Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
AND GEN. ORYAN ‘ i FAVOR "GUARD DAY’ sx, zor cxmrat_abonty | Teaching Them Every Branch ee | of Service, Office, Shop and High Civic and Military Orfi-) ° 9a 0he Steel Highways sane cials Praise Evening World’s | They Can Do Everything Men Parade Plan. Can Do Except Most Strenu- — ous Kind of Manual Labor— RECRUITING.| ‘They’ll Get Same Pay as Men aE as They Learn to Do the Work Public Farewell Would! as Well—Will Fill Places of Make Soldiers Far More Men Colled to the Colors. Contented. By Nixola Greeley-Smith. TRACY HARDIN, Vice Presi- » ‘dent of the New York Central | Railroad, sent a letter two weeks ago to the heads of every de- partment in the giant railway or- TO HELP Major Gen, John F, O'Ryan, com- manding the National Guard forces of the State, to-day approved The Fvening World's pian for a National Guard Day for a public review of the troops before starting for war duty, He declares that 1t would not only improve the spirit of the guardsmen Part beg but would stimulate recruiting employs 8, throughout the State. He favored a men, calling on them to begin training women for railroad work. This week seven women were put to work in the purchasing department of the New | York Central to assist In buying sup- plies, At Collinwood, near Cleveland, O,, a gang of thirty women under the direction of a woman bookkeeper of the Central are busy sorting 3,000 tons of scrap, nuts, steel plates, spikes, bolts, brake shoes—practically every part of a superannuated engine or a broken down car, These women ex- amine and sort every piece of scrap. ‘They do the work as well as men and appear to like it. “Vine people of Now York State pay, ‘The first rule we have laid down moro for the upkeep of thelr militia about the increased employment of than many States combined, When women, made necessary by the war, en went to the border a H fot seen how the border experience same work as # man will get the same hardened the men and made them the pay asa man,” sald Mr, Hardin to me finest State troops in the land. yesterday afternoon. ‘Those women “When the troops came back last an averdi ‘inter they were scattered, WHO are sorting ecrap get an &' Bikny carte in on cold dayacon $2.50 a day—Jjust what a man would Many came in on cold days and hur- of ried to their armories after @ tedious receive for similar work. We have travel, No one saw them. They prac- \ioreased greatly the number of cally sneaked in. A National Guard ‘ hay throughout the State would be Women employed in our auditing de- fust the thing to give the’ men the partment. We have women in our epirit and make those they leave at oar department to keep track of the home more cheerful and contented.” | movements of 240,000 cars. They Keep cruits swarming to the armories to a record where each car goes and join after a grand & ration, It was what it does every day. We have put is opinion that it {would have @ fine women to work In our purchasing de- @ffeot upon the work of selecting tho Carements, We are training women Bact cieng to make up the new 1) sell tickets, to act as watchmen ‘ahere certainly cannot be any mill-|at railroad crossings. In our shops tary objection to the plan,” said Gen. women are learning to run lathe: O'Ryan, “since the celebration uA Nats drills and other small tools, and we eld befo: oop! t Be held before the troops get thelr CSoeoe to émploy women as assistants Ican to mako the ya big one in the In stations.” ; history of our city and in the hearta “H OW many men does the New Yorks Central employ and celebration of the day in every village and city where there ts a National Guard unit, no matter how small. “The Evening World's suggestion) not only meets my heartiest ap-/ proval,” said Gen. O'Ryan, “but it wppeals to my staff and to every mili- tary man who realizes the importance of making cheerful and contented the soldiers who are to depart. Certainly no man can be against it. “I am In favor of selecting @ day after tho mobilization of our troops, ‘Tho best time would be two or three days after mobilization. Then all men would have their equipmént and none would be dragged from their civilian positions and suffer a loss of time and pay. of our fighting men.” Mayor Mitchel, too, votced hig UM now many of those men are lable to ed approval of the plan. “Tam Hew many Poet he maid “fram start (0 floisn, be drafted?” Tasked Mr, Hardin, {n'a good thing and I shall do ‘7 Khould say we have about 86,000 everything within my power to make employees,” replied the Vice Presi- it a success. I had been wondering gent of the New York Central, “but swhat the people were going to do to- a. oe them, through the nature of Lam in favor of a parade and their work, are exempt from the nything that will make draft, so it would be impossible to n live long in the memo- answer your second question, But ward saying farewell to the guards- men. ys we are sending away.” many rafiroad men have volunteered fent Frank Dowling of the Two hundred of our finest mechanics Board of Aldermen, who was the first have volunteered in engineering to give official recognition regiments which will work on the ning World's suggestion by intro- railways of ance, Other railroads ducing a resolution approving the have given their best men. In th plan, said that if the city could afford countries of Burope women have io spend money receiving foreign en- proved their capacity to do the work Yoys it certainly could afford to ar- of men, and American women are yange @ fitting farewell for its own) demonstrating equal efficiency in soldiers, in every fleld they have enterod. “These boys who are going away Sir Robert Horden, Prefer of Boon are the best we huye-—the pick of was Anti-Suffrage and op- the country’s finest,” Mr, Dowling | posed generally to the work of wom- waid, "I cannot sea any good 11 en in fields pre-empted by men until sneaking them out of the city when| the war sent men to the front and the women at work in their they ara going to camps whose loca- x . e fiona are known in advance. I want to To-day Canada is in a bet- make National Guard day bigger than! sition financially than at Any other we have ever observed in| Outbreak of the war. And in a speech Sir Robert Borden said this city. When Now Yofk sends its! I 1 own troops to fight In this rent war, | ‘Canada owes her solvation to ite can any one imagine a greater ocen- | gion than their departure? I cannot." | $6 ] § there any work done on rall- — roads which a woman cannot >—_—— \ Summer School Regiatra-| do?" I asked, tlon Opened, | one, except the heaviest manual Rogistration began yesterday for the|/labor requiring great physical eighteenth su r session of Columbia) strength,” Mr, Hardin answered. ‘University. first day's total was) women could not lay railway ties, small, reaching only about but to-] They should’ not be called t @ay and to-morrow enough are expec | y N i RAeA MOR. 10 Colum! he Hare Shiites ‘wt do work which would overtax their a woes, ‘etart next Monday idea of the performance of manual | labor by women in this country,” Mr, | Hardin continued. “We don't like to 8 women do hard work, But there is nothing about railroad work re- Served Ive + cold auiring skill or accuracy which women cannot dc woman watcher 9) ing up the | years “Our present work Is centred large- We have had one at @ raliroad crosa- State for the last ten or Steaming Hot “The World’s Best ly in the organization and training |of women for employment by the railroads, We cannot tell how long the war Will last nor how many men we may lose by the draft. We want }to be ready. The women we are training now are in many inet * | relatives. of our employees. They | have taken up ratiroad work eagerly jand energetically, ‘Their contribu | tion to the industrial welfare of the country will be of tremendous benefit to wotien,” Mr, Hardin added, “Many nen have extraordinary energy power for constructive work which has never been put to prac- tical use. The war gives them an opportunity to serve their country Jand themselves” HE letter which Mr, Hardin gent to all the foremen and euper- Intendents calling upon them to mo- bilize women for railroad work fol- lows To All Mahaging OMgers: It 1s the wish of President Smith that you issue instructions to ail of your employing mediums, suoh as superintendents, tratnmasters, ROASTED ang packeD of stin, Nichols6 Try it in comparison with the coffee you now use. If you don't ngree that "Sun station agents, division engi- beam’ is best you can take ts, and accounting, traffic, it back and get your mon mechanical and engineering de- ORDER FROM YOU TL GROCER artiments, throughout, to begin IN dS BUNDUAM the employment and training of women for the various branches of the service which they can i perform, beginning officer of his depart training of the wor Particular work whi of them. With the conflict the armies and th form transporta’ Canada and abroad competently as the desire to serve their Will you kindly memorandum about in this direction? Yours very truly, A. T. He Is Sued for $50, by Mrs. Ben Stevi Belmont Tiffany has $50,000 for an alleged br of marringe by Mrs. H ® prominent theatrical with the firm of Klaw ‘The plaintiff, through oblained fe now a resdent of Mra. Stevens in he that si vgn againet Mr. Titfany in i jury there disagreed. A Mr. Tiffany haa testific asked Mra. Steven According to affiday roceeding, a second pr y the defendant on wed Mrs. Stevens on year. Belmont Tiffany was Anne Cameron, daught erick Cameron, June ago. WOMAN! PLEASE the least laborious, such ag office help and agencies; thence in the shops, in the handling of machinery and the more delic work around such premises. Bach department each division or operating dis- trict should take immediate per- sonal interest in this matter and in conjunction with the senior ment develop | an organization for the proper | men for the | ieee dertake and for the proper care of the Nation, hundreds of thou- sands of men will be drafted into will have to be filled to praperly t has been fully demonstrated in are abundantly capable of per- forming mruch of this service as as herote and patriotic in their @ach month concerning what you havo succeeded in accomplishing SAYS BELMONT TIFFANY BROKE PROMISE TO WED! of Theatrical Man, wife of the Inte Ben Stevens, who waa | life an » Bijur permitting her to file & summons served upon Mr Tiffany in New York Noy legal fany was granted a divorce nine years initia POLICE CHIEF'S BADGE! ie THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, JULY 6, 1917, MAYOR MITCHEL | Women Learn to Be Practical Railroaders OFFICES K CENTRAL To Keep Tratfic Moving During the War at first with te UBOATS CAPTAIN. ‘MURDERED OFFICER officer on ich they un- now In front |Seaman Saw Commander of Austrian Submarine Kill elr positions é 5 : His War Prisoner. tion service. that women BALTIMORE, July 6—W. H. Brown, a seaman, who says he was on men and are two steamers sunk by submarines, declared to-day that one of them was the Italian steamship Palermo, which on Dec, 2 was sunk in the Mediterranean by an Austrian sub- marine, “We had a general cargo for Italy and r vessel was unarmed,” he ‘said. "The submarine halted us with |a shot across the bows and ran up the signal to take to the lifeboats. We did, and several shots were fired at the Palermo. They did not take effect, however, and a torpedo was sent into her side, She sank within a few minutes, “Whether the fact that he had to use a torpedo to send our vessel to the bottom angered the German com. mander, I do know, but the subma- rine came directly alongside of our oats, The commander was on country. give me a the first of o . HARDIN. ,000 Damages | ens, Widow | been sued for ‘each of promise elen B. Steven: man, connected | th & Erlanger, ¢ Joha M. Quinn, | order from ptain of that ship? ‘Capt, Brown stood up and made his way closer to the side, The Ger- man vulled out his revolver and held it close to Capt, Brown's head. | “‘You'll never bring another ship petition alleges | 2Cross this sea,’ he sald, using #ev- proceedings | eral oaths, and calling the Captain Florence, Ala. A| Vile name, Then he pulled the trig . WIG, He labama n g Mrs. Stevens alleges that Mr. Tiffany, | ‘apt. Brown fell dead, We were! whom she had known ax a xirl, asked | permitted contin After abou her to marry him in Detroit, Mich, | Permit bb ae me oa Feb, 13, Wit. The day they were to be | Se¥en hours ¥ our way Into 4 married, she alleges, Mr. Tiffany called | Port In Spain, on her and asked to have returned to| Brown sald he was on the Leyland him gome letters he had written het. | liner Heasian when that vessel was) 4 that he nave? wed, Twenty. t men, ite fled tn the} killed by the explo mnise Wax made sunk in the Mediterranean in March he said, osion, and the re ur i deck and yelled, ‘Whereis the! RUSSIANS DEFEAT. COUNTER ASSAULTS ON GAIA FRONT | “Regiments of Death” Repulse Enemy Attacks and Inflict Great Losses, PETROGRAD, July 6,—Unshaken by the terrific losses to which they subjected openly themselves advanced across No Man's Land to the German hearten their trenches, laggard when they to Russian brothers at the beginning of Gen, Brusiloff's offensive, of death” the “regiments to-day continued to beat back furious German, Austrian and Turkish severe losses, counter-attacks, inflicting On the heighta east of Brzezany from the East of Lipn rn bank of rans oughly shell craters tusstans, bu Office The ale t advanced arrage fire, but the Russ |them back into thetr trenches beaten, w t les the # tonie troops also attompted | he ii or the lin taken Rusalan ement positions flerce fighting of | O'& Narayuvka, twice they on the east- behind ther some from the War says jand east of Lipnicadonia, southwest | of Brzezany, the Germans tried in | vain to drive the victorious Russians) fal, which resulted In the o advanced |had stormed in th | Monday and T | gamated ore the | !ng long terms 1 na drove| Way, A counter-attick toward the Village of Miecsyskoff, but were repulacd anguinartly. Berlin hints at the beginning of an offensive by the replenished and renewed Roumantan army on the Moldavian front, and wireless mess. | picked up from Berlin tndicate the erman high command new Russian drive in the of Volhynia, expecta a Kovel front | Austrians Claim Recapture of Pont- fons Lost to Russians, BERLIN, July 6.—"On field in Eastern Galicta ald 4h July” 8, inne, to| Vivors were in the lifeboats for sev- | Army: Hoatciariert in | ours before the picked Aug. 18 of that rye a is i y artiiery fghting occurre imarcied: 40 ation heights of Brzezany lo en at Bik rae Pe saps nents develop during 1843, Mra. Tits enemy Waa driv SPAIN IS TRANQUIL NOW | RETURN | False Rumors, His Advices Tell | AMBASSADOR ASSERTS ft ing himaelt, ré greater On rt local adds, “th enemy the Roumantan front, # activity than usual the battle. yesterday, at night's statement from Ger: only light On the al engage: whieh tho n from some crater 4 in which he still was maintain In the enighboring see quict p ailed gener- the re- howed more i} WOMEN SOLDIERS’ FLAGS BLESSED PETROGRAD, July 6—-with! Cossacks and sailors as a cuard of jonor, the first detachment of the Petrograd women's regiment as- sembled In the Square of St. Ieanc's Cathedral, where a priest blessed thelr regimental colors. Armed with rifles and with their hair closely cropped, the more than 200 women presented a truly sol- dierlike appearance. After the ceremony they paraded through the Nevsky Prospect and other streets with banners inscribed “Death Is better than shame” and “Women, do not give your hands to traitors,” CARMEN DENOUNCE UNION LEADERS AS "TROUBLE MAKERS Interborough and City Railway Brotherhoods Repudiate A. and Ask Protection. Resolutions denouncing the leaders of the Amalgamated Association for attempting to force a strike on the city’s traction lines in war time are, to-day In the hands of the Mayor, the Publio Service Commission, the United States District Attorney and the District Attorneys of New York and Bronx counties. The resolutions condemn “these professional inbor agitators who are seeking to embroil us in personal trouble.” | + Bets of the resolutions, identical tn | form, were turnet in by committees | representing the Brotherhood of New York Ratlways Company Employees and the Brotherhood of Interborough | Rapid Transit Company HKmployees. | The former organization is @ald to) enroll ninety-two per cent. of the! workers on the green car lines. | “As a matter of public welfare and In justice to ourselves,” the resolu. tion also said: “We respectfully ask the Mayor of New York to afford us prompt and adequate protection against organized intimidation or actual violence designed to interfere with our ability peacefully to perform our duties and to assure the operation of the traction lines of this city. ‘This expression, signed by the Gen- oral Committees of the Brotherhood, was passed last night by a general meeting of the members, About the same time the Brother- hood of Interborough Rapid Tranait Company Employees, which, Ike the other organization, is authorized by the company, meeting at No. 166 Bas’ Forty-second Street, also was passing the same resolution. Asserting their brotherhood Is self- formed and represents more than 90 PLANFOR CONTROL Co-operate, but Won't Give Up Identity. An the result of a conference’ late to-day In the office of Robert 8, Lov- ott, No, 165 Broadway, It in probable that co-operation will be effected bo~ tween the American Red Cros# and the various other war relief organiza- tlons. ‘The smaller organizations are an- tirely willing to ey erate, making the point only that they #hal not surrender their Identity. The oppose the plan to have the Red Cross War Council control and direct all war relief work and at a meeting yester- day this opposition was practically unanimous, “Every desire was expressed by all present," explained John Moffat, Ex- ecutive Chairman of the National Al- Hed Relief Committee and Secretary REJECT REDCROSS OF WAR RELE Allied War Charities Willing to WILL SOON BEGIN. TRENCH DIGGING ‘Will Learn Bombing, Bayonet * and Other New Methods of Warfare. PARIS, July 6.—All of the first con- tingent of United States troops will be in training camp “somewhere tn | France” by the iniddie of the month, making way for future contingents at the base camps Because gf the transfer of troops from the coast to the interior, Geh. Pershing is anxious to start the men on thelr active training course, al- though, If the French authorities re- Quest participation by the Americans in the Fourteenth of July parade, Gen. ‘ershing will undoubtedly accede to the request. Everything i# nearly in readi- ness at the training camp where Gen Pershing also will make his head- quarters, and where the men will by» drilled tn bombing, trenoh digging, bayonet and other courses tn the | school pf the new warfare. The censorship ls living up striete ly to the rule providing that ne names of Individual soldiers and of- ficern be mentioned in despatches and the course to be followed at the training camp and trenches. The battalion here returned to the base camp Wednesday, carrying nearly ev- ery eball, bat, glove and mask from Paris, ‘All the shopa were open yesterday, but only « few Paris con- cerns handle sporting goods, and ev- ery one of these was «tripped of aup- plies by the Americans, who expect to organize a regular league among the vartous battalions, After the baseball supplies were ex- hausted the men bought tennis a and then quet outfits, The An eady are getting uainted French cigarettes 1 are teaching the French how to roll them from loose tobac ‘The diMoulty of rolling a good cigarette appeals tremendously to the pollus, ‘The thing about the American per cent, of the employees, also that] to the Allied War Charities, “that the | troops which impressed the French ther Working | agrecmants, | eld co-operation with the Red Cross be| most—civillans and soldiers alike the fullest kind of co-operation, but, at the same time, the view was held that the fullest measure of ald could be afforded the Red Cross only tn the these men refer to President Wilson's emphasis of the need to keep rail- roads open. Then the {dentical resolutions, with was the cord around the back of the head holding thelr slouch hats on tightly, Much explanation 1s required jn proving to the French people that the ‘ord fulfilled the same duties as the 0 vd + in ot ore e (roan ermine atripped out, continuo) os that each of the organizations Oe a Knee egtinte ter wae “Recently some of the labor agi-|1n tho Federal Connell retain thetr | Seriiiy, ty ae wees” teen unt tatora of the Amalgamated who un-| ‘entity and continue as separate en- | ier Sela A i Pe peng successfully attempted to tnterrupt| titles both to collect and distribute | Wop a Noidiers are. widely oo service on the Interborough Hapid | funds. mented upon too. Transit lines last fall have returned to this city and publicly announced to the press that they are here to caune trouble, “Members of this aame Amalga- mated organization attompted to cre- ate @ reign of terror in this ctty last nvietion of several hundred member® of this anization, our of the officers of the Amal nization are now serv ing Sing for a dia- point that all of are still actively engagéd in collect- time taken work which the committees are pe - forming in France* and which appears to have been created Mr, Moffat declared there was aplendtd prospect for a complete un- deratanding between the various con- me of the present out-of-town agitators are now under indictment for crimes committed during the re- Prominent among those at yester- day's meeting were Capt. Philip M. Lydig. founder and head of the Amer- mphasta was again laid upon the the organizations ing fuhda at this time and that the Red Cross has not up to the present over this work, nor the eleawhere, contrary to an erroneous Impreasion ‘a HUSTED’S MANIGURE BRIDE STILL HIS; AND NO ALIMONY Her Case Against Former Yale Stu- dent Is Thrown Out Along With His—Both Charged Cruelty. ‘a bolical attempt to blow up the sub- Gh elles eae” ena ties STAMFORD, Conn, July 6.—Jenste thus endangering the lives of /AM agreement, doubtioas would be) shepard Husted, who tried to get & many citizens. ae Z*l divorce and alimony from wealthy Mills H. Husted of ( her cane disminned by eenwich, has had Judge Curtin in Oe eeaat eed { 5 the Superior Court Seine marine psd ty Baa of one of the /!e28, Atnbulance in Russia; Felix M.| The young bride charged her hua- sw Tork iecala in now under peace (Yo arburg, presenting the Joint ee band with Intolerable cruelty, The tribution Committee for Jewish War | ey . “i bonds and bas, been convicted four) sunerers; Walter Maynard, for the | ipl nea in fay Haven last year, Umer for disorderly conduct _[Brench.Tuberculoris “Wat” Vietima; [hen the plaintiff was @ manicure tn Becauso of these allegations and of! yyy & “th Marbury, representing | that y and Husted a student at violence committed aguinst their fam | jy. tcan Fund for French | Yale. They eloped to Northhaven om (Hea, the resoluttons Ko on, the mein | \ounded: Mrs. Cooper Hewitt, repre- | March 1, 1916, and were married 0 f of our ri o . . |nenting the Mund for Men Blinded in| Husted took his bride to the famtly rea | Runa. of ie National Surgical Dressing | jor, fevernl months later, | She sald . ‘ol ittee att the usted ‘amily snubbed her and Chairman Straus makes the fle} that her husband did not give her bar spree 4 ane sides a Labo loyers to ald Gtve-a- enough money for clothes. pa wan %: “Neither officially nor unoff- loged Husted was worth $175,000 Im cially have [ had any relation- his own right More th n 6,000 large employers of labor have promised to ald the New ship with the dissatisfaction that ppeara to exist among some of | Husted brought sult on the ground of crueity, and this action was tried the enployees of the Third Ave- | York County Chapter of the Red f Eb pen yee Py th ag non. 3 nue Railway, At this time, wher | cocoy in ite give-u-day's-pay cam-|other men, talked with men friends ail patriotic Americans have but i Gnethe telephone, scratched his face one dominant thought and pur- | palgn, More than 150,000 mercantile} ing kicked him. Judge Curth pose in view—namely, to imar- | concerns have been osked to canvass |inianed this complaint too shal the military and economic | their employees, and the indivations resources of the country to down are that the « t majority will do so, the enemies of democracy, It | If most of the workers in New York would be most unfortunate 1@ at | give one day's puy, Edgar J. Maraton, | this, the chief port of the coun- try, there should be any trouble In our trangit system | “This Is the time to bury our | little grievances and to think of ad of the Special Fund Committee, 4 a Renerous Working capital will for the relief of the sol- firing tino, intention of the New York | to enjoy Gulden’s, says the epi- nA eee i | cure, Him, Are Set Afloat Daily | The jtupplementar otticial os aus country, and this would i County Chapter to organize sub-com- ve ith Purpo: |ment Issued from rm my message to th sides== |inittees to represent hoof the | 4 , Real Mee eee on nai With Purpose Headquarters last « peace AMON Ourselves, sv that teem to represent, @A0H Of" iie'| Gulden*s makes eal Mean for Your Auto to Dash SHINGTON, July 6.-Spanish was a strong we may make our Demet el tteon will name workers to | feat foods taste Off While You Were Admir- Reaeianit apace ved Aeenatanen (0 n Zborow and Br any effective against our enemies, stimulate int st among individ | ~ better. ) hile You We Jmir | Ambassador Riano received despatches | t Bieaeany.” ouyé the Aunitian and I trust in the windom of th | firms: anvass for funds will be 4, ing Jt, He Moans. fon Breve forcaysoh fhe, baste ot om iat stator at, tel gsaphed from| panere of oreeniess ener + confved to ho set period, but probaply - LYNN, Mass, 6—ttobbed of his| “ure aitmation ip again i mpletely tisnw atill In Goseension Of the € Any clams of our population, to TT SORELY ESL We PeEamO bad, thief of Pol of Middle- tes a it bcapiitabante Aan and: Mal us» their influence to guide thelr 7 b i , ad worn for many years, 4 attacks nF f ¥ Aose| O00, William A, Russell, the police of- | everywhere and there Is no rea or ue activity wan slight in all] The Aimalgamat four of hy ae Payinw. 10 USE ficer in that towr Wehing for an] supposing that there are poll OF | theatres | members were dismissed by the Thir he At 198 Committer . J automobile with a New York Ucense| social disturbances, There is, how << Avenue Company on presenting their lig sending ters urging prompt Arich blend of D5 and carrying three women and four! ever, a manifest Interest in er man demands, had another meeting Mt) ont of frat’ inatedment Nature's purest mothe Ch tanding’ in © J atmosphere of doubt and of alarm by RACE RIOTS INTERFERE night, but reached no decision as tu)! sirat ailments on automoblic hove to and one of the men | Which, fortunately, very soon find @ WITH RAILROAD AFFIG! > relief fund, About $4,000,000 should | wl rai asked directions Lynn, ‘The Chief| contradiction in facts.” | Mav » paid in within the las At Grvcars and oe fave the information 1 then one of | ————— - : iU.d& went ur ho’ t up to date the ataueas GULDENSY the women want to the number | Wa Committees has eeeived onl on his. ba The removed tne| KILLS HIMSELF ON A TRAIN. |fyearth of Negroes Halls Opera-| Ps wn has received) only An American Staderd SZ silver star from hi mt and handed it oe saciebs J ~o be ’ ' ' 1° aha arnaine ouletandine in sled Popaler since 1867 ——. toile she wos & the “once| Wansas City Lawyer Feared Stek tions in St, Louis and in | =e jis $1647 Uheeks totalling over” the chauffeu valve | Son Would Be Drafted, East St. Loul i jaa ave ar ved from share- | and the ma te the! PrTTsuURGH, July 6 —Leon Block | Britain Gets $100,000,000 and} n rporations which declared | 7 — ———— only police budg | ae a ochey 7, LO! 1 ‘ a8 A 1 se dividends, Like idends . > - SURETY OL YARIS: O10. RN BB TOe ‘ Pts rane vial Italy Receives Additions : maid Ginount to SEROTTGIS | || WHEN vou 0 on your vace Kanans City, committed suteide on a ue cn J pees “4 aE P68 ‘ d aa ‘this Suaeeh Sage ASKS $10,000 ALIMONY BOND. frnnsytvania train between Roche Kast St, Le . Inte $60,000,000 ¢ k triba reported . pets lah tar ha eua thin ¢ ¢ ite wily with rattroad tra vet yesterday addit $10,000! |} your favorite paper mailed te a ee BY i fr rmninals of muny of the WASHINGTON, July Ada si | from Mra l Sug welling her Wife of J, ld, Rattread) his the with a razor and his body |" aithae ait pees | ouns of $100/006,000 ¢ aint 1 contr to $70,0( Others |p, YON every day. Man, Wan tly, | was found by a porter # In that city, and there Is ann 0 000,000 te me Tore: William Nelson Cromwell, $26,- | ' Mrs, dith MeDona eof James| He was accompanied by ene I f twhor ae [and $60,000,000 to Italy brought the } 9 estate of Henry Havemoyer Evening World, 12c per week . Me , South an ai}. | Strausburger, a Pittsburgh attorn | 7 Commissioner Coyle of | of war loans ¢ o Ur 1 ) n Express Com JF, MeDonais, south American, Sale| ard a moncig-igw. “Straurbutger SA | chamber of Commerce ton up the mat | States to the Allow to 8.25.0 : sfacemscomiens’ <1 aly Worl, 1 par wee Beem roan pond at che oad | Ben how ill in a Kansas City onglihl Vea cares anton ie \neaay Can Mt Britain has rece! Feta prep ye | Sunday World, tA per Sunday not be subjected w the incon. | ou REATEOG TEND. SRO AEE with officials of tho liner on the east | 20% Italy $160,000,000, P. Ducas, $291; Jamies W You cap eurmcribe 00% for © week or venience of havin alt for ali-| nnilpemerereare of the river. He aatd that if nor-| 000,000, Belalum $45,000,00 Clarence Kenyon of Poughkeep. Weoath ‘of me you wish and we mony Payments wich | Boston Preacher Weatera New movement of frelmht could not be] $3,000,000, and $10,000,000 ‘ $100; Hogan & Son, No, 873 Pearl Kanes Yon conan oh Sey Fee a York Bish ‘cored by the ratlronda he would seek Seteat &ean i on the fi f Pi 5 gan a he u veep Ysa op Street, $240, American Association for MeDonald, her lawyer Tye peek | ROCHMSTER, July 6.—Tne Counct! of faslstange af the Medora) Govern passe to Bussla'e credit Pp n of Purity In Pood, $200, forced to live in a humble way in an |the Eplscopal Diocese of Western New |" Omicials of lafea corporations tn Mant BARA: (RHO: HAMSTER, HAR: AO! i} Bparimene AL No. e A D Sint | York, in session here te vc le iis met to-day to determine ha been formally accepted, as Special Tour pamirigace iron |The orney adr Ot 5101 " nduce negroes who left that city nb: or Bakhmotieff has not ba ee eet! had just es \Slont. byt sald it [invite the Rey, Dr, Alexander uc nogiors, who Itt that city. t¢] Ambassador Bakhmotieft has not been! No fg or Ands sboutlt, nx | Was “done on oe Bijur in rector of ‘Trinity Church, Boston, t negroes if the dhe tasting i), | ———— Bell-ans |the upreme, Court, f Y fe | succeed the late Willlam Walker waa to egurtailment i la canal ered prs sth tablets in hot water are guaranteed to Bireet Jail Dr Brunn'a aelection je understood to | aud are working. amon the refugees| O00,00U 4m the near furure. 1 Femave the worst attack af Indigestion Ko Mrtra Charge tor ft » ¢ pullt the I" - | he ali n, m uffinia in it ma! ¢ o induce thi oO 4 rey if | 2 \Mra. McDonald she vea her | William T. Munning, tector of ‘Trinity it, Gen, Dickson of the Tiiinols Na- | CAN Hallroad | ba v4 E o derenimapenie tm Tee Walks Ne ieee Maney in thie: in Tennensee, gUucetiny’ ot thescounen im Hudem ih junin in Haat wt. ‘Louls unui ail ‘pers $878,000,000 would be required to put| 221 American Diaicict Memeusnr office im the iy Justice Hendrick reserved decision, June, declined. oon n railroads in shape. FOR INDIGESTION |mmee.u