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000 TRANMEN N52 LINES VOTE INFAVOROF STRIKE Official Fees Wit Withheld Until Report Is Made to Managers Next Tuesday. WANT $17,000,000 MORE. Raflroads Refuse Demand Be- cause They Granted $30,000,- 000 Annual Increase in 1910. , . The result of the recent strike vote (2 Caleago and north of Richmond will Be formally submitted next Tuesday to (Me managers of the various railroads. Withough the exact figures will be kept Geeret wnt! delivered to the managers, te admitted dy the railroad employees Ghat the vote is overwhelmingly in fa- Wer of @ otrike unless peaceable means €4n procure for them « large increase in | The vote for a strike does pot neces f t |) fight arbitrntion to the end. and conductors were ila y se 4 payrolls of the railroads in- FIBD THAT THERE WOULD NO INCREAGE. it meeting in the Engineer- duiléing the committees from jer of Railway Conductors and of Railroad Trainmen were by the Conference Committ: of the railroads that no wages would be granted. and i +4 . is i i kf the terms of the weaeral Bréman subi sequent meeting wes held, at which Elisha Lee, heading the man- agers’ committee, refused to agree to arbitration, declaring that the trainmen the additional paKey demanded. It was pointed out that the new Federal laws were causing immense penses railroads and that the “full crew bills,” recently enacted in New York and New Jersey at the in-| stance of the trainmen and conductors had added another large sum to opera- exptnses ‘The refusal of the managers to agree to increased wages or to arbiiration was accepted as 8 by the trainmen ‘and conductors, and at thelr annual conventions a atrike vote was ordered among the employees of the Eastern Conferen 5 next wees, when a further’ conference Will be demanded my President Lee of the trainmon and President Garretson @f the conductors. WILL MAKE ANOTHER PLEA FOR AN INCREASE, At this conference, which will be errenged for on Tuenday, the union Jeadors will lay their proposition again before the railroad managers, backing it up with a statement that their followers have, by thelr vote, Quthorixed them to lanue a strik no watisfactory wm fected, forts will be made to solution of the con- tke order being with- ry last, It is expected from the Department of the Stores. Labor tm Washington will take a hand | Fren of th jard, ish “yeep rote paghre oder ich woman, the fire e Spaniard, the charming voice of the Eng! is issued, in an effort to procure some etait RUFFIAN PUSHES A GIRL f r This Italian visitor to the United FROM A ROCKAWAY TRAIN. ¢ J States had deen asked many times: = retters trom Evening World readers After Fighting Passengers the As- sailant Leaps Through a Car An unidentified man, without hat or coat, threw the occupants of a crowded Rockaway train into @ panic te-dty he leaped throu wind t iieip ‘platform ef the Marcy were added the eyes and the heart. tion and escaped, after he & young woman 90 that Leeee the, bamaere 0 twee) that his wish can never be fulfilled because the American is a developed ‘The train was a short distance from| Woman and has passed permanently from that lower phase of femininity Marcy avenue when the man was seen crowd Mice Tillie Raymond, twenty. | Stmired by Latin men. the second car. 6 young women pro- Only that type of woman whe tested and several men angrily pushed Ras deen described as a “cerebral the individual aside, He showed fight coquette” is @ succcessful dirt, roughly 4! Misa Raymond until ‘but there are more of her in the therfen Setween the carn. "The uard, ‘United States than anywhere else, John Hat e, selsed the girl as bhe third car when he leaped through a window to iatform, arose quickly one races cald catch hime ore] for that matter, Suyph should| days before marriage with “the North- ‘An ambulance was called, but Miss jer flirt, for ey will alwi jowe the | American filrtation,” which is unlike Raymond refused to go to the hospital. of the} anything to be found in Kurope. aren Two men called a taxicab and Miss under} young American wo! Ana Raymond and her friend returned to land] impression,” he much confidence when one notices em-| to conquer not the heart, the kind of girls they prefer to flirt fifth street, Man! n, dlema of deeds that are done in their] “Born In a country of bol with. They a @ay they like old- their home at No. West Twenty-| where the cypress and myrtle a: Coupon Good for a Fly-Killer. The Kind That Costs 10c. at A 24-Page Illustrated Maga- zine in Which Starts the Great Serial Love Story, “The Sable The Flirting Season Is Here Copy: jt, 1018, by The Press Publishing So. (The New York World). American Women, Ruled by Brain, Not Emotions, the Most Artistic Playere—Flirtation Flowers Best in Temperate Zone and Shrivels Under a Tropic Sun. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. “Why do you think the American woman is the most artistic flirt?” inquires an indignant masculine reader. “She has not the finesse of the degree can woman which Commander Doc- Ameri Psyche.” “Have these American girls any hearts?” “Is it possible,” a Spanish friend inquired of him, “that a type which blends in itself the most en- chanting forms of beauty and en- follow: oteak girl's Window and Escapes. ‘What would she be if to the marvel- lous perfection she has attained, of an Andalusian?” The admirer of the “American Psyche” tells the carping Spaniard quite 4 ‘and her companion, Miss ‘Anita “Bhe is the very of the ,clime you had better keep away from ugh, twenty, on ‘the platform of| %@tim woman, in whom the heart | flirtation altogether. has the mastery over the head there| the American type, Signor Carito de- {s a marked woman, or a marked man|clares that she fills the vold of her To teresting and worth wh! ergy, should have a heart so cold?| preliminary to mar ‘but love in a couple of rooms with the rent overdue is quite another thing. I know several cases where boys, and even men, making $10 a THE EVENING WORLD, “SATURDAY, JULY 6, 1918. Seventh Article Of a Series One Whose Head Cannot Control the Heart Should Avoid Part in Flirtation Game SOVEIN A COTTAGE 4 PRACTICAL AN Cegereu? CLOTHS OW Lous sr Teg DE-ANDED GAACEPVINEIE ClLoTHEs TOPAY ConDdUcE No SAusaventss she delights in carrying to ae highest SS ee ee of tension her woman nor the sweet womanliness/ nerves, Woman assumes arbitration pact that will be agreeable of the German.” type of seduction, for hei to both sides, A very good answer to this inquiry | "°t_ inspire tenderness, but ‘The railroade object to the Erd- man Arbitration act because of the phere \iLeaeervlt ed ae S; = ; tor Diomede Carito has embodied in names one arbitrator, and these two ‘ y his recently published book “In the select a third, who is practically th J Land of Washington. My Impres- eee socotaped errr: sions of the North American fs contained in a study of the Ameri-| nireucy ren Cometning more, real ®4-) Man Believed to Be Alec Colson of “The Genius of Mankind has given to the most active man who has ever been seen under the sun, to the North in Hercules, an Eve, who | flower of elegance and at the sa! of physical and spiritual beauty. WHAT'S THE USE OF FLIRTING, WITH BEEF 80 HIGH. Dear Madam: What is the ue of flirting #0 long as the price of beet- Temaing what it ie? From @ Point of view flirtation is in- not at all what » “Love in a cottage” is Dractical and wholly delightful, ve the impudence to take up & girl's time ba ad even propose mar- riage. If there were not some sensi- ho have some idea of how ch marriages would be it ‘would be a bad thing for the country, ‘The main difference between the for certuinly to live decently at the . Hor right foot was caught as the cars came i @ standstill and, was Amerionn on8 any other women Present time one has @ hard tim y is that the former is more fre- making three times that much do, ‘Meantime the fellow fled back throusn| THOSE WITA GREATER HEARTS| quently the captain of her soul, I know whereof I epeak because I the crowded @lsles of the second and| THAN HEADS SHOULDN'T FLIRT. | and stays 60. keep house myself, though I'm not third cars. was at rear of the| Now, I believe wherever the heart] In commenting on the coldness of| married, tell you the truth, the more I see of husbands the better I tove a aingle life. It is the easiest thing in orld to get @ husband if you 't patioular whose husband it is. the bachelors do not inspire fashioned girtd, but of course no one , takes them seciously there; one can’t. old-fashioned girt with men yet, al- | @,°e seen many fluffy M anted they could » who had scores of admirers. LATEST DEMAND ‘1 London is for a poctess laureate. But the men say they don't marry those girls. Still it has been done BOSTON HUSBAND suing for divorce demands alimony. and etatistics are against them, It ‘@ more or less of a joke. But sup- Dose men neither flirt with us nor marry us. As long ae we have a 00d Job we should worry! M. H. Q-FEW “QUOTATIONS” FROM A CONNECTICUT READER. Dear Madam: The following quota- tion seems to me might apply to ‘women as well as men. “Few have read Gartor Resartue with either comprehension or profit, and are therefore u are, Teufeledrockh ‘was, that ‘Society is founded on cloth’ <4. @, that man does adapt his man- ners very muoh to suit his clothes, WOMAN In Titusville was killed by @ bolt of lightning; baby she was carry+ ing was uninjured. PHYSICIAN in Trenton was warned by police he had violated law in selling ® human skeleton to the rag and bone man. COLLEGE BRED HEN in Oregon has justified her training by Iaying ninety: nine eggs in one hudred dayw. VINDICATION COMPLETE-—Section clerk who kissed a girl ¢lork in the Pension Office and was suspended has been reinstated because he did it on & dare Ht FOR FAILURE to carry lights on his carraige Newark man was fined $250; first prosecution under a new State law. ONE-LEGGED MEN using crutoh eat one-legged men wearing artificial legs in two baseball games. The crutch outfit talk of challenging the Yankees. and that as the costume of the days of Louis Quinze or Louls Seize in- Spired graceful deportment and studied courtesy to women, #0 does the costume of our nineteenth cen- tury inspire brusque demeanor and curt forms of speech, which, how- ever sincere, are not flattering to the fair sex." In regard to the marriage question: “Now I have slways thought thet $f & woman does not love a man MAN WROTE to the Treasury Department asking if under the new currency bill banks would stili require collateral for a loan. LIGHTNING struck the Euclid Avenue Baptist Church in Cleveland and shattered John D. Rockefeller's pew. BACHELORS lead married men in crime by three to one, statistics show. ‘Women may paste this in their bonn: after cutting off this additional oddity: ‘Three married men to one unmarried attempt suicide. well enough to leave her country and home and be ready to follow him, WEDDING GUESTS were resentful when instead of a ceremony @ even to the ends of the world, if |certificate was read to them setting forth that an Alton couple had. been mar- need be, deeming all nothing in com- |ried in advance, Whereupon the bridegroom advertised that persons who *\ Parison to hie love, she should not | didn't like it could get their wedding presen i marry him.” ronan: i's ur teres [BOMB HURLED AT. HOUSE women as guiding stars in our | IN BROOKLY troubled sky; a few of us would work HARM BOMB-PROOF DOOR. |iiiica and climb to greatness for love of the one woman dore; would con- —— at 2 o'clock thie mo by an express 3 aye, would die for | Hallway Wrecked and Families in ape wit Reading er Cheese + or, what Js far more ‘i man had driven a woman who had spent diMcuft, would live for her the lite ot | Panic, but Bar Evidently Aimed at |tne day visiting his wife to her own @ hero and martyr! Yes, euch things Is Saved by Sheet-lron Armor. home and was returning home when are done, and men can be found struck. The horse ran home to thes who will do such things—all for a | Several families were thrown into @/parn and his coming alarmed his wife, ‘woman's sake.” jo early to-day at No, 43 Union “Men are like chikiren—they tire of | street, Brooklyn, by the explosion of their toya; hence the frequent trouble | bom» which wrecked the main hallw: and discomfort of marriage. They |The bomb ls delieved the work of grow weary of the same face, the | Black Hand, but no one In the ho eame caressing arma, the same faith. | Would admit having recelved any ful heart. threats ae ; “Men never fall in lov: m the groun joor is a saloon run a-woman's mind; aay paved haraoey, by Calogoro Galant! A door leading They may learn to admire the mind |*® the saloon from the hallway of the afterward if it prove worth admira- tion, but it is always @ secondary thing. This may be called a rough truth, but Jt is true, for all that.” Fairfield, Conn. LB ELLEN TERRY SEPARATED FROM HER YOUNG HUSBAND. Actress and Man She Married in Pittsburgh Part by Agreement; He Is 24 Years Younger. LONDON, July 6.—Etlen Terry, the JUMPS TO HIS DEATH FROM HIGH BRIDGE. the Bronx Hurls Himself Into Harlem River. A man, wh entity has o1 partially established as Alec couse pe Sars : epnypetpmiaee pela ype Le nd, James Carew, whom she mar: eee te Were On ten oueg |in Pittsburgh in ‘March, 1901. Carew was her leading man. He is forty-one, death off Washingion Bridge into the| twenty-four years younger than his Harlem River early to-day. wite, None saw him jump, but Witiam| The separation ts by mutual agree- Kenny of No. 149 Boscobel avenue, | ment. Miss Terry will turn over to the Bronx, was standing on a float of |Carew all the beautiful furnishings of @ boathouses below the bridge | their home. splash and saw a| Balen Terry's first husband was George on the river, He| Frederick Watts, the famous painter, put out in @ boat and there found the | whom she married when bhe very young unconscious man floating | and from whom she eocn parted in ro- just below the surface of the river. ™mantic ciroumstances and with his con- He towed the body ashore and, with| sent. In 18 she married Charles War- the ald of @ policeman, worked to re-|dell, an actor, who died some years store life, Though at first there was a| aso A faint glimmer of returning conscious- ness, that soon passed, a surgeon from Reception Hospital determined that the Jumper was dead. ——— WALKED OUT INTO OCEAN. Young Woman Rescued at Coney play Ss a ona eee table Compound, an honest, tried and true remedy for femi- out beyond her depth, ite ota nine ills, holds the record for the foot of Kensington Walk, Coney /@ the largest number of actual ee ast an ne erman|g cures of any similar remedy, Huckel, Ne, 9 West Fifty-sixth street, |8 and is prescribed and recom. Manhattan, end Witkem Gavwouiye |¢mended by hundreds of fair- swam out and rescued her, minded doctors who do not Hospi the rated tel to me fear to feocmianend a werty but later said she was medi »: even ui it is , ” Brookiyn. 1) ania ban bee ‘Teamptat sue SUNDAY WORLD “WANTS' ort cecTtellrious, Bo change woo made WORK MONDAY WONDERS. against her. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- Amazing Tale of a New York Society Woman’s $10,000 Pink Pearl; “Ludlow Street Jail as I Saw It from the In- side,” by an Actor, Author and Philosopher; How the Loyal Wife of a $1,430,000 Embezzler Engineered the Return of $1,435,000; ‘Bill, = Office Boy,” Suffers a Financial Loss with the “S ystem”’—By Paul West; “Below the Dead Line’”—How It Is Guarded by ory, Fone, Dein, Gere | ag TR Treen: | | ee Vek le on Wesennn ice Men, » than An er Place | “How RichPit len HaveBeen y oe in the United States; . ’ —A Detoctive Story | by Roger O’Mara; New York Is on eels A The American-Born Chinese Girl Wife, Who | “Prince of Sheepdogs,” hoe Specimen in Funny Feature by Roy McCar- : Has Four Bridal Feasts; America of the “All Wool’ Canine; Thirty Style ‘“Don’ts” for Men by a Well * Known Authority on Men’s Dress; “Wea Suffrage,” Illustrated and Described Women of Opposing “How to Climb the Ladder to Success”— Twelve Rules by Two Capitalists Who Began lan on $3.00 and $4.00 Per Week ive! ages ol a Instructive Reading About “New ang Odd Things in Science” and by Two Prominent Res Of Unique Interest to Women—a Real Novelty, “The Crownless Hat." Words and Music of the Song Hit, “Hello, Honey,” and a New Copy of “FUN,” the Great Weekly Joke Book. ; : : 3 dell in the Metropolitan Section.