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NUER OF STRIKE ON 50,000 MILES Crisis Will Be Reached at the Conference To-Morrow Be- | tween Committees. fusal to Arbitrate May Be Signal for Tie-Up. Phe prospects of serious trouble be- @woen. 100,000 conductors and trainmen @@ the 06,009 miles of railroad embrac- the territory east of the Mississippi ‘Maver and north of the Potomac River Gesome more serious to-dey than at @My time since the Order of Rallway @enductors and Brotherhood of Rail- @ead Trainmen filed a demand for an @Bsregate wage increase of $17,000,000 @ year. @he Conference Committees of Man- rs, representing the forty-four main involved, held a secret meeting @day in the Engineering Societ; Deliding at No. % West Thirty-nii @treet. At thie meeting a definite an- @wer was prepared to be handed to- @errow to the Committee of 100, repre- @wating the trainmen and conductors, AMhough the terms of the answer @ere withheld, as a matter of courtesy, (@ati they are formally given to the @einmen and conductors, it is said the @uswer will reiterate the managers’ po- @ition—that the wages already paid ave fm many cases excessive and that furth- @ increases will be ruinous addition, it is reported, the man- @gers will reaffirm their refusal to @ubtmit the matter to arbitration under the Fedaral Erdman act, on the grounds UEASTERN ROADS MANAGERS SEEM FIRM |¢ Rejection of Demands and Re-| ‘ that the entire matter is left in the hands of one man. @uch an answer from the rallroais will bring the matter to @ crisis, for gt to-morrow's meeting the trainmen and conductors will notify the Confor- ence Committee of Managers tuat the recent vote taken among thelr 100,000 members called overwhelmingly for a speedily be reached. ‘The meeting to-morrow will be held at 10.90 o'clock A. M. in the assembly reoms of the Engineering 80 Bulld- ing and will be attended by the Confer- ence Comittee of Managers, of whicn Bilsha Lve is Chairman, and by fifty from the conductors, on jarretson, and by Atty representatives from the trainmen, headed by President Lee. It has not been decided whether this oonference will be secret or public, though in the past most of them have been held in secret. As soon as the conference is called to order Presidents Lee and Garretson will announce to the railroad managers the figures in the recent strike vote. The exact percentage of this vote will be kept secret until delivered, but 4t is known that more than 90 per cent @f the trainmen and conductors on the Foada involved have voted to give their lesders authority to call a strike if @atisfactory wage increases are not gzanted, Tt te reported to-day that the train- men and conductors, aw soon as th fhave announced the strike vote, will d d again that the wage amcale ques- tion go to arbitration. A previous de- mand along this same line has already Geen refused with much definiteness by the manag Should they repeat their wefwsal, the matter will have reached @weh a stage that a walkout of 100,000 (men, paralysing traffic in the Eust, may ensue. Federal intervention 1s more than like- dy before a atrike order is issued If the matter goes that fur, Secretary of La- Sor Wilson is known to be watching de- velopments, and is prepared to send the Qhlet of the Bureau of Labor Statintics 6 Mow York should a crisis be reached. it was reported from . i urging Congress ¢@ enact an amendment to the Erdman ect which will increase the size of the beard of arbitration, The present board fe mited to three members, one being elected by each side, who then select @ third, As two members of the board neces- earily are partisans, the third member usually writes the award. The raflroads have all along objected to this proced- wre and based their recent refusa erbitrate upon this “one man power. President Lee of the trainmen will re- turn to New York this afternoon from Cleveland and will confer with Presl- dent Garrison and the other union leaders to-night, preparatory to to-mor- row'n meeting. Until this conference none of the union officials would discuss to-morrow's action further than to ad- mit that they have been authorized to issue a strike order should 4 peaceful settlement fail Chairman Elisha Lee, representing the Conference Committee of Man- agers, in 4 statement to-day, declared men and engineers and demanded by the tralnmen and contuctors would impp & licn of $1,040,000,000 in 8 per cay ecurities on the rallroads, this ing necessarily paid before frat te bonds. Ages of ratiroad tabor can only | fe out of funda received by the 7 ,fouds for nervices performed,” he i J. “1 these wages absorb a con @tantly increasing proportfon of the reeeipts from this aole source of rev- eave it is obvioun that the public must pay the Dill in the end, "The question the public has to ewer is: ‘How long shall this process | the wage Increases granted the fire- | | Evelyn Nesbit Thaw in Dance of “Hello Ragtime’’ in London DOOLE ESTE FSOOSSOEBOLEGS 6 46-08 OOS4 HE4OEHOHEH EHO EEE « Pa cS 992-9930 (Photograph From London Sketch.) THE EVENING WORLD, | e) | | $| 3 t SPEFRE-D IDS ESR THT GOD S826 PEISEOGIDE OO POODLE D4 OGO4OO ) 6 OH EOD i | RIDE OF DEATH WHEN COASTER’S | BRAKES FAILED Victims of Accident at Palisade , Amusement Park Gen- | erally Doing Well. At the North Hudson Hospital this morning !t was said“that no more vic- tims of the roller coarter accident at Pailsade Amusement Park, Patteades, were expected to die, as Mi the sur- vivors were getting along well. Two of the victims died in the hospital eary to-day, They were Frank Le Claire of No. 11 Norton street, Manhattan, the operator of one of the cars in collision, and Arthur Olsen of No, 19% Washing- ton avenue, Bronx. Le Claire's skull was fractured and he was hurt inter- nally, Olsen was also injured inter- nally and a bone was driven into his ieft foot, which had to be amputated. The others who were taken to the hospital were: Clarence Gillig, No. 361 East One Hundred and Fifty-ninth street, Bronx, lege injured; Tor- rance King, No. 44 Henderson atreet, Jersey City, hurt about the body; Lor- etta King, his sister, same address, right ankle sprained; Kate Wildman, No. 251 West Eighty-ninth street, Man- hattan, right ankie dislocated; P. Wel- wand, No. 667 Eighteenth street, West New York, hips injured; May Reyelt, . 380 Beach street, Jersey City, right ankle sprained Willian Josslyn, No. 1286 Washington nue, Bronx right arm and leg injured; Fannie Spolan, No. 213 East Ninety-cighth etreet, Manhat- tan, left elbow sprained; Otto Casper, No. 381 Thirty-third street, Woodcliff, N. J., hips and arme injured; E. C, Mason, No, 120 Beach street, Jersey City, arm broken, SEVERAL SLIGHTLY INJURED GO HOME FOR TREATMENT. David Goldstein, of No. 117 Sussex atreet, Jersey City, and Frank Higgine of her income she went to London, dance with Jack Clifford. ald the other day: am here not ‘freak,’ to be stared at because of my com- Ught-stage Which has been my artist. my profession to-day.” CE TRUST TRES TOFORCEDEALERS TO REDUCE PRE Knickerbocker, Because of the Shortage, Can’t Supply New Wholesale Customers. Refusal of ice dealers who handle 68 per cent. of the ice business of Greater New York to reduce their price to meet the rate fixed by the Knickerbocker Ice Company, will cause that company, it is believed, to refuse to handle the business of ne customers, forcing them back to thelr old dealers and increased prices, The Knickerbocker Ice Company, handling 32 per cent, of the ico business of the city, has fixed a rate of $4 a ton whole- je for ice during the summer months and claims that it makes a legitimate profit at that price, Other dealers are charging from $5 to $6 a ton, Ana result the Knickerbocker Ice Company has been swamped with new business, “The other ice companies in New York can sell ice as cheaply we suid President William Oler of the Knickerbocker Ice Company to-day, d make a good profit. Their re- fusal to meet our prices, which are fair, will work a hardship on the buy- ing public of New York, AT FIRST RELIED ON ARTIFICIAL ICE. “We started the season with a short- 1,000,000 tons of natural tee, to age oO. the unusually open winter During the early spring an? summer, of course, sold as much artificial ico as possible, working our tce-making plants to the mit, for we cannot store artificial ice and we can pack natural 1 Now we are forced to supply natural ice from our storage planta, “Since June we have been selling tee at $4 ton, while our competitors have been charging % @ ton or more, The % rate Is extravagant and unjust, since we have shown that a $ rate can be maintained with profit, The excesulve charges of our competitors have thrown their businems ly ue, With @ result that my company faces an ice shortage. of increases be allowed to continue wumohecked? " There can be but one result, We mus! refuse to serve new customers, or other | Memized account presented in the proot| dealers must reduce their prices and bold their own customers, “If we cannot serve new customers, they must oontinue to buy—at an exces- alve rate—trom othar ice dealers, We do not believe more than # a ton {s jus- tifled, but our supply ts limited by the unusual open winter, and it begins to look as if we can serve only those who always trade with us. IT's UP TO THE OTHER COM- PANIES TO REDUCE PRICE. ‘The retail pricet of ice approximately {s $a ton. An independent dealer sell- ing tce at that figure can make a fair profit if he can buy at # a ton whole- sale, But if he ts forced to pay #% or more a ton he will be driven out of business, That Is a natural result. “Why, last Wednesday my company sold 21,000 tons more of ice than ‘t sold the same day last year. With our ural shortage of natural ice we cannot make sufficient artificial ice to continue that rate of consumption. It is up to the other Ice companies to reduce thelr prices the general public will be the auffere: That other ice companies are charging $5 and more a ton and that they expect to maintain these prices was the con- sensus of opinion among them. "We are charging $5 a ton for ice, said Mr, Scott of Foster-Scott & Co., No, 32 West enth street, “and we do not intend to cut our rates. We do not care what others do. I ain attend- ing to my business and I guess you would better attend to yours,” he sald, concluding the interview. "I am charging $ a ton for ice and am handling all the business I can, #0 it does not matter to m what others charge jared John M at the foot of 1 do not intend to cut my price to #1 a ton or of No. 159 Sussex street, Jersey City, were taken to the Knglewood Hospital in an automobile. 3t is said be*h will recover. Three others who were treated at the Amusement Park, refusing to go to hospital, were Thomas Langley of No. 635 Broadway, West Hoboken; Mrs. George Toite of Edgewater, N. J., and Mies Frances Lamberton of No. 123 Greene avenue, Brooklyn. They were suffering from bruises and nervous shock, A number of others who were more or less hurt left the park before they could be treated or their names obtained. It is expected that County Ph: Armstrong will begin an inves as to the catise of the accident to-day. So far as has been learned, one train of cars had taken the S-foot dip on the roller coaster railroad at the Mid- way and had started up the incline at the other end when something went wrong with the power or the oper- ator did not apply the electricity or falled to apply enough of it to carry the train up the incline. When near the top the train stopped and then be- Ban to descend. SAFETY DEVICE WAS 8UCH ONLY IN NAME, Just then g second train of cars ap- peared at the top of the descent. An alleged safety device, according to t management of the park, should held that train on top of the decline, but {t failed to do so and the two trains came together with a tremendous crash, Many of the pat were were hurled from the cars by the force of the colll- sion, while othera were injured where they sat, The park attendants hurried the aid of the injured and ambulances Were called from the North Hudson a: Englewood Hospitals. ‘The more severe ly hurt were rushed to the hospitals, while the others were treated on the grounds, ‘The accident caused wild excitement, and relatives and friends of persons known to be on the trains in collision rushed to the scene, The em- plo; of the roller coaster company refused to let any one enter the pli but they promptly shut off the power to prevent any more cars going down the decline and smashing into the four already wrecked. PAWNED WEDDING GIFTS AND GOT FIRE INSURANCE ON THEM of loss showed that a number of w ding presents had been destroyed, Later on, according to information given out by the Dystrict-Attorney's OMce, a num- ber of the Wedding prenenta included tn the itemized account were found in varl- ous pawnshops in thia city michael made @ trip abroad | has been in New York about ten He was arrested by Detective Joseph Russo of the District Attorney's stat on Saturday last at the home of a friend Vivian I. Carmichael of Merric charged with fldin He was released bat! ¢ michael, who is twenty pleaded not guilty Fire occurred michael's at Mer! years old, a house Car- in Ju He in k, of 10, had an Insurance the Th 2 ley for $10,000 with elaim for He collected #4, The it $5,000 damag: at Riverside Drive and Suventy-second street. Ttusso went there with a bench war- rant issued by Judge Foster and on entering the apartment was told that the man was not there, The detectiy | sald he threatened to break into a room and later found Carmichael hiding in # | clothes closet. Conaiderale of the Information fur- |nished in reference to Carmichael and J his interest in the tire was given by his fathersin-law, Willlam J. K. Kenn | — ; Sunday World “Wants” Work Monday Wontéers, orprmeny «7 MONDAY MBB SUGGESTS “OOLNG PEROD”. TO QUEL RCE Novel Marriage Reforms Pro-. posed Before Conference of Jewish Clergymen. (Special to The Brening World.) ATLANTIC CITY, July A “cooling Period” of three months from the time of the final hearing until ultimate de- | cision is handed down by the courts wan the novel acheme advanced t's Morning by the Rev. J. Leonard Levy ot Pittsburgh ax the solution of the | Problem of minimizing the divorce evil. This plan was brought out while speak. | ing on the “Modern Problem of Mar tage and Divorce” defore the Central Conference of American Rabbis tn oon- vention at the Hotel Rudolf here to-d: “This reduction, I believe, in the eep- erations between married couples would be to @ startling extent," he declared, “if some plan of this nature were car- ried out. Let the concluding chapters | of @ sult for divorce be held up for a quarter of a year from the day of the Completion of the trial, making It con- ditional upon the tmpossibility of a re- coneiilation. TORE FORMER RELA- | | MIGHT RE TIONS, HE SAYS. “This cooling period might thus elapse, during which neither of the divorced Persons would remarry. This might not only serve to restore the former rela- tions, ut woud surely save us the shock to our moral sensibilities caused by the announcements such as ‘Divorced and Married in One Hour.’ “Another thing that should be ad- vocated {8 uniform Federal marti and divorce laws. The confusion caused dy so many acts end the posiltility of evading the lawn of one State by the Protection of the laws of another State ia certainly most undestrable, It tn cer tain that if the present laws, inade- quate, conflicting and confusing, were eMctently enforced, however, many of the evils deplored by honest men and women would disappoar. “The haaty marriage must be curtatied if the rate of divorce is to disappear. A rabbi should demand at least twenty Gays notice before performing a cere- mony, in order that he may thoroughly investigate the character of the princ!- pals involved, ‘The agitation that is now sweeping the land by the educated conscience de- demanding the presentation of health certificates from the bride and groom ‘when they make application for a l- conge to wed, should e expoused by every rabbt. “Great an evil as divorce is, there can Be @ still greater evil in domestic life, the imposalbility of obtaining divorce in e@pite of legal grounds. When domestic conditions are immoral, husbands and ‘and wives should be legally put asunder. ‘Nothing can be more debasing to inno- cent children than to be reared In a| home in the presence of parents who have lost all respect for each other.” MUTANT BOMB DAMAGES EXCHANGE IN LIVERPOOL Explodes in Cellar of Building Where It Had Been Planted —Plot to Burn London? | LIVERPOOL, July 7.—The cellar of the Exchange was partially wrecked here to-day by a bomb exploston, which | A search by the police in the bellef thut some clue backing up thelr theory that the bomb was planted by suffragettes would be 4 | SOUTHPORT, England, July 7.—-Mi- | tant suffragettes to-day attempted to burn down the recreation pier, which | {a a mile long, at this watering place, Fishermen discovered the fire and ex-| tinguished the flames before much! damage had been done. LONDON, July 7.—Following the state- | ment of the Daily Mail that militancy | had been “killed in England by th cat and mouse law," @ sensation was sprung to-day by the publication in the Evening Standard of a story de elari that Scotland Yard had dis- covered a plot ty burn London Atcording to the a@ pians for the firing of the city, phosphorus bombs | were to be dropped from aeroplanes on | the principal buildings, According to| the story, it was planned to have French | C ors fly acroga the channel with the bombs, which would be furnished them from London. The plot had ad- vanced to the point of approaching cor tain aviators, it ts declared The air- men refused to become involved and) reported the affair to Scotland Yard. According to the s, the Wo phosphorui the oity in had planted tub various sections tion for thelr demonstration which was planned as the effort of their destructive work ¢ to the effect of the “eat | the Dally Mall de ant leaders nat lost | their followers and practically no funds | were being subserived to the Women's! Social and Wolitical Untun | The inolated fires and other attacks attributed to individual now ———— | by Mistake. | twenty-one years; hinder employed und liv- old, # cabare Ing tn the Park Avenue Hotel, at the Boulevard and Park avenue, Rockaway Beach, is in the hospital there, prod: jabiy dy! ax a emul of taking & bb chloride of mercury tavlet by mistake, at 1.20 o'clock yesterday mourning. a So, i dich dhaiienac ances aceh_. anROaee Seema deen aaa Aen , IULY 7, 1818. ‘USED AUTO LAMPS President’s Daughter and Fiance Snapped on Way to Church eeteeee ~ FOR TWO MONTHS | RA°and jong anticipated. The Colomel* CAMP ON DESERT Ex-President Slips Away Quiet- ly With Sons to Take Long Rest. Quietly vet euddenty Col. Roosevelt left thie city to-day for the Wild West, to be gone for two months. He snnounced Just before departing that his trip is the beginning of « vacation much need- ae 3, 4 a ‘ * ° « “ . ri ~ $ ote eeeeteee ds @8 » led, hia vacation was to prevent the Qe aS ee o¢ POTDDOD MISS WILSON BLUSHES TO SAVE THREE FROM | AS CAMERA GETS HER DEATH IN THE RIVER} AND FIANCE AT CHURCH Motor Boat Party Rescued] Sayre Joins President’s Family After Their Craft Hits Over Sunday and Drives Rocks in Hudson. in Afternoon, A daring and unusual rescue of @ Wana ve, bad Mead vere json ‘ia family, which motor boat party which had foundered pebesrenlpe io fear. perend ‘on the rocks on the weat shore of th@|Gaughters Misses Eleanor and Jes! Hudson River near Philipse Manor at 1) attended church in Windeor yester- o'clock this morning was effected by|day. They were accompanied by Mr. three plucky swimmers alded by @ coll and Mrs, Tedcaatlo and by Francis B. of rope and an automobile searchitent. y|ered with pimples whi was accompanied by his two sone, Quentin and Archie, but there was not ® gun or @ bowle knife in the baggage outntt. Col, Roosevelt made tt known severst weeks ago that he was going to take « vacation—a quiet sojourn unattended by any strenuous side issue like hunting big game. During the Colonel's stay io the West the designations for the May- oralty will be mado but he will have returned to the metropolis before the primaries take plac He left to-day with Quentin and Archie aboard ¢he Metropolitan express train which hauled out of the Pennaylvania railroad station jock. He i bound for the Ark zona desert, thence the Colorado Cam- yon. His address for a week will Se Hotel E. Tovar, Grand Canyon, Cel. ‘There he will fit out a camping ¢rain and then @o into the desert, ‘There Is no big game in the Canyon er the Arizona desert, It was expiained after the Colonel's departure that his sudden determination to begin, unherald- Presence of @ crowd at the point of departure. ———— William M. Shelley Drops Dead. MORRISTOWN, N. J. July 7.—Will- iam M. Sheiley, Pesldent of the Hygdla Ice Company, dropped dead at the fae tory in Water Street to-day, Heart @is- ease, which had been made acute by the recent heat, caused death, Mr. shetley. wan fifty-elght years old. He bad teen in the ice business here for twenty-five FACE COVERED WITH PIMPLES-- RESINOL CURED * < Atlanta, Ga., April 24, 1913:—“When I received the samples of Resinol Soap ) and Resinol Ointment had face was coy. defied othe: creams, soaps cosmetics. ry ee warts of saateet bnk to me, coming in contact with many strangers as I do, as o business woman, “Hy the time I had finished » cake of Resinol Soap and half » jar of | Sayre, the flance of Miss Jessie Wil- People iiving in the little colony on|#0% The presence of the Wilaon fam- the west ahore of Tappan Zee, where |J!¥ id not increase the congregation the river is four miles wide, were awak- |*PPreciably at the Old South Churol ened $y Gren tor help borne on Whe iitt |. 508 Tremaeat wal éresved th the wile that was touring up the Hudgom |f0™m® neal Gray sult wien oe Oren early this morning, but It was impos | Wiser was dressed yt alt al i mble to tell from which direction the | Witte straw hat trimmed ark white sounds came. H. M, Stewart, Prealdent | 00 Sins Jeesle Wilson was dressed of the Stewart Publishing Company, |i0° white too, and @ vell wae drawn who has » cottage at Phillpse Manor, and | carefully about her head, not suMcl who Was one of those awakened, bit upon the device of running an auto- ntly, however, to hide the blush mobile to the shore and using the lampa on fooused on the party as they en: to search for the wrecked party. They on discovered about three hun- and left the churoh. . ‘The pastor, the Rev. J. F. Schneider, were # dred yards north of the Philpse Manor are CY ieee oe fs here ¢ ceptional ai @ vibll- Boat Ciub pier, pounding furlously on) TY Ti terence belng Bark xiv, 37: “And Jesus saith unto them, All ye that a boat could not last] shall be offended because of Mo this for a minute in the rough wen, @ reacue| night: for it 1s written, I will smite the party of three, consisting ot Guy P. | Biepherd, and the sheep shail be scat- Norton, an Importer, Paul Furtenberg, | tered.” ——__ he Death of Mrs. A. H. Ore. Mre. Mai Shippen Orr, wil Alexander K. Orr, former president of the New York Life Insurance Com- mnude tant to the shore | sa [etarr te aed ah beaten hore Through deep and shallow | water: | Hemaen street, Brooklyn, She was in broken wit! numerous sharp rocks, and| her seventycninth year and had been lashed into @urf by the wing which| married forty years, Mrs. Orr was a swept across the river, the rescue party | reat-granddaughter of Chief Justice fwam, waiked, alld and stumbled thelr | Shippen of Pennsylvania, way to the motor bot = — ‘The three in the boat, consiating of Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Hubert and a friend, wore safely conducted to the shore along the rope by means of relays eatabliahd by the nercuers, They said that they had started from Rockland late in the evening and were thelr way to Spuyten Duyvil, when their engine «ave out were blown acrosn Wie river, boat atruck the Fi Th pounding on the rocks for fore thelr cries for help to the atranded boat. Norton, who led the party, carried a rope which had been from mosquitoesor other insets are quickly relieved by the prompt anplle cation of Hydiox, Helps all skin troubles. Handy necessity in caseof 4 Mrs, Oscar Johnson killed in front of the Quogue ata- tion at 9.90 A, M. to-day, The child tried “ pase in front of # train, Kast Quogue, Rislieyes eure tnvoos “FRAUDS UPON THE PUB-} | * lie a the bead. Lic” Peotth pecan is what some physicians have ofp Cressi called patent medicines, and it is undeniably true that some are frauds and some are even worse, because they are injuri- ous. On the other hand, there are many patent medicines such as Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, and others, Which are of real worth, and are recommended by phy- sicians of recognized standing, found articles ade je The World wil be Usted 0 Worl tlen Bureau, Arcade, i'ark Hows Work Uptown Office, northwest cor- nth Mt tt '. tum Bi. Beooklym, for #0 following the Qdvertincinemt, . of the ali Resinol Ointment my skin was soft ar velvet, and as smooth. My friends were stunned, and everyone asked me what I had done, When I told them I think they hardly believed it, for the transformation was simply w ince then I have been using Soap and shall never be without it again, for I have learned the delights of a clear, soft, beautiful complexion uh be attained by its constant ( ened) Miss E. P. Gaddis, 206 ‘or St, Ointment and Resing! Soap stop itching instantly a ly heal eczema, and other skin humors, das. druff, sores, burns and Sold by every druggist. For free trial. write Dept. 3-R, Resinol, Britimore, Md. IGID adherence to the Miedo stand- ard of quality in mak- ing, plus consistent freshness in selling, wins and keeps friends for te candies, For Flavoring Gravie HOLBROOKS WORCESTERSHIRE SAUCE le elmply delicious. Imvorted Absolutely! Going on nay hee T