The evening world. Newspaper, April 19, 1912, Page 28

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Ceo APRON THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, APRIL 1 ‘NGINEERS ON BIG ROADS REA. NOTICE OF ASTRKE = “Se stieere TON RROW OR SUNDAY ~ BWEN TO RAILROADS Brig. -Gen. Frederick Funston, Who NEW YORKER WINS | WALL STR STREET Is Talked Of as Grant’s papi Us MH York Central about 1 point below the Mike yd of Th Irish- American sneel Toren ‘The SPPEL ‘Tae course of prices tn the stock ket to-day was jostly reactio! sient slightly lower the Ust a through the morning hour, y ttle change in prices, * | pow NG eed i tn fairly large vol: which was res: Steel, U nion Pacific, in bringing | ¥ + C. Runs Distance in 2+ |, tote night, owen sod tt ics of wo Hrs, 21 Min, 18 4-5 Sec, eS “ge ae - f= : he -- - BOSTON, ads April 19.—Over roads| Az come, il es . . . ¢ hat were n ankie-deep in mud and | 4% "So Wad 1s _ Unparalleled Calamity in Railroading that wer ieee tn mud and | yunder oth unfavorable cond{tio Mike Ryan, star of the Irish re nl Athletic Club, New York, winning the} sixteenth American Marathon here this) the classic. Ills time was 2 hays nutes, 181-5 seconds, bettered by 2 econds, the mark established last year ‘Threatened in Letter Sent by ie Chief Stone To-Day to Man- agers of Filty Eastern Roads & Co. Ctarence Pe Mar, of North Dor-| 23rd Street 34th Street hoster, fn the race tn which Tyan | TIME LIMIT FOR ANSWER rn Andfew Sockalexis, the Oldtown, Me., | Indian, who finished second, ted past| ‘oulidge's Corner and well toward the vit bY @ great burst of speed near © finish, Ryan overtook and pa n, winning by a comfortab adden, of North Dor . The IS SET FOR MONDAY NEXT. After That the Men Will Leave) & Their Trains Wherever They Are ; on Twe Hours’ Notice. UNUSUAL SALE SOROSIS SHOES ' On Saturday, April the 20th. | ULE FIGHTER others. finies silva, South Corlson, Women’s Sorosis One Eyelet Ties and aa 3 Phare Walking Pumps,—two of the latest and most rape a | nent a attractive models. Grand Chief Stone of’ the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers WHO MAY eunneeD pie aie Sisbed an ultimatum to-day upon the Board of Railroad Managers | | Ryan’e telumph this afvernoon dia Made of Tan itussia Calf, Gun Metal, ; trolling the fifty railroads east of Chicago and north of the Norfolk and | Aone MA GM IERTA ce oarul Okite Dull Kid, Suede, Patent Leather and White e ‘Western in Virginia, giving warning that if the railroads did not ode GEN F i] GRA | Gen. FREOK. he ins been a consistent lone Aistance Buckatin, : from their flat refusal to consider the Brotherhood’s demands before | ne eee FUNSTON larly the fact that he established a ‘Monday next 25,700 engineers would leave their locomotives on two} hours’ notice. ; Every wheel on all of the fifty railroads would be tied up at the single word from him, the Brotherhood Chief threatened. new record for the Boston race, make {him the most promising candidate to year the American colors in the Mara- : thon at Stockholm this summer, Ryan's first big performance over! the Marathon distance was in May, 3.50 per pair value 5.00 Fred Funston, Daredevil Sol- dler, a Born Warrior, Afraid Aghting in the jungles of the Caribbean Continent. He got so interested in it t he forgot all about the writing He enlisted in the Cuban army CAPTURE OF | 4 1910, when he extablished a new Can * When J. C. stuart, chairman ofthe Bourd of Raltoad Mangers, of Nothing. to fiienantotnel and chi of arte | ASOINALDS | truant Haraifon On. "in Stet On Saturday, April the 20th. under Gare! je et rc hed ceo) h wy . was asked by an Evening World reporter what answer the board would Sa & to New York unt! December, 197, when! MILITARY AVIATOR KILLED, |{Schnio Harriers’ Marethon i tcaags | sent to the engineers’ hgnomp se, sarge a6 the feport runt, Brig.-Gen. 138, ied @ great story of the battle of and ninth in the Boston classte. “The members of the Board of Managers departed to thelr homes | wra iis Army ederick Funston, commander of the Departmont of Callfornia, is promoted qwe|'? the place of the late Maj.-Gen. Like Johnnie Hayes and other star, long distance men, Ryan is small in} stature. FIRED THE FIRST DYNAMITE GUN IN WAR. White In Cuba Funston fired the first dynamite gun ever used in actual war- fare, with only the printed directions of the gunmakers to guide him. He didn’t know as much about artillery as he did about @ sulky plough, but he made a stab at it, and when a chunk of the Spanish fortifications caved in he was as happy Lieut. Aveay of the French Lost Control of Acroptan: PARIS, April 19.—While cruising In @ military aeroplane near Verdun to- day Lieut, Delaville Avray of the army aviation corps lost control of his machine. It capsized and he was, N thrown out and instantly killed. in the pe fast night. Consequently I have no answer to give,” ing World ) and ad Tt was Yearned Wy eceiey ‘that unless | agreo sc rig ited meena ‘ail | Frederick Dent Grant ax commander of om unquestior ‘and a completo reversal this and wo are fimnly of the opinion |h® Department of the Kast, New York real concession made by the Board |Our constituency, composed of 2,000| Will have un opportunity of studying B of their position 1s ' tous sirike|tAlned engineers on the roads repre-jat close range the “fghtingest” little o - Cegqearag pet ear would be ed, are an Important factor in the|man én Uncle Sam's army, a general ooin creation of that degree of safety #0 he poltshin; nee ousontial to gatlety: sriiire ¥ 80] who was not turned out in the pollshing MEN’S HABERDASHERY. 600 Raincoats,— English models, of ‘Gray Mixed Tweeds with velvet or self collar, also single or double Tan Texture In Both Storea. Horse K A horse, ——— <o——__—— Self on Runaway Gate. driven Marry Stern of! Goercis street, Williamsburg, ched to a newspaper delivery n, took fright tn the inédéle of the Hamsburg Bridge to-day and ran STILL CONSERVATIVE. ! our refe Fred Funston, the capt aldo and the conqueror pines, comes of a fight! the son of Edward ue Funston, @ captain in the Union during the 1 war, and Ann Iitzabeth Mitehell | unston, a descendant of Dante! Boo The elder Manston served thyee term tn Congrers, was for many years al Kansus legislator arid Speaker of the | "s oniform. the latter brotherhood will not Sishalto be it will preserve union fealty by ting its members not to work on locomotives operated by non-union ene | gineers, and this will in effect am tee strike in so far ay Mt aft vallsouds. Ht is no secret that the Board of Managers of the railroads involved In the present crisis has been depending He went about in; of a civilian, When) hy he did not put on} replied: “Now I'd look wouldn't -, trotting up and down ; lonel’s rig, when all around here! nough soldiers—men who hi fought their way up from the Ine in \the regular army, who have been in the clvi! war and 't;, a score of Indian wars, Who have the right to wear only of Aguin- the Philip. s family, being enee to the con-| wish to rted from UNTRIMMED HATS. In Both Stores, » widow of a y. The gat the New York end 7 7 — oschgaaasay Lepees ae Stone will “WE ALSO D. wens mill at West Point, but who jumped with's mv. ery Ag lurones aul “hat and killed, Oct. BYR watou awran was closed, and the horse crashed tito Cloth. values 18.00 and 20.00, 12.00 frobably on Saturday ‘come VTE TO CALL lint the fgiting trom the seemingly |Cuban campaign hee was as fearless al {24 ftilieds Det. # by a wagon owned) 6 iting himaclf, Stern was uninjured. | Bas ; it until the engineers’ Pack ATTENTION to THM daredev t pertervid | PY is ee | 150 dozen Shirts,—made of All Silk Prd en who hays been In conference] FACT THAT IN pori ‘TH |‘BMoCHOUR calling of a Government bo- | Garedevit Aghter as the most perfer See oRTLs OSU TA aTe ithe tie Rlarrinté SRueatfea DAT ro-Niget,| u tf pie ;: men ; < : st . 3 ages of $10,000 by a Jury in the Su-| Ma ‘o-Night. sk Mi ARG oatatninag At the Broadway Central for the ist) WESTERN ANd soummticnn |tanlcel explorer—and made good: |” aithough Gov. Leedy of Kansas ap-| Fen OF 810000, by 6 Jury in the Su: vere udson Theatre und. the Harriet and Silk Mixtures in neat stripes. 158 Weeks have time to reach thelr) UBRKITORY, ERD TE eee ein ton dat totrutat wha |Bolnted Fred Funston Colonel of the! Counwel, Bruce R. Duncan had told the| Tieatre will be closed tornight because | values 3.50 and 4.00 2.45 ‘before giving the word. VOLUME or LoTH FREIGHT {*Y ‘vg Peat Twentieth Kansas Volunteers, he 41 jury that Mrs. Cody was left depend: fof the death of Henry B, Harris in the| PLEDGE OF eUPPORT OF) AND PassHNGi dRarrIC 1s Sie Uenuy if Auer Lv ki seqbat Aelds | not get a chance to go back to Cural onc with two small children, \reck of the Titante, | LIGHTER S with a specimen book under one arm|and resume warfare with the Span- P : ad ; (THE FIREMEN. OFTEN SAVIN, oe HANBS Janda neat Uttie box under the other, |airds. He got as far us Tampa, where —| 300 dozen Scarfs, of Imported Silks in don also be sald definitely that} ARM MAKING. ALL ‘tig ra. [thet ia another sort, ‘The bullet-headed POMC anect the tidoparecny vot plain and fancy colors. he last] PROVEMENTS wy, 9 angan..W py hapalay dad ‘ of 1. Dy Chiet stone has within the last FBTR. AENTONED, AND pioo:n hunters who'd swim an Alaskan (ceftain parts of Cuba, Hl values 1.00 and 1.50, 65c each ed a letter from Gran ARE STILL KAKNING H Nagi Brotherhood of o-| AND ARH PAY NG ts river or climb the crags of Mount|REFUSED TO WEAR HIS | Carter of sth oo samen waeite WAGES ‘MIAN i s be McKinley with the same sangfrold that COLONEL’S UNIFORM. Firemen a Dew oft “ bod would mai ourse In a New Jeraoy | While in Tampa, W.'.fam Allen White, j full support and eee en Jat INSISTS THAT THEIR POLICY 18 | meadow, tells, Funston would not wear his| ody, comprisini nf | | It's What Others Say About COOPER’S : | New DISCOVERY his uilform, | that we have Yy but When tie conference ss to capitalize om. th f the engineers to the | UE Our proposal in its such weon forces uw to ad+ mit the futility of adhering to a policy the A variety of shapes, including Hemp and Fancy Braids. 2.50 and 3.75 y ea une Ostrich Novelty Pompons and Quills House. |& captainis cr At most a malors unl: | in all the desirable colors f the Brotherhood | that is unable to secure results th: \form! Wouldn't I .e a daisy, letting in al e desiral " Bia see coforten st mrotormens | fet, unable th sere remults tht Wan to MEXICO WHEN A @OY| Sin i hat salute me in my. tine 1.75 and 2.95 the engineers’ cause, relying upon | employees with more radical polte AND PICKED UP SPANI [ofl PES pkee tl. not—not ; feeling engendered by an obi grud ! “IN VIDW OF THESW FACTS of this hardy Kansan left He scampered a out in his unadorned Between the two powerful unions. THE COMMITTEE OF CHAIR- farm in his teens and went | clothes, and jeered at what he called a oun S$ MEN DECLINE TO ACCEPT YOUR LETTER AS A SETTLE- MENT OF THE CASR, THEY WILL WAIT UNTIL § P. M, FRI- |to Mexico, There he picked up Spanish and sufficient American dollars to come back home and enter the Kan ery in his early twentl alt the livery stale brigadiers who did not know fours right from balance all. It was as a colonel of Volunteers that Fred Funston went to the Phil- which Chief Stone has re-| Setved from Chict Carter cut the from this hope of the railroads, RB GIVING NOTICE OF IN-/ HANDKERCHIEFS. Don’t take our word for it—Leave it to In Both Stores, i his Kansan regiment tn those who were sick and are now well ‘ ri pay, ,. nated for eeveral years pines with Pt 4 ell. 2 (7, TENTION TO STRIKE. THER SUGGESTIONS Hie Con, [EME clolatered hally of toarning nnd the | 98nd Judeing from the cabled. de: For Men and Women. ? wing ts the letter sent by the!” FERENCE COMMITEE OF MAN. |ETEAt outdoors, earning outdoors the |there was fixhling there Was the tue The experience of the ‘ , of Engineers: (MAY WISH TO MAKE. |Ingoors, | ‘© Me? Bim st his books!) Kansan and his Kansas rifemen, man or woman who has Men’s Irish Linen, band-embroidered fis “Brosdway Central Hotel, NONE, THE: Wiul returned from Manilla after a bought dh been ’ oidere: ee att a i 1 “to ” 4 First he was a train collector for the | fighting and was made a Brigadier-Gen- oug! an Jas pr iens , da) Bar’ Sere AVN is YOUR ANSWER OF |santo ¥o, cen he tried hia band at eral of volunteers. ‘Thon be went back! benefited by this un- |] Col. L. A, Mackintosh initial. value 3.00 14 doz, .2,.25 ‘ Me. 3. C. Stuart, Chairman Conteronce FINAL, AND THE | reporting for a Kav o « {again in November, 1000, captured Agui- je L. A. Mackin ~~ Comumittes of Managers, Koons $9, MEN WIL VE THE and lates he bucamme a Goterngnababe Maida and put down. the insurrection, | equalled . hLi . Look THE IN- |tantcal explorer tn the Dakotan and in |ANd for this he was made a Brigadier! TONIC and BLOOD OF 1631 N. 29th Street, Phil- —j Women’s French Linen, hand-embroidered ° OF DHE Montana, in the terrible Death Valley adelphia, Pa, and well + sas q 1% ot your letter of tho 18th Gf. Southern Califorsta ta te ANY | HOW HE CAPTURED THE HEAD PURIFIER tava bile eee, initial. value 1.50 }4 doz., 1,00 been placed before the Chairmen’ ) MBG Wherever’ the Govern: \ OF THE INSURGENTS, genes mote by far, than New York City ’ 4 4 ss » Tepresenting the fifty roads) “Grand Chict Engineer ment thought ft to send him in queat| In the course of that Philippine cam- it i ‘int Women’s French Linen, — various de- and I am instructed to make| sr RIKE CERTAIN IF RAILROADS | Mare and wilque sctentitle data, paign the commander of the Fight-| ll we can say or print. : 1 ing reply: DO NOY YisiD. In 182 the Government sent him to|iné Twentieth Kansas risked his life Many thousands of per- Says--- signs and colors. value 50c, 35¢c each “We eagin reaftirm our requeste made, ELD, Alaska to botanize along the coast, and|™# Many times ag he had hairs tn his ttribute thei peer Sete of Jan 2 and reamrmed| Grand Chief Stone set forth the en-| in 1898 he was instructed to continue his |need. There seemed to be no human} sons attribute hater “1 | ueerr Gate of March 2, because we be- | Kt Position to-day tn the following | researches down the Yukon and up the [hanes thet he AMdne taxe. Me plarnel! newed vigor and health to t affords me much pleas- Gove they ure equitable, und are some-| statement to an Evening World rep: | Poreupine Rivers, spending most of tho |ravag without assistance from any of-| the use of Cooper's New ute fe) five you my unquali- . it loyed the | por Winter at Rampart Hi id Hn . 5 J Hig She soars eouloye onthe) rr sasroan recate trom (Rt tamner Heute under the|eitaime "ale dngied a Fore as| Discovery. tedteatimonyofthevaluect H | MISSES’ SUITS & DRESSES. 1m noth storm “in this connection we have carefully| thelr uncompromising position and | After his return from Alaska tn 184 he |private and by means of this ruso sur} DQ YOU FEEL ALL y | wonsidered that part of your let t-| thelr Mat refugais, which the en- |took it into his head to tnvad rounded and captured the insurgent N N 1 was induced to try it some | sing forth the reasons why the com.| gincera take to be Invitations to nd yet rid of th Header with very ttle bloodshed, He RUN DOW Wanies represented by your commitice strike, the engineers wil absolutely increase the wages of thetr 60 out within the next few days and Ue Up every locomotive east of Chi- vomstble. | mgineers have followed their Al conservation in this matter and deliberated Jong before ar- riving at a strike decision because {accomplished in very ‘short spaco of ‘jtime what all his superiors had failed in and Gen, MacArthur, In command of the Phillppine forces gave him full credit for his achlevement. Funston had won his fame as a Jsoldter and been rewarded with a bri- \gade command in the regular army {when he met and married Miss Mary Blankart, a school teacher much ad- Fr imired for her beauty in San Franctsco, Then the Cuban cause |The Mttle General devoted only two ppeal for him, weeks to his courtship before the come- Kansan got plenty of jy Miss Blankart surrendercd, time ago, and its action on | me was remarkable. I have | no hesitation in saying that its therapeutic value cannot be overestimated. “L shall be pleased at all times to recommend it tomy friends who may be in need of some such preparation. “wish you success in your efforts to relieve mankind his bones in t established a coffee ntral America, then put sistant auditor of the San Kind of thing was too tame for one of blood and he escaped to Cuba on the went ostensibly as a cor: | respondent for Harper's Weekly, but he ae tho’ Naenion ate cuits told his fvlends that he was going to Mf the railroads matntain euch an |Ré Was bullt for uncompromiring attitude and the en- | Mii avon gineors d° not enforce thelr demands | AP¢ the I! At Wil Wreck the organization, pute ting us back where we were years Suits,— choice models in Taffeta, Serge, Whipcord, and various mixed fabrics. Sizes 14 and 16 years. values 27.50 to37.50, 22.50 | Plain Tailored Suits of Wool Fabrics, Sizes 14 and 16 years. value 19.75 13.50 Dresses for afternoon and strect wear. Made of Crepe Meteor, Crepe de Chine, and worn out—not sick enough to be in bed, but too miserable to do your work as it should be done and enjoy life as you should. It matters not whether it is due to the poor con- dition of your stomach, ur nerves, poor, thin plantation esire to call your attention *o -that the railroad companies in reat, Norihwest, Southwert and yatheast are at he present timo pay- tng their engincers approximately the mame rates we ure contending for here, With better working condiions thaw we wre asking for. _ S4Y8 ROADS GIVE NO REASON FOR REFUSAL. April 8 you place your refusal t the increases ‘on the Wy to pay more 4 the bare stat regardless of the fact fe aud volume of business, state, ‘The public interests are ik, ep.’ doub : eS #4n your letter of March % and again | ° roads’ In- | * gpa offer nothing mt to substanti. | that, lal reports sow both tncreased ng sufor and better yond ne WiLt NOT interlocking and care, suonger Stone was asked if the committe, engineers bad considered the ago and making It Impossible to ever hope to secure any increases in the future, “LE we strike and are beaten means the wrecking of the onganiza- tion anyway, and we belleve that we | had better go down fighting for what we know to be right and just rather than to go to wreck through tnac- avity,"* should not be soppe tt |thetr operation. He }auch a situatlo that {f engineer the throttle 01 no Interference "a ot ene delegates conference united tingency that might arise through the intervention of the United States Gove ernment to insist that t ed that Brotherhood had taken cognizance of mail trains there wi!l | with them, ‘otherhood will not invite the pos- eere’ tod tn sayiog that Be Wise 11 trains bed in lence will be tolerated by the unlon engineers in the event of # strike, + Nothing but moral suasion will be used | In an effort to prevent strike-breakers btood or any other cause. Cooper's New Discovery will quickly build you up, the | from Ming the places of the absent en- Bineors, ' tis @ fact, and the ratlroads know | sald one of the committeemen, | that the railroads could not posslbly | together a suficient number of en- gineers outside of t Brotherhood to, INCITE INTERFER- sibility of any gush action being taken Tun one-tenth of their engines, We will by President Taft as President Cleve not have to use much moral quasion ENCE BY U, 8. OFFICIALS, 4 fohowed in the great strike of 1894, | ov: sible strike-breakers Seonus o there © nnot possibly be many etriki and you will cat better, feel better and sleep bet- ter. and believe all that isneeded to convince the most skepti- calisa fair trial of your medi- cine.” i Don't Delay Get a Bottle Today At Afi Druggists Foulard and Taffeta, Attractive models, Sizes 14 and 16 years, values 18.50 to 23.50, 15.00 James McCreery & Co. 23rd Street 34th Street

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