The evening world. Newspaper, July 22, 1912, Page 12

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.COME ON Now AxeL! 7 DO SOME ROAD WORK AN" AND GET Busy- SEE? , RUN ALONG THE SAND : Ou Hulud iil ; law ANON You Got STRAIN OFF THAT BAY WINDOW — GO DOWN “TO ROCKAWAY REACH AY BANE LIKE ROCKAWAY ! \ FINE = @Y DONT LIKE, ROAD WORK It! THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 22, 1912, 4 w Boos come Home ? BEEN AT ROCKAWAY EIGHT A.M, HE'S WORKING | WAAL - wity pont Hat | . 1M Goin’ Down THERE AN sEE How THERE MUST BE A REASON WHY AXEL LIKES ROCKAWAY “3% 3% 36 3 3% "By Vie _ GEE ITS FUNNY 1 DONT GEE Him - A GUY SAIb HE SAW A FIGHTER RUNNING ALONG THE SANG Me “THIS MORNING AND (T He's SINCE. MUST HAVE BEEN AXEL AN 00 15 GOIN TH wall JACK, JOHNSON? RAILWAYS PROTEST THEY CANT RAISE WAGES OF 3000 Present Their Side to Arbitra- tion Board in Opposition to Standardization. CALL IT OPPRESSIVE. Declare It Would Mean Heavy Tax and in Some Cases Bankruptcy. ~The Afty-two raltronds east of Chi- ago and north of Norfotk and Western Fallroads agsumed the defensive to-day Refore the Straus board of arbitration, im pession in the Hote! Oriental, Man- hattan Beach, in support of their con- feation that the 20,000 engine drivers of ‘the Brotherhood of Locomotive Gineers are not entitled to a eed and increased scale of wages. “It te expected the railroad officials will occupy a full week in their pre- Sentation of their side of the wage con- troversy, which came no perilously near to causing a strike a fow months ago. The chief contention of the railroads fe that the increased wa, lemanded will tax the fifty-two roads involved 07,653,792.71 a year, equivalent to plac- ing @ lien of $183,84,818 of 4 per cent Securities on these properties, this len taking preference over even first mort: gage bonds. The collateral effects of the increase, the roads contend, will be simultaneous demands from all other branches of their employeas, which, If Granted, would tax the roads $60,000,- 000 @ year in increased wages, or the equivalent of a lien of $1,600,000,000 4 per cent. secunties. } The roads contend that this burden would cripple every o1 {yould in the case of the weaker roads @ause almost immediate bankruptcy ang OSERT ENGINEERS GOT RAISE IN 1910, Whey point to the fact that the e Lrg in the Eastern district received | 0.73 per cent, wage increase in 1910, dmounting to an axgresate of %,923,- @061, and that the high cost of living | has not increased to the point wh mother salary increa. warranted, {The roads, too, odject strenuously to the standardization of wages demanded by the Brotherhood, They declare the fame high grade of skil! and efficiency fi not required of engine drivers on the and that @ consequent ‘ale ought to prevail. are bet- ter able to pay than thé ler roads, over which the traffic Is alight as to result in small dividends, 4 any at alt $Necessary improvements demanded by | the travelling and shipping public taken all the surplus funde of the roads, | the Managers set forth, and they urke | hat if all their earnings are to go into) ‘pockets of their employees, instead | a dividend return to Inves- | will decline to furnish the| . for the ordered tm- | according to Presi- ton of the Chicago In charge of the ease for the railroads, would result in the utter inability of the roads to handle the countrjf# shipping and a consequent blow to every class of trade, SUBURBAN ENGINEERS HAVE ‘LONGEST HOUR Tt was brought out that the average of the hours on duty for engineers of fast freight trains was hours or less, and that «msi: slower freight trains seldom exceeded eleven ton turned to the pos: Ihe engineers of the Twentieth Cen. | ry Limited who testified at a pre- yous session. | “Our tables show that the engineers | fon that run—the Mohawk division—” Geclared Mr. Worthington, “recetved | erage of $1.26 an hour and that working time on the rail ts 4.9 ours.” Turning to the subject of Quburban passenger runs the witness : “Engineers on suburban runs | naturally have longer hours between | Feporting for duty and dismissal, as fheir trains are run when the trat- | ev is heaviest tn the morning and | fyyning. Our records show twelve hours and thirty-one minutes total | time with eight hours and for- y-aix minutes the time on duty, and geven hours and ten minutes the time | ectually on the rai sales of week af ing Baturday, ents per ound, Best Society Circus Ever Seen MIKADO GAINS On Earth or on the Sea Either' BUT IN DANGER > WAL RANDOLPH SEMON AND be A} Pee, Es EN (BLACK) IN A Fi NY SPARRING STUNT, ——— Atlantic Yacht Club Men Certainly Do Themselves Proud as Cut-Ups. The members of the Atlantic Club were all ashore for the stupendous, Spectacular, slirpassing, — surprising, sumptuous “society circus," which was given tn @ big tent on the clubhous lawn at Sea Gate Saturday afternoon and evening. Nothing like it ever was seen before | on the briny deep, where the yacht cl members ar much at home as me maids, or on solid earth, where mer Jandlubbvers are wont to give circuses Even the amazed and delighted landlub- bers who were there as guests—and they were numerous—declared that they really had seen some hitherto unknown in And, they admitted, some, Jt Was plain to be seen from miles out wt sea that something extraordin ary Was on at the yacht club, for there Were flags and streamers, pennants and Yacht Ms novel and | the circus Une. | that Was going banners wherever they could be hunk, beginning at the top of the Hag- Lg and flying in many-culored profus down (o the very ground THERE WAS A PARADE AS WAS A PARADE. was @ parade before mance, ‘The clowns, the wilt aninals, the gorgeously attired acro- bats and the prancing horses were all in the parade, 1t was headed by Com- modore J, Stuart Blackton and George Dt . chairman of the entertain- ment committee, in an automobile, Co modore Blackton Was attired in a Ww flannel uniform, and he looked so ¢ manding that everybody wondered how the United States navy got along with- out him, Then came a monocte, Behind the mcenocle was the right eye of Lioyd Bingham. The rest of Mr, Bingham accompanied the Mr, Isingham was dressed in “pink and leathers” like and English foxhunter, and he wan armed with @ megaphone. He was in fine voice and proclaimed to the in- ere Regardless of Summer Take | ‘Wow has Jon's Medicine as body buliding tomle, fot LIE STRAND CERE! REES. Randy Semon, H, W. Dittmar and Ken- the tanbark. }neth Lord * ore “white hopes,” each one It was whispered in the awed throngs) of wh, in turn, knocked out the col- of spectators that the ringmaster was) oreq chu pion, Wallie Van Nostrand none other than Ernest Malcolm, fleet| refereed. In the clinches the band aptain of the club, But even the most} played and the lighters did the turkey Jardent admirers of Mr, Malcolm's un-| troi. |Meve It, he Was go perfectly stunning im ringmaster get-up, DILLENBACKe ; Miss SEWED WILBURN, i oy tay habitants of Sea Gate the wonders; whistles blown by Mr, Wallace, who that were to be seen in the cjrcus| was Introduced as “Signor Wind." tent. Mr. Bingham was the official an-| Lioyd Bingham and Wallie Van houneer, Nostrand did a Weber and Fields tnt. Immediately behind the flery steed] EXPLANATION OF WHAT A PO. which Mr, Bingham sat with such ad- LAR BEAR I8, mirable grace was @ handsome cab of & polar bear, Vallle?* in-| brilliant red, and in it, his long whip Binnarh i | veld in his strong right hand, sat the “Vot iss quired “Oh, I know,” reptied Mr. Van 3 very handsomest ringmaster that ever) trand: “I was a polae bear at Ei was seen, He wore a red riding coat,| gunepat s high silk tile, white, tight trousers!" yo ragren was “Jack Johnson, and the shinlest boots that ever trod questioned good looks could hardly be-| “‘Now, stand that way, Picture machine can get tt just right when I knock you out," sald ‘Jack Johnson” to “White Hope" Luckenback, Instead the “White Hope” landed on } Jack's" Jaw and he was counted out. Mile. Vichy,” with flaxen curls a a beautitul weary old black mule around the ring REAL ELEPHANT AND A HUMAN GIRAFFE. A real live elephant was in the pa- rade, (00, and such as were not to a so that the! izy pink dress, rode a| Of ARELAPS Only Fist Stage of Illness Passed and People Warned of Oveshopefulness, TOKIO, July 2%.—The bulletins tssned trom the Palace by the court physicians ot of reporting the improved health of Mutsuhito, the Japan, have been receive evidence of satisfac in al to-day, That the Emperor, who was actually at the point of death, {s almost superhumanly regaining his healt, adds to his prestige throughout the em- pire. The stock market improved generaily as a result of the satisfactory news, The Nichi Nichi, one of the leading newspapers, publishes a report that on- tertainments are to be resumed to-mor- row. conditiva Emperor witn ey the cap moted'as saying that this is only the rat stago in the Emperor's malady and Advising against overhopefuiness be- cause the second and third stages of the disease must be passed through before fnll confidence in His Majesty's recovery can te restored. Crowd. hool children gathered outsive the Palace grounds to-day and presented an intensely moving spectac while they prayed for the recovery of the Emperor. ‘The improvement in the condition of the Emperor, which set in this morning, continued throughout the day. A further bulletin, issued by the court was as follows: clans at 8.30 F ‘emperature, 98. respiration, 24 proving.” SUED, HE CLAIMS H WAS GOOD SAMARITAN. Petbury Says Instead of Running Over Holland He Carried Him to Hospital. ‘The complaint and answer tn an unique suit were filed in the Supreme Court of Brooklyn this afternoon, Mrs, Mary Holland, as administratrix of the estate of her husband, Michael Holland filed sult against Charles J. Petbury of No, 6 Quincy strect, Brooklyn, for $10,000, Mrs, HHolland charged that on May a horse her husband was driving along trand avenue, near Atlantic avenue, yas frightened by a Long Island Rail- road elevated train, and ran away throwing HHolland to the street. While he was ly! leges, Pet form’ with an automobile, juries from which Holland died in the Swedish Hospital. In his answer Petbury denies that he ran over Holland. He says he saw a great crowd gathered about Holland's body and asked the cause, When told, he declares, that Holland had been in- Jured in a runaway, he acted the good Samaritan and hurried him to the hos- pital, where he dled. Petbury declared he had thirty eyewitnesses who would swear that that wag his automobile's only connection with the accident. When the young woman removed her wig and Ii in the dressing room looked astonishly lke H, W. Dittmar. ing Amelia Bingham, the actress, and Mrs, Blackton were seen in a chariot race and Wallle Nostrand appeared as Marcelline, Prof, Starrett and his trained animals, with his assistants, were the only none club members in the show, After the | performance there was dancing at the clubhouse. Were perm! ed to ride on the beast. There was «so am artificial gi- raffe, more wonderfu, than the reai ele- phant, for the giraffe bowed to the ladies it knew. It was rumored th: Alvah Nickerson and H, A, Kell posed the giraffe, ne clowns were Wallle Van trand, William Walla back, A, 8, Hills, W. D, Van Nos- Loula Lucken-! Frank Welsma ard, W. V. Kipp and Randolph Semon: | Arnone those who Were active at the Carios de Zaftra and Dr, Charies Atkin | pox office and who contribuied very son Were policemen and 8. M, Spedoa| materially to the comfort of the guests Was a constable, b' gosh, by thelr efforts “at the front of The clowns did a few funny stunts at| house’ were Charles Ludwig, Col, Den the opening of the performance, Then by, W D. Gash, V. H. Thun and M. C, Lioyd Bingham announced tl Bryan Limburger, the strongest man in | would lft sume weiss A) yaemay, in red tights, with lumpy | muscles as big as water | vcke neaved | great tigis a8 he raised weights marked ° 600 pounds, watch a clown afterward Vv t ety aia eae ais trees| # & VACATIONL ta n was Alvah Nickerson, ; e “Mabe! Killaman, the beautiful bare-! ir Cr portiy, but she could ride, Those on the ! inside of affairs said dhe was Krank! , Wetaman, | An educated elephant, that danced one step with his forelegs and another with his hindiegs Breeted with, | roars of laughter, W, F. Sohat and Loule Luckenback were the elephant William Wallace and Mr. Malcolm had 92 emusins Malosus over the reeds and Harmless, gentle “Syrup of stomach, liver and 30 feet of bowels of sour bile, decaying food, gases You old people, Syrup of Figs | particularly for you. You who don't exercise as much as you need to; who Hike the easy chair, You, whose steps ‘are slow and whose muscles are less clastic. You must realize that your liver and ten yards of bowels have also become less active. Don't regard Syrup of Figs as physic. It stimulates the liver and bowels just as exercise would do if you took enough of it. It is not. harsh like salts or i ies. The help which Syrup of | Figs gives to a torpid liver and weak, sluggish bowels is harmless, natural and gentle. When eyes grow dim, you help them. Do the same with your liver andbowels when age makes them less active. There is nothing more important. Costive, clogged-up bowels mean that vine Greening food is clogged x bee FLOERLY FOLKS! GALOMEL, SALTS AND GATHARTICS AREN'T FOR +00, [GERMAN LINERS RAGE ALL THE WAY | AEROS ATLANTIC The Closing Prices, ‘The following were the highest, lowest prices of stocks for today and Prince Frederich Wilhelm Beats | * Kaiserin Auguste Victoria by a Few Minutes. Two German Uners arrived within few minutes of each other at Quaran- tine early to-day after a race across the ocean, The Prince Frederich Wil- helm of the North German ‘Lioyd| N° reached Quarantine first at 6.5, fol-| j lowed by the Kalserin Auguste Vio-| Re torla of the Hamburg American Ine. | Both vessels had warnings of icebergs | & | and went thirty miles south of the sum- mer route. A few miles out of Southampton the liners met. Both were carrying offi- clals of the respective companies going to a ship owner's conference at South- on, The Kalserin Auguste Vic- torfa overhauled the Prince Frederich Wilhelm after a long chase, and both liners raced together while the passen- gers cheered and wagered on the out- come. They left Cherbourg almost to- gether and were in easy communication all the across, | yesterday on the battleship confiscated rere and in Brook; WALL STRET the net changes as @t compared with Saturday's closing quotations: High, Low, Last. Bel Comer BR BR a ‘ GIRL, PIQUED, GIVES CLUE TO THEFT OF GUM OPIUM. Patrick M. Tobin, the fireman arrested | tul charged with conspiring to ateal oplum ordered destroyed from the Appraisers’ Stores, was arraigned to-day before United States Commissioner Shields. Tobin was put under $1,600 ball and his examination was set for July 30 Walter P, Murphy, a customs inspece tor, charged that on June 2% Tobin con- spired with Alexander Frasier, an oller the Public Stor to steal a quantity Net | 0% Sum opium, which retails at H a dig. | pound and which was given them to be 5 "NE | destroyed, It is sald they gave it to } %) Willam Shuttleton, allas “One-Armed Larry,” who sold it to “dope joints” in Chinatown and “San Juan Hill. Frazier and Shuttieion, who wei rested last week, are also locke the Tombs, It 1s sald the clue that led | to the arrest came the result of a family row and that a girl was th former in the case, Her name was not disclosed, but it was admitted she is related to one of the prisoners, and last PRETTY BATHING SUIT sandals, cap—all fixed for the Sum- mer campaign, where the surf rolls up on the ae eel ead big forget the always possible chance sunburn sand the discomfort that, fole lows. The wise woman always keeps a tube of i" VELOGEN “Beauty's Guardian” within reach, Every night and morn- ing, before going out of doors and | after that ka dip in the surf, she gently rubs a little Velogen into the skin of face, and hands, and Ld complexion is always above and her hands are soft and good look ‘ing. At all druggists, in collapsible » 25 cents, Towa etter than cold cream, need the same way. $tt ++ tt tel+ t+ + Ut TM FO TE SS FREE ES OF FE TE yn and On the Hamburg American line ves- sel was Miss Ressie Avott, w! to play Maid Marian in the all vival of “Robin Hood," which has tts) opening at Atlantic City on Aug, 5, With Miss Abott came a portable bath house such as the elite of Tourville | have adopted lately, Hundreds of these portable houses are wheeled into the surf every day at that fashlonable wat- | ering place. The wave of modesty which has hw come quite the fashion in France Is re- sponsible for the new bathhouse, When | Miss Abott uses hors at Atlantle City it Is thought there will be a crowd of cager onlookers, A maid sits in the bath hovse, which is wheeled from the hotel to the beach, the lady stepping Into the Water and oxt of sight displaying so much as an ankle Arnold Daly was also a pi bringing over several new pli the latest wonder of Milan, Sem Bennelll, who writes for his own little theatre. The play Daly inionds to pro- duce is “Lorenzo the Magnificen which, according to the actor, has some passages in blanis verse which are “grand bursts of eloquence and rapidity of dialogue.” Daly 1s also to appear In a play about Shakespeare, in which the Bard of Avon will be the hero, Mr. Daly will be Shakespeare. Another play deals with life Ina Harlem flat. It was written abroad by Hennin Berger, Mr. Daly does not know who will be fils man- ager and backer, but says he will try a process of elimination, having all those who don't want him step fofward now or hol thelr peace forever, Among the other passengers were © comes tar re | 23rd Street 620 Satin 200 dozen Towels, heavy TOILET ARTIC Mra Edward F, Foley and her sister, Mrs. Wilhelmina Myers, returning from an oxtended tour of Europe. sorted odors. D’Orsay’s Books in assor' Figs” is best to cleanse your Java Rice and clogged-up waste, Wool Puff, Imported rirty feet of bowels suck this decayin, Brushes. value waste and poisons into the blood, You will never get feeling right until this is cosrected—but do it gently. Don’t have @ bowel washday; don’t use @ bowel irritant. For your sake, please use only gentle, effective Syrup of Figs. Then you are not druggin yourself, for Syrup of Figs is composed of only luscious figs, senna and aroma- ties which can not injure. A teaspoonful to-night but thoroughly, move on Rubber W: teed. will gently, and out of your system by ing all the sour Cloth and Hat bile, poisonous fermenting food and . clogged-up waste matter without gripe, and Pin Boxes, nausea or wenkness, | But get the genuine. Ask your} druggist for the full name, “Syrun of Figs and Elixir of Senna. Refuse, : with contempt, any other Fig Syrup 2ied Street unless it bears the name—prepared by the California Fig Syrup Compeny. Bodthelph James McCreery & Co, On Sale Tuesday and Wednesday, July the 23rd and 24th. HOUSEHOLD LINENS. 25 to 50% less than usual prices. continued patterns. 1.65, 2.25, 2.75 to 9.75 each Trish Linen Pillow Cases, hemstitched and hand-embroidered. Bayley’s English Toilet Soap, as- Guest room size. Rubber Bath Sprays. value 60c, 40¢ value 75c to 1.00, Imported violet color Celluloid Toilet Articles, including Mirror, Hair Brush, 34th Street In Both Stores. Damask Table Cloths, at Dis- Hemstitched Huckaback pure linen. 2.85 doz. regular price 3.50 1.85 pair regular price 2.50 LES. In Both Stores, 45c doz. cakes powder filled Vanities and ted colored leather cases. usually 1.00, 35c Powder, assorted colors. 20c various sizes......... 5¢ Bone and Wood Nail $0c to 1.28, 25¢ to 75c ater Bags,—fully guaran- 50c Brushes, Frames, Trays 35c to 1.00 value 75c to 2.25 34th Stree

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