The evening world. Newspaper, July 8, 1916, Page 1

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ie an RE a Ne ieattlines sie, Oy: ZOITION eet 2108 ONE CENT. atte od y HOME DEFENSE LEAGUE'S 21,000 MEMBERS T0 HELP POLICE FIGHT PARALYSIS #8 New Deus Weptt To BAD FOOD BRINGS MUTINY Days 4 pes tha Nese | WN Q7THS MARY ARRESTED day, 2 in Manhattan, Inquiry Begun Into Charge Camp é FEDERAL AID COMIC Whitman Men Attacked Young Woman, EKSKILL, July 8 Men of the ’ be an tres aad a 4 ial a “ be [*cireulstion Books Open to All.” | NEW YORK, SATURIAY, JULY 8&8, ALLIES DEFEATED, BERLIN CLAIMS Ay LOCKOUT OF 60, --> World Basis of Settlement of Controversy. ALL- DAY _CONFERENCE. Union Agrees Manufacturers olation Camp Outside City) Suggested for Victims Forty-seventh Regiment, tired of Waiting to be ordered to the front, of Epidemic. started a little war themselves to- day, with the result that a big de- Godley tachment of Company E is in the wuardhouse, with a court-martial Defense | *Walting for insubordination, They jdeclined to accept burnt rice for | breakfast and demanded something fater New York, to assist 1m the’ more edible, When this was refused “tle against the epidemic of infantile they would not go out to drill and lysis. Bexinning to-night and go-| Were Placed under arrest by order of into force throughout the city, one Col. Jannicky. Peekskill village is now patrolled mber of the league will accomPANY | Hy 4 provost guard of the Forty- ch patrolman of the shift which is on | seventh, POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y, July &— Sheriff E, J. Conklin of Dutchess ‘ounty sald to-day that the author- ities are investigating stories of al- leged mistreatment of women living near Camp Whitman by National uardsmen, It was said that last night complaint had been made that jthree young women of Stormville, a , Were oVerpow- sol@lers at a lonely spot in The District Attorney had Ho said Acting Police Commissioner iInced to-day “ule mer @, which has 21,000 members fn that he would call wre of the Home ty from 4 o'clock in the afternoon til midnight and will assist him in tecting the He will serve at least one hour this period and make @ written re to his precinct captain, ‘The ue Was organized and drilled to re- Place members of the regular force guddenly summoned on riot or other wency duty Deaths as a result of the epidemic ibered eighteen in the twenty-four ending to-day noon, ‘This is Jess than were reported during violations of sanitary t the road, heard nothing of the case. that he would investigate. The Sherift was at the camp yesterday investi- twenty-four hours preceding. | gating other civil offen: rteen of the deaths were in| aeneniliaie oklyn, two in Manhattan, and NO SENATE ACTION ON CASEMENT PLEA Committee Decides Not to Report Resolution Asking Wilson to Intervene for Irish Leader. WASHINGTON, July 8—Decision not to report the resolution urging , ; ‘ President Wilson to intervene to save mcorely Tratched in the localltien | the iife of Sir Roger Casement was ° | WBaeegayd | reached to-day by the Senate Forel jew York received Federal ald toe |r nes wonuey OY tae Benate Borelen i" 0; | Relations Committee, fm her fight against the infantile | ne committee concluded It would yaia epidemic, It was announced |be an impropriety for the United Washington that Miss Jane A- | states officially to question the out- 0, head of the nurses’ depart- : come of a judicial proceeding in At of the American Red Cross, had) other country, and that action In a mobilizing a force of Red |{n involving @ treason charge nurses to ald in preventing the would be particularly discourteous: preadi m here Mens tre eee 0 Hefore the committee met Senator rtine Now Jersey, the ‘was Suggested to local health au. | Martine of New Jersey, the author of in Queens. or the week ending to-day noon total of deaths in Brooklyn was | ) in Manhattan seven, in the Bronx ur, in Queens six, and in Richmond pur, @ grand total of 126 Two up-State towns and a number towns in New England have ro- cases of infantile paralysis in consequencé all New York er- foniste and summer visitors are | |the resolution—which declares the . that an isolation | “pl gga Mee pe city CASE ment proceeding a “hasty, so Victims could be cared for in called trial"—demanded the commit- tee bring his measure before the te during the run of the epidemic t be the means of shortening its tion, | Senate, Ho said afterward he might \s ndeavor to have the Senate overrule i The figures on new cases issued | the committee, day by the Board of Health show > oklyn has 74 new cases as against Be taastaee it 31 mn c HE IS A REAL BURGLAR ase Of 1; Queens, 1, a decrease | 8, and Richmond 6, a deer e of 2, guessing for a long time, d Q ‘The supposed band of skilled burg- Dr. William Colby Rucker, passed! jars whose depredations have kept walatant Surgeon General of the Mod. | detectives of the First Branch Bureau |‘ ral Public Health bureau, returr materialized | Have Right to Increase or Decrease Force. ‘The Evennig World is in a position, to announce that the garment work- ern lock-out of fully 60,000 men and women which has continued for ten | waeks, probably will be settled ‘with- In twenty-four hours: An all day executive session is be- Ing held by the Manufacturers’ Aa- sociation to decide the main Issue of the strike. From all indications and e¢xpres- sions of members it will follow the lines suggested to both the union and | the aasociation by ‘The Hvening | World yesterday. This to give to the rkers cither the right to strike or to establish a Board of eRview or Arbitration to settle ail disputes as to discharge. The manufacturers will accede the right to strike. With this one fundamental point settled no wthe workers and strikers will be ready for conference to di cide the minor issues which {t is generally agreed can readily be ad- justed after a conference Is once made possible. There 1s hardly any likelihood that this matter will go over until next week, although it may not be off- clally given out. This was the question submitted to the union by an Evening World rep- resentative: “Will you concede the employers’ right to regulate the number of em- ployees in his factory to meet the re- quirements there{n and to retain such employees as he may desire on the basis of efficiency aa unquestioned, and that the exercise of the employ- ers’ functions, as above outlined, shall not be construed as unjust or oppres jsive? | “WUL you concede the employers right to discharge for lack of work and to retain such employees as he may desire on the basis of efficiency, and that dischargea for this reason shall not be construed as oppressive or unjust?” To this Mr, Schlesinger of the Union replied through The Evening World representatiy “The Union has never asked for the closed shop, but has insisted that em- ployers live up to the preferential clause which prescribes preference for Union workers at the time of hiring, t and which was practised for five rs, he Union has never denied to the employer the right to discharge work or to reorganize their factories in ordance with the efficiency of their 9 Washington t cont to-day in the arrest of an undersigod | business, All the Union asks is that mee with local and Government! poy of twelve years, Anthony Cam-|the manufacturers do not exerciae Palth officials, and will en the | paniello of No. 8 Goerck Street, who that right oppressively or unjustly services of the Interstate Commerce | confessed that he and several of his |nd when a complaint is made by een Commission in tracing cases of ine playfellows had robbed no less than | ployees that the complaint: be re fantile paralysis which may cross th rty plices and got hundredy of Viewed as formerly preseribde and New York line into other State avs’ worth of booty practised.” The Government experts will open! Campantello told Detective Lauke- Then tollowed the answer from the office here on Monday to taxe up Tp LAek On Hise 8 be and Bie sams Union, whien with little or no modi- = Millett at No. 29 Goerck Street, and ee @oatinued .. Second Page.) ole $600, (Continued on Second Page.) | one 2 Suggesstions of The Evening ‘BOY WHO BIT GOLF BALL apy 1916. O00 GARMENT. DIES OF BURNS FROM : Inquisitive Lad ‘Lad Wanted to See! What Was Inside — the Core. GREENWICH, Conn, July 8.— Charles Andria, aged twelve, who bit into the core of a golf ball which he was attempting to open, died to-day The acid in the ball burned his mouth and stomach severely. It is supposed he decided to ex- amine the interior of the bell, and , after unwinding the elastic between covering and the acid pocket in the centre probably atempted to break the small shell and, failing, bit it. The fluid burned his mouth and he is belleved to have swallowed some of It. | The exact substance contained in| the centre of the ball is not known, | 4s it ls a secret preparation, guarded | by patents. ITALIANS HOLD GAINS IN THE ASTICO BASIN Rome Reports That Austrians Have Been Repulsed and Positions Consolidated. ROMF, July § (via London),—Nota- ble artillery activity along the Tren- tino front is reported by the War Office in to-day's official statement. Wwairina The picture shows the strikir before office of the joint board Makers’ Striking Cloak makers in Line to Get Allowance of $2 a We MAKERS TOEND IN 24 HOURS. jr RIGHT 10 STRIKE CONCEDED . ek s cloak and suit makers ined up Cloak and 8 Union at No, 34 East Twenty-first Street, to draw thetr weekly allowance of Positions recently won by the Italians 2 cach, The line, four deep, reached down to Fourth Avenue and in the Upper Astico Basin were con- around into Twentieth Street, About $80,000 im paid to the strikers solidated. The statement says: each week by the board, “In the Ledro Valley the artillery has been active, Some shells fell on Bezseoca, In the Lagarina Valley the enemy's heavy calibre guns yesterday bom- barded our positions on the right bank of the Adige and tn the Sevgna area, “Our artillery dispersed infantry columns in the Terragnola Valley and caused explosions near Roveretto, “In the upper Astico Basin we are consolidating positions,” Bosco) sl LANSING ON VACATION. WATERTOWN, N, Y., July 8.--Sec retary of State Robert Lansing ar rived to-day at his summer home at Henderson Harbor for a month's vaca tion, Asked if the Mexican crisis was passed, Mr. Lansing seid Louls Windler and Thomas Lenson, vigila and the officials of the Department of Correction brother-in-law, wbout OLD PLOT TO ESCAPE TOMBS FOILED BY PRISON OFFICIALS, CELL BARS CUT BY PRISONERS ——_ -4 > The boldest plot to escape from the Tombs that has been attempted {im years was frustrated early to-day by the of Warden Hanley to be : “I don't know ap to that, It looks | tried for an alleged $706,000 robbery of the United States mails, with etter” Pye antes the prospect of long terms in prison ahead of them and, it is said, at least AQUEDUCT RESULTS, $100,000 of their loot hidden away, worked out an ingenious scheme. It a included the use of false keys, hack-saws, a rope w f strands of bed- FIRST RAC ‘orm ’ old and up, handicap: $4 ; sheets and the aid of confeders waiting with d mobil and a half furlongs —-ithine Tos] (Re Hoffman), | A light flashed from the top floor of the prison was to be the signal won; ja, | tol, and 3 to 5, .c |that the escape was begun and th omoblle was to be ready at the 198 (Keogh), 7 to 1, 6 to nd » 5, third. ‘Thine Matac Hite, Water | bFison wall Helle, Lady y 1, . ‘ ‘ EERIE SA DP ie EC TSE Maid: Hidden Star and Lady win: | Warden John Hanley te dermere dino ran a turned from his vacation, a week ag, | federates, wailtiig in an offce hired Hantingten to Canvass the Yown, | a prisoner leaving th ombs told him, in a business building on the other HUNTINGTON, N. Y., July &—The] pian was on foot for two of rie of Lafayette et, would im Rourd of Health to-day decid te edia bring up a car and canvass the town to find out how Mest noted prisoners to t ve other side ve southern many children affected by paralysis in| informant said they had lots of prison wall, to cateh a rope the pris the town, A mass meeting sled v manne, Glente. Ok HAIR On ; opera would iieow Ae oF to-morrow afternoon, at which in hoped to get three hundred men to| 4&4 & completely worked out Mr, Hanley at onco reported to volunteer for the duty. Besides the| He heard that when t ver Commissioner of Corr ne Burdette two cases discovered yesterday there saci : vat ; ye Oe Leow He and Deputy Commis are now two ‘a they would A a A ° in ” David 1 Kelly joined the w Je of the seventh t (For entri W piigga buliding, dle oasd con! (Coptigued op Siajh Page.) a na a Cloris, (*Circuiation Books Open ta All.” | 12 PAGES = PRICE ONE CENT. 8 MORE DIE FROM INFANTILE PARALYSIS AUSTRIAN ARMY RETREATING: 30,000 CAUGHT IN A FRENCH SURPRISE GERNANS a London Attributes Let-Up in Drive to Heavy Rains, While Paris In- sists That French Troops Made Gains in Surprise Attack. BERLIN GREATLY ALARMED, SAYS A LONDON REPORT BERLIN, July, 8.—"On both een ee numerous fe- peated enemy attacks were repulsed with sanguinary losses,” said an official statement this afternoon on the Anglo-French offensive. The official statement regarding operations says: “On both sides of the Somme, our heroism and tenacity pre pared for the enemy a day full of delusions, Numerous and continuously repeated attacks were repulsed with sangiunary losses, The enormous number of fallen Englishmen before the Ovillers-Contalmaison-Bazentin le Grand sector, and of fallen Frenchmen before Biaches--Soyecourt front, give an indi- cation of the devastating effect of our artillery, machine gun and Infantry fire.” To-day's news from the western front shows that the fighting of the last few days was most Intense at three points—at Thiepval, around Hem and the region eight to ten miles south of the Somme River. Ig the Thiepval sector there was a® succession of bitter attacks and coun- ter attacks The British several times succeeded by violent assaults In ob- taining a foothold in Thiepval, but each time were ejected from the ruins of the village. Tholr los: re de- scribed an “extraordinarily heavy, The only Hritish success, and this ts deviared to be unimportant, w: the capture of a salient of German trenches east of La olselle, only a short distance east of the original German line. From La Bolselle south- ward the Aghting was of a local char- a The Germans have thrown a strong dam around the British flood e and isolated attempts to break the dam have been unsuccessful, — , 9,000 OF THE PRUSSIAN GUARD REPORTED SLAIN IN FRANCE | Kaiser Is Said to Be Rushing Between the East- ern and Western Fronts Giving Direc- tions to His Generals. LONDON, July §.--Five thousand of Katser's Prussian Guardsm killed the Contalmaison, east ¢ mark to-day, indicating increasing have) pubtic anxlety in Germany on account fighting around’ of the western and eastern offensives Albert, according | of the allies, en in to speelal despate’ from Paris The Kaiser, one correspondent to-day | teported, is traveling from front itish troops spent the night im-| tg front, conferring with his gen- their positions north of the} each Gdvising. seslcel the rain having interfered with! reduction of his forces for the operations, Gen, Haig reported this! — genefit of others. afternoon Despatches from Paria say the War! OMive that the French mm vance last night on that the Crown Prince is being announces: blamed for persisting in the Ver- a further a the Somme front in the vicinity of} Belloy-en-Santerre and Estrees British War Office Austrian troops have retreated | report is as follows: from their advanced lines in the “A very heavy rain whieh fell bend of the River Styr, in Vol- on the afternoon and evening of hynia, before greatly superb Rus» | yesterday operations, sian forces, according to a state- nd between the Ancre and the ment from the Austrian War Of- Somme the night was chiefiy fice. The German War Office an- spent in improving the forward nounced that repeated attempts in | positions gained in yesterday's the Lake Narocz reaion and a | fixhtinu Russian attack northwest of ‘tn the netg dd of Com. Buczacz, in Galicia, were repulsed, mecours we b ed the en- At Kolomea 30,000 Austrians are | emy's trenches with field guns reported cut off and trapped in and trench mortars. the mountains, “Near Neuville St, Vaast (in Garth steedinc cenitusnarae wees (tc nsiiara nee, southwest of violent artillery engagements, partic«| Lens) and north of Roslimoourt larly in the districts of Hitt g04,| the enemy showed some activity Esxnes and Souville | London newspapers printed veveral | lust few days we have dispatches from Holland and Den- captured 2 guns, 6) maenine f

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