | Clubs, was added to-day the responsi- | bility of carrying out another woman's | programme of benevolent and humane educational charities. The will of | Charles B, Reed, which was filed y terday, transferred to Mrs, Brown | $100,000 with which to carry on Mrs. | Reed's lifework. Dr. Augusta Reed died Feb. 9. She died sharing with her husband a firm | belief in the transmigration of souls. One reason for her concern for the] T humane treatment of animals, in addi- tion to a notable tenderness of heart, was the belief that animals were our| J ‘Yesser brothers,” embodying souls which would later enter human shapes, She also believed in soul communica- tion after death, Mr. Reed died only @ few weeks after tus wife, believing that many messages had passed between them, His will was not based on spirit messages, but on an undertanding that had existed between | the Reeds and Mrs, Brown for many |! years. They had been the closest of friends for fifteen years, aft CLUB wo. the Levy The case was an appeal from Supreme Court Justice the law Gavegan's ‘Three other Justices concurred. Clarke dissented ARMY AVIATOR IN A MISHAP. Hin Macht pee “NO GOOD TRUSTS,” OMAN I, EFT $100,000 TO USE FOR CHARITIES. LEVY LAW HELD CONSTITUTIONAL BY HIGHER COURT cision of Justice Gavegan, Four to One. The Appellate Division this afternoon rend 1 its decision in the matter of Law Gavegan's decision that was omstitut! he Appellate div ‘onal n reversed Justice deciston, declaring thereby the law constitutional, ustice Ingraham wrote the opinion. Justice Struck the Ground at Nassau Boulevard, (Special to The Evening World.) BOULEVARD, L. 1, ‘Theodore E, Ellison of the Army took a header thin ernoon in starting on the passenger. Sept. Mrs, Reed's charitable work was not |4rrying contest altogether directed toward. animais,| When about to make the firat turn @he took a lively) interest ia: the Besers (Nie ae ne struck the ground, break- ation Hotel for Working Girls in Twen- plane. Lie Ellison was ty-second street and in the Home for it not injured. Harry Hall, Crips n and in many of the |one of Ellison's menchanicians, which try to make human guf-|W@8 in the mac! with him, The less hard to b spill excited the crowd Aephas humait mee hiacesas Ison, after getting out of ‘his ma- stantly strove to have courses teaching | aptisere asinine It was altogether ie ton emda R RT. c. Wi WINS S $5,000 TROT. pited kne @ and skill to ree rd and final heat 2.12 tro T ¢ She started the mo for the 1 A 1 \ " animal fountain at Rivers Drive and urth, 7 8 34. One Hundred and Sixieenth street and) 7 A nA y, Lewts with her Wax one of the larg-|) Nbeesaay Hiei me . est contributors te fund for tt, Appellate Division Reverses De- | *"* | SAYS PRES IN KEYNOTE SPEECH All Monopolies Are Illegal, He Says, and the Sherman Law Will Be Enforced to the Letter. WATERLOO, Ia., big business interests that there are no “good” trusts, that all monopolies are illegal and that the trust managers might as well reconcile them- selves to the inevitable because the Administration intends to dissolve in restraint of trade along the lines laid down by the de- cision of the United States Supreme Court. all monopolies This 1s a section #trongly favoring the “Progressive” principles of Senator Al- vert B. Cummins of Jowa. Possibly thar is why the President selected this date location for an attack upon the progressive movement insofar as it In- volves indiscriminate attacks upon the banking and business interests of the East. Earnestly and forcibly the Prest- dent pleaded for calmness and restraint in working out the problems presented by the rapid development of the business | interests of the count Agitation in one part of the country against the interests of another part of the country will result in disaster to the whole country, the President said, effect he stated t have grown up from non-enforcement of the laws against monopoly are being reme that ff legislation had best be followed along Mnex to be rec ommended by the Tariff Board. TIME TO CALL HALT ON SPIRIT| | OF HOSTILITY. “We have reached @ point,” sald the President, “where we can call a halt, ressive movement to keep ness free from abuses, but where we can call a halt against appeals to a spirit of pure hostility to prosperity on the theory that no one can be pros- perous without being dishonest or @ iwtor of the law.” The President plunged right Into his subject with his opening remarks said there are four points at which the olicies of Congress and the Federal Executive touch the business of the country ina vital way ‘They are,’ he continued, “first, in t of Interstate commerce and the regulation of ratiroads and t of transportation between the in the enforcement of combinations to monopolize second, forbidding interstate trade in industrial com- panies; third; in the amendment of |tariff legislation affecting chiefly the manufactures of the country; and, fourth, in the furnishing for the use f the b f the a pro and reney system automatically give an tins the busines ispiring # confidence railroads the ation that request of $100 to Mrs. Brown — ee ——————- - —— ST seed vie thinks De tees vould ao it ene | HOW Cubs Might Yet Win Flag; BE yon Rr go Giants Can't Cinch It in Chicago eart to do rings with e 1 uring e pregen ( and fans who were specu. ished. My people have all been | Including to-day'a game the Giants have fifteen more games to play and a for suffielently and I believe I the Cubs ten To win the pennant the Cu must ¢ wht of these ave nt to mak my oney ive ten games while the Glants ‘ losing twelve of th ning fifteen. after a orking for the s toward [phe standing of both clubs then would J witen T have tried to 4 t work. 1 @tants L. Pc. Cabs w. & Po, |$ ake the respons Another ne of figures save if the Giant tak ee remain L. games tn ako thely standing will n, ay. If Chleago should win these 8 total and OL lost, ‘Therefore the Glants, assuining that they w cub heed only win on se! the flag, If Chance tests the Polo Grounders must win seven o! fifteen battles to Anish rr kames Sept: 28.—In a carefully prepared address on the relation of Government to the business of the country President | Taft outlined here to-day what must be the issues upon which he will go before the country for renomina In| t the evils whtch | He |! DENT TAFT tion and re-election. He warned the gress by which the powers of the Ine torptate Commerce Commission enfarged. President Taft gave It ay his opinion that the country now has ef- |fective and Impartial machinery for effecting reforms in raltroad rates and siuating grievances of shippers and gore without additional restric. tive leginlation, | OETERMINED TO ENFORCE THE LAW AGAINST TRUSTS. Next the President took up the sub- | sect of trusts and gave his view of the| meanng of the Supreme Court decision on the Sherman law. ‘Then he relter- ated his determination to enforce the y without discrimination: Critteism has uttered tn no | measured tone against the activity of [the Department of Justice In the Instt lution of prosecutions and bills of equity under the Anti-Trust law, on the ground that tt 1s hurting busines said the President. “It is the sworn uty of the Executive to enforce the jaw, and as long as such combinations exist and are known to exist to the law officers of the Gc been nment In any way they would be lacking in thelr duty If t prosecute t ‘They are rders to treat the prosecu- tion of trusts Ike the bringing of any other suits which are within the scope and duty of the Department of Justice, and I must decline to admit that there Any discretion which would enable the Attorney-General and his assistants to stay the hand of the Government * respect of such violations of law. be long continued, that the business ¢ If is rapidly the taking tn the decisions of the Supreme munity It effect Court, and that we may expect a revo lution of feeling on the attitude of bust toward this ste [THE FIGHTIN G FACE OF J. P,. MORGAN IN HIS 73D YEAR. ONE RAT, ONE DOG, ANMILLIN RUMORS IN BROADWAY 1AM Explosion in Auto Brings To- gether a Typical Gaping New York Crowd. F ‘Thirty: It was noon at eventt street and Broadway in stepped out in the middle of Thirty-seventh st fol- lowed by a squirming, barking Ittle rat terrier, In is hand the man carried a rat-trap and tn the trap was a rat Obviously the man was going to re- lease the rat and the terries was goluit to eatch it and kill tt. Half a dozen men and boys stopped to see the sport; A man had shot a woman A woman had shot a man In ao Two men had b A woman had kill a cab and had committed » same ca One man in one cab had killed a man in another cab. a heard the » eritiotam, men engaged in business, ¢ Prust law, It is diffeult for 1 with them, I don from som the Antl }to think measure competit poly { statute ed which establish, a ine bet those 1 ex that are | reasonat at are not—those that are beney and those that are inconselonable sible, and th expressly so decided. Mourning over « ‘condition which is inevitable te use {axa until they realize that their views jim this regard must be radically changed their complatnte must fall upon deaf ears, POSSIBLE TO LOWER TARIFF AND NOT HURT BUSINESS. pect to tari aws, the bust country to-day rests upo @ tari? basis. Eve tariffs in such i lane 4 « tariff or not The from a protective for revenue only 1 to sting business and must lead to business depression and at least temporary business dis- aster, But there are many, and I am ‘among those, who belt: that protec- |tion in the past has been too high, and ail ether (Continued oa Second Page) ry A chauffeur had been shot by a pas-| housands, Mterally thousands, of busy TAFT DEFINES THE STATUS OF THE TRUSTS PRIC E ONE OENT. _ OVERRAN HE WILL ORDER REPEAL OF NEW BOXING LAW Dix Will Send Message to the Legis- lature To-Morrow Urging Law- makers to Kill the Fraw- ley Measure. #|\COMMISSIONERS REVOKE LICENSE OF GARDEN CLUB Tom O’Rourke, However, Gets Back Permit Taken Away From Him Last Week. Gov. Dix late this afternoon at Albany announced that he would NATIONAL LEAGUE. AT CHICAGO, fifty men and boys stor Then a} GIANTS— couple of hundred Joined the crowd on 10000 — the outskirts of which were a few] CHICAGO— hak 00200 - Just then an automobile turned into Batterles—Mathewaon and Meyers, Cole Thirty-seventh street from Broadway. lang Archer. It was a high powered car, The chauf- ay: feur slowed down to get through the ne st. LOuin crawd, and then speeded up again, Aw he turned on his power the exhaust | BROOKLYN— spat four times with & nolwe Nke four ooo -, pistol shots. ST. LOUIS— “A man just got shot tn w cab! 101 “a yelled a quick thinker on the corner, a tintldaoraxd bad) dimetiay Bandas Up and down Broadway «ped the |ora Wingo. news e = AT PITTSBURG, Batieries nd gimons. PHILADELPHIA— ; 21100000 » | PITTSBURGH 00000000 Moore and Carter; O'Toole -->—— AMERICAN LEAGUE, mG paused in thelr dally pursuits toward in f the AT NEW YORK, tragedy, They ran through|§T, LOUIS— Thirty- ‘enth ti “ and} vo4aa4 re nbh at Seven'h | HIGHLANDERS— ene shangenga nan Broadway t s and followed the | crowd of the seventh stree hopped from hix o and f re us nt > and p The hautte 1d to fight hi way into the | ip breathless He build been sho f ofl York Honpitai, where it im aaid he will | Bere | gecover. 3 AT WASH.NGTON, DETROIT— 00001 | WASHINGTON— O00 0:0 15 - 00 und Stanage AT PHILADELPHIA, 2030010 sialeroom res CLEVELAND— 2 1 10200000 0—3 © | ATHLETICS-~ v5 103000 —9 AT BOSTON, | CHICAGO— | 0100002 - | BOSTON— _ FOR BASEBALL REPORTS SEE PAGE 12, > vations and Uehets ra Hog: send a message to the Legislatur¢ to-morrow asking for the repeal of the law creating a State Boxing Commission He considers the workings of the law far from satisfactory, and is being used for purposes not contem- plated when he signed the Frawley bill. The Governor summoned vley, father of the bill, to his office to-day. The Senator requested that the law be given a further trial, but the Governor was obdurate. SCORES TO-DAY ‘The quibbiings of the Boxing Commis- stoners, the resignation, from the Cem- mission of James I. Sullivan, tha trouble over Madison Square Garden and the Flynn-Morris bout, described in some of the newspapers as @ spectacle full of gore, have bad a cumuletive ef fect on Gov, Dix, He has found the. every difference of opinion bdetweer Commistsoner O'Neill and Commissioner Dixon has been put up to him. He was put In the position of ordering, througt the Attorney-General, the revocation of the Hcense of the Madison Square Ath. letic Club, which has been giving touts in Madison Square Garden, The Gov. ernor 18 tired of having to give hhe personal attention to boxing matters, and strong pressure has been brough: upon him by reMgious bodies all over the State to revoke the legal sanction to boxing exhibitions. FRAWLEY WANTS LAW TO HAVE LONGER TRIAL. Senator Frawley does not think the bill should be repealed, He thinks the workings of the law will become emoothed out after the preliminary met- ters are out of the way. The Senator will have another conference with Gov. Dix to-morrow and will urge thet @la Dill be given a longer trial The Boxing Commissioners held a meeting this afternoon and formally revoked the license of the Madison {Square Athletic Club, ‘The revocation of the license of Tom O'Rourke of the National Sporting Club, which gives ona in the Amsterdam Opera wa reconsidered. O'Rourke | was given a new leense when he pre- nted a lease which was considered by ‘ommisstoners O'Neil! and Dixon @p ‘omplying with the law. Licenses were aiso granted to the East ue Athletic Club of Queens County » Empire tic Club, which ein the Manhat- 1b {9 controlled by tan Casino. T. {the MeMahon boys Dixon voted to revoke is ssioner the Garden Ilcens mply with the la rnor's wishes, i @ Madison Square Athletic Club, |whtch lost tts license, was represented | by a member of Aaron Levy's law fem. {He did not enter the Commissione:s Moe When he heard that the Come. ad acted unanimously he hure Mr Levy is in Albany to» ay on thiy matter, Until he returns ssion d awa | nothing will be satd h he sald. Have injunction papery been pre- | pared?” he was asked, certain papers to test tha Jon of the commission to put arden Club out of business,” aa» the lawyer, "Any action tobe | }taken won't be taken until to-morro O'ROURKE AND HIS LAWYER BEFORE THE COMMISSION, O'Rourke, with several lawyers, was ailed into the Commissioners’ office, O'Rourke took oath that all statements appearing in his new lease, dating from Sepleinver are correct. He swore that pai SAN Brenton tt tl

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