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as a toon ITOPUARR 1ST BRA Joined With 24 and 14th Kt Will Make Up Command of Gen, Lester. LONG STAY EXPECTED Wives of Officers Seeking Homes Near Camp Give McAllen a “Boom, ly Martin Green. (Opeciel Oye Correependent of The ven 9 World.) MALIN, Tex, July IT Another Shift in the movement of the Miaty- ninth New York was reported here to day, It ie said on authority, alleged to be oMficial, that Hrig. Gen. Wilson who comes fry N.Y, and commands the Th uarters at hos that Third Regiment of Nook ter, which was scheduled to go to Mission to camp with the Mecond of ‘Troy, and the Fourteenth of Urook iyo be sent to Pharr instead, ‘Phin would shift the Bixty-ninth to Mis sion, with (he Fourteenth and Ser ond, the three regiments forming the Firat Brigade under Brig. Gen, Les ter, upply train teached Minsion at o'clock thin morning. The first section of the rel ment is expected in camp thin evens Ing. Aw the supply train drew into vamp the first p of military equipment unloaded were two sets of xing gloves. Reports of camp were circulate inpection shows tt of infectious sickn «the men here and that the camps are conasld- ered by the regular army medical staff vie best in this country Rumors flew about the camp to- day to the effect that horse thieves kidnapped four steeds from Battery & of the First Artillery, Saturday night. According to the current gossip, bold, bad hombres mounted on Mex- ican pontes sneaked Into the camp ia & moonlight which illuminated the valley as Broadway and Forty-second Street is illuminated at midnight, and attempted to stampede Un Sam's equines. It 1s perhaps a fact that three or four of the horses slipped thelr halters and got away, to be recovered later grazing in the vicin- ity of the camp. Apparently the impression has be- vome implanted in New York that the soldiers ure to make a long stay in Texas, Inquiries for rooms and houses are pouring in from w) +s and ether female members of * ive of officers quartered here, Every thing habitable in McAllen has, been rented and enterprising builders are siretching themselves in the preps ration of plans and the purchase of material for a lot of two and three single room bungalows. NEW YORKERS WILL TRY HARD AT BRONCO BUSTING. R. Fulton Cutting of New York, Who came here on a special car with bis wife and daughter, has rented the biggest house iu MeAllen, two stories Nigh, two baths and a sleeping porch, at a figure which causes the owner to walk around in circles and wonder if de is alive every time he thinks about it. Mr, Cutting's son-in-law is an offi- ‘cer stationed vere. Because of death, disablement and general unsuitability of cavalry mounts brough’ here from New York it has been found necessary to buy a lot of Texas ponies. Col. Debevoise, of the First Iry, Is arranging to have 200 native horses shipped in from San Antonio,'und the cavalry end of the camp Is in line for a bronco busting expedition such as the Buffalo Bill show never could present. The provisional cavalry troop which was sent down to the Rio Grande to explore the country and make ready for the placing of New York troops along the border as guards and out- posts, returned tu cemp last night They were bro than when they went away, but not hungry, for on Saturday night they wave a big feed io the officers of the ‘Twenty-elghth regular infantry who have been stationed at Hidalgo and adjacent territory, They rounded up 4 barrel of beer and imported an or- chestra from ttvynosa, on the Mexi- can side, Altogether it was quite a party. Another provisional troop will 60 over the same ground this week. There are now encamped in South- ern Texas, in a territory about the close close to of the Bixty-ninth Ww sickness in Medical is not @ case ipfectious to-day i size of Long Island, A Pimple to dispose of— A Rash to banish— A Complexion to clear— Eczema to heal— TRUST POSLAM with ite intense, ever-active Dealing power, to do the work quickly and well, If it to but o slight irregularity of the ® ication be sufficient. | pra.mara srenvase, fer bs releriens ‘enggpt pay be seen. ar ALL DRUGGIS samilios | ed and a little thinner | MP woidiers Heading miitie from Nee Vouk ond wher Mates 7 omy -reenieetions te ber he ot Me vile »* ¢ guard duty WO HEN DUMPED INTO Brace OF LONG ImMaND Dok Ubiehome ty te fret of we oe camped ip Cameron Hidalgo “ io, Idane Grande, Juan, Downs, Wb ene man McAllen aw tary wadquarters ie aw Hie; the other ov. OMyan, quarters at MeAiien, “ posed entirely New York suldiers, and & a ntaatio) when his divisio Will have eoatey! of 1 than 30,009 men. » Ryan went to Brownavilie to-day with Major Vanderbilt to fe turn « cull made by Gen, Parker lant Sunday and discuss (he situation in the y orkers may get an idea of the jay of the land down here by imagining Fjushing as Mission and Kouthampton as Brownsville, with camps at Great Neck oo onding to MeAtien ne Ban Jue outposts, would represent in yar outpo ng the Atlantic Great vuth Hay | stretching from Coney Island to Southampton, Now the #i dumping of 60,000 troop Inland would strain the time, at that ps munit itwelf a mark to the great supplies of | k City, wine What the | mituation would be if but two mingle | track railroads traversed Lang twland, from Long Island City out to Port Jefterso ‘ other from Port Je Southampton, and if Lon «] were a country thinly inhabited, about 75 per cent, dexer with no reserve supply of provixtc and just vering from a fourte months’ drought HORSES “SHIPPED TO DEA HAMPER NEW YORK TROO It is exasperating to note that the infantry, artilery and cavalry unite which have arrived at Mission, Mc- Allen and Pharr from New York within the past four days have been even more inadequately provided for in the way of rolling stock for mon and horses than were the firat regi- ments and compan to reach re.| tly the railroad compantes have ransacked the discards of their equipment for coaches, tourist cara, Pullman and stock cars for the use of the New York militia, ‘The horses | of the militia of New York State have reached McAllen in stock cars which the Interstate Commerce Commission would not allow shippers to use for the transfer of cattle to a slaughter | house, The horses of the New York cavalry and artillery detachments are generally in bad shape, and thou- jsands of dollars are being thrown | away on animals that have been, to use a stockman's phrase, “shipped to | death.” These animals, picked for | their fitness for the military service, were shipped hurriedly from Kansas, Oklahoma, Missourl, lowa, Nebrasi > = ES 2 3 = 3 3 ‘Sf 2 = 3 | to New York and shipped from New York to The horse death roll yesterday heavy, for a great many of the artil- | lery animals arriving from New York after six or seven days on the road | were not more than half alive when | they were led down the chutes fi the cars into the McAllen corral, which was already decorated by the cass of m horse that had been | there two days In a broiling tempera. | ture, The cavalry encampment at McAl- Jen is at the extreme southern end of the camp ground, Small water | pipes run to the cavarly through the campa of three Infantry reciments and the Firat and Second Artillery. — | HOT WATER SUPPLY, THOUGH SMALL, FOR CAVALTY. ‘The pipes for a considerable por- tion of the distance are on the aur- | fa Yesterday morning it took | twenty minutes to fill a bucket with | water from a faucet in the camp of Squadron A, and the water was hot, not warm, but HOT, But for the fact that this southern Texas country, al- though hot, 1s high and healthy, t Government would already be reap. |ing the penaity of throwing thou- | sands of troops from the North into a district which had but a few hours for preparation, | With ready acaptability the New | Yorkers ara ascommodating them- | selves to the weird variety of caloric | climate this territory deals out. ‘The | | country around the camps is taking on | jn military agpect with troops march- ling along the roads and drilling in | the fields A trip through the camp district re- Imost immedis | wards the tourist: with a en of moving pictures in which the olive | drab service uniform of the United States is reflected against a back- ground of brown canvas tents and green shrubbery Col, Fiske of the Seventh New York | put a fringe of romance on the grim blanket bf war in this vicinity Satur. day evening when he took his com- | mand out for parade in the late dusk and marched them back to camp through McAllen in an atmosphere drenched with light from @ big round full moon, | The McAllen Electric Light plant aided the picturesque feature of the parade by going cut of commission as the moon climbel up in the eastern Twelve hundred New York boys | tramped through the town singing “Give My Regards to Broadway" while the moon rays cust ows along the palm Ined roads and made a spectacle that atoned for much that is not exactly a@ it should be in Texas, F Company the Seventy-firat | Junder Capt. Eben, finished halt its | hike along the Rio Grande last night, | and two companies of tho § are to start out along the trail | day | PAW ATUCK, the plenic of the Seventh Doy Baptist Conn, July 1%—At Sunday gschool at Atlantic Peach yes terday, tach member of the svlool Was allowed three rides on the merry-go- round, Nobody enjoyed the whirl more than did Uncle Amos Burdick, for over elghty ‘* @ member of the Bible t ninety took bis first ride @ hobby hor | trodden THE BVENING WORLD, MONDAY, JULY 17, i916 pea ey FIRST MILITIA AERO CORPS TO ENTER SERVICE OF U. S. COMPERS HOPEFUL {aR The of ty First Acro Squadron, N Aero Club of America If Authors Form a Union, is pletured abo nieed with the 4 2 D-operal © 1 Was mustered into thy Best Seller Writers May Lead Parade of Strikers First Thing You Know You May ice Robert W. Chambers Marching Down Fifth Avenue, or Gouverneur Morris and Rupert Hughes Doing Pick® By Nixola Greeley- Shall the authors of America agiiate tion of Labor? kyen a* you read, the thi Robert W. Chamb down by duty outside a non-union lary, a bill recently, constabulary would adore. t Duty. Smith. with the Amer n publishing house, me. an Federa Authors’ League of America is taking a vote on important question, and the frat thing you know re may be seen leading a pro of striking or locked-out writers up Fifth Avenue, and) Gouverneur Morris and Rupert Hughes may be ridden the State constabulary while doing picket Now, | know that New York has no State constabu- providing for one having ‘been defeated! but the principle ts the some authors I should just love to see ridden down, only they are, unfortunately, the very writers the State) the regiment, for which I have the If any amount of untoniza-/| greatest respect. | ton or affiliation could arrange literary awards so that Edith Wharton and | work arduously for the United Sta There are Booth Tarkington could earn as much money as if they had never been educated at all, then I would be for it at any cost. | can endow, protect or develop brains 80 that they can compete successfully with the powers of platitude, A sub-committee of the Authors’ League Authors’ Union, but the report will have to be ratified by a majority of the members before it can be adopted, | certa acure nent are of its council. 1 found that all of these members of the down- working class were out of town yesterday when | sought from them a forecast of what the vote of the league will be, And to be out of “Ne ness, autho feld, ters of the Authors’ League, at No; ls 33 West Forty-second Street, is kept! open, e at 90, and the very courteous Se tary of the league, Eric Schuler, found me an author, a very nice one, in the person of Leroy Scott, mem 500 port o! ve scribably chaotic, ns and ‘contract matters xt t cy in tions are for his share in the f the Federation, with its But no human effort Lb Piracy is rampant and redress un- 7 ted in favor of an hed has reported in copyright questions are ob- ande- It is charged that plays and novels by authors so prom- is of fle- isfactory ; Sresident of | nent and seemingly well-protectec Winston Churchill ts President of] ag Hail Caine, J. Ml. Barrie and Gf: the league; Theodore Roosevelt 19) pert Parker ‘have been stolen for Vice President, and Gertrude Ather-| screen production and thus far re- ton, Rex Beach, Ellis Parker Butler, | dtess aoe eee ees, arn ece Feat SK. Wil| seareely an American author Robert W. Chambers, Mary KE. Wile | tion who has notin some dewree aut. kins Freeman, Mary Roberts Rine- | fromthe unsatl hart and many others equally emi-| methods and practices in this fleld, AUTHORS AT MERCY OF PIRATES. AMONG THEATRICAL MANAGERS the motion picture busl- worst, from the standpoint, in the dramatic | Plays are frequently held by a! manager as long as six months and, [eee beaied 66. pradis then returned without comment, And, giously desirable that for a moment! tracts vary so widely, and for the [1 was tempted to resurrect one of most part are dy so carefully in i ; favor of the manager, that the new my youthful ambitions from its coftn | ote ete te ape to ce and become an oppressed author my-|jittie compared to. the amount “he self. should receive, Further, when it comes to making a play into a motion VERY MUCH IN EARNEST AND) picture, the theatrical managers, CONVINCING 18 MR. SCOTT pleading that nite motion plotures have cut into their profits, and a Due investigation, however, re-! substantial share, usually one-half, vealed the fact that the headquar-|of the motion picture rights; and it n charged in some instances that managers have paid tho author picture | n when the thermometer is|rights, which rights they have secretly | disposed of for $10,000 and mor “Atfiliation would give us the 500, 000 members, almost all of whom are | Ke¥8 on the lock of the inner door. It would give us the right | He arreste unions whose { with “ ra place before the various ber of the Executive Committee. nd there are. many uniona Before Mr. Scott came Mr, Schuler interests are closely. identified had supplied me with the views pro the Interest of authors) a statement and con of certain prominent mem bers of the league, Brander Mat+ thews, for instance, thinks “the sug gestion to affiliate the Authors’ League with any labor body singu- jarly unfortunate. Hamlin Garland says he is “likely to oppose the idea port of any differen motion managers, publishers and other gether with a request for active aup- picture producers, 1877, obtain more ea we might have with theatrical to- pay of the Chicago teachers had not been raised sinc efforts to Thetr money were laughed at until they formed a union Then they got a raise of 10 per cent. that writing is only @ trade,” and | ty excess of what they had asked for, adda, “to me writing is. art and the | "gurely that's. the answer... Even idea of affiliating with the labor | for authors in union there ts strength unions is at first thought repugnant." George Barr Baker, on the contrary, _> PAIR DIE 3 HOURS APART. is strongly in favor of affiliation and —_— so is Mary ©, Wilkins breeman, the | n Tumor Kills Mes, Perrin inust © rining Combination oF autho Woindn Wi the United States Mra. K. W. Perri Nod, Maliation with the dederation | died at 1 o'clock yesterday morning of a strikes ime as very aesrable,” Mra | rain tumor, and 4 #reeman aald, Vif autho:s can thereby | nuspand was foun ad in bed. County convince people that autnorwuip is] prs wclan Neate said heart disease had labor, 1 have never boon able tol Ka Me Perr! accomplish that, Verhaps affiliation | “phe Jatter had conducted the Holmdel may protect’ authors from being | inn for twenty years and was known levied upon for unpaid symposiums, | well to New York auto tourists, Ht dc. Also from demands to write {leaves & daughter, Mra Willan Gordon one’s life history and a truthful | of Philadely 8, brother, Wiliam i pnfeasion of one's soul aspirations | eet Se irechold. ‘Thee Inhkeep: for a paper to be read at a woman's | or married three years ABO. club. Also for an account of one's an-|"" A'dounle funeral ‘Will be held Wednes- cestors unto the third and fourth | day afternoon generations, Also trom the ible —_—_—_—_—_. eferment of oversea performances | Kept © Secret Since to those of their native land.” Ni eaemanee Ped Ep told me that the The friends of Meta Brinkman, uthors’ League does not propose to F Shia ot William Brinkman, insist that all authors be paid alike, | eee eer tena ani niahed te merely that they have @ uniform con- plete were aon ie tract.” L had hopes that some way |learn yesterday that ung Wo might be found to enable people who | Was secretly married in January, to have genuine literary gifts, Like Le | ne ec ta ene ny was pers Gallienne and Marian Cox and Ar-|tormed by ‘the Rev. HR. J. Butting- turo Glovanitti, to make ax much|hausen of Bloomfield, Nod. It waa money as Géne Stratton Porter or| known that the couple were eng Harold Bell Wright, But this ix of | but the magringe was not expected tu course too much to expe Why [fake place until: next ye should fate double up its favors by |(hase, who la ningorn i penn conferring brains and fortune on the|}oat ut Atlantic Highlands. Her hus sume persons? | is away © border with the “From the author's viewpoint con- ditions in the motion pictu ndustry ar most unsatisfactory Leroy Bcott told me, “The author ts at the | Jat mercy of the dishonest producer, 1% nt 18.02 cents per pound.—A federal service at Garden City the M rder ju PLACE OF CONLEY AS HEAD OF 69TH enantio Official Notification of the Ap-| pointment Is Received at Camp) Whitman, CAMP WHITMAN, N.Y. July 17 Capt, William No Haskell, U8 received official notification here day by wire from Major Gen, O'Ryan| that he had been named successor to | Col, Louis D. Conley, retired because | Of physictal incapacity, ax commander | jof the Sixty-ninth Regiment. Capt | Haskell sald he would accept “L have no feeling in the matter ex- cept one of duty,” sald Capt, Haskell “L have the highest regard for Col Conley and his command, 1 was in-| ; Structor for it# mounted officers last, | winter and know most of the men of! HASKELL TOTAKE | | | } | I believe they will Army, They have the nerve, brawn) and all the fundamentals which are required in the Federal service,” Capt. Haskell is a West Point grad- uate of the class of 1901, As a li tenant of the United States Army he was assigned to the National Guard 1, @ Will soon join the forces now CASEMENT APPEALS FROM TREASON VERDIC vooedin| nt of publ hardly compa in interest with the trial, privileged spectators began to take | seats an hour before the court was) called to order, Justice Darling, by awon of hin seniority ax King’ ch Judge, pres! with Justices ray, Sorutton, Lawrence and Atkin Hy" np perminsion, Sir Koger wan present, He was attired in a lounge sult, His face has axsumed « | pallor xince he afpeared for trial counsel immediately Mm opening argument emphasiaed the technical point that the law gov~ not include any to the Kin, of the real Alex- ander Sullivan of Dublin, counsel for Sir Hoger, said the appeal would in- volve two questions: Firat, whether the matter described in the charge was in truth an offense within the statute cited; second, whether the definition of the offense—adhering to the King’s enemies—given at the reading of the trial was an accurate definition or defective as an instruc- tion to the jury. ——— JOHN R. M’LEAN PAPERS more than a year ago, When the order for mobilization came, Gen, O'Ryan asked permission of the War Department to raise him to higher | rank, It is jumed from the tele- stam calling him “captain” that the request has been granted, Capt, Haskell was born in| New York and has served in the Philip- pines, He is an expert rifleman, ‘FORMER POLICEMAN HELD AS INTRUDER Found With a Letter Carrier at Door of House Untenanted for the Summer, Mrs, Harold Paige of No, Bey- erly Road, Flatbush, a bride of a few weeks, saw two men at work on the ‘wereen door of the home of John Brundage of No, 604 Beverly Road to- ‘day. She knew the Brundages were away in the country and ran to the police booth at Ocean Parkway and | told Policeman Hagan about it, When Hagan reached the house the screen door was unfastened and | propped back, and the two were try- jing an assortment of twenty-s a them, | ulch of No. 130 Avenue C, | Flatbush, one of the prisoners, is a former policeman who was dismissed after he was found tending bar last |Summer in his father’s saloon. The other, Curtis Rebeaut of No. 967 Co- |lumbus Avenue, Is a letcer carrier They sald they were drunk and want- ed to Ket into the house to sleep. Mag- dstrate Naumer in Flatbush Court held them in $5,000 bail each WOMAN KICKED IN FACE. arwed Wi jt on Street Car. ringello, twenty-six years old, 6 Morris Avenue, the Bronx used of kifking a woman in the |mouth, was locked up in the Morrisante y Station last night on a charge of NOUN wMNAUIL Mrs, Mary ‘Tenchion of No. 4121 ‘Third Avenue, the Bronx, had ‘been spending | the afternoon at Pelham Bay Park, The cars were crowded when she sturied to |leave for home. As whe attempted to | board a packed surface car Gringelio, |the police way, kicked her in the mouth to force her off, She refused medical attenuion Detect!ves Massie and Haegeney of | Jthe Bronx Detective Bureau, who say they saw the assault, arrested Grinwello. > WILSON NOTIFICATION DAY. | ded Upon, & Report. Euge: ring Definite word was received from Washington at Democratic headquar ters that Aug. 5 had been decided upon for the notification of Pri nt Wilson nination, ¥ Whitman had luncheon to-day with William Ro Willeox n of the Republican National Conimittes, in the Hotel St. Regis, presumably to dis cuss campaign matt > Atal me for Blind Poor, A two weeks’ campaign to clear from debt the $400,000 home of the doclety for the Kelief of the Destitute Blind, now being built at One Hundred and Ninety-third Street and the Grand Boulevard, begins to-day, The urer is Lewis Spencer Morris, Liberty Street, The home is now Amsterdam Avenue and One Hundred and Fourth f*reet, ARE BROUGHT HERE Custodian Denies Letters Are Sen- sational, but Expects to Destroy Them. Carrying a suitcase containing the Personal letters of the late John R. McLean, Francis T. Homer, @ Baltl- more lawyer, has arrived here, He denies the letters are sensational and predicts they will be destroyed with- out being made public, Edward Beale McLean, aon and heir of the late publicist, is trying to his father's will aside, The American Security and ‘Trust Com- pany of Washington, executor of the estate, demanded the correspondence and young McLean has secured a temporary injunction to prevent its delivery, alleging that to make the letters public would bring shame and humiliation upon persons of note in financial, social, diplomatic and polit. ical circle I have read about half these let- ters,” says Mr, How nd I have not found one that involves any Am- bassador or any society person, 1 don't expect to find any. The whole thing i# @ mere flash in the pan, I have no doubt that the issue will never come up in court again, In my opinion this correspondence. will » destroyed, just as Mr. McLean wished.” ELSIE JANIS ESCAPES INJURY IN SMASH Was in Auto That Into a Telegraph Pole, Elsie Janis, the musical comedy | star, her mother, Mra, Josephine ne is; ir « Kerlin, the song writer, and O, March, an investment broker, of Actress Ran ». TL Broadway, narrowly escaped death or serious injury Saturday ev ning when March's automobile | plunged into @ ditch on the Bedford Road, just north of Bedford Village, and then crashed tate telegraph pole. ry accident occu r red when March turned his machine into a ditch to avold hitting 4 man, The auto crashed into a telegraph pole at the side of the ditch and was completely demolished, All of the occupants of the car w thrown out except for bruises and cuts, seriously injured. Miss Janis and her mother were taken | to their home in) Tarrytown and March and Berlin returned to Man hattan, > STOLE AWAY TO WED. Leaving her home two | ference hi ‘ _—_— Deadlock Over the Preferen tial Shop May Soon Come to an Pind At the Motel Continental todas shortly before be wen , polltan Muliding wo « b Of the jot anute hon the cloak, sult and shirt industry, " tor The Bee the fe Wretion in writing to Gompers, President of the American ration of Labor the joint gente ito other ponding questions were to be Adjusted oo as to be ace ie to th » Would Mr Gompers approve of continua the strike in the vers refuay con font lo & preferential shop?” over To which Mr pers replied, in Lawyers (Question Accuracy of | SYMIR@, a8 follows: “Any matter in : > | depute between the Ladies’ Garment Charge to Jury—Prisoner in | workers Union and the Manufectur- Court by Special Permission ere Association which can be adjusted LONDON, July IT =A new chapter | ly to the union does not re- hed today in MIF. Hoger Case. (44lF@ my approval, ‘The suggestion of is lemal ght againat being exe fone without the louted for high tendon fer Bis as organteation-to enforce them in the Dublin revolt, sir! @aningiess and untenable « reached the unt of OEADLOCK OVER PREFEREN inal Appeal, and although t TIAL SHOP MAY OVER TO-DAY Hut Mr, Gompers is optimiatic in wpite of the fact that the joint con. reached @ critical stage, An extreme move by either side would put an end to it and cause the continuance of the strike, Late Bat- urday the conferees deadlocked on the question of the preferential shop, For 4 fow minuten the extremiats on the union side let loose many threats, and “it's all off" was quickly seized as a slogan by impatient officials, Happily neither the employers nor Samuel Gompers have lost their heads, It was agreed that there should be another session. This ses. sion began thie morning at 10 o'clock, with Mr, Gompers atill refusing to admit that the situation is a hope- lena one. In fact, The Evening World Is able to repeat to-day the atatement made on Saturday—that the conference will be @ success, If by any chance it sbould turn out otherwise it will be because of serious doubts in the minds of the employers of the ability of the union officials to make good their Pledge. There is nothing to show that officials of the Garment Worke: Union have that control over their membership which 1s apparent in the businesslike conduct of other and older Mdustrial organisations. Real labor leadors have privately admitted this much, PROTOCOL IN PLAIN ENGLISH MAY BND TROUBL! On Saturday the employers made 4 firm stand for an “open shop.” They probably wouldn't ha stood out against a preferential shop if they had had any jurance that the union meant @ preferoutial shop and nothing ‘ertainly, as far as the ployers concerned, there should be nothing alarming in a preferential shop clause set forth in plain English, | ¢ It Samuel Gompers and Hugh Frayne have their way, @ buainess- lke contract or agreement will take the place of the present myatifyin and solemn document called the pro tocol, And there reason to belle’ that E. J. Wile and his associate will take a different view of the ques- tion to-day when they get assur- ances that the preferential clause in the 1916 agreement will be stripped of all the suspicious verbiage of the protocol On Saturday Mr. Morris Hillquit informed a reporter for The Evening World that no matter what else the employers yielded—increase in wages, &e. if they did not accept the prof- eromtial shop the strike would be continued. ith the chances of an endowed strike favoring it, the union has not @ great deal to lose by continuing the struggle for an- other month or #0. This is the twelfth week of the strug fight the industry has known, The 1910 strike lasted a little more than elght w the Philadel- phia strike ten weeks, and another, in Cleveland, ten weeks, The 1911 strike in the dress and waist industry was ended in the eleventh week, and last year's struj in this same branch of the needle industry lasted just a month It is noteworthy that the 1910 strike of the cloak, suit and akirt worker: came to an end in the fame buildin, the Metropolitan, where, this morn: ing the joint conference of the Em. ployers’ Association and the entered on the sixth session in this structure that the word pro. tocol was first introduced and used in the Industry, weeks ago, ostensibly to visit a girl acquaintance at a Jersey seaside resort, Miss Caro- ine Berryman, daughter Job Berryman of No, 136 Wash- treet, Bast Orange, came to orge's Episcopal Chureh, ne ne the Wite of Jty son of 4 San Announcement just night rare mak- with th of Mr. and Mra. ing thelr bride's par Hamel | who ts presiding | union | Te was | OWE KILLED, Waa monr'saure +) Hits Mortis Magener, (one hundred and Siath ond He Dies in Hospital, * year ald Morris sed UF 20 automobile while + lle yesterday i treat No #16 Bast ue | The machine: yhen Medel of Me od a Fi ® fe bering ah ar into she will brain b Mush, twenty vo? Thirty-ninth Mireet, Was moloreyolng launch wide of the was token to Hellevue of Ne erved his Avenue overt Ja Bireet * Ra Newar r blinabet ot it was Marantas and ‘ © thrown out was the ity Hospital with an knee and thigh, Mine Agne hieen, of No 197 Kenner Ai to Mt Harnabas's on ankle and cuts on FLIVVER RUNS DOWN = FRENCH RACING CAR James Humphreys, Who Bought Resta's Machine, Caught by Policeman in a Ford, in beat the hare im an exciting chase at Hastings-on-the-Hudson when « flivver ran down a French racing ear | after two tires of the latter had | popped under the peppering of @ man's pistol, Humphreys of No, 168 West ighth Street, this elty, 1 |of the French car, wan arrested | bis trial for speeding will be to-night, The car in auectiat, the famous Pugeot in which jo Resta won many races, Mr, Humphreys bought the ear and has heen seeking to emtx — late the former owner in thrills and apllia. Policeman John O'Leary Lise check him at Warburton Avenue . Main Street with his Colt, but the ~ car wan going so fast the bullet dropper into the road behind it. Po- iceman McQuade heard the jumped on the running board Ford and told the driver to beat record, He fired three shots and two lof thern plugged the two rear tires, Humphreys ran two miles on the rim and was finally grounded. pans Maa SPEEDERS GO TO PRISON. Themas Ge Loula Thomas, a chauffeur, who took his employer's car without pers mission, and struck and killed David Kidd on Flatbush Avenue, Brooklyn, in May, pleaded guilty to violating the law before County iS mrcoklya, tonds ke, fot Sing for from on three months and te to from on sentencing the men Judge Fawcett se iverely denounced them, speaking pare cularly of the reckless driving of Thomas, which caused the car to Jump. the roadway to the sidewall, where Kidd was struck, Thomas wat tried for homicide as a result of the death of Kidd, but the jury d year to a y ‘Thomas Oo0G Every Night ° For Constipation RANDRETH PIL. 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