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+ I 'y' ‘by’ the House would remove all possl- bility of & strike. ‘The first thing President Wilson a When ne got to his office to-day was to send for ail documents bearing on the case, Then he completed pians for his own participation in the conference. Asked whether he would back up Beeretary of ir Wilson in his ad- Yocacy of the jon amendment, th President sald fi taken no post. tive position, it his next answer showed that believed that there bad been too effort on some one's part te make controversy of thie questi He atated that ft was not 0 much a question of who should con- trol the board as of getting it created and into action, The creation of the board, while an independent question, is not in reality &@ serious problem according to the President. And even though this after- Roen's conference should not reach & deGnite decision the President main- tained that he was hopeful that both Sides would agree to arbitrate. LOW CONFIDENT CONFERENCE WILL END TROUBLE. “If this meeting results in agreement, es I feel confident that it. will,” . ud Beth Low, “we shall have laid the foundations for peace in the industrial just as The Hague conference ted the way for peace between aa mere fact that the two opposing get together before the President @ notable advance Im the cause of In- @ustrial peace. Never before have we had highest executives of such great interests or go many employees meet for @micable discussion. Never before have the presidents of the railways met with Tepresentatives of the brotherhoods of workers, This te no ordinary meeting wherein ene employer confers with a single union concerning detalis of some Questions at .s.ue ber in them alone. ‘Mere we ohall have « delegation of rail- way presidents representing Gtty-four of our great railways coming togetner ‘With representati: of the unions for Hil THE EVENI the purpose of extablishing rules to gev- ern their future relations, “What we hope will result frem this conference is something more than e4- Jestment of the disputes at issue in t te tay the this particular case. We foundation’ for the preservation ef in- dustrial peace for many years to coma The methods of mediation and erbitra- Uon that we expect them to agree upon are to establish the machinery for amicable settioment of labor disputes tot only between these parties, but be tween all capital and laber. “We are working in the broader field of federa) principios looking to the future Qs well as to the present. I consider that the inffuence of their agreement will have wideredching effect. Their coming together for such an effort is an event of highest importance, because what they mutually agree upon is prac- Uoally certain to be enacted into the law of the tanc. “When the representatives of the| NOT OUT TO BLACKMAIL. brotherhoods asked what railroads would do toward changing the present arbitration syetem, the managera re- piled that they had nothing to say. This led the men to believe that ¢ companies would not mee. them im arbi. tration. “But such questions of broad pellcy naturally come within the province of the presidents ef railways, not the maa- agers, and it wae evident that they had ROt posted the managers on this point. The National Civic Federation cow that | Mulhall, self-styled lobbyist for ten and We | years from the National Association of there was misunderstanding opened communication with presidents themselves, “Now, a8 @ result, we have the preai- | lobby investigation to-day to reply to dente of our greatest railways coming into personal contact with the repre- sentatives of the men to straighten out | Upon his character and his purpose in the miaunderstandings and to agree upon | the expose in which he has become the & line of general action that ie eure to Rave beneficial resulta, eral arbitration act be agreed upon, it will be quickly enacted in law and applied to the “ The quentions veray in @ manner thet peaceful @Ajustiment of ‘esue.” Railroad Managers ‘The Conference Committee of Railway Managers this afternoon issued @ for- mal statement, in which they offered to @rbitrate the men's demand for in- ereused wages, providing the Newlands Dill 1s passed, Hitherto the managers have refused te arbitrate under the Erdman act, be- @huse only thr bitrat are ap pointed, only one man hav! therefore, the deciding vote. ‘The statement of the managers agree- fee te arbitrate under the Newlants ‘Bll Was issued this afternoon after u @ecret session, and was a@ent to ington to President W 1. Lee of Abe Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen and nt A. B. Gurreison of the Order of Railway Conductors. : MANAGERS EXPLAIN THEIR Managers, representing ftorty-th Bastern railroads, has éealt with three Ieer controversies—the pres- @At one, Ome with the engineers and Qpether with the firemen.. The com- ‘Malttee's policy has never changed. Wt has refused to be coerced, through / Ghrents of strikes, into paying the employees wag all @mt in contending ¢! @ct—arbitration under which rail- fond employees ai urge—does Mot protect the interests of all par- Wee concerned. ‘Judging from your letter of the Instant, we take it that you will @gree to arbitrate under some fair Pian, such ae Yhat called for in the Rewlands ill, the passage ef which Fepresentatives of the railroads have ‘Deen urging for rome time past, and that you will not insist further upon the Newland: ‘Rtil be enacted into law, the Confer- ence Committee will, of course, be willing to-oubmit to arbitration by a board provided for in the Newlanks Sli at) questions of rates of pay and Working conditions of conductors &. C, Long, Genera! Manager General Manager | York Central Railroad; J. , anslstant to the Third Vice-| it of the Baltimore & Ohio R. W. McMastera, General Man- | the Wheeling @ Lake Brie Rail-! C, L. Barde, General Manager of jw York, New Haven & Hartford & Bims, Vice-President and Manager of the Delaware & Huason Ratiroad, and H. W. Thornton, General Guperintendent of the Long Toland Railroad. TO CALL STRIKE 1F NEWLANDS' BILL FAILS. But tf all peaceful means tall—and believe they willme otrike ordi be issued. Before they left N Presidents Lee and Garretson fs Hl ie until they were ready to issue the etrike ‘The General Committeemen on all the Himes left New York yesterday for their with all instructions as to the Conduct of the strike, if the order is Bot effect a settlement. The dete for the strike will probably be Thureday, if the Newlands bili is Ret previously paseed in Congress. Whether a walkout of the trainmea and conductors would cripple the ser- views ta problematical, The railroad managers are known to Ready to Arbitrat by reason of the Washington conference | Months to give them a to-day. William Miller, eecretary to President Conference Committee of Managers, the following formal notificacdon of the ac- secordance with arrangement entered Into by us at the final con- ference held witn your committee, you are hereby notified that the Gen- o- | Which now are im the hands of the ut | Senate committee. Later, he said, he Bt] proposed to introduce witnesses and W. G. Lee of the trainmen, to-day de-| ¥ould receive for them." 7 livered to Elisha Lee, Chairman the|N. A. M. DID NOT HAVE MONEY| "4%." he concluded, fro of the General Commutteemen yee-| York World?” asked Senator Reed, jay LOBYST PAPERS WERESOLDBY HI Told N. A. M. Would Pay $150,000 for Documents; An- swered Couldn’t Be Bought. Testifies to Deal of Manufac- turers in Maryland and Pennsylvania Politics, NITRO GAYCERINE oured, who were to be encouraged to 0 on strike as econmas the labor unions ouggented it. Details of the fight against Pearre were brought out through a letter from | Mulhall to M. C. Holtsman of Cumber- | Jand, Md., dated April 27, 1906, whieh outlined @ plan te “send you all the labor organisers you wish, ané guaran- tee all of them to be firet-clase men,” ‘WASHINOTON, July 14.—Martin M. Manufacturers, interrupted the Benate what he declared were personal attacks/ to organize the fight against Pearre. In @ letter to Cushing in Api Mulhall wrote of w conference on 2 between President Roosevelt Gamuet Gompers, at which, the said, Gompers declared that if labor were not favored more in legislation it would carry on @ campaign to elect labor men to Congress. Mulhall wrote Cushing that he hed found in tours of large citles that “The ‘Threat of Mr. Gompers" was being carried out to the best of his ability,” and added that Gompers “labor leaders are doing thelr utmost to turn their labor ization into the Hearst movement ‘hiladel- phia.”” "I am perfectly confident that Mr. Muthali| Gompers and his labor leaders can be told the committees, “I never had in| badly beaten if the movement ts taken tind the questions of the money 1/ hold of in time,” Mulhall prophesied. “I know if you take hold in the right ‘no more delega- tions ike the one that called with w} Gompers on the President will ever be gotten up and I know that the Organisation you have got in Uonal Association of Manufacturers can easily put those peor'e out of business.” Mulhall told about makig personal isits to Cumberland to lend his in- central figure of the lobby inquiry. He denied that he had tried to sell the great mase of papers and letters which were recently biighed, and letters to show that he had been en- gaged for months in “trying to give away” the great fle of correspondence which has brought oMeers of the Na- tional Association of Manufacturers “I have attempted fo: @ past two ENOUGH TO BUY PAPER “But you did ell them to the » “T would like to offer further letters and witnesses on that point," sald Mul- hall, “I did not sell them. I fell into the hands of a gentleman named Barry who y, eame ever to look at the letters for Mr. eral Committees of the various prop- | Hearst. I have learned aince that he pesiaod pro ee a pyle bya Tepresented by your commit- |ig what is known ‘& newspaper tiD-| jetters he received from his employers ee, Including all from whom you |pter, The letters wiven to the) which sald: ae held original authorisation, meeting |New York World, but later Mr. Barry| ‘ separately, unanimously approve the | came and wanted me to k the con-| “PERSUASION” MEANT MONEY, strike vote of the membership on thetr reapective lines, and this will be your notification that each of such @mmittees separately authorises the undersigned to fix the hour at which ec properties above referred “Owing to the eaneat solicitation of terested: Interests, the undere signed were authorised to attend a conference arranged in Washington with the President of the United States, Pecompanied by presidente of interested raliways, on Monday, the fourtwenth, for the purpose of press- ing passage of the Newlands bil, which Was the outvome of various conferences between those interested in ite passage. “The local commitieemen of the rious properties have returned te tract with The World, saying he could Bet $180,000 for the letters from the National Association of Manufacturers. “I wald the letters were not for sale;| forts and don't get caught.” that the National Association of Manu-| A letter to Mulhall from C. H. Holts facturera did not have money enough] man at Cumberland sal@ the anti- fo buy them; that I had no proposition| Pearre organisation there wae costing: of blackmail tn connection with them."| $200 @ day and muck “persuasion” was At thie point Muihall's statement was! necessary. Interrupted by the committee. aid] “What do you mean by persuasiog?” he wanted Editor Maxwell and Louis! asked Senator Nelson. Siebold of the New York World, and) “Money,” sald the witness crisply. other witnesses called in his behalf.| “We had a large colored vote there Mr, Blebold te alreody under subpoena t needed seeing often,” he explained. by the committee. ‘ou had to see the colored voters The ‘House Committee appointed tp| over and over again,” suggested Chair- investigate the Mulhall charges was un-| man Overman, able to proceed to-day, owing to mon-| “Yes, sir—the last fellow who got to opolization of the witness by the Senate, | ‘em had ‘em on election day.” and is considering taking for a| On June 14, 1998, Cushing wrote to couple of weeks. Mulhall telling him that he could point MULHALL EXPLAINS. “We want to do all we can to defeat that gentleman, so redouble your ef- NG WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 14, 1918 Jersey City’s Queer Third Rail Whiskey MULHALL DENIES And Some of Its Practical Possibilities WF THEY COULD ONLY ORIN TEACH THE ORINK HABIT To THe MasquTity = AVIATORS BURN * TO DEATH UNDER BLAZING ASHP Father and Son Flying in New Machine Are Hurled to Earth and Wrapped in Flame, VBRSAILLES, France, July 14—The charred wreckage of an aeroplane with the incinerated bodies of two aviators lying in the ashes was found to-day near Nonancourt, on the railroad from Paris to Granville, The dead flying m ere identified as a man named Percin, who was ex- perimenting with @ new monoplane of hia own invention, end his son, who had pocompanied him as mechanic. Thels aeroplane capsised from an un- known causegat # height of 150 feet. It fell with @ crash to the ground and the violence of the impact caused the fuel tank to explode. ‘The aviators were pinned benesth the motor, whence they were unable to ex- tricate themeesives and were burned to HUE CRSPEL MURDERED, SCID AUTOPSY SONS (Continued from Firat Page.) day ehe arrived in the city, howe: ahe In-- MEY MIGHT USE IT TO RUN THEIR. CARS wiTH, ae mR) 17 MAY EXPLODE oF You ony aney v GENTLY FILLS HOSPITALS ~ WHO, TINS | Poison Whiskey, at Five Cents a Big Drink, Knocks Out the Hardiést. The personage who promulgated that dustly of ed wheese about there be ing no bad whiskey, only some better than others, never lived in Jersey City. If he were still alive, which, In view of the musty savor of this ancient gag is more than unlikely, it would be a liberal education fo: him to meet Frank Hague, the recently elected Commissioner of Public Safety of Manhattan's big Jersey neighbor, and hear what this activ tleman of public affairs has to aay about much of the “boose” that ia ladled out to the unwary in that populous com- munity. Commissioner Hague, or one of the four sleuthe who conducted his recent investigation, could lead Mr. No-Bad- TOLD OF POISON ONL WHEN SURE SHE WOULD DE Homesick Eighteen - year-old Girl Took Arsenic and Sald Heat Affected Her. The death of her parents a year ago left Helen Lavelle, then seventesn years old, alone in the old home at Whitehaven, Pa. Her sister Ruth and brother Henry had long before moved to Brocklyn, Helen accepted their in- vitation to live with them. From the “c= the green flelds and re- mained morose despite hor relatives’ efforts to cheer hi Then her brother married ana the “How the N, A. M. bought" Maryland | Out that Pearre was “saying both enda politicians, placed spies in Phila: labor unions during the printers’ strike of 1906, and thelr homes Instruction not te return to the service, pending fur+ ther Instructions, and we sincerely trust that @ crisis may not be pre- clpitated by an effort to compel any of those committeemen to retura te eervice,”’ Senate lobby committee. of the manufacturers, Mulhall —— Ts PARALYZED Y A DIVE, appearing in his role of conféesing lub- Ex-P byiet. resident of Wilmington Coun | “Tn, witness told how the asvociation ell Badly Hurt While Bathing. | used its power In = vain effort in 11 WILMINGTON, Dei., July 14—@amuel | % defeat Congressman Pearre of Cum- H. Benson jr, President of the City | Setland, Md. He said a negro editor Council which retired from office July | ¥8# “bought” and money paid to C. 1, was seriourly injured yesterday while | ephieee of Cumberland by Secretary at Fenton's Beach, N. J. whi ushing of the N. A. M. sere heard) “an Philadelphin Mulhall gald Michael againat play both your own account.” Ipiin | @winet the middie.” Cushing wrote: “You ought to point out to ali such epared a broad campaign | People—that {s, those who naturefly to combat the American Federation of | Ought to be against Pearro—how he is Labor, was disclosed to-day before the|‘rying to play both ends against the ‘| middie; that he ts attorney for the Bal- Two hundred letters of Col. M. M,|tiinore & Ohio, and could not excuse Mulhall divulged the anti-labor fight | himself as a paid employee it he doce re- | NOt oppose legislation when it came to @ show down, both onda! can oo “So while Pearre te playti mid Der! you against the middie A letter from Holtsman to Mulhall H,| June 2%, 1908, urged the latter to help immediately to raise funds for the final effort to beat Pearre at the primar.es. It sald that Pearre was “working the srs Colina, union hoisting engineer, was|!Abor racket” with great succese and paid by the N. A. M. fo epy upon the| that the “Federal office-holders are Mr. Benton dived from to the | strikers. Another man got #0 @ week supplying the money.” Delaware Riv truck a | for the same service, N. A. M. CAMPAIGN ACTIVITY IN testimony to-day re- Mar@hall Cushing, Ip wae laid open seven Inches and he suffered concussion of the epinal column, which resulted in com- Plete paralysts of the lower limbs and partial paralysis of the arms. His con- dition 18 40 serious that he could not be | removed from Mr, White's cottage to his home here, of Manufacturers, sums paign against Congressman Pearre of Maryland, Muthall said he made fre- quent visits to Pearre'a district and conferred with former Senator W ington, George H, Holtsman, Postm: Cumt ind, and others, 'Why did you oppose Pearr Reed, “On account of him stand on the mn bill, aame aid the witness, RS TO ROOSEVELT'S TALK WITH GOMPERS., ‘The plan by which Mulhall and om- cers of the Philadelphia T. hetae Proposed to break down the printers’ asked explain the etiqueti ting cake with a fork in order to avold taking off the gloves at an afternoon party, It Is not always due to the concealment of roughened hands, It te thus ex+ plained by @ lady who has Hved and worn gloves in many lat Bhe writes from London in March: “The taking off on of gloves In @ warm quite so simple @ matter strike there in 1905 was outlined in a _ report Mulhall identified a: he had Z ee ' made to John F. Mcintyre, eretary (Prem the Wichita age.) of the National Typothetae, A Wichita professional man has fer- eworn Wearing hii raw hat until the Winds cease to blow, Wednesday morn- ing ashe was going along Dougias ave- n heavy gust of wind whipped his hat off his head and out into the middle of the street it went, There pened to be only one mud puddle near that place, and the made a bee line for the lone mud hole and settled very ily Inte It, “A great many men had been brought up from the South to take strikers’ Places, but proved no good to the em- ployers,” Wrote Mulhall, “Our pian was to get them to go out on strike) also, 80 they Would become chai on! the unions and help cat up 40." report to McIntyre told of an| arrangement with employment agen- ¢lee by which new men could be ne-, THE LIMIT, (Frow the Detroit Pree Press.) “T Nke your Mat and you seem to be @atiofied with my references?” “Yes. I see no reason why we should not lease it to you,” | “I think {t only fair to tell you that we keep a do have dogs and we beard & complaint.” “And we have an igi daughter.” “Oh, you have? Then the tons negotia- (ine lla kite om ee PENNSYLVANIA, In July, 1906, Mulhall began to write and receive lotters about campaigns in Pennaylv: 1a Congressional and he wrote to Cushing "It mixht be of some interest to you to show you what the Gompers people are doing in this State, They have nominated President Thomas D. Nichola from the Tenth Congressional District of Pennsylvania on the Democratic ticket, and I should predict now that Unless there 1s very good work done in that disirict we will have a red hot agitator in thé next Congress, “There are about 400,000 miners in that and Nichols is their ideal, Be- sides, John Mitchell ts piedged to come to that district and work for the Demo- cratic ticket, I hope Mr. Sherman “and the Hepublican Congressional Committee will wet busy in the near future.” Mulhall sald the Mr. Sherman referred to was the late Vice: Home of the C hall watd were on the “Gompers black- Mat" were given in @ letter from him to Cushing, as follows: . “The principal parties that he will empt to defeat this Fall will be Chairman Jenking of the House Judtol- ary Committ Speaker Cannon, Con greamnan Daizell of the Ptteburgh dla md Congressman Lit- districts, Senator Meat brought in the name of Congressmen Nicholas he put in the record an article from @ Philadelphia paper, Aug. 8, 1908, In which Longworth and Gocbel were said to be opposed by the American Federa- thon of Labor, “Longworth had been a pretty good follow when you went to see him for atolam Association of Manufac- € I had never met Mr. Longworth up to that me," ald the withems, Correspondence submitted dealt length with Muihall's efforta in behalf | of the National Association of Manufac- turers to bring about the re-election of Congressman Charles E, Littlefield of Maine, and to elect the presen¢ Con- Greseman, Daniel MoGillouddy, girle could not maintain a house, eo Long: | 4 and P.M, Goebel of Oblo, when | ‘the police declare, claims he was Soecatentea exe wont to the ‘woodpile | te gober up. TWO NEW WITNE TELL OF MURDER-NIGHT DOINGS, ¥. D. Van Buskirk, twenty-two years and Ms sweetheart, Casterline of the same place, were located to-day by County Detective James Holman, and they are important witnesses. Van Buskirk and Miss Casterline have told the county authorities that they were in a row. boat on Harvey's Lake on the night of July 4 at 11 o'clock. landing, where they Body of Alice was found. Another rowboat, containing four men, suddenly came in sight and rowed firat to the left and then to t! right of the landing, where two of the men alighted. Shortly afterward Van Buskirk and his sweetheart went to shore and started down the Iake road, ‘They met Alice Crispell and Herbert Johns, and the Crispell girl appeared to be staggering. The couples spoke as they passed, knowing each other, ‘Van Buskirk and Miss Casterline went! to the hotel and Miss Casterline took Qt about 11.99 for this city. vV, jekirk did not come back with hi but remained in the Harvey's Lake Uon, About 18 o'clock ‘Ww a crowd of five men come down from th landing, and after he got ‘nto ¢ he found that Herbert Johns Passenger and that he was bound for this city, This car left the lake at 12.05 o'clock and Harrison Cann, once suspected of being @ jealous rival, has sworn at the Coroner's inquest that Johns was uot on this car, Clara Johns, sister of the | lover of Alice, has also sworn that! whe left the lake at 11,30 and that when she got homo her brother was in bed, | ‘The police to-day started w hunt for” the men in the rowboat. ——=——- — | Fett Municipal Buliding. ! Another name was added to the list of victims of the erection of the Muni- cipal Building late this afternoon when Emil Spindler, an electrician, plunged thirty-five feet through ian airshaft at the northern end of the structure ue tulning # compound fracture of the lez. | He wan removed to Gouverne: pital. Spindler is twenty-four y and lives in Sec old | (#rom the London Chronicie,) i Lovers of simplified spelling should! make a pilgrimage to Nevendon, in Ke- uex, where the church wardens’ ac- counts in the eighteenth century were Quite delightfully phonetic, Under date 1742 occurs the entry: "Gi | Geekup Kollina for his gall too shelins ‘and mix pens, Also his close for the in- ‘The mysterious word | a to signify the girl or| "Geekup Kolin.” And nome of us who have drunk the cup of | jominine militancy to the drege may accept gall op the right spelling, - | Hospital and herolc treatment kept her | ‘owner of the > Hartford Club of the # they moved into @ little flat at No, 403 Franklin avenue. Helen became even morp homesick. Bhe frequentely prear-* * - ‘onging for the old home and her despair at the realization that she coui. not return, On Saturday Ruth noticed that Helen ‘was more quiet than usual, and sald: “Helen, you're sick. There's something the matter with you.” probably the heat,” declared the girl, “I think I'll go to bea.” retired and presently her slster, ring he: groaning, sent for siclan living nearby, who examined the and declared: yt the You been poisoned. uu eaten recently? Instead of answering, the girl de- manded: “Do you think I'm ilkely to diet The doctor admitted as gently as pos- sible that he feared her chances were slight, and to his surprise and the terror of Ruth, Helen actually emiled as she eaid: “Then, if you're sure you can't save me, I'll toll you the truth. I was too homesick to stand it any longer, I wanted to die and see mamma and papa. I took arsenic.” The girl was rushed to St. Mary's it that’s troubling you. What have alive until this morning, when her strength failed her and Helen went to! join those for whom she had longed. JUDGE ISSUES WARRANTS FOR SUNDAY BALL PLAYERS, NEW HAVEN, Conn., July 14,—Bench warrants charging them with having taken part In a profensional baseball game on Sunday wore isvued by Judge Inaac Wolfe of the Common Pleas Court this afterngon for George M. Cameron, ew Haven Rastern Aas ciation, James H, Clarkin, owner of the league and twenty-four players, members of both teams. The warrants chargé participa- tion in a game yesterday at Savin Roc For | Censtipetion Whiskey into @ hundred or more ai leged saloons where for five cents throw @ man may inject into his sys- tom @ tumbierful uf the most extraordi- Mary concoction that ever masqueraded in the guise of a distillers product. According to the Commissioner's in- vestigators, the “wallop” from a single j@laas of this malignant beverage has been known to send a quiet, peace-loving workingman forth into the street raving abdut the number of adult men he |e accustomed to murder before breakfast and eager to give battle to the entire police force, NUMBER OF DELIRIUM TREMENS CASES AMAZING. But it wasn't what one dash of this mystic liquié could de that aroused the interest of Commissioner Hag: It wi the City Hospital report the everincreasing percenta, where unfortunate citisens brought in ambulances, strapped to their tretchers, shrieking at imaginary hor- @ and giving every indication of euf- fering from both delirium tremens and acute poleoaing of some unknown ohar- acter. And Commissioner Hague diaa't eleep on the job, He picked out four of the Nkellest looking Hawkshaws in the De- teetive Bureau and gave them carte blanche at the official disguisera, with orders ) make themselves look as little Uke policemen as possible and get busy. “That's some boose,” they would say to the unsuspecting Barkeep. “Blip me a half pint of that same stuff.” way Hagu juartet of boone visited 16 of the suspected establishments and collected 156 fasks of cheap whiskey. All the red eye samples have been shipped to the chemists of the Btate Board of Health at Trenton, and Cothmissionet Hague ie merely waiting for their report, The Evening Werld reporter drifted a | ' few blocks off Exchange place and dropped into a saloon that looked the part. It was an obviously foreign nelgh- borheod of heterogeneous character and the “gie-mill was typical of the | gro aeighborhood. Halt a dosen dingy citi- Bens were gussiing from beakers Of steam deer, but no whiskey absorb- ere were in aight at the moment. How- ever, the reporter didn't have long to wait, A Ddieated, shadbdy individual chuffied through the swinging doors and idle up to the greasy bar, He croaked an indistinguishable order and flopped @ nickel on the bar, The bartender, a | tf arthy foreigner, pulled a big black Dottle from under the bar and set it, with o large whiskey glass, before the customer, ‘With @ hand that shook with palsy | drug the intrepid stranger filled the tumbler SSS SS “FOR Til OUTING FAR bo REN ST., N.Y. Att wae Lp Som FERSEYSITY RUM | - oe Ree Te RE ER Gk ld” ai “4 to the brim. The liquid, that from the black, unlabelled bottle lke no whiskey the reporter had evér geen. It was a deadly red color, and flowed thick! ‘The stuff slopped from | the glass aa the customer raised ft to | his tips. | throat with @ quick, backward toss as ! thou He threw it down Into Mie ith he were afraid it would singe | his teeth. For a moment the reporter 5 | thought the old stager was going to dle ‘on the spot. His face grew livid and his haud clutched his throat, which worked convulsively as though strug+ Gling against the frighiful job ite em- ; ployer had thrust upon it. Retlet came in the form of folent coughing spell. “GOOD Booz GOT A KICK IN IT," VETERAN'S VERDICT. No one in the room pald the 6! eat attention. It appeared to be customary ceremony attendant pos the absorption a drink from the bise® bottle, The reporter was about to ash the customer if he felt any better when he was atounded to see that individua , fumble in his pocket, produce another nicked and renew his attack on the black bottle. “Pretty strong stuff, en?’ eald the report “Good booze.” sald the dloated one “Got a kick In it.” Thi eporter waited until the old enter” had ughed nianett / through his second ick on the bottle and gone banging out of the, swinging door. Then he stealthily dab bed @ corner of his handkerchief ts some of the spillings. When it dried the stuff left a dark ced stain om the white linen. - The Commissioners of Jersey Cit meet to-night to pass upon many of the 1,000 salon licenses now extant in thas community. asain nian TROOPS TO CHECK RIOT. Lexington, Ky. Mobs Bara Cae Away. . Ky., July 14.—Rioting’ marked the attempt of the Kentucky Traction Company to operate cars with strike breakers to-day, and as @ regull , an appeal has been made for Stats troops, The new men were pulled of the cars as soon as they reached thi heart of the city, One car was fill with passengers, but every one w ejected by the strikers, Another oay was burned on the tracks, and the com Pany abandoned Its efforts by & o'clock, A score of arrests were made while ¢” number of strike breakers and deput) sheriffs were badly beaten, Francis Douglass, Secretary to Gow {a in the city, and has aske < jor to send troops to guar and strike breakers, Ctreub Judge Kerr has also been asked to cal out the Lexingtun military oumpany take charge o: the situation and eup press the rioting. The men struck Saturday for high er wages and recognition of their newt formed union. te Advice to Those Who Have Lung Trouble y oan weight: and ota thom \y Pe. for booklet telling @ 4 additional evidence, Eddys TF glish » uce 10. Grecers and Delicatessen Stores sell It, bettle Made by E. Pritchard, New York. Bast Bok Special for Monday FRONTRD FIG BAILLIANTS—inire- sealetit worth, 1 “Taine al LOC gestion for Monday The Delicious baronet’ Re. MAT Soe ku Si avers ape ant e » oe ace te All Parts, Including Vacation Kesorts (Tred Special for Taesd FREAH PEACH AND NUT. Beochte,, ‘ave ‘and "sage treametey eal x L0¢ Suggestion for Tuesday SPECIAL MIX! rely sulted for fects aFoveaings eat TE Agee al 296 BROADWAY Cres ulten Streot 147 Be eteon beeen