Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
V WILL MAKE MANY \_THOUSINES LE — Eiaforced Holiday Taken as a te! Lockout and Violation Ls of Agreement. WLTIMATUM IS REFUSED. QQeestions of Wages and Rights - Of Union Are Involved in the Situation. { GBe eaten plasterers of this ty are @uhoying @ foreed hetiday to-day. Last GAM at & meeting held tn Lator Tem: O00 tm Hast Wighty-fourth street they Geteeed the terms offered by the Pias- Geary Builders’ Association after two Pearw quarreling over « new agreement Gupereeding one which expired in 1911, Gat has deen continued from time to @me dy mutual consent pending the of @ new agreement. The bosses that by “declaring to-day « holi- they are not ordering a-lockout. merely “giving the men @ ee to think it over and come to rea- they say. clauses in the old agree- there shall be no strikes during %s term and ni the bosses. Individ' Mberty to quit thetr jobs. The have etuck to this contract the interim. outlook now, unless an agree- reached before Sunday night, there will be either a lockout trike declared Monday, which will Bp all buildings in which plastering fm progress for an indefinite time, the accompanying enforced ‘dle- thousands of inside painters, and gas fixture men and other There are four thousand mem- of the Operative Plasterers’ Inter- Union, Local No. 60, concerned it quarrel. meeting last night wae largely President James Crowe asked ett, Chairman of the Ex- to present the ultimatum master plasterers’ formulated night, The bosses refused Gemand of the plasterers for of wages from 9.50 a day Gemanded also that the ‘wp the clause which union to control foremen. Unéer this regulation a union member G@echarged by & foreman could appeal ft the Executive Board; if he proved to Doard’s satisfaction that he was * and had been discharged un- the union could discipline the foreman by ordering him suspended or bit Iyt i e 5 bf i i at He e Li ? 1 | ul Business conditions were not such, the bull said, as to warrant an 1 jos. The control of the foremen by the men working under them was destructive of good disci- pline, encouraged shirking, and was in- telerable to the bosses. The men complain that unless curbed fa some such way some foremen, to dmcrease thelr good standing with a ‘bows, turn elave-drivers and work a ‘man 20 fast that he will sometimes ‘complete the work of two daye of nor- mal hard days in one. ‘The plasterers have little regard for the term “holiday” as applied to to- ay’ situation. They call it a lockout pare and simple. ‘Moa strike. The temporary agree went out of business when they ‘all made us quit work this morning.” —————_ CAR GOES ON RAMPAGE W ERIE ROAD STATION mashes Bumpers, Crashes Over “Platform, Causing Commuters to Ryn in Pant. ‘As 9 or more commuters @lecharged from the 9.8 Newa: train in the Brie station trainshed at Jersey City to-day a four-car train, mado up for pasuengers, was backed qdown the adjacent track to the train Either thi on the last car would hold the brakes or t wine which ‘was propelling the empty fain did not shut off its power in time, for the last car tore through the heavy twelve by tweive timbers at the end of the track and continued on across the trainshed platform. More than fifty persons were sitting on the benches outside the station wait- ig room and directly in th runeway car. These, swelied by the last } of the Newark commuters hurt by Mra. Oeirichs in honor of Mrs, Fish. | ‘the tea, fled in a panic, Mrs, Grace! phe gui wore thelr faney costumes) Aghaetfor of New York, who was and were seated at one long table, with ae! om the bench nearest the station door with her two small daughters, fainted aud was hurriedly carried out of way by two men. rm's ‘The car broke through the tron gates 9 if| Rare roses and orchids were used, and clowed before the No. 3 plat they wei paper, cut a wid. the wooden boarding of the mats form and finally brought up aquaroly ‘crops the door to the wai am ch in path of the . | it been given on a: Peeps, Little Boys ii Blue and Mies Muffets Many at, Mrs. Fish’s Brilliant Affair at Cross- ways. Mother Goose Leads 40" at Lawn Fete. Ten Thousand Electric Lighte Give Affair Blase of Glory, and Guests Dance Un til Sunrise. ing when the first pallor of ing suffused the sky, and within house, where fairyland wes, fonable society of America, dressed as Mother Goose characters, atill danced. @he most remarkable and picturesque social entertainment given in the United States in @ long, long time 414 not ter- minate until dawn. For sheer loveliness, goetry of con- ception, perfection in arrangement and tho delight it gave the #0 guests who attended, Mrs. Fish’s Mother Goose and Nursery Rhyme ball promises to remain | @ criterion for brilliant eoctal affairs, The magnificence and artistic qualities of the decorations would have excited the envy of Louis the Grand, and the richness and beauty of costuming, the wearers of which were assembled with exquisite dramatic effect, would have taught lessons to any royal master of the revels. = There were 10,000 electric lights hung on the grounds of Crossways, mi the approaches luminous. A cord Dolice gurrounded the villa to keep ou those who had no right to enter, for some $12,000,000 worth of jewels epgrkied in’ fair hair and dark, at white throats and on slendor fingers, within the great house where wonder and delight held IN COSTUMES OF MOTHER GOOSE CHARACTERS. Into the blase of light about Cross- jaye & few minutes before 10 o'clock garriages and automobiles followed one another in rapid succession. Mr, and Mrs. Fish, with other guests from Mrs. Herman Oelrich’s dinner party, which also was a Mother Goose affair, were the first to reach Crossways, The other guests arrived promptly. Five hundred invitations had been issued, Lesa than sixty of those invited failed to attend. And, with very few exceptions, every guest was dressed as 8 Mother Goose hero or heroine. There were Jack Horners and Bo Peeps, Little Boys Blue and Miss Muffets and all the rest of the story people dear to childhood. As these characters entered, Fish, arrayed as queen of the fairies, received them at the head of the bal- cony between the ball room and draw- ing room. Her gown was of silver hue and trimmed with rhinestones and span- gies. A large star, fitted with an elec- trie device which kept it twinkling, was worn in her hair, and sive carried & aceptre in which tiny electric lights emphasized the deauty and magni- ficence of the gems studding her cos- tume. Her slippers were laced with ropes of diamonds and rhinesto..es and had buckles of diamonds. She was at- tended by two children dressed as sprites. Miss Janet Fish, who assisted in re- ceiving, was dressed in an elaborate goose girl costume, and carried a stuffed goose under her arm. Never before in Newport were more elaborate precautions taken, it is said, to prevent the loss of jewela, Cron: ways not only was surrounded by p: livemen, with a captain in charge, but cores of plain clothes men scanned all Passing in and out, and even, It waa dis- covered, mingled among the guests. Fire precautions were also taken, and uni-| formed firemen were stationed at poinis of vantage in the grounds and in the house. | The many jewels pick, two days ago, | were hurriedly removed from thelr owners’ houses and taken to safe de- poett valuts because of the Narragan- tt Pier robberies, were again in evi- dence. In many cases the eum- mer colonists gent armed messen to the safety deposit vaults, jewels never left the watchful the 0 of | the private detectives employed to nee that they arrived safely at thelr desti-| nation: | ARMED MESSENGERS BRING, GEMS FROM VAULTS. ‘Phe festivities of the evening began at § o'clock for many of the guests t a dinner at Rosecliff, the palatial ‘embellished by home of Mra, Hermann Oelrichs, given ‘the exception of young people who danced the Yack and Jill quadrille, land who sat at smaller tables. The dinner was served in the ball room. the electrical display both in the bail Viat=/ oom and grounds of Rosecliff were | found dead last night when Dr. Jerman- Thle dinner in iteelf, had! t, would have teen one of the season's notable, affairs, Following the dinner, the long line of | aviomobiles conveyed the guesis to Crossways. As the first of the guests Jentered the grounds Mra, Flash | a button, and the thousands of electric (lights were turned on. | Supper was servel at midnight on | the Inclosed veranda. The waiters were costumed in Hveries of the time of Louis | Following the supper, dancing was med and did not cease until dawn, hers giving dinners and 0 the ball were George Peabody Wetmore, | magnificent. 6 | Mon Mrs. \Jonn J. Wyeeng, Leuls Bruguiere, Mrs. wu eer SEA GULL. COSTUME of MRS: WM. 2 THOMPSON. R. T. Wilson, Mr. and Mrs. E. Haywood Ferry and others. JACK ©’ LANTERNS’ GLEAM WELCOME TO GUESTS. Reaching Crossways, guests were welcomed by grinning jack o’ lanterns set on the gateposts and brilliantly Muminated by electricity. As they en- tered the well of the hall they passed under a canopy of flowers arranged to’ represent the heave: Seated on Juat under the well a 1! was riding a broom and evolently down on the gu fect being rather startling. In the court garden were numberless hydrangeas of pink and blue, with an arrangement of electric lighta that look as though lightning bu flitting about. On the north s! of the ballroom were seven stacks of wheat, with a black cat perched on each, representing the seven witch In the east end of the ballroom, in an alcove, was a clever arrangement of a Mother Goose tale book. The ‘#fctures" were living. T layed in delightful mann pany of players executing a beautiful series ef dances and pantomime. First Mother Goose stepped out of the book, followed by two attendants, each one} of whom carried a golden goose. Eight | pages appeared and ran down to meet Mother Goose, carrying standards bear- detectives hired eo beginning of the dance was de-; Quarter of a million dollars’ worth @ com-|of jewelry, stolen from the cottages of Mrs. Charles of E. Hanan, manufacturer, was abandoned single clue gained py several days’! Gane GEM (NERS ABANDON eR HUNT AT and Mrs. Hanan Plans to Move Away. All to recover over Rum H Narragansett to-day with e Nursery And $12,000,000 in Dazzling Jewels at Newport Ball Jack Horners, Little Bo | RCANSETT FOR MISSNS EELS Rumseys Call Off Detectives active search by professional » daughter Harriman, and Mra, John H. wife of the millionaire shoo Pier, not a ym! Rhyme Costumes | ne @UMPING.JOAN. COSTUME af’ MRS: NM.EARL DODGE. reas Mn ey We BUT AR CASTLE FALLS) ste Sous tne charging Batteries of the New Harold P. Sawyer Arrested Craft G-6, PROVINCETOWN, Mass, Aug. 2— Here for Embezzlement at a Chicago Hotel Five mechanics employed on the new submarine G6, which is awaiting her Government acceptance trials off this port, were overcome by gasoline fumes to-day. A launch was hurriedly de- despatched to shore for medical sasis- tance, but before the two-doctors who ing wolves’ and cats’ heads. With | investigation. {| reaponded reached the submarine all of these they marked out the space for any amateur detectives are still en-| Mra, Harold P. Sawyer, who was ®/ the men had been revived, ' dancing. . don the mystery on telephone operator in the Bl one The mechani WITCH! CAULDRON — AND | basis, and comedy sleuthing around the | 1014) citcago, until July 18, when she! batteries with DEVIL'S DANCE CHARM. fasifonable cottages Is furnishing | . : jerated by @ gasoline engt Mother Goose then stepped to one alde and introduced the various characters that stepped from out the book. The fairies and Mother G caldron attended by little devils, while she concocted a mysterious 2r0W. | The devils gave a whirlwind dance and tired. Then came one of the pro.t.est ures of the evening, hundreds of rt- tle balloons being sent up and captured souvenirs, Profeasionals from New York gave a playlet, “Bluebeard Jr." Dancing then became genega'. Sov- venirs were given on each of-Which was the inscription taken from an old tomb-| stone in the Granary Burying Ground in Boston: “Here len the body of Mary| Goone, wife of Isaac Goose, deceased) October Ye 19th, 100."" ‘These were also ictures of devils, witches and black cat ———i Westchester avenue, the Bronx, Henry Roth, eighteen, of No. 316 East One Hundred and Fifty-ninth street, was sky of Lebanon Hospital arrived in answer to @ policeman’s call, t Mon about the stable had reported to the poll that the Jad was there | apparent! iil, ‘There was no out- ward aign to disclose how the boy had suffered death, and none of the men about the atabie seemed to know about him. Young men in the neighborhood {identified him. ——————— SPECIAL NOTICE. In the Metropolitan bection of te-mor. row's Hunday Wot t pon, the presentation main er branch office entitle the holder to @ splendid © Kit” containing five articies and page booklet om “Firet Ald to ths to beth of which will be invaluable im the 1 of ‘the Wi precia\ farm. coming voly biager man, closed with his brother of The Four, and they fought all over the| room, at lean for dispose! probably ————<< CHU CHEWS CHU’S EAR IN A PELL STREET FIGHT; What Happened When One China- man Tries to Borrow $3,000 from Another at Gun's Point, Actylties in the fantan and piesow tine are so dull in Chinatown, now that there Is peace between the tongs and) the payloft of a stable at No. 42{ outaide nants’ Asnociation te xe: ald in suppressing Me games of chance, that Chu Hem, who used to be one of the shining lights In the Four Brothers organization, started out late last night to collect $3,000 from Chu Yung Yue, @ fraternity broth he point of two Chinese “ga Hem is in Headquarters as @ result, waiting to means when ft say! tlon and assault with a deadly weapon. hat white man's justic ‘attempted exto e Chu Hem inveigled Chu Yung Yue t his apartment at No. 12 Pell atreet and there assured him that he would ap- a loan of $3,000 in order that he might move to California and buy @ not forth- Chu (Hem flourished the re- When the loan wa ‘». Chu Yung, who is a muc! There were mi sth In ble Ohu's left ear and should when Detective MoClunn of Inspector Leahy'a staff broke in end stopped the ag ‘Those concerned in the loss | , however, have given up hope | of recovering any of the gem: for the present. They belleve that later, when the thieves begin to break up the necklaces forelxn cities, there may be @ chance of recovering some of the individual gems, an accurate description of which Is being circulated to all diamone mar- kets throughout the world. in at , Sloped with a young clerk In the hotel | warily tha: funea. would’ have ‘escaped nd came to New York, suffered n rude! through the hatchway, but they were interruption of her honeymoon last| held down hy a wultey heavy air and the men were gradually affected. One night when Detective Donohoe of the st. | 8° em poem nae dances Nicholan avenue station arrested her |ing ghouted for help. Ald was quickly husband at their roome at No, 512 West | at hand and the men were hauled one One Hundred and Fifty-elghth street |by one to the deck. All were uncon- and locked him up as a fugitive from|sclous when they reached the air but Justice. they were soon restored and none of it POISONED WOMAN COLLAPSES NCA, DING IN HOSPTAL Tells Brooklyn Physician She Took Drug But Not Where She Got It. 3 a and Mrs. Emil Cavalier About to Start ‘on Long Cruise. One man wae badly burned In Jewelry and clothing went tom of the Hudson River today the twenty-eight foot moter caug.ut fire at her mooring at the of West One Hundred and street. A leaky gasoline tank, em @ back fire from a balky @ sheet of oll and flame over of the boat, closing off the Emil Cavalier and hia wife, the Alreg, were preparing for an weokn’ cruise, George Jogeus, the owner of the bont house was fixing the engine at the time of the exploaién, and wan badly about the face and shoulders, ‘Cavalier, who is a professor of tam guages, living at No. 2 West Forty- fourth atreet, hed from the cabin, carrying his wite across the i i s g { i it i tit! j ! HER CASE A MYSTERY. Has Been Known as Barbara Harms and Other Names at Various Institutions. Barbara Harme-Hangon-W alto n- Behr—ehe has teen known by all of these names at the hospital’ in Brook- lyn during the last three months—ie at Bt. John’s Hospital, suffering trom the effects of poison. The doctors say that @he te in @ eeriows condition and may die Early to-day she collapsed in « Fulton etreet car at Grenada place and fell unconscious. The conductor, to recover the gems, POLICEMAN CAHILL'S DEATH GOES TO GRAND JURY - District-Attorney Cropsey to Take Churchyard Tragedy Up for Criminal Investigation. Diatrict-Attorney Cropsey, with the operation af Deputy Police Commissioner * Dougherty, will present the whole evi- dence in the mysterious case of the death of Policeman Jchn K, Cahill, found sbot/In the churchyard of St, Matthew's Church, Brooklyn, before the Kings County Grand Jury and ask that body to determine if @ crime has been com- mitted. ‘ Thin unusual proceeding, which hes ite precedent in a similar action, sev- eral months ago, when the Grand Jury was asked to investigate the persistemt report that a murder had been deme in a Brooklyn department store, arises out of the reported dissatisfaction of both the District Attorney and the Deputy Commissioner with the findings of the Coroner's jury yesterd Tee jury found that Cahill “died the hands of @ person or persons unknown.” weight of police evidence waa to the support of the contention that Cahill had committed suicide after eloborately planning the evidence of em At the hospital the physicians found aymptone of poleoning and asked the woman what alled her. Qh, I took poison ‘ail right—biehloride of mercury aad beladonna,” she said. She would not tell where ahe procured the poison. When asked for her name she murmured something which the hos- pital people understood to be “Barbara Harma, ind lapsed back into uncon- aclousnens. In the woman's handbag was a postal card addressed to “Mra, Harms, No. 420 Richmond street, Unicn Hill, Long Te- land. ENTIFIED WOMAN AS HER DAUGHTER. A policeman was sent to that address. He found Mrs. Margaret Harms, who sald she has a daughter named Barbara Harma Behr, who waa living apart from her husband. From the policeman’s description she identified hospital patient as her daughter, and sald she would go to the hospital and see her. Meanwhile more informaiton had come into the hospital from other sources. Tt was found that as long ago as May % & woman had fallen from a street car In Park avenue, and, when taken to the Cumberland Hospital, had told the surgeon she had taken a drug. Her name she gave as Charlotte Walton. At that time the woman appeared to n @ hallucination to her con- dition, The docters found that in this she was in error, but as her condition was more or less serious they kept her in the hospital and about a fortnight ego performed the operation. Yesterday she was well enough to be arraigned in the Adai ‘There was some delay and the womai eat in the court room from 9.99 In the morning untli late in the afternoon. Mastatrate Walsh was in doubt what charge should be preferred against her and paroled her. As she wae reapect- able in appearance and very weak her case was jooked into by Miss Connolly, parole probationer. for the widow now hangs onthe deciaten, as to how Cahill met nis death, Pins os te KNOCKS PATROL WAGON OVER Trelley Car in Jersey City Jere Police and Privener. A Jersey City police patrol wagon in which were Patrick Crane, the driver; Patrolman John O'Neill, who steod om the rear step, and William Wollen ef No. 103 Pamrapo avenue, a prisoner on @ wife abandonment charge, turnes from Madison avenue into Commuat- paw avenue to-day and was struck ty Qn east-bound Plank road trolley car travelling at high speed. wWegon was overturned husband died in February of this year and that she had no regular place of abode, Miss Connelly telephoned to the Osanam home for friendleas women and asked them to take the woman in for a few days. To this the superintendent of the home as- sented, but a few minutes later tele- phoned that she had been obliged to change her mind as the home was crowded and had heard mean- while from one of the nurses that Mra, Harme or Behr had been at Cumber- land Hospital and made herself un- popular with the nurees and other patients by her noisy and quarrel- some behavior. 1M KING'S COUNTY HOSPITAL A® CHARLOTTE WOLTON. It was learned from Michael Waish, in charge of hospital cases at the Cha: ity Department, that the same woma! under the name Charlette Walton, had been transferred from his department to Kings County Hospital. There Hospital, where it was ascertained that ‘none had dangerous injuries, Crame and O'Neill were taken to their homes later, but Wollen remained in @e hospital a prisoner, William Crane, motorman of the trolley car, was arrested an @ charge of assault, He says that the wages id not appear at the corner until tee late for him to avoid @ cullision. RESINOL INSTANTLY RELIEVES SUNBURN Resinol Ointment, aided by Resinel Soap, soothes cools eabare stently, and quckly restores the health and comfort. oak poisoning, and stops the of insect bites. You need nol Seep jothing est surface. scription which proved so for ecsema, ringworm and ing, bur unsightly skin that it has been used by ot! cians al! over the country for years. No other treatment for skin now before the public can such a record of professional phoning to other hospitals the woman walked out. said at the Adams Street Court ver hesitate to use Resinol Oi: 7 yesterday as she was faint from lack of tood, Misa Connolly, bation jeclared the womai se not th to be at large and ought not to have been released from the hospital. CHINESE AIM TO END CHINATOWN GAMBLING Eleven of Merchants’ Association Give District-Attorney’s Office Evidence, Lee Frank, @ prominent member of the Otinese Mervhants' Association, and ten other solemn Chinamen filed into the th it fil ROBINSON’S PATENT BARLEY The Only Infant Food Sawyer, a creatfallen bridegroom, sat eee much the worse for his ex h mo oeday, his ul} PE! = | ite Barra Court, taser Rie ear a "G-" was built by the Cramp bride holding his hand, and hoard Magis) «1,1, jutiding Company of Philadelphia, trate Marah adjourn his case until Mon-| gi6 wan echeduled to hav: ‘gay, when extradition papers will at-|ance trial to-day, and the five lve from Chicago, oMfcers composing the trial board Sawyer was arrested at the ponent | on board the schooner William Green of John H. Halpin, chief of the Chicago] nearby when the accident occurred. Detective Bureau, who wired - quarters here that the hotel clerk was! ET EAD T A cence re tt oe vac; oon] OE READY TO TAKE {¢rom the Blackatone Hotel, W. H. Val- 0 iN M0 | tette, manager of the hotel, !s_the com- L0 P TRAl NDAY! plainant aguinat him, After her husband had been ted! Midnight To-Morrow Time Set for away to @ cell the bride, seeking i sympathetic ear in @ strange ctty,| Opening, Two of Four Tracks told the story .of her brief happiness Being Used. ‘to an Evening World reporter.» The bridge loop subway will be T was engaged to be married to a ling salseman when % met Har |cpened te the pybito Monéey. The ol i4. "It wae @ case of love | ¢xact hour at which general operation over the awitchboard. I wasa telephone | Wiil begin te not stated, but the Public operator and he was a clerk et the| Service Commiasim declared the loop Blackstone. His father, Dr. A. P, Saw-| ready for operation Sunday midnight. yer, 18 ® prominent physician in Chi-| Only two of the four tracks in the cago, but Harold hae quarrelied with | new tunnel will be used at firet. These him and I suppose he cannot look for| fun from the Brooklyn Bridge terminus any aid from his father in this trouble. | in Manhattan to and over the Wiltame- “| ‘broke my engegement with the| burg Bridge. Those lines ef the Brook- man I was pledged to marry. When| lyn elevated system which have been Harold urged me to elope I consented, | using the Williamsburg Bridge will have ‘We took a train to New York and were | their terminals under the new Municipal married !n Jersey City the next day, | Building after Monday. Our happiness had been complete unt! | The opening will put Into service one ot | that detective appeared and brought ali| the largest traction line atations in the our alr castles tumbling about our ears.| world, The station beneath the “1 am eure that Harold oan clear him- | Munictpal Building wil! eventually be self when he gets back to Chicago.” @ great clearing house for traffic, con- oe necting the three bridges with a line down Nassau street ené the present qubway, "abecmmbare, office of Assistant Disirict-Attorney Attorney's office wit! at. what the pollce have been try- inaucesestully te de fer yeare—to ost gambling la Caleatowa.