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(pe eee THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, DECKMBER mi) , 1916," 8 i — ore meeting this afternoon in the office Gi +l Wh Ei d 7, d Ti l Ab j 3000 GIRLS IN JAM ot ‘Mayer Bhoenteld, labor adjuster TET" o Entered Verdun Fortress Tells About R pp | POS BIE 10 BRING. | HOSPITAL ORDERED 10 for the association. ! ’ If the striking clothing makers in- FIVE YEARS BACK T ] sist upon turning down our offer of a ew om man er 0 rene — } $2 @ week Increase and a 49-hour a) ‘a Reattyd ff week,” Premdent Herbert Ansorge raat ae of the American Clothing Manuface G di A She islor ig : fir Astotiton ia te-avy,-wen GEM. Nivelle I a Mo ern D’ rtagnan, nd _ | have to close our establishments. We } } cannot make any further compro- ai ine) | mise, ond 1 nus’ pay taxe of If the workers will not come back are 1K to : : to their places on Monday on the sive Appellate % Parade to East Side Halls by| terms we offer there's nothing for us Mrs. uiege ten Sent to Black- Bonar Law in Reply Majo » dovided esys Ss “eh “ r - ; “ | to do but sit back and wait till they alite fe sot ‘ ' antic Jam Poorly Clad Workers Aban- | get tired of atriking. The first part well’s Island to Serve Redmond Says Such a ( Ii , ‘ pitals founda doned Because of Storm. GE she Winters Dury seamen 1s over, Six Months. dition Would Be Desirable. Ania Bens may hereatt te and, as the talk of peace In Europe . aby axe The Manhagtean makes orders indefinite, there's no = : Maternit f 1 by Moses ‘May EMPLOY ERS ‘STAND PAT.’| use in trying to fight the strikers if SUI anserting she would never cons) LONDON, Der 15 APM lor, who gave it $200, they want to keep up the strike.” tribute one penny to the support of Pring the debote in the The question Appel- om nn . Word was received by President her son's three children, Mra, Clara | Commons tn the report stay late Division involves ofthe Declare they Will Close Shops} sianey Hiliman, of the Amalga- ML, Hecmuniten, nity. canym vata, oe | Ot the vote of eralit the Nath lonor to ' ate joc- if $2 Inc e and 49. mated Clothing Makers’ Unton, that 7 ot / members brought up the Trish ques. | Cupid uponen. | WiRER if $2 Iner and in crgunibine Ghd tinty: plabete hae Mehmond Hil, was nsferred to- | ton. William Redmond, member for j >, n asneaning the Hour Week Is Rejected. been driven out of Newark and Ridge- | day from the Queens County Jatt at) aw Clare, brothes of John Redinond, | jo, 1 was shown, t08 (0 ———__ wood, N. J., by the police. By Presi- Long Island City to Blackwell's Int ot “hut Bh er m minder in the | the property remained in Taylor. rish Division, «ald that tn the = ‘Three thousands girls, somo of them We hanheea, Galvan tee Saket and ta begin the aix months men sagt had heen in bitter oppasitien. to poorly clad, were in the jam of strik-| Gommittes, “advised the organizers | tenes Impored on her yesterday by) most of the new miniaters, but thi DIAMOND ing garment workers that crowded! and pickets to go back and, if neces- Magistrate Miller, following her re- i i. te en to faa ie three halls inthe lower East Side| sary, submit to arrest to make a test eee rene for the maintenance Wie a auderataatier ter this afternoon—tho first of a serie ars vase bate order. i | Developments to-day showed that| Ment between Irishmen of the nortt of big mans meetings to “put pep’ cae went Cake ie oon aay Mrs. Berwenger's plight is largely of 1nd the Waw quite posnible into the strike, as one of the walking | ° Tetons weak Wasis tae her own making. Troops from Ulster and the sout "il delegates described jt wettlotniivta on this baale ware made Magistrate Miller made this atate-|PTovinces, he sald, in pretty | Ping sano iv" A Seager rinag at The biggest meeting was held at|/by independents, he eaid. Sym- mont | clow contact at the and it had |? nar No, 175 East Broadway. The girls] pathetic =. mee toreenes. dae | “The real facts in the Hersenger remarkable here had a came from all parts of the clty.| {i cierky” Union. He N. Greenbers, © are these: Harold HH. Jones, °C" under any circumstances any About 500 marches across Queensboro | business delegate, says this union has | Mra, Bersenger's son by a former | (MMe but the very beat and kindil Bridge from Long Island towns and|a membership of 8,000, and that they | marriage, was brought before me for| {cling between the men from others came from the upper and| Will all be out tn forty-eight hours. falling to support his wife and three |MOrth and the south, He paid a lower Eaat Side, ‘There wan to have| Several thousand pickets etarted out thildten, I hont tim to the work, {wowing tribute to the valor of the| ore viaesttlas| lirish troops and sald there was only | men a parade from Rutgers Square, }in the atrike zone. Hotee for six months, 1 , r a but the snowstorm colled the ardor 2s “After he had deen there two)?" Maid o ree that was to back | of the labor leaders. $ months bis mother and wife came to |"? (he Mon at the front However, that, didn't stop taree) SO¥O00,000 PAID TO 500,000 |Me'and hiv wieeaa that iet'meulg| Amiren Tomar Tam, sepiing i groups of girls from assembling on |net him free his mother had agreed Masor Redinond, sad the desire for a selves hoarse for the union and a| until he could get work. [confined to Irishmen. It was a gr ‘ i he ade a or » first Jetmll jews and a 48-hour week, after which | Activity In Manufacturing Attains| “Mra, Bersenger admitted the truth | iyi ae er cat tle Best tine other Bracelet W they marched in twos and three to the halls. Speeches were made by uation officials, including President Sidney Hillman. Some of tho atrikers carried banners to the halls, and one of these had the inscription “we want “Highest Point and Wages Show mpire. It bd Ss. KENNEDY. irom Big Increase. »! ALBANY, Dec, 15.—Activity in man- ufacturing in New York State at- tained its highest point iast month, Miss Kathleen Burke, Who | of this statement and.tn addition as. | |mured me that she would live up to the promise, She even guaranteed | to get her son a job, rest of the United Kingdom and be- | “On her promise L released the son part of Ireland and the from custody. + as no sooner free [othe t sOULE tik ce, One thing that would influenc wtood on the side of thy wae his heartiest wish, as deeply aeat- as that of Major Redmond, that! ote change between Ireland and the R ‘ a A Ce eV ELLE Was Decorated With; Miss kK BELL-AN r ; § ’ " Se he people of the #8 Bours, no more no less, showing an Increase of 2 per cent. in| Way Medals, Gives Interesting Picture of Man | woxrapir!” wiv. said with great injustice | than he disappeared. | Vnited Kingdom more than anpehinet Absolutely Removes ‘The manufacturers have decided|the number of employees and an in- | to heracif. “I saw Gen lie at his! “Her son's three children will bave! «ine was that. telat re willing) Indi ti to put the $1 and §2 a week incerase| crease of 4 per cent. In the amount of | Who Succeeds Joffre—Tall, Slender, Mar- headquarters after rtai Had /4o po supported, ‘She can test the aw |to run the same risks we thone In Enge | gestion. One pa Into affect next Monday——then await |“@#e# pald, according to the monthly vellously Turned Out, a Missing But- vent an hour trying to disswa if she ilkes, but I am going to ace| ind were running. provesit. 25catall dru; | pared with 1. Nivelle . that pho- statement issued by the State Indus- trial Commission to-day: The total number of employees was more than half a million, while the total amount | of wages Was more than $8,000,000, In November of this year 13 per cent. more persons were omployed m the trip and thei a“ letter to him, Gen. L cler and still retains the F is try which the war has almost blo ted the French eh 1 ed at his hoadquart because my hair was white had given me remulte. They take the position that ts e they are willing to increase wages but cannot reduce the number of working hours in the week because to do that is to reduce production. that those children are provided fo: wi a HE mea o| OOUNT TARKOWSKI 10 GET “o| SAFE CONDUGT BY ALLIES ton Would Be a Tragedy. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. strengthen, rather than weaken, rdmotiers determination not to/ of the court Max Freedman, of J. Freedman and|and 28 per cent. more wages paid Miss Kathleen Burke has the honor of being the first woman Cl a aad ea aay anal hee ‘ a the Island and serve Company, has been made chatrinan ee ar Anne | stowed to enter the besieged fortress of Verdun, and she is probably the| vy" are powsdered dike an eletiteenth | te full six months,” sho aul » | Newly Appointed Austro-Hungarian | not kolng to ask mercy from an one And ft won't file a bond for the sup- port of those ¢ ae ai TEIPER DENIES OWNERSHIP | century Marquise (% fr + told me that the war had Commander in Chief of the) wid him to change his idea of j women, ‘Once,’ he said, ‘I thought the | iusiness of women was to inspire us of the Manufacturers’ Strike Com- mittee. The comirvttee held its Arst only woman in the United States who has discussed the war with Gen Robert Niv , the allied armies in France. Within one week of last July Miss Burke met the Ambassador to This Country Now Persona Grata to England. October it was Met Hy and for Novem. “Later be ber, 1915, It new LONDON, Dee, 15.—Acceding to the " eal: hic he: ould then No Connection With Any Other Establishment tn the World. four great Generals of the French army—Papa Joftre,| Mivont us trom carrying out. ‘Wut |Fequest of the United States, the a | now just a sort of military Nestor to the French Cabl-| to-day they are our sisters and citt- | OF ONE MURDER WEAPO \les have consented to grant Count | net; Castelnau, his right hand, and the two bright stare | 7¢n4 With us in the republic of cours Yarnowski, the newly appointed in the firmament of France to-day—Petain and Nivelle, Austro-Hungarian Ambassador to WORTH | datinashe ch Vania GENERAL PRAISES FRENCH AND) Admits, However, Revolver He Washington, safo conduct to America | Miss Burke, a descendant of Edmund Burke, is mak- aay nab De | Bought Ten Days Before Tragedy | Count Tarnowski was appointed | | , ze ential Gen, Nivelly too spoke with great ; 4 Se ~s “ | Ambassador to the United Stat | ing her ond visit to the United States as Honorary | ,amiration of the work of woine Was Like Exhibit at Trial. | sucene Count Dumbu, who retu 43 & 45 West 34th Street cietn we EWADISINE BECHSIATY: Of Jie ecokHin Women #/ HVORUSE (Ad OBE Rae at Cini tees BUFFALO, Dec, 16.—John Edward | t@ Vienna, because ho was MecAlpin Hotel for Foreign Service, which maintains many units of succor to the | and sympathy . persona xrate to America, The | . Nivelle s! Teiper remmed to-day on the wit-|Qinited States made known its dis. wounded throughout the war zone. She is here to raise money for her | bas jother Was! peas stand the recital of events that| pleasure at Dumba's actions and he! tine old-fashioned rectpep © jhospital. And she spoke yesterday in the home of Mrs, Willlam K. Van-| B a iis de we fe Sire occurred prior to and immediately | was recalled, When Tarnowski was trouble) ewest inter oats |derbilt'for that purpose, receiving pledges of $5,000 at that single meeting. | {S)) TERRE keu- [after the murder of his mother, Mra, | appointed luis guccessor several woos | vee | [It was her sticcess in gotting $70,000 for the Scottish Hospital Service in| pr mio | Agnen M. ‘Telper, and bis brother | Wee" frat, on. the, grouMl that ms | y nnd ada to tt ‘pint wee | France which won for her the distinction, unique among women, of enter- |) “H0l8 Beene ie en Gon, | Pttderick, for which he is on trial. | entourage ‘was entirely too large to | Jf hot water and "toa. of granulated ing Verdun and of lunching with the new Generalissimo of the allied | Nivello'n headquarters last July were | Telper denied emphatically that he} be a bona fide, and later, because it mugar, Take one tablespoontul 4 * ; : Was contended by the allies that pre- day ort Nivelle. i an old ychool house, His oftier, on| hid ever owned oF had seen on hin) \* ¢ , M4 our whole body Fitted, Flare and Belted Models || :mies, novert xiv - | tha asa Moar" was recohed'ByS| premince amine rowening. the |Z ee pe {HOW SHE MET THE MODERN]... , 45° You see, the roads wera| eeu stairway. “An aide-d0-cAmD | ong introduced by the prosecution | MAG WOWAne 4 G R d d D'ARTAGNAN. impassable from mud and they could | was of a man ¢ surrounded hide ot ie mn ue ; iene be peemuttine ig seine ood as to 8 ]get the men a NonIY by mapa. There maps all over 10 defendant then told of reyol- | © , ds reatly eauce | Miss Burke has t his ei ket the men and guns up only with) ife'walle and on. ta On & oye | 2 be had owned during the last|to travel. i, her entrance into the leag' the greatest dimeulty, Gen. Petatn | from which the General rove to greet | two or three years and admtited the| America later made formal request should give this prescription « teal fortress in a book sho has just pub-|told me there were 15,000 motor cars| mo was a inap on Which ev Jone ‘he ‘bought ten “days “before the|for Tarnowskt's safe passage, Tt at Adv Mshed, “The White Road to Verdun." serving Verdun alone, Later, when I| ¥48 indicated, Tho strangest thing as of the same make and| mained unanswered, and a second id P: abot v eadquarte = ibre 0} © one found near the| request was recently made of En Women’s & Misses’ Coats which Is one of the least pretentious | stood wiih Gon: Nivelle in front of bis |; ‘nrars headquarters Beate ee ee Ore eae c tron name, WHR LSA LORDS MBR Reernte/HH859.0 _ Broadcloth, and one of the most Interesting nar-| headquarters, in the last week of July nd leisure which per a Tetper's direct examination closed Velour, | ratives the war has produced |—1 can’t tell you funt where, but an] Hut all of Nivelle's work iy planned | abtuptly Just before tho noon, recens ? < Last night at the Murray Hill Hotel| he was commanding the defense of ‘ore 8 o'clock in the morning 4 admitted he led to the Dis — turd S : L Duvetyn, she told for the first time of ber con-| tho ¢ vouwill know: it-wasinot| eeuieee, cae ne eld bout Hie Anancial saturday specials 7 $4 le te es yO! 0" # no! naps Hke a a laboratory. | eondit id he did so to escape => Montagnaca, 16. 50 versations with Gen, Nivelle and her) far away—we watched the passing The day Tom 1 was the ne murder. e | visit to his headquarters the g the food 4 ammunition | diy he advance > ~ With or Without vi ne guns, at m i | | She spoke firat of Gen, Nivelle’s| wagons and the camions or trucks, on | J\/\\ king $c ’ i 66M Houwumont and the other forts “id Fur Trimmings, sspenrance at women ire apt to 20] nf nen are wamsporeds eis awa, ie gee ferent | MARKS SCORES ON MAYOR ristmas Coats: Reduced when they are not afrald to be them- |; five at a time, to the front, 1) fur hours the ‘French 4 nome ae [asi uae mt uhm ned Sos” QBTH STREET TUBE FIGHT N@ nn yet ne 3 } oy alee Abe heisiahe took a pencil and ma , | “Nivelle,” sald Miss Burke, “is the} my stopwatch and the wagons passed | NOH Chine nite on Dre ena A § 50 Women’s & Misses’ Coats {deal Frenchman, He looks ke) ys every twelve nda. that little sehoolroom the new line of | Wins Move to Ascert to Ascertain Cost in A Silk Plush Coste” - @'Artagnan—tall, slonder, with a very| 3 Prench trenches—the first advance. Searink cay ‘ Bolivia, ets pei beautifully cut feate}2E SECOMES A “KNIGHT OF Iti not very much, tx it?" 1 asked | Absence of Mitchel and \ $30 Fur Trimmed Coats, — ye ures, rather cold, gy eyes and a] TENDERNESS! pape Seog Bap reeset mites Prendergast $25 Broadcloth Coats, ‘elour de Laine, | warm, wonderful smile. Marvellously| “You know 1 was permitted to #0) 1 gist A hundred yards in t bie cout of w tunnel to carry N , Velveteen, farmed out am co daira, a minang|% Verdun aa a reward” Mise Burke it "atrection, ty worth more ena | ra Mt Of 8 Senne! orm January Reductions Now! Broadcloth, button would be a tragedy—in every | ¢xPlained at this p "Did. the General express any | sixth Gtreet from Central Park Weet % * |way the opposite of Papa Joffre. what they called the eloquence and] oyinton to you as to the duration of| to Broadway 1 to be ascertained by * 3 With or Without “Let mo ony that all this talk of {dignity with which I had pleaded | th. war of iis outcome?” | caked | go ¢ ’ Pur Tri i | Met sifu sed over | the cause of France in America.| “He has no doubt of the outcome, | te Board of Estimate. Horough Pr sty bz Sas mminge, Gen, Nivelle being inced over|* <a 7 ‘Ine No one in France has! Miss Burke | ident Marks, who is behind the plan, $e " te: fect non-| They made me an Oflicer do I'l r he, Reduced to : | Gen Pet a's he Bae | ere een alvin (cae r ea wi oh note uf astonivhment.| had his resolution calling for t 7 Fur Trimmed xonae, ‘The two men are brothers in| Mruction | ubllay Patina and mak toi the Jenath Gen, Nivelle wid TAOMAHAA QIMWE ahs Velour Coat, IU Tee cache sti erst ll OES Joma to (year and three monthe toner” f Mayor Mitchel 23.60 fered to Petain, who s hat Nivelle | (7) ni RENAE rn Bi Prondergast from ( 8 was tho better man, just us Castelnau) qyronshoe the Ward ENJOYS FRENCH GALLANTRY refused supreme command in favor) likes that chart sentence AT \ VERDUN LUNCHEON. Ri ick ues Marks of Jotfre, and then Joffre said he| than all my medal ; Clan aren ea uonNTGeC ek te ter bo exte would ne cept uniesa he could| , Just here 1 want to say that Mi: with him und hie) Gomptrotie i . . . Fj | a Burke is very blonde, very. energeti mptroler Women’s & Misses’ Coats have Castelnau as his right hand] and, without her war medals, wels sp lanien wou man possibly 110 pounds, The | medal to SAOt ner ny the elty ant Peau de Peche, | "Gen, Petain defended Verdun dur- |e #0. many-—th are amone ong il with ic a Ld aT lay Cashmere Velour, : : (arnere, Canee. \team Vrance steak, cold pete rake . ing February and March—the hardest | from Serbia wher 4 Suede’ Velour, months and the only mor which | tie early months of ; Bae, sete RE Barks suition had: e forires: r » danger, ‘If the t M y the Marka m 1 * Bolivia, es Py ATTN | eee rey earweratr mae wel ‘ Oualy adoqted Mi erdun had failen, n told \ Comptrollor Prendersas \ Handsomely bd r f 1 P \. me, ‘it would have wus of x st ignorant of w J i . t nould be “ | Fur Trimmed, Hue, white and There should “ = pas J Reduced to be poppies " looking at ' The big January reductions moved ahead for ’ | the Ronee AYO, HOPBIeg, CANFIELD'S DEBTS PAID, (the Holidays! Presenting you to-morrow many i ih ' white red of your $ of the season's magnificent 5 and $40 coats at hy i, 1 Ue Wh : 841 a ESTATE LEFT © fi.'s0 : New Spring nT Preps) i ° ) Materials and colors that this Winter's best Satin Dinner Frock, i il nh 4 1 Gambler and Art Patron” Left a usage has suggested, in great, full-hanging mode ¢ $36.00 : We - mone of $1,063,030, Which Was In . - A neue) pa f fficer before f sil 2 No Charge for Alterations anil reached tho the Gen. creased 205.76 Will cl 0 Wi hy al Iie aw wanted. $o8: heads creased to $1,205,760. U ose Out try roaa, noame very warin and re-| ‘The estate of Richard A. Canfteld, ( th Fash ; * 5 Th hia shirt sleeves, Suddemy he Kambler and art connolsour, shows a . At e ‘ashion 90 Fur Trimmed & Tailored Suits Moe ee eee aa ec ot SA TAalh in baa Wanita or Th ! } — ee Cc n men, And one man who had had executor, Luke V. Lockwood of River Neu Shop Froadcloth, Velour, Ducetyn, Gabardine, | entury Favorite Born Beans ee ried {0 Balite | sig Conn. # to his accounting Ms ie 1 Hondaomely ta niu 16. 50 Time has enriched this per- rising Nin » ei Cantiont ere 4 wae Nineteen West 34th Street any handsomety R fect blend of selected ryes. UE Sede old bs ur Gon.) The latter puid $211,877 . - ral ie in his shirt sleeves, And be. | creditors, To Bros, the fora God, all men. in. their shirt |larkeat, was pald $222,000, The total amount disbursed was $864,276, ceves are equall!® US YTS