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a thé part of : tind detachments of infantry of the enemy yesterday. ‘ “From ‘the Oteo t the Argonne the situation in the vicinity " @f Golssons chows no change. Near Berry-au-Bec a trench which we ‘were compelied to evacuate following a violent bombardment was féeaptared by us. In the region of Perthes the enemy delivered an Attack Guring the night of Jan. 20-21 at a point northwest of 2 Dat without success. 4 the Mouse and the Moselle: To the southeast of - , Gt Mitel, in the Forest of Apremont, an exceedingly violent bom- made it impossible for us to retain the German trenches us yeuterday for a distance of 150 yards. of Pont-a-Mousson, in the Forest of La _ Pretre, the enemy yesterday recaptured « portion of the trenches by us Jan. 20, but we are maintaining ourselves at all other il z the Vosges the enemy hurled against St. Die six projectiles calibre without doing any serious damage. Mount Bonbomme and Mount Sohlucht has been an artillery engagement in which the German bat- were reduced to silence. “Im Altace the infantry fighting in the region of Hartmann and Wellerkopf is going on with great ferocity. The struggle is 4 ectually hand-to-hand. “In front of Dannemarie our artillery dispersed gatherings of the enemy.” F H BRITISH STEAMER HUNDRED NURSES | the Germann to-day in the bloodiest q engagement since the new Russian 4 Ps offense against Kast Prussia devel- $ | oped. in Carrying Out Plan of Von Tirpitz. for Eating Lunch. Ss AMSTERDAM, Jan, 22-—Germany 4 (Mipacial to The Brening Werld,) * hae begun the retaliatory naval war- an interview which he gave ‘This was the in- on the sinking Petty ‘stand by the suspended nurses. ‘with the purpose of eut- pended at once for ai Period and went to their homes, ter until to- in the hospital Supt. Charlies EK, Talbot, convinced the threateni _ 7? Cates Court Appotatments. ons “a pad the day. |force returned to its work. ‘with the appointments of all the of the proposed Court of |wuspension was not because » Believed to Be the First Ship} issue Ultimatum .in Newark : When Three Are Suspended NEWARK, Jan, 22.—Almont a hun- | fare against British merchantmen | dred nurses at the City Hospital left @uggosted by Grand Admiral von Tir-|their patients to-day and walked acroan the street to the Nurses’ Home and told Misa Mary ©, Mason, Buper- inténdent of the Nurses’ Training School, that unless three nurses aus- pended by her Inst night are rein- mated by nightfall they would all otrike, A Troubid DAN ndeli brewing at the local hospital for several weeks, and when Mise Mason suspended. three Dureen the fight became so warm that the graduate nurses and mem- ‘bern of the training achool decided to ‘The heapital at the present time is overcrowded. Ap there ts no Board bad more ‘At! prewént ‘the situation is|men to do a job in Jersey. we Mise Mason lant night made a tour ‘ae tha ‘of the Dur- jof inepection. In ward seven she cama upon Misses Blisabeth Allen, Edith) work, eh? Well, 1 know where to find uaa Steeete 8 DORIS" | aisckee and. Anna Kelaher, thres| Cor ae nurees assigned to that ward, having & lunch of toast and coffee. They wai Indefinite No more was heard about the mat-| the troiley car! / when all the nurace nd training acpool, xcept Just enough to look after each ‘ward, waited upon Miss Mason. Miss Manon declined to reinstate the nurses and the ultimatum was then issued, ent for, | wants roug BMI tmerenses Fewer on|that it was their duty to stay, and| ¥, 01 that justice would be done the three | for his nurses under suspension, and the | holler about having to walk two It waa eaid at the hospital that the the ry Be RN ETE AR SNL NRE SE NES HH IR RE F “TAG GERMANS | ON ANE FRONT Right Wing Is Reported Only Ten Miles From Prus- sian Border. | ! MOVE AGAINST THORN.| German Commander Attempt- | ing an Attack Upon the | Rear of Russians. PETROGRAD, Jan. 22 (United Preas).—Along @ forty-mile battle front, extending at one point to within ten miles of the German border, Rua- wlan troops are being hurled against; Fighting along the Muin Rivor in! ing weatward along the Muln, with | the Prussian city of Thorn aa ita ob- Jective, but in meeting with stubborn | Featetance. ! The Russian left in about thirty. | five miles from Thorn, but the right,! reating near Rypin, is #carcely ton niles from the Prussian border, In an effort to halt the Russian of- fenaive Gen. Francois is attempting a Movement against the Russian rear from the Mi: rogion, Heavy rein-! forocements are pouring to his aid IS “DEPUTY'S” to see you.’ he says: Bo I we.t outside and ‘Red, I want about thirty “I told him I would get ‘em. fo I ‘went out and rounded up twenty- eight in three hours, Pretty good ‘em, because that's my business, Sixth Avenue and went over to Jer) of the trains and paid three fares on We got off at a @eserted spot and there was Jerry O'Brien waitih in an automobile, That was 13.80 o'clock that same night. “Say, Jerry's a good fellow. Give him a boost, whatever you do, work before he pays jersey, but Se atah got not rk, 20 Re has to come to New York men, Well, our gang made a jtack the Rugsians, ix reported to ha crossed the Mjawa and to have pene- STRIKERS’ SLAYERS ESCAPED, (Continued From First Page.) “We mot at Bleecker Street ang |.Pard us, sey City on the ferry, We kept clear| armed with che U.S. REAR. AD. T-B-HOWARD. ©£ Mu. from Prussia, and the cavalry advance of his army, moving westward to a! trated nearly to the Vira River, The German forward movement opie been halted, according to un- ol jclal reports, Tho Germans con-| translated, means a professional strike |do and paying him for it. Work and| They can have what work there !8—| sige to do it tinue bombarding Vysogrod on the| breaker. east bank of the Vistula preparatory | the rough stuff" was “Slim” Sullivan. Now ho 1s travelling “straight” under ‘The Russtan advance in Bukowina| his own namo and clothing store in Nowar! withheld, because “Slim” doosn’t war his pals of the old days to “get him. to an attempt to force a passage. and in the Caucasus continues, It is oMcially reported. king on the evening of Jan. 8 went to Mill Street, and went down “wnugmery.” for “smoking room.” forty-nine men and took the Past us to the plant, That to jump off the train. They did, strikers sore, A fellow in a yellow raincoat vas leading them. He was waving two red flags. Bud- denly he pulled @ revolver and fired several shots into the ground. It squnded like @ 22-calbre. ‘That mus! have been a ae for right then thi lo mob of strikers rushed to- ‘Lots of them had gune and the: pened fire. 4 oe were ie ha could eee what they wanted to o— rush ue through th ite and between the uidinae of the plant down the 8 zor te the water. “What d'ye say!’ | yelled at Pat- terson, “‘Open up on ‘em!’ he yelled ba: we did. I passed the or: id we began to shoot back, along mone of us was touched. But our fang was all old hands and our bul- ta went home. and at mob of strikers Caused Death of Four—Rear Admiral Howard _ where they went. because I rounded up the gan got my monoy all right and I orgs Bere ts New York, got in Newark, who stayed out of the sera way. The order to them was: back and let the New York gang do the work!’ me. Well, I read all the stories and I wanted to set things right because no one has told the deputies’ side of the story. I wanted to show that our gang ain't gunmen. breakers, Rough work is our regular I'm going to beat it Wes: had told another World office to-day and corroborated against Warsaw from the west has| “Red’ Newark priv by the plant Ro and that Jerry commissioned “Slim” Hopkins, living in Mill: enth Avenue and Thirty. to hire men to uct as armed guards. | company earnings. There is enough Sullivan says he in certain Hopkins was tho recruiter, but that Hopkins | ‘eft for the rest of us, Ny and “Red” might be the same person, Ww ny since men of this type change foun names constantly. in the least. We don’t ask any ques-| American Federation of Labor, was | ihe cargo ough. f that only twenty-ni jew Yor Thoy begun to drop] Sinks were there when the trou Preven teie ha charged. CLE wey “WE WILL TAKE EACH CONVICT AND “Every one of the eif! 1 was promised more rson and the eleven men they portant. by orders, are still at the lant. ey will answer the charges, ut they can’t get a thing on those “Our gang did the work, believe| (Continued from First Page.) We're strike-| ter chance, Far better. That's our (By Commissioner Garretson). Q. When @ man, Shortly after “Ked,” alias John King, came into The Evening;to bring him back to usefulness to eth, 4 restoro his self-respect. A. Yes, if} "f! Me in a tetormea “fink"—which,|¥U mean by that giving him work to| ers. His name when he was “on| fair pay—that’s what men need. 1s working in a| How is it possible to ascertain earn- Profits’ to every man He also said that Jerry O’Brien, the| Weeks? A. We don't. We know what | tending the Hotel at Se Q. Do you discriminate between their] union and non-union men? A. Not According to Sullivan, “Slim” Hop- | tions as to that. Hotel No. 1, on Bleecker] @ You have an into the | That's about it. That is gang language He picl over EXPLAINS That same morning, Bullivan PLAN AND ITS E the Sheriff went over and swore in as deputy sheriffs. men,” ‘were first on the job. They were ® reception and protection for the other ‘bowsos’— icTs. effect in the Ford factory in Detroit at y ther name for professional! ‘The baste principle of the trikebreaker—who came in two days|tmat every workman who later from Chicago and elsewhere. | auction ia entitled to a share of! restraint.” irae are known as ‘Chi- the proft resulting from euch pro- wage rate in the Ford factories 18lan A. F. Roosevelt, N When the plan was put into ef- “So I guess that's straight good pulled up short, came, miles to the plant, but we finally did it and walked right through the town and soul Was wise to us. both “regular” and “addi-|nurace were having toast and coffee, [lows are all residents of the State of Hemel.” His original bill gave the | but because they were catin: aw rte select the first to. Whitman | Seve: hich ts the “Typho! the latter to thd Appellate Divi- |#nd Mis amendment proposed to-day the Assembly would remove this ive function from the Abpel-|ihat thore has not bee three months, were of the belief that th Division. wo jtiona| ber: epire by om. 1 PLS. They im mseare prnalice would | Were being cared for there. ’ u ring and deciding of “dam: . | aL REDFIELD SAYS HE yr HAS ENGLISH OFFERS of the complications all to drag us sooner or late! mediately. Has anybody raised Ambassador, sayin ol jon to his ship to be used in the Bout UNDER DISCUSSION PARIS, J held in Pi 22.—A_ conference celior of the Exchequer David Lioyd| form of the plant and wa’ George and Alexanére Ribot and P. Park, |there were just t Re French and Russian Mines aid u Pu Me ant ad ts CRE Nan, ‘one of the moat important | could ulations of the institution Rorbids | We did that, and, of course, after wi ting tl It ie. said, in behalf of the nurses phoney add La cane of lurther provides Beve: ‘and when we got to the gate a man sare members i typhoid in Ward Seven for at least] on guard sees who we are and he|! in was in force only while typhoid patients TO SELL U. 8. SHIPS) ti "sie EY Star 4 ST. LOUIS, Jan. 33.-—Secretary of A iy Commerce Redfield, answering a paper , of James J, Hill at the National For- Harry eign Trade Conference to-day, sald it }eon. He called us his ‘flying squad- was based on surmises and not facts. @ big man, about 6 feet 2, ‘ _ e our orders from him. [ “What does it mean,” he sald “to speak 2 sort of a lieutenant and passwd certain | hi into the | New York. Patterson passed out guns European conflict. It has been adver- | 4nd ammunition. tised all over America that there would | bis hands would be clean of the thi be trouble if the Government bought rman | here an offer to, sell to the | volvera, seven riot if we bought theee English ships? go! ‘We have had eerere to mae wk al im ernment Frefich ships, av le ina. | Say meen. question oft imterna tions) compton ple of HOT gave a merchant In Loulsvitie [RO Work golng on, except by four yestorday a letter from the English Se erence who had there was no tend: a German jendent was t American Laat week we could get Enx- 4 ipa immediately, buy them by BY ALLIED FINANCIERS. | Tain, “We started out and we saw was |500 of them. “ to-day by British Chan- | te train. Remember the New Jerae: Hoe told each of us to think up a wifty address that we ve if there was any trouble. were pinched the other day we gave resses. was leading the New York men nays: ‘Remember, you fel- | station nd others away “They aay we fired at th: who were up to their water of the swa: didn’t shoot “IT led ow A three mi died pretty soon and another died yes- terday in the huspital. We called to the ikers to come and get the in- it out of Jersey. They increased from 15 to 20 per cent, and | °mployer. “Bure I know those gu; e beat! the efficiency of the employees has| witness of th ‘ays do. A| increased in the same proportion. timony he be man like ‘slim’ Hopkins could ads dow into the ‘snuggery’ any night In other words, Mr, Ford explain: and pick up a hundred ‘fnks’ t out on a job at a moment's notice. wen or teey Gatos £07, tant | more work in s working day 11 per| dae wn 4 ob out at the Guggenheim | cent. shorter. apenas ‘Sines in Utah abouts year| Under the old plan 10 per cent. of | ar! and a half ago. in waltzes us in. We find the men from Newark already there, making forty in and swore w sheriffs. He had us all put up our! hands at once, and he didn’t even atk us our names. He handed out little black let- ERIFF, MIDDLE- COUNTY.’ "ll take care of days the and then he want orders along to my men from He gave them to because, he said, that way got from him twenty-four calibre ‘revolvers, five 38-calibre you know, sawed-of shotgune—and three army rifles, the kind that shoot steal- jacketed —bulleta, carded b; weeks we just Joafed around the plant. There was refused to Also the superin- trikers soon found out we were there, & mob of strikers, between 400 and They had surrounded leven men from Newark stood back on the plat- of us Bae there never was @ crowd around have the propositions here) tne piant until last Tuesday morniug. | f jui ‘They were pretty acared, but they saw we meant no harm and they carried the men away. “We hit sixteen mon, I think, who were helped away when the others broke and ran, And I think others were hit, but didn’t report their wound y, I was in the Spanish-Amert-~ can War and have seen some scraps! But I'll never forget that battle! It ‘was short but hot! “Patterzon ordered us back to the plant after a while and he iocked t gates, Just about time Poll an Dowieg of Roosevelt wr 4 came up. says he was on the station platform and saw the fight. He's wrong, because be didn’t come up for baif an hour, je saw me and spit out: “You're fine Americans, you ari he matter?’ I asked him. men were ‘shot ‘em up!" he say ‘eaceful', I says, ‘yes they were— hey tried to run us into the wanted to ta told him it his off I'd go aft him. i we call a ‘harness cop'—a cop in unl- m, you know. same day the Prosecuting Attorney came down to the plant and Questioned us and examined the bul- t holes in the top of the railroad tation, which showed that lots of had fired ir. Jerry O'Brien T eee you gave it to them!’ at a big table in the ing around, one guy nd #0 On, until we knew pretty well just who potted the atrikera that were burt. I told them to keep their mouths sbut. “Well, Patterson and I combed the bunch and we picked out eighteen New York men who could eaaily be picked out by the strikers to Staten Island, thone birds. “Then the remaining twenty-two Yorkers in the ‘Ayle juad on in “Wwe rushed in and’ yelled to PE of us went over to New Brunswick and gave ‘up: Our idea was to cover up the men who really That was before 1 reformed. ‘finks’ that time shot up about fitty and a lot of them croaked, “Everybody jumped their bail, just as pent from work. stat. ; peent aad In March, 1919, under. the ol¢ eye- 7%, ela’ atta ink a ae Cie uit fer In March, 1914, the num- sald Mr. ae, ber of men who quit or were dis- this present tari charged was reduced to 447. ‘There has been a marked improve- | Oarretson ment in the finances and health of what Mr. Perkins thought of the great” the employees, according to Mr. Sfmy of casually employed for whom Ford. No man is ever discharged | ‘Mer? is work only now and until he has proved himself utterly “A man in an J lowing questions: GIGHT-HOUR FOR id Q. What has experience shown re- garding the extent to which the char- acter and a@ocia] conditions of em- Ployees are the result of the condi- tions under which they are employed, including wages, hours of labor, gen- sal seein @ atuigs and teats Judge Grants Separation and Forces ment by officials, superintendents and foremen? ‘A. No man can bring up a family and hope to own a home on the ordi- nary rates of wages. I do not think! taker of No. that any man can do good work men- and Thirty-second Street, defendant tally and physically for more than in a suit for sepnration granted to-~ eight hours per day. In my judgment | day on the grounds of cruel and in- the other factors are not so very im-|human treatment and abandonment, ploy more men, day men?” about five days a week. They do not/with some people. Q. (by Commissioner Weinstock)— | stay. They do not want to stay. Q. Have you a force studying the ? His name is|ings so that you can pay a share of |effect of your innovations on your STEAMER ARKANSAS, every two] men and their families and euperin- volunteer educational detective, was hired | we can do. We have our own capital.| work? A. Under John R. Lee, who is velt Borough | we do not have to borrow any money.| here and at your service. .| We pay each man what he needs to}about sixty men undeg him. The ith ‘Street, |live, Then we take that out of the| voluntary teaching, of course is on|*teamer Arkansas, which sailed from the men's own time. He has open shop. A.|saying he had reecived & = trons he Comment ‘Telegraphers’ | these Foods and | Union askin, vedere. Brooks . Q. Do you call $5 a day your minl- | Oty “Western Union and Edward 1 UP| mum wage? A. Yes, for every one | Reynolds of the Postal Teli legraph opérators. u'll get some startling iInforma- tion,” the tele, It was on | fi PROFIT - SHARING | Western Union bia! general de- |}; Mr. Ford explained at length the nial to the proposition that thé same | money the Bor - | cotton. Sullivan went on,| profit sharing plan which he put into] jaws Qught to govern business. com. | cotto ill be published Sa! ry re Miabor |eclock. (Hxporta so far torday, 51,044 2! wil re said, “the products of labor. is | 1s an erroneous term representing bu- | rrom 11 in| man beings and their power to pro- | stop. or duce, which is by right free of all| cline. Mr. Gompers also di led that or- i ho receive| ganized labor nowadays sought to 1 know that during the couple of | duction. The employees w weeks of idleness before tho battle|the lowest pay get the largest pro- Reap Up, wages by curtailing output. lust Tuesday about twenty of the men | portion of the profits. The minimum they got from New York on Jan. 5 Were fired because they didu't have | #880 Those strikers were bum shots and Pek ery eee Up @ good ‘ rr. Gompers had read record a letter from Hugh nae 8 into the strike shooting. . ee read frome she cir- cular of a detective agency to prove feot the factory was run on a nine-/ 10) employers sometimes hire hour-a-day, basis, The bypetndl hand on their help wie are supposed 1e- {stirring up trouble. in addition to the eleven I hear| Was cut to elght hours. Nev: A “Then they broke in all directions|they imported fram Newark to be/ less the output of the factory was|him, Mr. Gompers sald, by @ friendly and ran, Some went back past the| sed to frame-up allbls, ‘The labor le: sples to be George W. Perkins was the frat y. continuing the tes- rd Ho read the report of, the United Atat Steel Co! ration to a (0-40 |the increase in wages inspired his) Fiiscr.Sin"igis, it showed that out- employees to turn out 20 per cent.| si46 of executive executive sal- e rate Was $2.93. The ny had reduced the hours Iwas there, t00.| the employees were continually ab-| 4¢ tnban aunent when imposcble (as Under the profit-/in eontinuous blast furnace work) sharing plan the percentage of ab- ‘eight hours a day. they have done in Jerse: they got just one man. He Davis and he got fifteen years in the pen. Right now in New York the ‘finks' are taking up @ collection to be used for a lawyer to try to get a pardon for lo was willing to be jugged be- cause he is to get $3 a day for every day of time he serves. Pretty soft, eh? Flops and will he w for hi “Th on th They got $3 a da flop and free grub a GOVERNOR FIELDER . ORDERS INQUIRY INTO STRIKERS’ SHOOTING TRENTON, N. J., Jan. Fielder to-day directed Florence of Middlesex County to make an investigation of the shooting at Roosevelt, N. J. The Governor directed the Prose- cutor to call upon the Attorney Gen- eral of the State if he needed assis- tance. oo ———— Little old New York, as always, knows what’s what in choosing a nee COV) ih our Rep chicane | dew Pose | st CEYLON TEA “Tt je an outrage,” NOT ENOUGH PEOPLE DIE,’ LAMENT OF UNDERTAKER Him to Support His Family. Alfred 1. MeCormick, an under- 76 .West One Hundred ‘was compelled to pay his wife: Jpee- considered | support and that of his two ehildren. to be the effect of the growth of, large corporations and the centraliz- | Justice Blanchard that people did not ing of their control on the condition | die fast enough and that he had to go of labor in the United States? A. | Ut of business. McCormick told Supreme Court 19] @. As a result of your observations | phine the sum of $10 a week for hér and experience, sanpeantipeenensin “My wife is the most violent tem- Any manufacturing institution that {5 | pered woman in New York,” said Mc- successful making a single product ment that you had. A. He has a bet-|should increase the business and its plant and make more work to em- We cannot expect through violous|@ man to give his best efforts when jasked F. J. Ryan, qounsel for Mrs. habits, weak character or misfortune, |he is in debt and has not enough to oR ° keep his family on. ‘ ory and “beat it west,” |!" down and out, is not the best way Ks eee Se wail wean OF A. Nomadic work: |cision, said ‘They are on a waiting list,)man and h Cormick. “I was thrown out of my house by her rich family. I second fiddle for seven years until the strings broke.” “Did you not rush at your wife?” the runni . Justice chard, in giving bis de- ‘Here is a strong young it to work to support , and he allows some one Charity is @ profession Almost anybody can find an excuse not o get @ job.’ ———— tamil; DETAINED BY BRITISH; IS ALLOWED TO SAIL. LONDON, Jan. 22. — The Dantsh New York Dec. 11 for Copenhagen and was taken to by o British Newcastle GOMPERS URGES SEPARATE | warship on Jan. 2 for an investigation of LAWS FOR LABOR. fee thea er cargo, sal lor Denmark on ‘ednesday last, no contraband having Samuel Gompers, President of the | been found. consisted chit ot es: t of which wae, anitted to furtt spection. \bor jeprars | troubles: made te tepestible to. retoed roubles made itm 5 ms] ‘and the Arkansas had to ———— lesraph be| NEW YORK COTTON MARKET. fewark that night, where they | over twenty-two years of age or un- | summoned to testify as to the alleged were given 50 cents each for a “flop,” | der twenty-two years of age who has |blacklists and the next morning they all went dependent on him. Over to the plant at Roosevelt Bor. | (ners depe Cotton opened off from 7 to 10 ints. Weakness in Liver; we jue to American selling t! Bete | sales price New Orleans was a heavy it Bout n hedge selling was Reports claim that with cheap uth is able to hold its ernment cotton ginning repo! ———————————— He told of the) ost, FOUND AND REWARDS, Cel Oras Pt Fresh from the Pen of Mr. Bigdeal The man who thinks that money Is scarce as scarce can be Should offer through a World Ad. Some high class Realty, Large sums are paid for ‘uilding plots, Hotels and mansions grand; Just read World Ads. or use Wor: \!¥. And then you'll understand. It’s quite as easy to sell a costly hous:, lot, farm or other Real Estate security as it is a cheap building lot, if you go about it in the righ gal 79,551 ‘Vorid “Real Estate” Ads. Last Year— _ 10,407 World Ads. Find the Buyer One: ‘Sel