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thfl long dlstanefl telephone laat night I when he arrivud. and then returned to the capiUl with Judgfl Chamhera and the deleg-it'.or.s from the railroad mai - agers and their employe* Tlenfl Made fi>r Mei-tlng. Judgfl Chambers and Mr. Tumulty will go to the White Hoesn this morn? ing ai floon a* the train renche. WMft inrton. The Preaident aenl word that he would dlaeard hia aeheduled appolnt menti ar.d devot* any part or all of to-dav to an endeavor to reach an agreement with both aidet to arbitrate their differences. An appc ntnient will b* ma.ie through Judge Chambers. aj*d thfl ra-.'road aanafan ar.d empl_.'c*. who w.'.l be in Washington at the aame time. arill be notifled. Mennwhjrle tha Preaide. ? wil! have obtained flrvt hand Information ef the Bttnatioa from nis media'or lt BOOmed yesterday that the three Federal medi"ators. Judge Chembera, Judge Martin A Knapp and 0 W *>?> Hanger, did not ?? I hope ,? c' their teah nt tll long after ?t had become apparer.t to the mnnagera and emplove- ?'? night tha railwav men wer* a Irn_ tiimp aheni. of the board. The mediiv that imaaed etelf when they faccd the gathenr.g ' "* cbalraen ?? Wrbster Hall at 10 o'clock la the morning The bewildered look when they left the hall told the _rt-T_ he"er <*ords can iiescr.be. Mediators Mueh Snrprlaed. The aneilla-an erpeeted that the mfln micht cor.se .t to arbitration in prin? ciple and let the board narrow the icopfl of the arbitration after both vad agreed to rhe method of Bflt tiereei l r_etBon had told the , board on Saturday that if the - - tor* cn-r.c with a def.r.:*e proposition arbi- < tra?_ ? Jomards onlv the dele gntei ' :t- ?0 th,s " j what happened: ' The dclegate* met at 10 o clock. A feu minutes later rhe mediators en- ? terfld Wehster Hall Tl ey remained' 'er an hour. When the*- came out! thev Btarted through a battery of re por'rers, turned back, held a hasty con- , aultation at 1 then came again. Judge Knapp he'.d up one nervous hand; dopreentingry and eddreeeed tne Le-, ?he public, gen tlemen. there Is r :iv " , T'-e-1 the threr bruaned an eccited path through the crowd andi rner toward the neare-u aubway - ?*??* * ?*?**? came fron. I t for heura An piante now and then eould be heard in After l o'clock i nfted out that the men would adjourn for lunch. 1: wni 2 o'clock before the delegates tnck'.ed out in aearch of : ng broadly, mi the laat te e_aerge. No \ew rropoeition Made. "I c?n onlv mt thia, ger.tlemer." he announced. '"Not a fllnglfl ftOOO has been offered to us to-day that wei , not offered by the ra.lroad manager" themselves befOM thi ? ' h of June. W* Bl. ? ? w Uking a spell for lunch and we're coming back here at 3 o'ci.ck. I expect the mediators may come along later." Mennwh tne medlal r_ had has tened tr. meet the railway managers agar: Thc two groups eonferred a' 2:C0 o'elock, but the managers did not recede arr ;rch front i fnr a-bitration of crcrything or nothing. Soon after the employea convened aga n the thrOfl ? "or? hurried up the Btepi of Webetea Hall. Again thev aUved for an hour. Agnin thfl battery faced them when thev came out. Again they prepared for the sortie. Ctter disapointment ?*H written all acrosa their worrffld browi. ??Plriise. gcntlemen." pleaded Judge Knapp, both hands held up in earnest lupplli ? the interest of the gieat public, don't ask us to aay any Fhinff. MediaU.r?' Hca Futile. i Thfl employea. it flflema, had Ule 'phened the mediators earlUr ln the . afternoon that thev had voted l hu-enimoualy to rejeel any urbitnition at all Vi I croupon the three disap : pointed peacemakeia made all h??'*\'0 . get to the n eetinf. They pleaded with the delegal H lar. bl,J W!,h i ent a?Bit Then they reed to the men ; ^e Pr appMl. and Mr. G?r* ret'on. for thi unions, accepted the in ?? Houm and tp"<" the board that :?"?""' ?:ili :i . committee ol Ul i-tment : compriac the de'ega pioyea. The mediators th.n -.- eacaped the running ? questions in the street loud ap .lanafl ioended through the windowi :rom the meeting The ateti : hy the me diaton rn their return to the Haa* i hattan II. r. l wai as fo owa: "After repeated i ?' >rti to br-.ng i about an arb.trar.or. of the pending -? Statei Board of Me? diation ?? . ' *>" was to-day adrisgd bv the repiesontativci of the empleyefl that thev would jr>t aubmit -. in dispute te arbitration ir. anv form. ... .. "The emplOTea further state. 1 te the board that they wonld i own _en-__rdfl, ? f the con ? ? demnnds of the ra I also declin* 1 te suf gest anv etl t plan or method for ii peaceful settlement of thfl eontrewerap. Wilaon Requeat Granted. Thev were informed that their de? cision "would be at once made known to President Wileon. and alao thnt tho pre, thfl rlfht to a personal -r" r\ iflW with b I he_on ' f?n a ib taken. This reo,uest was. of course. g] and a large delegation of employes. with >. 'road mai ???- ir \\ aahington to-d :. con feretn the railt rd of Mediation and i that they - pt ar? bitration." All partiei concerned showed the of foctfl ot the strain of the last 'onr | Mr. i er. ? e'eran of many labor ,. o( them as large n? 'ho preaent, pieked ent a aoft *p?r In an - at the Woodatock Hotel Blumped doi i lt, nnd remarked: "Mayhe you folks don't think I'm a t ire | rr-.an." Offer from Mediafor*. .?-.body admltted it, fo he ron tituied: "The medlatora came to us this morning with the ..tatement that all nld effflf from the conference coinmifee of mnnngflra was pr ? *he manaccrs' committee offered the day Wfl broke. which was the prop ? tblfl b] the managers on June IB, when th.- '? I conference waa broken np. In other word*. after they hnd mvoked Federal inediat.on the national conference committee of manngers V.d not in any way consented to bo mediatfld, but ex peeted all th* medlatlnr to be dona on tha tida that had not Tnvokrd rriedi ation. In answer to that propo-ltlon I to arbitrata all pendmg dinVulti**, I including th* manager*' tentativa p-rbpoatUOBB, we leplie.l: " *A* our nropositioni for th* eight hour dav and the punitiT* overtime Bflfl been in the hand* of th* manager* for rnanv month* and as no propoBltion has from them directly or in.liro. tly iooking toward a *ettl*ment of tho dll firulti**, we have nothing to 188 tfl our demanda as eoBtatafld Ifl foxat '? " 'Wfl rflfflflfl to arbitiate on any *urb baals, BBd shall eonaldor oBrafllvflfl nt libartv tfl take the nro.-s-nry BtflBfl low ard effecting a settlement of the pend in-r efltitnTflra* ln aeeordaBCfl 34 ith th* method* of thrse nrganirations by withlrnwinc the men from the service oi th* road*.' Plana for Washington Trip. "The mediators then announringthat thev officifllly rcpr. ,1 ntfld the Presi? dent of the 1 ?- tfld Btfltflfl, requested on behalf of the President b ronferrnre. both parties to the controversy be for* the tinal break should take * BC8 were BOtiflfld Ifltor that the four executive* of tlie organizat ioaa. AMOflB . ! b-.- n repreaentati-rB committee . woald !"? in Waahinfton to-morrow morning, BBbjflCt to tlie re ? of the Preiu.lent for ? confer -Eam was the vote rejeetinr* arbitra? tion?" Mr. (iairetson wa* nsked "Well," he drawled, 'ftou nv.ght *ay it wa.' orerwhelming. There wa* one <tft*enting vote." ft waa thflfl siiggested that the 1 rflSl mifhl mail enough train* Wltfl trooDB ft. keep milk and r?ail trains nioving. . ? BnBwarad the big Weswrner, lightiflg his cigar rarefully. "the i, ? t will probably aak us ahout tfl morrow. W'e'll tell him then." Cleveland'* Method Iln.ught I'p. Then *he Cleveland method of 18*4 wiis mentioned. "Thnt thing might go in '94. _ Mr. Garretson surmi.se,1. "but it won t go ii -ft*, witli ?he rrst two Bfltsarali changed." . . , ".-"uppos* the President ru?* flffl plflfl ? on r baaia of patrioi -What aboul tlie pnee of -'a-olene . If they r.-n-e it WBlfll ha* tbal to do w;th patriotiaaa 1" "Then how aliout the number ol BB gineer* outside the unions available for a rall of the Pi*4 - ? ,;' 'road men are like politician*, . they dtfl, bai they quit When the government i ei -riflflflra ifl Panama they had to train one." "How much notice will you fi*ra the rr ealling a itriaaT (.arretson < ites M*1hnlog*. "In retrard to notice, that'* lll ' I ?? ( fuftire. I BBWflnl word about notice. lt'? on the kr ? r what ( maaiia, ln old mytbolocjr, when aon ? ? - ?? : on the knees of I ' ft-e lord of the living Bfld thfl d*ad.'? while his ipiril was judged in th* Hall of Double Trul ni aril tha body in life. The body didi 't know till next morning what the 1 verdiel was." There were all kiada of spec ? All author- ; . the Chief Kxeeutive's ra-legal ln thi- mn rhere m K.o.nno tr?oi border, anii thflir food is being ' aupplied to them ia f.ve-day ration*. 1 Twenty-flTB thousand more have heen the border. One million ; August Furniture Sale The Wanamaker-Special 7-piece Living-Room Suite at $105 Solid Mahogany, Cane Sent* end Baeks Offered complete or singly at these remarkably low prices 5-ifee. $17.W. Arm rhair. $1130. Arm recker, . Kaise longue, $20. Magazine Hand, $14 $11.30. Bemh. $1J Ccalci tabl.-. $18.50 Total $105. The design, as you see, is after the William and Mary period. The finish is antique mahogany. The value is very remarkable?to get the price BO low we bought five hundred piecea; but we can get no more this year, nor again, we believe, at the price. Fifth Gallery, New Building. A Sale of Old *"_"_r_Tf?**Tf_____j^ '__S__]__L'~~_ L*_ tl. . New England Furniture An Unusual Collection Au Quatrieme is offered begin? ning today at discounts of 15, 20 and 25 per cent. from our own modcrate prices B IJ A set of six painted Co lonial kitchen chairs, until now $t?o, today $ 15. ECAUSE of important in coming shipmerita of an? tique furniture from abroad. Au Quafriinir is obhged to make room by sending out quicklv many rather rare pieces'and sets of early Amer? ican cottage furniture. ?; A highboy with original braaaee has carved fan panels and Dutch legs; it is mad< pine and maple. Until now $250; today it is $175. t*J A chest of drawers with the original brasses is a beauty. Until now $100; today it is $85. ?J A small table with cabriole legs, ilender club feet and decorativel, cu1 apron; until Many otl - will bo ?day ?,>?- dieplayed al I; ? C Painted thi Cokmlal lo* prices. ?ettOee, until nOW $50, are to- Au Quatrieme. day $40. Fourth floor, Old Building. Serge Dresses for Autumn La Galerie Wanamaker haa been filling up quietly with many nmv moderate priced faahions for women. Tailored suits and all the use ful serge and satin dresses that will be needed for the first cool da\ . Twlat-d won] frince in blue rdgea, i chnrming blue werajt drfaa with him. nnd blue ____? broidi ry nt $22.50. I.v.l atitching atul re<l bat* tona are thr ..dvancc notice that botb nr. to t.t* nroeh ucd tlus season; this little s.rgi* dress is oul*/ $1.1.70. \ dreia with a ihoii effect in front. !>:t :i long ira I. line in the bnck fioiehed with quaint cordiin*. is trimmed with wide braid at <f'__T..,?0. An organ piped skirt ia an? other Paris idea; this Berpe dress has n broadcloth collar atid cuffs. $25. A pretty Uttle drcM ol all with wid mnl *<1< l1. .1 -. irt J!.-: v rollnr and t' i r? imy batitti broidery, $14.00. Second floor, Old Building. Crash Makes Mermaid's Swim a Two-Blocks' Chase on Land Ida Flionsky, Toting 275-Pound Buster, Foreed to Leave Water as Boats Collide?Runs Along W< I Street to Reaeh Clothcs. Four hundred potinda of Ellon*ky | plunged off the Fifty-eighth Street pier into the Hudson River yesterday morning and ?et out for the Dattery. Oae hundred and thirty ?rivn pound* wa* Ida, known a* "th.- mermaid" t * her pres* agent and her diicerning itudent* in the New London High SchooL Thfl rest of the *plash wa* ' her brother, Harry, known far and Widfl paitirularly wide Bfl Bil'tcr. Bflfltfll Brl la bad ta Ida's hack. She B*aa to c?rry him to tbe Battcry. She would hav* done it, too, probably, ex? cept for n lot of photogrupheis and movie men who had no mermaid sis? ter* and had to depend on a niotor boat. Their veasel ran into a barge off tr?Bt an.l they wata bi arlj drowi ? Aj it was, Ida swam thrre miles in 56 minutes. Then, on land. elfld in a ,,-:?* ; . ea bflthiaaj suit, she roverc,! the ? r? ' ocks that separated her from tha wrecked lauaafa and her clothe* hn practn-ally no time at all. The awisBBBfa wera accompanied by babies in New Vork and miilions throughout the eonntry need milk daily ? Tork and other eifie? dflBOBd on the dailv rflflYeiB8Bl of trains for their es. Farthi rtnore, it is admitted that thi* .-ht aeex mml" m . tni I oth ? ' that ?ni has be.-n waiting* for ? veara for thia flfbt thal la, to win if, ? President Believes Strike Can Be Averted Washington, Aug. IS, President U : oi ii Bfl stand on the meritfl of the railway controversy, and ? i thal he will do so at the conference to-morrow. ,<1 tfl feel that, Mie. a way ?meal wi th itarbaaefl to ftner i.ndtistries and inconvenience to the general public whirh would result. her he will -ugce-ft any new forrn of mediation, now ihat government agenc oi hav.> h' rn exhausft-d, Wai not ght. PARALYSIS CASES SHOW DECLINE I ( nnllniiefl from pme 1 have entire charge of th* patient, wlth full liberty to treat the disease in any ? pears to them be-'. Six i o had rerovered from the diaease appeared at the Willard Parkflr Hoapital yesterday and per . Im. / liK'hcr to draw thirty fo-.ir and one-half ounces of blood f'-om their vein* for the preparation of blood serum. The blood obtained ye* .viil he placed on ice for .;ev BBd arill be ready for u>e the last of the week. Twelve natieits were treated yes? terday with *erum made from blood obtained last week. In each case the :ans draw off from fifteen to ? utimet re* of ipinal floid by means of a lumbar puneture and : tflflfl cubic centimefres of 'he .serum into the spme of the pa Thia treatment ia repeated at twenty-four-hour intfllTflla as long as is necrssary. An-.mus to (iinc Mui h Blood Kvery person who offerefl blflfld terday wa* anxious to give as much a* lla to help tha suffi'iing babies. From thr> vein? of afiai .!. B. Leichliter, of ;._' Bleecker Street, Newark, Dr. Zingiier drew two ounces of blood. She had the diseas,e twenty-eight years ago1 bb ! iaid iha waated ta <h> v.ha'evr abo could for the "lit'le nifferer.s." Another was Hnhert Polan, twenty old of <:?>'' Eaal Siflteeath street. i : bad iafaatila paralysis nxteen ago, and it left him BO badlyl crippled that he never has been able to ! do much work. For several years he ' ha.-> bflflfl making a liv.ng hy leading blind people around. Ra Cav'* aifhl , and said he would be baek in a month and g". e t "I have three children of my own," , of '???''? Fifty gevenl Brookljra, "and I altl; the 'Var thal oae of them will catch infantile paralys" |d. i b*bbI to do whatever I can to save the life ofl some litl Two (iive Eighteen Ounce*. Putnam gave eight ounces, and ten ounces were drawn from the veins of| Ifra, Bfllflfl Pogers, who had the di. ert'e twenty-flve years ago. Four and laeea were given by Misa Msrj Robiaflfla, of 1112 Fali d . | ,-.. 1 do a child *ome good, ; onldi '? ! d ?- i ? 1 N.:ir.arow?ky. of 361* John ? tWO OBBCfll of her blood to to fl tha trea Bf ow n baby, wba i* ill with tha Minturn Ho.-pi'al. Thia institution i? la tho ard Par'r.er Hoa -.?;'? .fte paticrfts rinf from paralysis. Whether the Board of Health of FfflflBort, L 1.. has a legal rif the churche* of the t teea will ba determii ed this week by Justice Craae, . . ? i ourt, ; in Bro At ;: CObfereaee yesterday b, \ I>r. William 11. RoBCie, villagt tey for the ? niian Latholic Church ll Holy Tftdeemer, it was decided CBflfl to estab legal precedent. Sundav School* Agree lo Ohey. Kvery i-'inday school in 1 reep irantine r> ? | -.ed at the i :. cliurch yesterday warne.l children not ! to enter the building. Father O'Toole ted and succe?ded in getting a ; number ot children in by the baek j door. Thirty other* were taken into hurch by adult* who defied th? Ipolicemen to arreit them. Sixtflflfl new ca*e* of paralysis and ;. < *er.!av town* nnd Hllflfflfl in Suffolk C'ounty. Thi wexn in Central ' ? i.' ? ? ? aad 1 ? ? .? wealthy re-ident of Si BthaflBBtOB, has offt-red a large tract j of land for the erection of an isolation lu epitaL Because of ssverai nerw eaaea ir a rowboat, a* well a* the photog raphcni' launch. OfT Chnrlton Street Ida saw that the launch wai in trou h!* l_lfl wind, despite thc frantlc efforts of the steeisman, awunj. it bnt ."I again * a I irge. fllagiag ita ecenpnnl l te aafety on the bar_e, but demeliabing the motor boat'a bow. At Ida's direction, the rowbo.f de acrted her to pirk up any who miph* been tbrown into tbe wnter ln the eollialon. Thera waa aobody te rcs.-ue, which wai juit aa well, for fhe wind .lapped lh" rowboat into I Ifl harpe. tn ,, nnr\ if driffe.i off. leaving thfl enraman elinging te the bar^e. While swimming to shore a block or so'further south Id.i caught sight of the drifting l.oat, and aa she had got med to Bneter*. wetght by that time, caught hold of the boat and brought thnt nlonsr, too. Then c.ime fhe inter eating iprint back up Wor-t Street for the clol She was flad to learn that no one Wni drowned, thni;j.h somewhat ve.ed to have lirr swim inteimpted thnt ? Of. The jaunt down th* river wns just ', ihfl inid, to nerve her for the f.vim around llnahnttni Ialand, whieh she lateada to make soon. -ttCARAGUAN FLEES TO U. S. E.iled ('..ndldatr for I'resident lo (Jo to Wnnhingtea. Bnn Snlvador, Republii- of Sel Aiitr IS. Dr. Jnlinn Irina, candidate of the I.iberal party of Niraragua for the lei ? y, who was excladed from P.i_nrn_r_e on arrivini* Thumdav from Coeta Kica, has dcetdod to co to S;in nd thence to Weshington. On rench ing Corinte thi. exiled can .lidate, who is one of three nominees for tha ; ? "v in the bttterly con ? campaign, imfl informed that not ? her N ieni ? port* were elo r<! te him. Explosion Kills English Miners. London, Aog. 13. Thlrteen miners wore killed early this morning by an explosion In tho Ashington colliery near Blnth. Tha cause of the explo i ion is not known. Bloomfield. N. J., the Board ef H-al'h thera ?? ?" r'cture llXa fcrn ;. 'the : a eonfer- ' termina whi .-hools . opened at tha nannl tinae. I.ibrary Ordered Cloaed. Tn Cnldwell. N. J., the health aulhori tief hnea Ordered the free public li? brary eloaed for the real behrtring the pelionajralitia germ might be aprend by tha handling of Coraniaaioner Emeraon continues to receive prbteefa from towns in the Cntahilla ugainit which ho diree.ed a dnya ago. From K. S. ? ikill Infor- ? Btakill, N- V., he : -d this letter: "Pointi nnmed ln your interview1 n' ffednaadoe waraiag agaiaai i kill are forty miles from Catskill IfoaetoJae. Beeerda show that there Houn exeepl al Cairo, which ba. twe cases in a town.hip of more than j eight miles in extent. No ea-es along j the line of the (Jlater I Delnamrfl Railroad, thfl Otia Railroad or the i II A- Tanneravillc Railroad. This can be -/erififld I?'?' tlie State Board of Health." Connecticnt Ph.sicians' Teat.' Phyeleiana in Conne-tieut have be e_nn axpeiimenting with tha immune and normal b'oo.l serums which have been l.enetieial ln N*w York cases. Hr. Alberl E. Benaetti of the Green wich Health 1 . iajeeted aerum madfl from thc blood of E ' II. Fineh, son of a wealthy reeldent of . Greenwleh, Into the apina of William; CuiT. fonr years old, of South Beach,' Coaa. The child was in a critical eondi tion when bronght to the heepitnl, hut al Bproeement after tha ')r treated D irothy Flolk ; r .1 Geergfl C. 1 I nod taken Thflsfl ? - n impro* ement The Special \ ??>', ef 259 . ' I ? a | na en Bg funds to for tha paralyaia .ictimi ar'ter they lenea the hoapitala. Thia organ iintion !?<>? itorted a crippled c'ml dren's fund. of which Mrs. B. B. Whit ing is chairman. Contribotioai mai be -ent to Mrs. Wh:' I F'.r'th Avenue. I.*.curaii>nista Detained. Many cxeur6ionisf * from P'mla.lcl ph.a, Newark, Jeraey City ent ef th _nnin eeernlghl in the eitj ? r.; ? e i! on New York City by the IV.I.ral authcri More than fifty persons, with chil dren, whe eould not gal pn-sage on fernes or trains to Jeraey and other places, appealed to thfl (ireenwich Street police ftetion for help. All wera referred to the Board of n*,.!' of the Health De leclared themselves power INFANTILE PARALYSIS IN ALL BOROUGHS t A8E8 aEPOSTED *i K>l ERDA1 i Brookhn . 54 Manhattan . 49 Broau. 21 Qnaena . ll Riehmi.nd . I l.-tal . lll ( _>n Reported Salurdai .... 167 DEATHS BEPORTID YKSTKRH VY: Manhattan . 10 Brookhn . 8 Brerax. 2 Qaeeaa. 2 Richmond. I Total . 22 Deaths Reported Saturday ... 42 !'?! 'I < ISESi I '- . I t . tan . ? .? . J99 ii . Ruhmond. 217 Total . C.279 Total Deatht. M-3 WOMEN PREDICT | WILSON'S DEFEAT Conference Decision Forc shadows Loss of West ern Vote. [frra-i a BUft* C??rT**p<mla-it af Tha Trtbuna.1 Washing-ton, Aug. 13.- That the na? tional political situation would be l-reatly affected by the decision of the Woman's party at Colorado Springs to oppose President Wilson ln every way possible waa the contention of officials here to-day at the headquarters of the ftongreseional Union and the Woman'.-. party. "The decision of the conference af Colorado Springs to defeat the Demo I ,-rafic party will receive the moral and 1 financial support of women throughout ! the entire country," *aid Miss Lucy ' Burns, viee-chairman of the national organization. It was pointed out that without win? ning the votes of the women in the VYaat Mr. Wilson'* defeat "seemed in? evitable," and that the campaign tour ! he is planning through the West t-howed hi* own aecer.tanco of that fart. ft, I'o.internct the loss of Ohio, for iBCfl, which, to judge from ladtea Bt the primaries, will go wfth lt.s twenty-four electoral vote* to the RcpabliCBBflf tbfl Demoerats would have to win Californi*, with itfl thirtien ial vo'es; Nevada, wfth three; ? 'olorado. with six, and Arizona, with thrflfl. P.epresentatives of th* Wom? an's party declare that this they eaa - do. "Two of the fwelve suffrarre Btate ?. Illinoi:- and Kansas, are allBOSt lUrfl to j.-" 1'enublican." said Miaa Burns. "In .\ Ucmocratic party is split. Both Hepubheans and DflflBfl-CTBti are cl.'iiniiiig California, with the stroagflr claim on the side of the Rfl publicaafl. Iti Colorado the Progn party .-'??rn* to be a thing of the Bfl ft m Idflho it ia dia lolved. ln K the PiaafBflfli-fflfl and Republicans are pi "In Montana there i* great dissafts fa.'tn.n over the nropose.l Democratic tax on copper. There bas been heavy Republican registration in Nevada, ow in>r to the diSBfltisfaetiOa over the Ad ministrattoa's attitada on Federal *uf Olflfafl aad Washington are -?1 to Bfl '-'''? ubliean, since the Democratic tariff has been serm isly felt hy the lumber industry there. I tah .? i-onsidered *afe for fhe Re? publicans. In Wyoming thi' Progres ?ivea and Republicans have joined hands." les* to give relief to the excursion | 'he blflJBfl U|ion Federal ? ? ? nn i railroads. It wa* pointed out thnt persor.s out flf I i hiidren whe desired to vi*it I.->.nd, Rockaway or other parts of the greater city had received no waraiBC that they could not leave New York City again without health cer tiiicates for their children. Some excursionists witiiout enough moaaj to go to a hotel were obliged last night to sleep on the sand at the beaches or on benches in the station* or ferry houses; others walked the Btrflfltfl all nitfht. A few nighft- ai*o Patrolman Edward Sullivan, of the ("reenwich Street sta? tion, put up with his own family a mother and seven children from New? ark who were unable to get home after spendmg a day here. The following are the addre<ses wh?re new cases of paralysis ha\e been found: Manhattan. ? Houston Street. 422 Kast ! Street, ift' Graad Street, 'J Baxter Street, 113 Broome Street, 78 Cathahne Street, 46 Henry Stre.n, 13 StantOD Street, 111 Monroe Street, 186 Watfli BtTflflt, 169 Charles Street, 3<" (ireenwich Street, l*y.*> West Eleventh Street, 72 (Ireenwich Street. 107 Wflflh il fljtflfl Street, 611 Hudson Str Jones Street, 317 Kast Twenty-hrst Street, 4ii Kast Twenty-ninth Street, 750 Second Aver.ue, 277 Third Ave? nue, .''j- Kast Nineteenth Street, 36 St. Mark'a Place, 14-. Kast Kighteenth Street, 539 Kast Sc\enteenth Street, 199 Avenue A, 12-4 West Thirty-lirst Street, 268 Wflfll Thirty ninth Street, 467 West Twflaty-flrst S'reet. IM Sixty-third Str. et, 339 Kaft Pifty-aixth . 428 Eaat SoTeaty-third Street. 224 Ka-'. Fifty-sixth Street. 419 Weat third Street, 700 West 178th. Street. fti West Ninety-fourth Street, 143 Weat Ead Avenue, 12 Amsterdam \ 536 Wflflt Forty-eighth Streer. L26th BtTflflt, 149 Kast 127th Street. 4n7 Eaat 100th Strflfli ' if 136th Street, 169 Kast Nine' . 417 Kast 122,1 Strflflt, 2 Wflflt treet, 66 W?at 139th Strflflt, 268 ? 1 17-i-i S'reet. Thfl Bronx. 1993 CHatOB Avenue. 1946 l'..u IO, 1278 Third Avenue, 107 Southern Boulevard, 141R Clinton Ave nue, 4826 Park Aveaafl, 669 Kast 166th 1018 Eflflt 166th Street, 973 ion Strflflt, 186 Kast 138th i I Eaat 139th Streat, 433 Kast 145th >freet, 6S6 Kast 171th Street, 2841 Beaamonl Avenue, (two eaflofl); 618 East I86th Street, 911 Eaflt 176th 688 Southern Boulevard, l.'ft Brook Avenue. 1307 WaflhiagtOII A-. ' , . Avenue. Braohtj n. 112 Soath Nii * I South il . Sflcoad t, 190 Raaaall Stl ;, 12 Morgan Avenue, 621 Metropolitan Avenue, 191 McKibben Street, 220 Grand Street. 117 Freeman Street, 660 Bedford Avenue. 230 Cook Street, 339 Bedford Avenue t two cases', 175 Wyckoff Avenue, 24 Sumpter Street. !t Kiehfllaa Avenue, 161*St.Mark'a Joha'a Place, 1148 St. Mark's Avenue, 16?2 Prospect - ? Parll Areaue, 1663 Myrtls Awflaae, 284 K BtTflflt, 666 Hart Street, 314 ii 11 UflBBfl, 1647 Crfll 8 A : treet, 1 181 ? 167 Albany man Street, ' ton Street, 1686 Kast New I two Bflflflfl), 10 Crosby Avenue, 694 Bel moat Avenue, 1330 Sixtv-second Street, 197 Bay TwflBt-f-tbird Streat, 9104 K dfB Boulevard, 114 Fourteer.th S 19 Sallivao Stroet. 666 Stflrliag Place. reet, 1166 Porty-flfleaad St, - --A West Thirty-third Street, I ..-? | ? tj iath Streflt two . U7l Th BtTflflt, 55 ' I Kr.i . . Queens. 56 Greenpo-.nt Avenue. Long Island City; 467 Grand Avenue, Astoria; 77 Bradford Avenue, Fiushing;-Bay ? | Avenue, Bayside; 209 Denmore t, ElmhaTflt; 696 ""enecs, Avenue, vood; 46 Sackett Streeft <orona; I Hor ftenue. Morrii Park; ?' Haw 1 - - ? fl ? .i???,?? t, Far .'on Avenue, A verne. Ki. hmond. 5P5 Forest ^Avenue, West fc'e'i Brighton. | ADVERTISF.MKNT <# ADVERTISHM.AT What is the legal mean ing of "Committee"? W7TIEN a person is incompetcnt to take W care of h_S own property a Committee may be appointed to take charge of his affairs. The appointment is made by the Supreme Court. In selecting the Committee, the Court ufiiially carries out the wishes of those askin-; for the appointment. When the Trust Company is selected to act as Committee of an incompetent'** property, an individual is usually appointed to a<t as "l .'ommittee of the person." The legal fees for this service are based on the rare and responsibility involved and on the amount of money rereivrd and paid out bv the Committee. IN FtNANClAl DISTRICT 60 Broadway !N HARLEM 125?St6 M LtnoxAve COLUMBIA TRUST COMPANY IN SHOP". INC CENTRE 5**Av-_34**_t INTHEBkONX 148^ St S Third Ave ___? TO PRAY FOR ENDING OF PARALYSIS SCOURGE Father Kerwin Announces Ser? vice Tuesday at Coney Church. Fa'her Walter A. Kerwin, of the ' I of <> ir Lady of Solace. PTeet teenth Street and Mermnid Aee nue, l and, will olTer public ra Tuesday afternoon for a . ? ending of the infantile paraly Idemic. Before the ceremony, , whieh will take place at 1 o'clock. there j will be a parade through the streets of ' i Coney Island to the church. Many peraOUfl will Bttead the aer :'or Tuesday is Assumption Day, I irga erowda anna ? I'oney r to bathe in the ocean. believing .-.- the water p'?se_sea hcaling qualities. also announces hourly ? ? ? Burial of Mrs. Page, Plague Victim,To-morrow Funeral services for Mn. Katherine Sefton I'age, wife of Frank C Page and daoxhter-Tn-Law of Walter Hines Page, -ador to Grent Iiritain, who died Saturday from inl ilyaia, were held yesterday at her home. 112 Fourth Street, Garden ( lt*?, L I Owing to *he Itriet quarantine regulations thc ser- ' rleefl were priv.-i'e. Nre. Page'fl h<?? W will be taken to , Auburn, \. Y.. where she lived until her marriage, on June 8, this year. An lenriefl erill be held there' to-morrow and the burial will take . in Fort Hills C emeti ry. Ambassador Page, who arrived from I.ondon Friday for a short vacation. v/ill accompany the body to Auburn. QUEENS SUEROGATEOPPOSEI) Noble's Job Wanted by Other Demo-. cra:s na Well as Republicans. Surrogata neni :. both Re- , : publican and Demoeratic parties there. bnnie] Xobi". Sarrogate for tifteen ' reara, and a Democrat, has opposition En hia party. Arthur E. Keatlag has called a meetirr_ of the eXOCBtive com naittee ef rhe Demoeratic Coanty Com BaiUflfl for to-night, at wheh nomina- \ tions will be discussed. Chairman Joseph EL De Braffg_, of the Bepublican County Committee, I al-io has called a metir.rr f'.r tO> Thomas F. Doy VViaehert, of Ridgewod, and Robert I'rice Bell, of Fluahing, .-.re Repub? lican aspirants for the office of Sur . understood rhe Progressives will arr"i to indorse the Demoeratic nations. PINCHOT SAYS LANE "CANNOT BE TRUSTED' Attacks Secretary's Record on Oil Land Withdrawals. ?f--r~. T - Washington, Aug. IS. Cifford Pt. chot, in an BfM_ letter to Seeretary of tbe Intenor Lane. cVciired to-dav that the Seeretary "earnot be trutt..* to protect the property of the people o? the United States. Mr. Pinehot's letter itta oo: I ? history of oil land vithd-UVnla for thfl navy and their attfltnptfld de.tn.-ti... H-s conclusion i? that Mr. LflBaB flHhat kept gilence in the face of the paaiag* thia and other ar.ti-coniervatioa legislation or activelv aided lt "If," said Mr. Pinchot, "*.hi? legiila tion which .Seeretary Lane haa b?? I ro get paa aad * rr..i**',d the oil land reserves set asid* fee th* the navy will be destroyed. The m?r* threat of ita passage has caused Bfl Navy Department 'to senourCy consid.r . the adviaability of abando .ing' tha i policy of the construction of oil-burn ing ships. Only oil-burninr ships M 1 develop and maintain th* h:?*h speedi required in modern war. Withont them no navy can even be aeeond class. Ne Inter than last February the Seeretary of the Navy made the offleial __-te_i_nt that 'this leasing bill would u'm away from the government that WB timfl of peril might change thfl t.it *'. WILL OPEN NEW LINE FROMHOLLANDTOU.S. Rotterdam Company Planningto Start Service Soon. The Hague, Aug. IS. A new ateam ship line will be put in Bcrrica Maa from Rotterdam ro Ameriea, ar to a:i Amsterdam newspaper. A Rotterdam company is negotiatiej for the purchase of the former (.-re?? steamer Macedonia, which can a.otn modate 2,000 peaeeagen ar.d his * t capaeity of o.oeO tons. It M propoaed to open the new aervice ?___ -'lip. -_? ftuits Ward's Island to Dro wn. William Kaplowitz, an inmat* of th. toward him saw him throw Up r* h-inda. Before they reached _M had drowned. The Visiting Buyer To the out-of-town buyer now in New York on his annual. semi-annual or periodic visit, the Harriman National Bank offers the suggestion that his banking relations are as important to his house as his merchandising, and he can put in a quarter-hour to advantage discussing with the Harriman National Bank his New York account. An account with a New York bank of standing is recognized by progressive interior merchants as at least desirable, if not a necessity. It not only confers prestige, but permits payrr.ent of ac? counts in New York exchange. while the special terms made by the Harriman National Bank for such accounts carry further advantages. Subject to the standing and responsibility of merchants, the character of their business an-1 the quality of their account with us, we are pre? pared at all times to meet their requirements for loans or discounts at rates in agreement with the current eondition of the money market, which at this centre, the great money market of the coun? try at all times and to-day the great money mar? ket of the world, always offers distinct advan tages to the borrower. The Harriman National Bank holds its ser vices and faciiities exactly as a merchant holds his wares, subject to inspection by the customer and discussion of their quality and price. The bank will be happy to receive visitors whether they come in compliment or on business. PIKKIMG HOURS FROM 8 ? M TO 6 f U. SAFE DEP3SIT Y6UITS8 6 M TO MIOWGHT HARRIMAN NATIONAL BANK Y'-.NUK AND 4'iH IT, NEW YORK