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NALD PARATYPHOD ATTACKS THE 14TH, pa Suspected Cases in One Day, but There's No bpi- demic or Dang THEY'LL BE HOME SOON Sixty-ninth Held at a Remote Ranch, Safe From Con- tamination, By Joseph 8. Jordan (Bt0M Correspondent Evening World) MBADQUAKTERS NEW YCeK ‘The last soldier there, WD the exception of the Fourteenth Regiment, had veen moved to Bt linge Ranch, twelve miles to Berth, before morning dawned. The ie practionily im quaran- of ite men being allowed to leave camp. Thirty suspects of para- typhoid were developed yesterday, and fourteen of (hese were classed as “positive” cases. Thorough labora. tory examinations will be made to- day at the base howpital at MeAlien. The reason for the hurried removal of the troops wa at the report from the San Antonio that twelve more uf paratyphoid had + developed among the pationta sent from Mission and Pharr for examina- tion, This makes thirty-one cases tn all, two cases being from this camp, one from the Twelfth Regiment and one from the wnd Ambulance | Corps. While all cases are reporied as mild, and there is no fear of any epidemic or fatalities, no chance: are being taken for the spread of the aliment. The Fourteenth will be the first regiment to be sent to Camp Whitman when the orders to en- train arrive, and daily examinations will be made of the men up to the time of departure. Every euspect will be held here in the base hospital and a hospital car will be sunt along with the regiment. ‘The origin of the malady has not been discovered, but it wae thought wise to move the men from the seat of the complaint, which appears to be Mission. At Sterling’s Ranch there is plenty of water and there is no town nearer to it than Mission. Monte Cristo, a mile away, boasts of 8 station, a saloon, a school and one or two lemonade stands. The water {se pumped and there is no danger of surface contamination. SIXTY-NINTH SAFE AT STER- LING’S RANCH. The Sixty-ninth Regiment, return- ing from its hike, reached Sterling’ Ranch yesterday and its conical an pyrami tents were shipped out it (o-day. The surprise was mingle‘ with disappointment affairs, for the boys were fettle and looked forward to a fine irch to Edinburgh and then into Lussion, which they have learned to love better than Camp Whitman. But it’s @ ine country out there at the yanch with plenty of water and grass and the biggest long horned steors in the world to look at. The troops will! be held at the ranch for ten days, undergoing daily examinations, and the — sic any develop, will be weeded out and sent to the base ho: pital here. Ten days is sald to be t run of the disease and at the end of that time the troops will be brought in. They will not return to Mission. One regiment will be brought to Mc- Allen and ono sent to Pharr. ‘ The reorganization of the T gecond Engineers, which has been in process since July 15, was completed yesterday with a daylight banquet in camp. The organization is now known as the New York Engineer Corps and lacks only a Colonel. Major W. H. Conrow. was mado Lieutenant Colonel, and the new Majors are Capts. ‘Harry Garrison and Fred E. Humphreys. The latter ts a West Pointer and was a Lieutenant in the regular army until a brilliant career was blighted by a legacy of a million dollars. But the officer went into the Guard and was ready for service when the late emergency camé up. Capt. McC, Barrett, also for- merly of the regular army, Is the regi- menial Adjutant. First Lieut, W, G, Lane is made Captain and Battalion Adjutant. Capt. G. C, Woodward is jn command of Company B, under t reorganization. Capt. Ernest F. Ro i{nson, formerly of Company D, has been made topographical officer, Lieut. George D. Snyder is in com- mand of Company D, which was the old Company G and which yesterday @ the bang to Major Hum- hreys and the other new officers. rst Lieut. John J. Dunn is Captain of the Supply Company, PRIVATE PHIL A GOOD scouT AND MULETEER TOO, | Private Hhil Shorey of Troop B, First Cavalry, is a good soldier, When he was in New York they called him a good scout, He knows his Broad- way as @ cowboy knows his bronco, and now he knows his bronco, Ho can mount a8 quick as a Texas ranger ‘and has been known to get off one without touching a stirrup, without touching anything, in fact, He is also @ome muleteer. Anybody who thinks base hospital The flour that bids good-bye to the pie-| crust problem is Presto Self-Raising Flour. i va Got Pollen PARALYSS DROPS, | AONEW CASES AD 16 EATHS TO-DAY Light Fewer Stricken and Pour less Fatalities Than on Yesterday eal END IN SIGHT, IS BELIEF Work Now Chiefly Confined to Vacationists Returning With Children, hase Te elven 1] Yorty we ane w cannes of Infantile parely en Coathe wore report the Health Depertm ‘This i @ decrease from yesterday of Ogi Caen and four dentin Officais of the Meaith D oad * figures confirm theory of Dr Simon Fieaner of Rocke feller Inetitute that the crost of in fantile paralysis wrually ie reached about the middie of Augum and a promounced decline takes place (oore- after, On Aug 16 169 cones and # deaths Were reported, Hines then there by been @ steady falling off in the datly average of new casos. Following are the lables of to-day's new cases and deaths, compared with those of yesterday ‘the Tor oF DEATHS A SKY SCRAPER. To-Day, Yeon orday 1S FREE FROM Brooklyn .. 6 ‘ HAY FEVER Mashattan ‘ u phe ; ¢ |There Are 1,000,000 Hay Kichmond . ° 0 Fever Sufferers in the ma cyt i United States, 25,000 in NEW CASES. | New York, and Latter anidya.., oiay: Yeas. Turn Loose 76,650,000 Manhattan bs *} | At-Choos Every Year— | , Greene ss 3 H It’s Another Jersey Pest. Totals .veeeeeeeeee 40 a At the offices of the Federal sur- eons who are here fighting infantile At-choo! paraly it was said that the ep- Do you? idemic seemed to be practically an end. Chief work of the Federa) sur- | gtons now js confined to vacation. | late August and iste with children returning to New York or passing through the city from New Engiand resorts, WIFE MUST FOLLOWHUSBAND. Court Reles Man Choose Lester Schiiemann of No, 336 Weir- field Street, Brooklyn, @ young ship driller, employed at the Robbins Dry Dock in the Erie Basin, when arraigned in Gates Avenue Police Court to-day on @ charge of disorderly conduct, made by his wife, Loretta, explained that the | latter refused to move to @ home near | abil i hay fever. forty-three years sneezing and the 000, Be Lak bac persisted in living in| 8Ponsible for at least 1,000,000 of those ker-choos. | idgewood. “It' t y work, Judge said the defendant ™Y/ EVERYBODY LAUGHS AT ON ee ee “You must go with your husband,” FEVER'S VICTIM. | '8 prophylactic,” said Or. Smith. Mann Mf Sou wanted to folion auer| The hay-feverite is the yellow dog) “Any one can be vaccinated own arrget, wilt you should have re-/of invalids, There's nothing either! {90 nee hay fave arent Cake single. ft n Mahen turning to the husband, he re-|t@matic or pathetic about him.| studied, it is often nearly or quite marked: Everybody laughs at his snuffies,| successful.” our home. | tears, handkerchiefs and choked ut- terances. Unless he can run away to Bethlehem, N, H., or some other zone of immunity, he must suffer al- most intolerable discomfort for at least six weeks every year, and suffer without a crumb of sympathy. So out of pure altruism—for I can roam through golden rod flelds unscathed —I went yesterday to an exporienced and capable New York physician, Dr, J, Gardner Smith of No, 21 West One Hundred and Twenty-second Street. And I asked him these two ques- | Hons: “Why ts hay fever?” “What can be done for it?” “you go and be master of y You wear the trousers and don't let anybody interfere. You ke your home where you wish and she will fol. low you. ne wife argued, but finally agree to do her husband's bidding. ss oo {t's all play down here in the First Cavalry, ask Phil. Trooper Shorey was on guard duty last night with the mules. It was a dark night, with the moon a@ crescent in the western sky. The mules’ cor-| ral is acres and acres wide, because. aoldiers | ome fling. ep in a fer with alfalfa for his bed an wagon | a sack of oats for his pillow. And like @ good, tired soldier he slept. He; dreamed that he was back on Broad-) There is balm, mental balm, for th way going from place to place, meet- | vi in Dr, Smith's first ing fellows he hadn't seen for two | ay fever vicuial in months. He walked so much that he! Word woke up with a pain In his feet. The “Hay fever is not a jo! falnt mnonlight was creben Ry the; told me. “It makes the suff ack of the wagon, which was Phil's In addition bow window, but there were spots on| ® soiuvely, wisi hed. ue Aen the face of the moon and something| ¢% its obviously Pp: was nibbling at the trooper's feet.| tome hay fever causes a man or The heads of two mules with ears! woman to be temporarily good for like the antlers of long horned steers| nothing, rvously depr were stuck In the wagon shutting out sf i much of the moon. ‘They had fed on| unable to do efficient work, || Phil's alfalfa bed and now had hold} have known people ready to of his blanket covering his feet. The| jump out of their skins with the soldier sat bolt uprlees and turned! pain and strain, loose @ yell that would have scared a) far" MO | “4 band of Villa bandits, It acared the| “!!ay fever 1s due to the toxlo ac mules and they beat it with snorts| tion of the pollen of plants upon the delicate membranes of nose and throat, Many persons are naturally jmmune to this pollen, ‘Those who | and heehaws and Phil's blanket, and the poor trooper had to hunt for half an hour in the dark for his lost cov- ering, He finally found it with ont of the mules wrapped up in It. “This is the life,” ho sighed, and he put his pillow at the back of the wagon #0 the mules could not bite hia fect | again, THOSE HOME ORDERS AFFECT DISCIPLINE. 3 McAllen has been doing a land office business since the order for the regiments to Bo home. The boys of all regiments, who firmly believe that the new order will include them and that this camp will be a memory be- | fore Oct. 1, have been blowing them- have a catarrhal or an asthmatic ten- dency are most likely to suffer from hay also thoxe whose inusually large.” heard that pollen explana- 1 interrupted Dr, Smith, “But persons living in the heart ork City affected by pollen? in the world does it com fever, nasal the secret was out, and I another thing for which New y Is to blame. nen found Jerse! n, like New York from the other ‘New York poll Mosquitoes, come selves to souvenirs, embroideries and @ide of the Hudson,” Dr, Smith ex- everything that Texas skill and inge- plain “It ds waftted to our nos- nuity have to offer, and they are trils from New Jersey weeds and cleaning up the town, The belief that flower I have often thought that the beginning of the end down here there ought to be an Interstate com- merce act prohibiting the importa- tion of pollen, But at present there othing to interfere with it, “One of the serious features of hay fever is that It Increases any natural tendency to asthma, The sufferer, In addition to the disagreeable cold-in- the-head symptoms, frequently has came with the orders to the Third, Fourteenth and Seventy-first has ex- tended to many of the officers, and !8 general demoralization has been the result, Work in which was being taken the keenest interest lected or done only tn a half manner. And the antl-boozo order almculty In drawing his breath, Hay gas blown gy high last night and ‘overt found in the same family for generation after generation. The dis- case itself {8 not inherited, but the lack of Immunity to pollen is handed down from father to son.” A PROPHYLACTIC TREATMENT FOR THE JOKE AILMENT. “And now tell me if there is any- thing in the world that can be done lave the, to cu it?" 1 urged. 1" “The most successful treatment A rumor reached camp to-day that the home order had been counter- manded and it looked as if a riot might start at any minute. The pas- time of many of the soldiers when off duty is looking at the depot at Mc- Allen, waiting for the cars which are coming to take them home, and the question being asked is, “ care come?” osis, By Marguerite Mooers Marshall. holding ite annual copvention at Bethlehem of the blessed oases where the sneezers ce Ro > TTERS WT VRE CHG oe Or are you blissfully immune to the curse that has come upon us these early September days? The curse's actentific name 1s pollenosis; its aesthetic title is ros cold; popularly—and usually profanely. —it is known ai The United States Hay Fever Association, founded go by Henry Ward Beecher, {s now H., one weepers are at rest. and iso that the total “How 18 it done?” I asked. “There are two methods, One 1s to try on the hay fever patient serums made from the pollen of different flowers—roses, goldenrod, ragwood and so on. The other way is to use @ seruin compounded of the pollen of « number of different flowers. “T personally preter the latter d. There is likely to be a delay ing half a dozen ditferent kinds of serum; and then suppose the pa- tient is made ill by the pollen of more than one flower, What then? The treatment should begin eight or ten weeks before hay fever season—in May or early June. Fifteen injections are necessary, made from two to alx days apart. ‘There is little or no dis- agreeable reaction on the patient. “I vaccinated five persons for ha: fever last spring,” Dr. Smith admitted in response to a question, “and of the five three so far have proved im- mune, while two have had very slight attacks, occurring @ fortnight after the date the disease usually seizes them. All five have been afflicted for years, This treatment was worked out at the Lederle Laboratories at Pearl River.” “Are there any simple precautions that may be taken by the individual who is subject to hay fever?” I asked, SALT WATER AND SOME OTHER “CURES.” “It consists in using @ spray or douche for mouth. and no salt solution, Th made by putting t—amocthed off tei by thy | pollen and tend to aiv to the individual in au And that’s all the defin ° which Dr, Smith could give me about data hay fever. Here, however, are a few “cures” which have been heralded from time to time—but for which neither Dr, Smith nor f will vouch | Spending the hay fover season in a cold storage plant. Spending ditto in @ beer cellar, (This from Bt. Louis) Living on the top floor of a York skyscraper. Going on a sea voyage. Taking fifteen-grain doses of car- bonate of soda after each meal, New drops of the fluid extract after meals and before retiring, Carrying the left hindfoot of a rab- bit killed in @ graveyard on a dark night, ——_—— Syracuse Fugit rr RUENOS AYRE Charles E, Mott, indicted Syracuse, N. ¥., official arrested by Argentine detectives after & long chase, Thursday aboard the liner V stris, se-Cold or Hay Fever It So, You're the Yellow Dog of Invalids; on Way Back will sail for New York Tid t ft 9 A a Just a Joke, and You Get No Sympathy 4¢ stot , « Wom SJ CELA AP POR OS Bs Re aunt Y PROM THe GERM COLO STORAGE PLANT wii STOP IME Shee zine MOSQUITO FLEET’ | ASSEMBLES HERE ‘ It has been estimated that there are at least 1,000,-| 000 victims of hay fever in the United State: MMADSAL, 95,000 sufferers in New York State; number of sneezes in the Empire State during hay fever season is 76,650,- I know one red-nosed, watery-eyed pessimist who says that he is re- Fast Motorboats Ready to Start Week’s Manoeuvres To-Morrow. The speediest ocean-going power boats on the Atlantic coast trafled into Gravesend Bay one after another ‘to-day, They will take part in the first manoeuvres of the “mosquito fleet” auxiliary to the United States Navy, organized by powerboat and |hydro-aeroplane owners for scouting and despatch purposes in case of war, | Beginning to-morrow the man- jocuvres will continue a week. The Jocal practice drills are part of an {extensive programme of preparedness iwhich takes in motor boat fleets all jalong the coast from Maine to the Dalaware Capes. in addition to privately owned power boats ond hydro-weroplanes, part of the reservo battleship fleet and a number cf submarines will take part in the game. It ts expected seven hydro-aero- planes will comprise the air section of the make-belleve defense fect. Harold E. Pratt's Dodger 1. is the flagship, as it was of the fying boat section, Among the power boats to particl- pate in the manouvres are: Elvira, Henry F. Mouquin; Rosa, Sigmond Cohn; Troubadour, R, P. Huntington; Vorpoise, Ogden M. Reid; Priscilla, I. 8. Fisher; Robert B, Roosevelt's Sunbeam 1, Simon F. Rothschild’s Lillian 1, August Belmont jr.'s Barracuda, J, Maynard Kissam's La Boheme and Richard E, Sause's Richard iL, Henry 8. Keardsley's Mustang, Robert H. In- gersoll's Psyche IV, Wallace M. Brown's Alturiam Il, Mathew Rock's Florence and H, H, Gordon Jr's Narda II, William T, Wheeler's Tea, William 'T, Donnelly’s Dawn, Horace |. Boucher'’s Zite and C, B, Parker's | Louise. ceutical EVERY HOLIDAY SATURDAY. |whether the Declaration of opend |ence was signed on the fourth calend Taking five, ten, twenty or thirty day of July or on the frst Saturday of of resin July, weed four times daily in a little water But, says Mr. Chandler, it does matter to @ business man whether his holiday comes on @ Batursay or & Wednesday, He bens work Monday keyed up for a week of solid work, and it ls wrong to | break it with a holiday in the middle of FOR WAR GAMES » SUBWAY ANDY” HIRING GUARDS — LINCOLN'S CABIN URGED BY NEARS —INNATION'S NAME! IN MEXICAN PARLE i Se Wonane Men Abe Kun Train 1 T, MEN ARE RESTIVE Leaders Now Talking of Por ing the Company to Re nize Their Union The appearance in The World to y of advertisements for guards. salemen and motormen experienced in the use of airbrakes brought to ral addressee in Maphation an Hrookiys, mentio in the sement, hundreds of husky individ Who did not hesitate to say that @ Willing to help in breaking y * sirike It no happened that one of the ade dremses mentioned, No 1M West For. ty-firet Street, ie a short from the Continental Mot William B. Fitegeraid, ehiet or of the Bireet and Electric ays Employees’ Union, and bis as PJ. O'Brien, Peter Rooney, ok Ahearn and others, are stay- nee where wane Rail Fitegerald and bis aides bad planned to spent the day at an out ing of the Longshoremens Union at liege Voint, When they saw the crowd of would-be strikevreakers at {the agency and heard that similar | crowds had gathered at the other ad dresses, they modified thelr arrange- menta, believing that the Interbor jue is apparently hiring strike breakers In the face of agreement for 4 — conferen between President Vrank Hedley and the unton leaders | to-morrow morning, While Fitzgerald and his associates | were disposed to look on th adver- tisements and the employment of the men asa “bluff,” they also took oo; nisance of the situation. Thetr pro- & ame for to-day contemplated a short visit to the outing of the Long- sboremen's Union and then a retura| to headquarters for @ review of the) situation and to receive reports from | special agents who Were sent out carly to-day to look into conditions, Reports that Mr. Hedley of the Interborough is away from the city lieved, to a certain extent, by the union leaders. They know Mr, Hed- ley is away, but they don’t think he is resting. However, the union heads put a lot of confidence in the ability of Mayor Mitchel to bring about an amicable settlement. The unions are now committed to a policy of insisting on recognition of their organization, while Mr. Hedley and the Interborough are committed to @ policy of individual contracts between employers and employee. No question of wages is involved and this Is the situation that awaits to- | morrow's conference. Brooklyn Rabid Transit union lead- ers are talking of forcing recognition of the organization. If there should be a strike on the subway or “L" it might, if the leadera have their way, spread to the surface, underground and “L" ines in Brooklyn and Queens. POLICE HALT CHILDREN OFF FOR HOLIDAY TRIP Health Department Orders Due to Paralysis Epidemic Not Obeyed. Upward of 100 children, whore parents attempted to take them on the annual outing of the Scandinavi Branch of the Salvation Army, were turned back toslay..by¥ policeman, under orders fro + alth Depart. ment. The police said that the branch had not complied with the regulations of the Department due to the paral sis epidemic. Tho branch charted the Empire for the trip to Point Pleasant Park on the Hudson River. ‘The outing had been planned for | Aug. 5, but was deferred because of | the paralysis scare. Ensign Axel Heckman said that the Health De- partment promised to have doctors on hand to pass the children, It was estimated that 200 grownrups left the| boat when the children were refused the right to Ko on board BOARD TO SEEK CAUSE Navy Department Orders Inquiry— Members Start for San Dom- Banke a Embrace All but t ~ Christmas and New Yeo ingo Sept. 7. It doesn't really matter, says Alfred] WASHINGTON, Sept. 4.—Appoint- N, Chandler of Montclair, a banker. | ment of 4 naval board of inquiry to investigate the wrecking of the Unit ed States cruiser Memphis at San Do- mingo was announced to-day at the Navy Department. The board will Key Wost on the transport Hance ‘The naval hospital ship Solace, ca! bers of the Memphis’ crew the wreck and other n. ek. patients from San Domingo and Hay- the week, Ui, has sailed for the North and will So Mr, Chandler has started the Sat-| stop at G urday Pull Holiday National Movement. fixed and says, the excep! Satur. . he ant to ‘turday in July and August. ake up for the jf holidays lost have a full holiday Congress Adjo WASHINGTON, Sept leaders in Congress are planning to ad- dourn the present session Friday, ‘on a week end period of rest are be- | K RIVER PIER MYSTERY OF WRECK OF MEMPHIS) . WILSON ACCEPTS \ Hirthplace Calls n Embodiment of Democracy VILL Ky, ope Marthe eorved a te teoa the property fund of from the Lin coln Farm Association. Standing be fore the historic cabin, the President of Lincoln ae the together th an endow t ance, of the “validity and vitality of dem ooracy.” “Thie Hitle hat.” said the Prest dent, “wan the cradle of one of the eatest sone of man, @ man of sin. ular, delehttul, vital genius, wh upon the @reat ns history, gaunt, inant, but majes- | ruler of men.” al Amert- can, the President said, typical because no who is #0 un “it wae typt- life that it should with supreme in- man can be uaual” But, cal Of A a produce such me differen LOUISVILLE, K Dt d—Aftor vations and by crowds led by that ted the President's © through every city and ham route, Louisville early thie jnorning presented the climax of greetings when the Presidential train dover the bridge and entered tion here, ali on big river boats walled out “My Home” and putrlo: wds gathered at every vantage seeing the Chief The cheering at the at tion developed into a deafening roar train finally came to # stop, special with t ! dent and Mra. Wilson were Senator John Sharp Williams, Senator New- lands and Robert Collier, Vice Preat- nt of the Lincoln Farm Assoc tion, ho took a leading part in presenting the United Mates the old log nin which the great emanctpator Was born, Joseph Fol of Missourl, one of the di also was a member of t dential party. Virginians, West Virginians and ith ‘h other tn ntuckians vied in enthusi- Yu Bey t wh the President astic reception on his first extended trip since his renomination by the Democratic Party, ‘The President rematucd up late night to shake hands with thousands who gathered about his private car at every stop. Ho retired about 11 otelock, being too tired to respond to the call of a crowd of 5,000 who were headed by a brass band at Hunting. ton, W. Vi LOVE AFFAIR, WIFE'S IDEA Mrs, Karst Tells Police She Thinks Her Husband and Niece Have Eloped. Mrs. Madeline Karst of No. 420 Kant Sixty-fifth Street told the police of the East SSixty-seventh Street Station to-day that sho believed her husband, Leo M, Karst, had eloped with her niece, Mary Hutsler, elghteen years old, and that their ii appearance was not a suicide com- pact, as it first appeared to be, Two hats belonging to her husband and the girl were found on a pier at the foot of East Eighteenth Street yeate: day afternoon with the following note attachod: indly give these hate to Madeline Karst at No, 421 East Sixty- fitth Street.’ Karst rushed to the police station and said she Was afraid they had drowned themselves, Detectiv: from the Third Branch worked on the cuse all night and were satisfied that if Leo and Mary jumped overboard it was not at Elghttioh Street. To-day they think the pair are alive. So does Mrs. Karst, She gave a description of both and a general alarm has been sent out for them, “My husband was very fond of Mary," she sal he used to live with us, Last May she got a job on Riverside Drive and Leo often went to see her, But he was @ very good husband. Protect Your Home! Department of Health, City of New | York, has advised physicians to use Chlorinated Lime as a disinfectant in all cases of Infantile Paralysis. The United States Government recommends the use of Chlorinated “ Lime as a most effective and ece- nomical germ killer and deodorant. Disinfectants must be fresh to be sail for San Domingo on Sept.7 from effective, Thousands of grocers and druggists have just received a fresh supply of Acme Chlorinated Lime, 1 De not accept substitutes which may be stale and worthless, Protect your home—sprinkle Acme Lime daily in your toilet — mhodiment | ~— AMERICAN . fs Secretary of State Outlings — Task to Commissioners at Luncheon ‘The wae “et together” day tor the nowhere of the Amertoan MM : Joint Com miaate oh be te ery erosions at the Hotel (irtew id in Mew London, That ” “ “ Comm lasonere hands the Rite bY the Mexican members, Bt” attended by Becretary of State neing, Secretary of the Interior” Lane Judge George Gray, John Mott, Stephen Bonsal, J. Brooke Page” | ker othere of the Americas Com — imlerion 7 The hoste were the Mexican Com~ missioners, Alberto J. Pant end Yanacio Hontiias The o Ment eaos atending were Ambassador Dawe nate Arredondo and Lute Cabra: . Minister of Finanes. After the reception the party went + to the Hotel Biltmore, where Geers. — tary Lanaing gave & luncheon to the” commission. In another room im the” hotel Mra, Lansing waa hostess at @ luncheon to the wives of the come — mi jonere. * The members of the commission were chary tn discussing subjects te! arine at New Lonton, They weres hopeful permanent peace would fol. © low thelr deliberations. Jum when the semions are to begin at New London has not been deckiedi = Aa Senor Cabrera ie hore to interview © financiers in Mexican railways, it io” hoped he may have time to complete® these affaire before the commission © atte. “va At the luncheon Secretary Lansing > delivered a brief address. He spoke of the arduousness of the task of reaching an agreement on the com. % plex questions at issue, Frankness and sympathy, he sald,” | Would bring success, whereas suspi- clon, doubt and aloofness would’ | “leave the two nations in the same! ‘tangle of misunderstandings.” He’ . complote ad-. 4 affecting our ions which will satisfy the f aa well as the present you can avold considering the personal rights” and economic interests of Americans ¢ who hve found in Mexico a field for their energies. 7 “The immediate subject and the im- mediate cause of your meetin; to-day is the situation alos jonal boundary. I believe & temporary solution could be found, but the Government of United States seeks @ permanent, is & temporary, settlement of the di culty, and I feel assured that the Govs ernment of Mexico desires nothing. le A! | : “To reach such @ settlement, one’, ” that will be lasting and sure, {t will | be necessary to go to the root of the | — to consider international rights and duties, and to discuss relation of the individual, subject fundamental to social order and to the _ intercourse between enlightened gov~ ernments.” matte! Patrolman E. M. Connors of the Butler Street Station te in the Holy Family Hospital with a fractured: kneecap. kicked by @ 4 Smith Stree afternoon, The John F. Batehm 420 Henry Street, n by William Seebic a lives of scores of persons on Uni Atreet. Connors grabbed the horse the bridie and turned it and the wag- on into the curb. ————— ‘Three Laborers Drowned. HERKIMER, N. Y., Sept. 4.—Three | laborers were drowned here to-day when @ boat which they were using in repairing bridge tipped over, , « ‘APPLY PosLAm ri j Blemishes of aa eruvtional nati ouek as Pimples, R mga ete,, ro . ven away very quickly Poslam, Its bealiat work in stubbors and eg: gravated Eczema cases is often re- marked as wonderful. In most surface ~ skin disorders Poslam seems to au cisely the soothing, control! fessce needea, Comfort is imm itching stops and as far as sufferi concerned the trouble may usually be lorpeion soon after Poslam is applied, .« — —Advt, endi £ Samet ae