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x \AGREEMENT THAT GIVE! an Hint of “High Finance” Ex- cites Deep Interest in - IN INTERBOROUGH AFFARS. ~~ WITHIMARGINS $200, 000,000 BY WATER FANE PROPERTY PERL Residents of Half of North Shore Section Carry Supply legal goal until the injection of Mr. in Bottles and Cans. Mitten as a candidate for the Shonts, sage: job. Then owners could not be round-/ There is @ water famine on the Cd up. ‘The committee is still under xorth shore suburban district of Long J. P. Morgan & Co. is moving Island south of the tracks of the Long ; Island Railroad from Little Neck to Mitten is @ S-cent-fare man. The Manhasset Bay. There*is no prospect Of a restoration of a normal eupply be- Wall Street. 50 per cent. and the Street WHO'LL WIN THE FIGHT] te eionsa.” TROON? Biers _ Berwind-Belmont-Shonts group | Berwind-Belmont Interest] the Morgant interests succeed: inputs Draws Line on Mitten, “Five-Cent-Fare” Man, How the Berwijnd-Belmont-Shonts Group of financiers practically turned @ dobit into a credit and allowed J. P.| 4, Morgan &'Co.'s clients to strengthen @ tottering $33,912,000 stock investment interest with $200,000,000 has been dis- closed since Thomas E. Mitten was reported a possible successor to Pres- ident Shonts of the Interborough. Financial men who have taken on interest in the indicated fight cat may decide control of the Interbor- cugh studied the proceeding to-day aud sought in it an answer to the ro- port that “financial backers” of the Interborough had asked the Philadel- phia Rapid Transit President to come here with his cents is enough for @ ride” idea, Acodrding to the records, back in 1996 «the Berwind-Belmont-Shonts group, in contro} of the Interborough, found the necessity of more money. They decided upon a 4% per cent. bond issue “not to exceed $10,000,000," end they pledged the stock of the In- tefborough as security in a trust greement with the Windsor Trust ‘ompany. ER- WIND ®ROUP CONTROL. Under date of March 6, 1906, this f®greoment provided that the pledged stock should not be voted to increase the indebtedness of the Interborough Company except: 1, "To pay for the construction of or the acquisition of improvements, betterments, additions, extensions or fore Monday morning. Meantime, householders whose spig- ots in kitchens and bathrooms ran dry without warning are carrying bottles and cans of water from the south of | the track in automobiles aad by ound and the whole territory, witn its mill- ar fons of dollars worth of property is the shoes of Mr, Shonts is another! deDendent upon the chemical. equip- question. He has not indicated his| ment of the local fire companies which answer to the “financial backers”| have fortunately been greatly in- Fre panvited him to succeed Mr.) creased within the last three years. mn ‘The trouble started with @ leak in ALL WESTERN COMMERGIAL GABLE OPERATORS STRIKE Men Announce They Will Walk Out interests Mr. Mitten into the presidency of the Interborough it will have to be no th: the Interborough direct- ors controlled the Berwind-Bel- mont-Shonts group. If a receiver for the Interborough is staved off it is the thought of financial men that the lot interest would eventually prevail through the weight of its neial following. hasset, nean the bay, two days ago. Pressure indicators at the Manhasset- Lakeville pamping station became ir- regular. The trouble disclosed itself while the engineers were still investi- " gating. Every drop of water, it be- Every Week-End Till They | came evident, had drained out of the Get Demands. twnety-five miles of six and eight Every cable operator on the western| inch mains and out of the great tank ends of the Commercial Cable Company’s | Surmounting Spinney Hill. lines across the Atlantic Ocean went out] ‘The leak was swiftly found and on strike at midnight, following the al-| patched. The pumps were started leged refusal of the company to them! on the forty-eight-hour job of filling the same Wages the operators in Europe | the system again at elght o'clock yes- recely| terday morning. At ten o'clock last ‘The strike ts unique in the histiry'et| sient 1 was stated at the pumping labor movements, in that the men have announced that they will stay out only | Station that through somebody's er- until midnight Sunday. Then they will| Tor the pumps had been throwing go out again at midnight next Friday,| water through the normal overflow remaining out again until midnight of| pipe and the proper valve to fill the next Sunday, and keep this up until their] system had not been opened. Gemands are granted. Housewives who were informed raid Tm Vice resident of over the telephone by the weary tel- he ¥ Fy “We have been advancing wages right along. but of course there ts a iimit |ePhone girl at the pumping station Ddeyond which we bape snerenes our that “the pumps are, working and expenses, unless rat are put up, and) water is started” were still turning t limit has been reached.” orticala aid that the mn have been |o0 faucets at ffteen-minute or shorter id from to @ mon’ for am lintervals all day to-day, blissfully ~ day. cr eight:hour day. ney ne’ gupersioors | ignorant that there would be no u equipment. operators 4 “For the purpose of funding or|Giing the seiko memwaees| water at all in the high spots before refunding the indebtedness of the In- ‘terborough Company existing on the first day of April, 1906, or contracted by it after such date for one or more ef the purposes outlined” (in the a@bove paragraph). Along came the qual system plon and the determination to utilize k. More money was required, and J. P. Morgan & Co, furnished $160,000,000 on & per cent. bonds to pay for the equip- ment of the lines in which the city had acquired an equity that is now close to $100,000,000, But the United States entered the war and the money advanced by J. sometime to-morrow, if then. Foreman W. B, Nixon, of the Vigi- lant Fire Company of Great Neck Station, took the precaution, because the company though technically out- side the water district has two motor dniven chemical engines, to bave Fireman E. B, Onderdonk sleep : at the firehouse to meet any emer- Nuisance gency which might arise. ‘Washington Market stall holders, aft-] The Great Neck Water Supply Dis- er trying in vain for three months to/trict north of the Long Island Rail- get the Commissioner of Markets to} roaq, which is supplied locally by WASHINGTON MARKET MEN COMPLAIN OF BAD SEWERAS Tell Evening World Commissioner Has Pailed to Abate a P. Morgan Co. would not! abate an almost intolerable nuisance n/what is known as the “Cord Me ‘ nsequen' ‘th rket, appealed to The Evening ° yer Rial ar Witeoed to advance 140,00 | Word, today ‘in the hope that their|8ystem", .i8 not affected by the 000 more on 7 per cent. notes with plight may. Temedied by publicity. | drought and it is fi e husinges of four or five stands 1s] irs s rem the:mains of $60,000,000 more in bonds as security | 2.19 “to have been. practically ruined | ‘8 company that the “folks. across for notes. t of others injured. the track” are geting the mean: Thus the Morgan interests supplied | “"fns "street sewer on-elther the Fulton a! ned $200,000,000 to bolster up the stock of the Interborough and the $67,000,000 in bonds taken by tne Berwind-Bel- wash their faces and have their cab- rest Street side is clog and sew- ays ee te oe red “"Torday | bage botled—aside from purchases of melling water fifteen |bottied waters from drug stores— mont-Shonts group. And when the | jn (The Geniers sayture | until the emergency is passed. last mentioned group took their Ket ®t one corner. | he dealers fay the : bonds they did the rare feat of Markets Gommissioner Day was a no- giving to their bonds, through the ‘Windsor Trust agreement, control of voting the stock in an emergency and they really turned their debit rep- resented by the stock investment into a@ credit by making the stock secur- ity for the bond: ‘THE ASSENTS THAT MAY ULTI- MATELY PROVE DISSENTS. As @ consequence, now that ‘“finan- clal backers” desire Mr. Mitten to come here and bring order from chaos, as he did in Philadelphia, the Berwind - Belmont - Shonts group through a Bondholders’ Protective Committee is seeking, because of in- terest default, to gain assents to a tice of increase in stall rents. pcan ade HALTS LIEUT. REGAN’S TRIAL. Delayed for Third Trial ef Police- Bro ‘The trial of Police Lieutenant Mar- tin J. Regan on charges of violating the rules of the Police Department and conduct unbecoming an officer Former German Liners. “indefinitely postponed” WASHINGTON, Aug. 30.—Organiza- rat ty Police. C 4 ate in ae Loach aaa: | tion of @ permanent “transport re- Headquarters, had heatd two wit-| serve” capable of carrying 142,000 neases, troops {8 proposed by the War De- Te'witl bo resumed some time attor| Ortment as a part of the army res re PLAN TRANSPORT RESERVE TO CARRY 142,000 TROOPS War Department Would Eilist Crews of Leviathan and Other Sept. 17, when a third jury to wrestle with the case of organization plan. This reaerve, with plan to permit an order being issued |to wrestle, with, the ‘case of "Ki to force the trustes to vote the|trather, charged with swindling |('e Tresular army transport fleet stock as they see fit.” While there has been no announcement of how it is to be voted, the trust agreement gives the trustee the right to sell the assets for the Berwind-Belmont- Shonts group. It ts necessary to secure assents from 60 per P cent, of the bondholders] G, before the trustee can be ordered to|No. 1030 roceed. ‘The Bondholders’ Commit- arrested on a technical tee was progressing well toward the slaughter, Poset'G. Wauliton jr of Gan Pra | would make it possible to move an cisco, expeditionary force of nearly 200,000 men immediately on the outbreak of war. \The plan, as outlined by Brig. Gen. Frank T, Hines, in charge of the Harry | Army Transport Service, contemplates Hie, Mtiver of fhe, wagon. Of lreserving title to fifteen of the for: a ‘of man-|mer German passenger ships and a number of cargo carriers with their eeentenoal Reller Skater Killed. Eleven-year-old William Mades of No, 649 Bighth Street, Jersey City, roller skating last night near his home, was killed by an express wagon. jamble, WE day-in response to our advertisement announc- ing the sale of U. S. Army Blankets. We had 4500 only and those were sold in WERE UNABLE to accommodate all the people who came yester- atlocation to commercial lines on the condition that the crews be enlisted In, the transport reserve and that no structural changes in the vessels be made by the operators. The Leviathan, George Washington, lee |Mdunt Vernon and Savannah are among the ships listed to be retained approves the plan. LOVETT SEES SOVIET RULE IN PLUMB RAILWAY PLAN Head of Union Pacific Says Its Application Would Harm All Around, R. 8. Lovett, President of the Union Pacific Railroad Company, in an inter- view given to the United Press to-day brands the Plumb plan to, nationalize railroads as an effort to apply the Rus- sian Soviet system to American railroad control, Mr, Lovett declares that the American the pipes in the lower section of Man- | Oriental Beauty Gave Circlet to Lieut. Gish to Carry on Toronto Flight and, Bring It Back for Good Luck in Her Mission to Aid Women Who Are 100 Per Cent. Wives With 10 Per Cent. Husbands, Along with its Interest in the spec- tacular flight of Lieut. Daniel B. Gish, U. 8. Alr Service, in tests in the Hotel Commodore and reliability flights between New York and Toronto, there has been a lively public curiosity ‘regarding the Princess Dalla Pattra Hassan el Kammel of Egypt, who was moved last Monday, on first meeting |the young aviator, to become his good luck guardian, . The young man recently returnelt from France with a crippled leg, which he still wears in @ brace. He was re- garded as disqualified by his wound | becoming an entrant in the New York-Toronto contest. He did, how- ever, get permission to accompany W. C. F. Brown as an aviator. Just as the two were'about to start Monday. The Prinoec Della Pattra, casual visitor to the field with Mrs. F. M. Wilson, wife of the Vice President of the Barber Steamship Company, who is deeply in- terested in the Princess's misaisn in this country and knows many of her friends abroad, was introduced to Lieut. Gish. On impulse she handed him a lace handkerchief, telling him to take it to Toront and bring it back to her “for very good luck.” The Princess speaks accurate English, but quaintly and with a tendency to French diction. Her natural language is French, though she startled several of the officers by addressing them in Italian and Greek when they teasingly began to test her gift of tongue. They ceased being startled and threw up their hands when she went at them in Arabic, SAVED FROM DEATH BY THE PRINCESS'’S TALISMAN? Lieut. Brown and his navigator hit @ bunker in the shape of a tree on the aviation field at Albay. + “We deserved ‘to -be killed,” said Lieut. Gish, later, “but I wasn’t burt at all and Brown only hurt his arm. Brown, of course, didn't have the handkerchief. ‘The two finished their round trip Wednesday. @ Princess Della Pattra was here to meet them and reclaim her handkerchief as a sou- venir. It was the report about the officers’ mess that young Mr. Gish didn't give it up without numerous sighs, plaintive looks and rueful cheerfulneds. Just what was said wasn't made public property, but overnight Lieut. Gish sought and obtained permission to take a ma- chine which had returned from To- ronto and enter the race, lame 1} all, Not until the Princess, in her joy over the first reports of ‘his brilliant flight to Toronto, showed a telegram she received from him yesterday, was it known that she had loaned him talisman far more precious, a ring which has been in her family for 2,000 years, set with a brilliant carat and a half diamond, surrounded by others haif/as large and engraved all over with mystic Egyptian symbols, In his telegram Lieut. Gish (entirely forgetful of his good De Haviland bomber and his Liberty Motor) told the Princess the ring was responsible for his making 610 miles in 188 min- utes. The Princess, acconing to Mrs, Wilson, is a neice of the Khedive of Egypt and a daughter of Gen. Hassan e} Kammel, @ distinguished leader of the British-Egyptian forces. Since the beginning of the war she has been travelling eastward around the world, spending several months tn Jay Hawaii and San Francisco before coming to New York. She is engaged in propaganda to bring the public opinion of the world to bear against the British support of the Mohammedafh rule of polygamy among the natives of Egypt. LIKE AN AMERICAN OUTDOOR GIRL OF CLEOPATRA’S BEAUTY. The Princess is slightly above the average height of women, has mark- edly Egyptian features and eyes of a peculiar green, such as Cleopatra might have handed down to her. They are shaded under long lashes of incredible blackness. Her color- ing is as clear as an outdoor Ameri- can girl's, but so deep that her pho- tographs are the despair of the pho- tographers. She is thoroughly eman- cipated from the Eastern traditions of the veil and silence, and is proud it. oft know," she sald frankly to a gathering of officers and correspon- Gents at the field yesterday, “Iam a Princess from a strange land, and for that 1 am what you call a freak— no, no; do not be so polite! I know that I say that which Is right. You have so many strange persons who come here and purposely make them- Selves strange because they want money or the publicity. It 1s #0? No? I want no money. I have my own, If publicity for me will help the poor women at home who are made against their will to divide their husband's love and time and attention with five, six, ten other women— what is it I should care for pub- Heity? “The marriage of & man and a woman should be 100 per cent. on th sides. It is so with you, It is so with enlightened people everywhere in this age. But because it is the tra~ dition of the East that !t should be 100 per cent. for the man and 10 per cent, for the poor wives—why should the British Government (which, as Egyptian Princess’s Mystic Ring, Good Luck Token of Yankee Airman, May Help Harem Women Win Freedom harem lifé. So the average grown woman of Egypt has the mind, the ambition and everything but the in- nocence of a child of seven. Her in- telligence is stunted. “Oh, I wish so much that America would say to England, “You have enough to-govern with your Ireland | 70 minutes. JAMES A. HEARN & SON people weuld suter more from the sdop: tshman will vladly admit for tion of the Plumb plan than railroad | you, to the most enlightened and gen owners and he declares the mass of rail- | erous government of the world) re- road employees who are standing back | fuse to allow the women of Exypt to of the project do not understand what | cast off that which is unworthy and the effect would be, unsuited to modern civilization, Mr. Lovett suggests that if it ts | DEPLORES RESULTS OF HAREM deemed wise to experiment with the idea | LIFE ON WOMEN OF HER LAND. em! in the Plumb plan, which | uy it keeps my people down. All eee eee te ress at Gor ib? education suffers by it. A woman is efit of employees, that 1° | eeriment might etter be ried “wl ta | She must al- i! ome it ‘th periment mig ‘with a ashamed to be alive, smaller interest such” ‘Wanufac- ways wear a veil. Thera is no use tetas "business: |p @ducaston if a woman ls to ive & ‘ and your India and your South Af- rica. Let us take Egypt: under our rotection for the little while, so that egypt may know for herself what is for her good.” Just about that time Lieut. Gish travelled 1,042 miles in 503 game down out of the blue haze. bav- Ny 1-4 minutes of flying since he took the very of into the alr. to be Interviewed any more. JUNIOR NAVAL AND MARINE SCOUTS HAVE A FIELD DAY Four Hundred Boys Contesting for Ribbons on Columbia Grounds To-Day. Four hundred boys, members of the South Field of Columbia Univer- and Broadway for their second annual feld day. ious 2,000-year old ring up And the Princess wasn't BALKS HIS ATTEMPT TO TAKE PROPERTY FROM FATHER Court Finds Emanuel Loeb’s Peti-| te, investigate, tion for Committee Is Not Made in Good Faith. Supreme Court Justice Richard P. eighteen units of the American Junior | (.ydon to-day deniedthe petition of Naval and Marine Scouts in an around | Emanuel Loeb, son of Simon Loeb, New York, assembled this afternoon on | for the appointment of a committee 4 of his father’s person and property, sity’s Athletic Grounds at 116th Street! The elder Loeb is said to be worth $115,000, The petition was opposed \by Mrs, Loeb, mother of the peti- The Junior Naval and Marine Scoute' tioner, her three daughters and two were organized four years ago and soni in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Loeb and claim @ membership throughout the “" unmarried daughter peside at No, country of approximately 70,000, The Chief Naval Scout is Admiral Williaa | 3. Benson, Chief of Naval Operations, . 8. Ny whiie the Chief Marine Scout is Gen. George Barnett, Commandant of the U. 8. Marine Corps. Daniel M Bedell is President of the organizatio: Among the units taking part ar Manhattan and Bronx—Alexander Battalion, Christ Church, at 10th! Street and University Place; Roose- velt Battalion, Broadway and 110th, Str ist Naval Battalion, Wads- worth Avenue and 182d Street; 2d Naval Battalion, 109th Street and Broadway; Bronx Battalion, 24 Regi- ment Armory; Yorkville Battalion, East 86th Street; Boys’ Club, Avenue A and 10th Street, Brooklyn—Bushwick Battalion, 13th Regiment Armory; Dewey Battalion, P. 8. No, 26; Erasmus Battalion, Erasmus High School; John Barry Battalion, Robinson Street and Rog- ers Avenue; John Erickson Battalion, P. 8. No, ; Fr (Richmond Hill and No. 97; Rockaway Battalion, Rock- away Armory. Long Island City—Battalion from Bryant High School he 8 Island, Port Richmond and Hoboken battalions also represented, TOOK $1,700 IN HOLD-UP | AS LESSON TO VICTIM, Prisoner Says Youth Boasted He. Couldn't Be Robbed, So He Disproved It. According to Mike Irajecki, arrested to-day by Detective Quinn of the Flush- ing Avenue Police Statfon, Brooklyn the reasen why he held up young Her- man Seminsky yesterday and took cash and checks valued at $1,700 was told in the note Quinn found In one of the prisoner's pockets, reading as follows: “TO WHOEVER GETS ME." “Herman Seminsky was always boasting that nobody could hold him up and get away with it. He's @ Wise Guy. I'm going to hold him up just to show him he ain't as wise as he thinks he is.” cka were recov= twenty, ank for bis! ‘®. — Irajeck! brothers, produce knocked’ him down “ atid GARBAGE MEN GET $10 A DAY Newark Strike Called 0: De- ™: are Gi 5 The one hundred, Newark, N. J., garbage wagon owners who struck to- day for @ flut rate of $10 per day were granted their demands shortly after noon and the strike was declared off, ‘The only difference was a matter of §2 a day in the rate previously received the new rate which will be effec: | demands of the strik- ‘® unjust but we cannot nything ing wagon ow afford to have happen that will | tle up the disposal of Newark's garbage |} now," said Director of Streets and Pub- lie /Improvements Thomas Raymond, “The cost lo Newark will be over $100, 00 « year for contract work with those owners but we must give in.” | any {18 o'clock until 2 the following 1 an opportunity the question of walking East 60th Street. “There is some evidence,” Justice Lydon said, “that Mr. Loeb has ad- vanced into senile dementia, but he ix neither violent nor destructive nd is provided with sufficient care under present conditions, 1 am convinced that the application is not made in good faith,” BEING POLITE TO HELLO GIRL LIKE CASTING PEARLS Court Frees Man Who Smashed Coin Box When Denied Connection, “Being polite to @ telephone oper- ator,” declared Edward T. Myers, a broker, of No, 242 West 72nd Street, in Washington Heights Police Court to-day, “is the same before swine. last night in @ drug Manhattan Avenue, tore at No, after he 8 casting pearls Myers was arrested 384 a yanked the receiver from @ coin box telephone, He made this Magistrate McQuade to-day. efense to “I dropped @ nickel in the machine and waited. There is a clock just over the machine and I waited half hook up and getting The an hour, moving the down occasionally, without reply from Celtr another nickel 4 the operator droppe: ehh 1 had been p lon, Magistrate McQuade ordered clarge of disorderly conduct missed —EE as I could and then I used som forcible, but not profane, language. the dis- 8,000 DRUG CLERKS TO ACT. More than 8) and hospitals the latest to join the demand for more in New York City money and improved working tions, A strike has not yet be drug clerks In stores are condi- called, it was sald to-day, but a meeting will be held Wednesday night in the Lyceum at Sth Street and Third Avenue from to give all employe to attend and out will then be discussed. The union clerks are mem United Drug Clerks, Local Retail Clerks International § Association which is affiliated with American Federation of Labor M sof of orning the the ‘otective the Harry Sorrowltz is president of the local and Charles A. Affenkraut is counsel, — L. E. SEXTON D Sexton, a lawyer, the firm of Sexton, Jeffery, and Eggleston, dropped dead in his fice at N J noon to-day The body wa at No, 951 Mi sixty years Judiciary Republican nominee for Supreme Cour Justice 1906, aithough ne: wa: Indep Deano dent, sound money ROPS DEAD. of Kimball t shortly after old. and t n SF Patrolmen and _ Detectives Watch Volunteer Posse of Citizens Storm Building. Several policemen and detectives | stood at “the busiest corner in the Bronx” at 1.80 this morning. A ter- | rifle explosion: occurred, 4 | The three-foot doar of a safe was ' blown through a big plate glass win- dow at No, 368 East 149th Street and janded at the feet of the city guard ans. " Uniformed patroimen gripped their night sticks and pulled out their pis. tols, Plain clothes sleuths produced revolvers and blackjacks, Then they all looked intently at \ the shattered window of the Hub Bond Company and waited, Half a dozen young men, waiting for cars on the big transfer corner, stormed the door of the building an@ Durst in. They dashed up the dark stairs and into the real estate and bond office of Albert Kaufman on the second floor. The doortess safe, containing Lib- erty bonds was there, the inner door intact and the contents safe. A side window, opening on a big lot, was up, showing how the safe- blowers had escaped. The self-organized posse of citi- zens descended to the street and said to the watchfully waiting cops: “They're gohe!” Policemen and detectives took firmer grip on their weapons and entered the building. They looked all about the place and adjourned to the Alexander Avenue Station, where they reported that the cracksmen must have been amateurs as they used an overdose of explo- sive, thus exposing the fact that an attempt at burglary was going on and defeated their own ends. Several months ago, a group of newspaper reporters, leaving th same building where one of the papers has its Bronx office, heard a suspicious noise and told a policeman “go on ‘That your job,” sald the re Porters, “go in yourself.” The policeman drew gui 4 olul and went part way up the stairs. Then be came back and rapped loudly on the sidewalk with bis night stick for assistance, When it came on the run from the adjoining posta the intruder had hi alarm and escaped. He did not get anything. Neither did the policeman, OSSIFIED MAN IN TRUCK WINS FIGHT FOR FLIVVER Coney Island Court Goes to Him for Session in Street. ‘The Ossified Man of the Coney Island ry invoked the aid of the magi trate’s court this morning in & pe sonal affair, He went to court on & motor truck and sent for Magistrate O'Neill, The Ossified Man is Frank Warden, “Hey,” he c court build) I can't “Pretty” risky,” he said, in.” he reached the to come aw re, end attendants said the Gilbert, Ni Brooklyn, tells e he repr ‘d Automobile and wants to give me a@ flivve It sounds 0, K. to me and convine me that this Ford is some wise bi ness man, So T says I'm willing to help him out and he can ath r around this Gilbert tells Magistrate Max 8. Levine, in Essex Market Court, to-day discharged Joseph Peralla, re old, of No. 118 4 Tony Bar- old, of No, 224 t complali could not identify either of the two me: those who tore a diamond lavalliere from her neck Aug, 26 at Avenue B and nth Street, struck by an automobile No. 24 Bast Street, was driven by Maika Chanik brought the regiment home, Col. Butts since his return | been living at the Hotel No. 49 West 44th Street. He Governor's Island, where Gen. Barry presented the D. 8. C. Af * authorities and captured by the ‘ of the 80th Infantry shows that regiment held the line from ‘ to Mesy, a three mile sector 3 sa ne a NT SARE ATE . ot ill fr rs, Butts made @ trip yesterday to) A map made by German military” my had hoped to penetrate. - i 38th was stationed to the right ling men, and haa its kilied and 2 —and various of its members received ‘ ~ oll cannot many war students that It bad severe fighting,-say om tations, But a feeling which these facts overshado' among when the” Germang write thelr history they will blame the 80th more than the 88th for keeping them out of Paris, NEW KIND OF GAMPAIG FOR REILLY IN THE 137 Reilly, cand} regular Democratic ticket an {a the Thirteenth District. keynote of these ment and reserve, One notices clally the absence of vitu who is not an organiznt bas seen them through years sembly Distr tare esessed of a sympa! ic and . hetic address, is &® woman of reine: “ig ment and discerning tact ond ae Fi which, the way, have so fat large. only on vital subjects that bar district “Besides Mr, O'Reilly, ith the needs of his as he of resi~ there, irs, Saunders is * ow to appeal to her @ er speakers a beard are Assistant District Attorney , Takolsky, Miss Olga Schaeffer, a brilliant and convincing . seph Shalluck, one-time candidate the Assembly, Joe for nd many others. ere are nofeher “Th bell. trucks nor wagonloads of boys, nor heckling nor ri note these met but a nm dr cere, th new influence arisi Nitieal uder thi gatherings that banners and ishful interest. amid the of the world sorrow like the soul t dead past—and is it there in the th Ww to re twenty minu Grand Central St Marion Avenue, her Ww day sho Bh co: Thirteenth District that we shall see — the birth of « new kind of $ ing?” Took 16 Days to Make 9 20-Mintte Church Street. Aug. 13 las oo . ELATED LETTER COSTS JOB.” y in wh 4, Le Ie A special delivery letter mailed at e Hudson Terminal Building, No, 30 t, « infield, L. yesterday mornin Ls ok. sixteen days for the missive to ! ch its destination, Which is only ho by the subway from on ‘The letter, from @ steamship agency this lth, wan’ addressed” { "| o. Winfield, LL, and off & position as & stenogr or. hen she tier for the job yester- foun: Was no Vi * hat the belated letter hes figurs her § ne