The evening world. Newspaper, May 19, 1902, Page 3

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ARMED MEW AT [TWO FERRY-BoaTS IN COLLISIONS THE COAL MINES. Sheriff Declines to In- timidate Strikers by Swearing in Non- Union Employees. SOFT COAL UP AGAIN. Seventh Day of Shut-Down in the Anthracite Region Is Quiet—Mitchell Is Sure of Victory. The 147,000 anthracite coal miners began the seventh day of their strike this morning without any indication of belligerence. | The coal operators have demanded that all non-union men be sworn in as deputies, but the demand was refused this morning, the Sheriff declining to be party to a plan TO INTIMIDATE THE STRIKERS. ‘Armed police have mounted guard over all the collieries to-day. A second advance in the price of an- thracite coal here was expected to- day. The price of soft coal ad- yance from 15 to 25 cents per ton. Fifty thousand soft coal miners have determined to strike, Wall street} 5 SHIN ETOWN, AND court-room cupled forty nests eee THE AILEEN Se aoe aS PRES, EONSASD mer itgown took a hand tn aues-|" Morenew ‘Murs Naw "stated that, she Glain Floor, Froaty fine quality; stripes and plain col- fy . feipyt nat SHRSing ALT orcad ore; jacket trimmed Armed Men z that FO Le Waeav ae ialevan’ A180 z with fancy white silk ) IO Guard the Mines. (Continued from First Page.) night of the shooting, Lace Curtains. braid; special, e hing dreadful had _happenes elalll MrLAtter yaw ntty-tour yearsola 5 NOTTINGHAM LACE CURTAINS, | PAJAMAS; Pongee Silk; pastel (Special to The Evening World.) |fusie i th vothes paprene) what nad | anal was one of the best known vesidenta JUROR Nay NODES: of best Egyptian yarn, with lock- iauaee: nandsomaly a : WILKESBARRE, Pa., May 19.—| Witty atserve grtat commeldution fos | art orelerle the captain of the Alleen hate INJBROOKS INQ + |[[stiten edges, in 14 designs, trimmed’ with fancy ney. benaved. aid one of his. crew went ashore. at Co Neate tae we full size; values $1.95 to white silk braid; very 4. 733 Presi¢>nt Mitchell to-day established | the an permanent strike headquarters in this city. The President of the United Mine Workers of America, elated over the! Misplay of union strength, !s confident | of victory—‘‘never more so," he de-|H clares. Sald he: “The strike was ordered a week ago and all of the men | before he was arrested and taken to the station-house in which he explained went out, Not a single striker | (}, haw returned to work.” Sheriff Jacobs this morning refused the | }4 demand of the operators to swear in Morgan & on nis way LETT L OTE TN ERENT TINT TEIN TERT THE WORLD: MONDAY EVENING, MAY 19, 1902, IN FOG-DARKENED days after the alle made t! “it ts | Change | Waiter Brooks |Mrs. Brooks's te Ieatd that ence Bur the wounded brought out the saw oman’ “In that the comb in thin ease as ev the lawyer. oT t The Colission 2 e seen lying at anchor off mile and 9 rter, ‘The with. He Of course the sight of poor Mr. | could y. WhO was a great friend of | about ng dead among the splinters and age Was an awful shock, esp when it seemed to us as it w doniy just been speaking to him, « has a who is employed by J. P. and 1 presume he was 9 see him,” Capt, Cattermore made a statement Ing to the office of Mr. Gould. he yacht sharps about the Morse tablishment characterized the Alleen a “hoodoo,” ald that | been In sever: ts, that h always aking dow ouldn't have her as a gift he cause of the collision. Mauch Chunk Damaged. Tab spite of the fog," sald the cap-| ane accident to the Mauch Chuni acht’ plainly, and she change her course. | Bappened aimost simultaneously wit yas crossing the bay and Iwas | “ie 0 was no paiuc. or confusion |Morse’s iron works at the foot of Six- them and they kept perfectly |tleth street, South Brooklyn. ‘The yacht os: ferry-boat left South Ferry for] years ago. nd ‘The witness's test! the comb caused a Le of his THE AILEEN BUILT tin h “) BY RICHARD STEVENS. Jai) ciniin® below. Kk vens, of Castle Point, Hoboken, three wife to the floor dressed Miss Burn Lawyer Rackus read from Mrs. | she | s former testimony in which it | (that during the last. week | Morence Burns was in Brooks's house Irs. Brooks testited that Florence Hurns frequently threatened to. shoot | if lawyer also read | s after aiaking the? | y apparent contra. | , mony Mrs. Hrooks | ‘t do not remember.” i } One of the jurors asked Mrs. Trooks Unctly hear the words. “I then determined to h} The Alleen was built by Richard Ste-|word to say and I accon (Continued from First ged threat wan) parent | Foren Phe Hannes y She \ haut n in which she ns went to church if, when Florence Burns was living at| Son w It of have m? Vher own | Stand. 1 . who was called | he ha 1 nthe sikd v it 1 man, Lawyer Bt W presented | rt roof aye mony concerning sensation In che t Juror “Hank testify would Ue! They the Ju abo with all the imported non-union men as|coming on a direct course, 1 had the | ¢, t ft r i deputies. ght of way. I' therefore’ algnaiied. to | ComMmuninaw at 10.0 o'clock. ‘She only/"'she waa later sold to Edwin Gould, |do you hound Walter . her to sheer off and pass astern, but she 9 a inte: sty! sie is a very handsome yacht. Her |!s home, Walter will never marry The reason given was that such /ajparentiy took no notive and kept com-| Nomen and children. Her captain wis eet eat eet, yous or. ention mente) pe 18 plenty ‘eoer Sin ant Too Late, lengths away from her slip there was a| She draws 9 feet of water, is 178 tons} “‘I can’t go home, Horence re-| jeard time after violence had com- | *!8' * colllsion with two railroad floats owned |gross, and has triple-expansion engines. ‘and as A ee rying me, wee about that.” menced, Now it would merely be |.) “I at once gaye the signal to reverse} py the Baltimore and Ohlo Railroad, | yl; grevens's first Aileen Was sold by eee ‘The witness then related the story of Dimas tol she government atthe Sena hla visit to the home of Miss Burns's. came known, he engines when I saw that a collision | towed by the tug Eli Conine. intimidation of the strikers, was inevitable, but we were going too| There were sixteen cars on the tw. ‘Nearly all the retail dealers hung ou u “no credit” signs to-day. u Three thousand coal and iron police] a have mounted guard over the collieries in this section. to It is expected that the executive com-|she could. The accident could not be] Instead of c1 mittees will this week decide whether |avolded. up with the fe or not the firemen, pumpmen and en- | ¢, gineers shall be called out. s Coal and iron policemen, posted at the culm banks throughout the yal y CLOSED BY DYERS. Se een Heda in|CHAMBERMAIDS DRESS UP and a General Tie-Up of the Whole Trade Is Now Threat- ened. (Specia} to The Evening World.) PATERSON, N, J., May 19.—In obedi- | ence to the request of the striking dye- house helpers all the men who were at work in the various shops about remained out to-day, virtually down every establishment in the ity. fur At the general meeting of the helpers|:he beds unmade. This is how it hap- If « in Turn Hall at noon great excitement | i prevailed over the vehement stand taken ‘oy the employers, in the face of the threat of the strikers to tle up every| shop in the count mously resolved by the helpers not to] }.; recede from their demand, that if need | M be to win their struggle, every union | 8° dye house working in the United States | j).t mi should close. M Several violent speeches were made by labor leaders and at times serious divturbancs were narrowly averted bh " va to eat It was nothing but hash, with bud to de » and It was unant- |i) ease on that thick, We all of us| “When | was a fast and 1 could not stop my boat in| foats and the forward float jamme jamaged at all’ the side of the Mauch Chunk with ter- me. The yacht was not d 3 far as I could see, but she backed! rifle force. The whole boat tremble way so quick! ook no notice but mad® off as fast as| town with the Alleen’s nose. ock had “When the captain of a vessel refuses] rushed one 0! rs partly o take any notice of whistles or any|onto the deck of the ferry-boat and other signals he Js bound to get into! there It remained. ‘This locked the tw trouble sooner or later, and I cannot be toaay warned away oll people who ap: | Diamed for this unfortunate calainity.” | the ferry-boat keeping up, @ tremendou gated ito pickiooal Tombs and remanded to the Corone other boats that shi Cattermole was arri igned in the] tooting to warn all was unmanageable. Coroner Goldenkrang parolled Capt.} By and by the Central ferry-boat Cattermore in the custody of his coun-| aston came along go close that ene | ————— sel, L. O. Clark, until Tuesday, to fur-|could see what had happened, nish $1,500 bail to await the Inquest on| As it was then expected that the floa | Mr. Atterbury's death. would be dislodged in a short time the rate dead man Pra terbury. | passengers on the Injured boat were left y were while tugboats went to where thi ployed in t i heard of the acc!-| the resci A. As soon as he nt he went to the South Ferry. The was placed jn a back ronm of thej were still stuck when the Easton gad fter being examined by an|her next trip she stopped and took th urgeon of the Hudson Street | passengers all off, None of them wa | Hospital, to awalt the arrival of the hurt, but some of them missed theii ia roner. trains, AND LEAVE ASTOR HOUSE + Fourteen Strike for Nicer Food, and Say) Things About the Housekeeper. n| ‘There was a strike in the Astor Houso we says. losing | to: day, Fourteen chambermaids gave|,, j1umphi she says,’ ‘ f 3 1nlop ) Yas though we could wor s and walked out, with all| without food. What do you think o neds mme your keys then and get out, s: and we did. on our good clothes and wen: ; mind you, there wasn't a be BY ELLEN HICKEY. “Upon me word we had to quit. It jo as something awful, the me of our work. o Mrs. |years ago, there wasn't anything ik what | that in House, and th shouldn't be now, but this Mrs Mahon's to blame, — Housekeep ur minds to quit, Mrs. Why, she dusts her pletu to Us and say: f takes “up her carpets after go to work?’ she says./ wards, What do you think of that e had nothing to eat,’ | Honest, it makes me i aye by «Mab t vod did ft do? “$o this morning the fourteen of us kicking and kickli h eMeh soWhyn't ‘Because Ww A sensation was created when Chair- man MoGrath 4 red that he had been offered $2.00) by a prominent silk man w use his office to effect a settle ment of the strike. | ‘The dyeing business is in exactly the | game stage of stagnation to-day as char- | acterized {t upon the morning of April 2, when not a helper was at the boxes | ip all the two score or more ostablish- | ments engaged in the trade. NEARLY 3 MILLIONS LOST. ‘ | Report of Asphalt Recelvers shows | | | Heavy Deticit in Two Years, (Special to The Evening World.) TRENTON, N. J., May 19.—P. Henry | Patnall and John M. Mack, receivers of | the National Asphalt Company, filed a report jn court to-day. Tt shows that 695,842 of the 600,000 shares of the capital stock of the Asphalt Company of America are owned by, the National Aaphalt Company, 4 that the former company, as a subs Jary of the National, hag’ conducted ita | business | principally through fitty-alx district subsidiary companie The Asphalt Company of panes amounting to. $d and Mlabilittes of $36,674,006. 62, losses for the past two years reached §2,020,06).03. ee GON. HAGAN WINS RICH PRIZE, merica has PHOENIX, Arlz,, May 19.—Aftor a long| | 4, ie and bitter struggle in the Mexican courts and on the Mexican plains, Gen, Charles P, Kagan, once Commissary of the United States Army, has ma Bitch ae inns Gh THE FOOT FEMININE. se & A Woman's foot looks womanly, when clad in the Regal Shoe for Women, No other make combines so much Parisian elegance, with the American fit and comfort of the Regal Shoe for Men, | No other make is sold direct—and in no | other way—from Tannery to Consumer, Style book on postal request, london. Also by tall ) District, MEN'S STORES, bet. Ann and Beekman, 367 Fulton at., opp, Montague at. he Hi Brondway, near Bediort ave Beventh Ave, cor, 126th Bt, Nod Papel, ™ AP OMIA AR oF WOMEN'S STORES. NEW YORK CITY, Broadway, corner 10th Bt, ‘oe ‘ae aor iy foe ilerpi4 ba ye i corner Tth Ave. ly that I could not see} with the shock, but the blunt end of clearly what really happened to her, the float prevented such a stabbin| “Although I hailed to her to wait, she} operation as happened to the Middle- ting In the float got tled craft floated off Into the fog of the river, the float and the Mauch Chunk ‘whyn't you go “(2 So Mrs, MoeMahon, she says, | food we had | made in'the house, and the nigger boys nhorn, twenty 3 jof the Spanish war, dd 5 0, 3 | 8 t et 5 " | | | | | k | f BOX FRONT... REDEEMED AT 30 EAST 23%? ST SO7 WEST 228"? ST. Says | “That ts the co Mr. ons of Mr. view with | ‘Kt Jtral Office, testitled thi the one in! the Glen Tslu of my |DR. SWEENEY SHAKES CASE _ | NEW YORK BAY. AGAINST THE BURNS GIRL. on THE BIG STORE ACITY IN ITSELF G Te Ue Py Gvery Nem Yamed in : aw oy Ay the with wht ake 1 A anew {etocnin wile y exhibited pte cova nove exhtbtted LINING TAFFETAS. saying Brooks ins i ng. the a the shooting “Walter tol serious trouble 1 et) anked | Barns 1 KE him, 1 xa nt whe James Me 1 Hotel him ni took rt to Beverly ‘There was considerable excitement in John Haydock an man had approached him and sald that|Punot and ¢ Isome Watson and could gi throw considera} » Brooks inquest this afternoon when | COUCH COVERS, of reversible Ot- : nouneed that a toman tap try, with heavy cae was willing to el fringe Jo- Carts. cidtnce which |f all around; value $3.25; 7 4 QP) Beautifully designed, full roll,,RE-f fo tight on the |feact, CLINING GO-CARTS, body of fine! istened to the man, but what he | I yersible silk damask, with silk tas- sald hat had no effect upon me," sald | H ge) fringe; 134213 rat uror. “It was thr dut the man. There meant by either side, ert Your place! do not know the name of the man or I would be glad to give his name.”” Schurman stated that the juror proached by a stranger, and threatened to prosecute him 1f hi The largest selling rands of Cigars in the world! One Band from ‘FLORODORA Cigars or Two Bands from ‘CUBANOLA; "CREMO" “GEO. W. CHILDS'or JACKSON SQUARE ‘Cigars are of same value as one “SWEET CAPORAL’ CIGARETTE | 1381 BROADWAY. | y NEW YORK, aman at my and T ga 1 the Comm, Specially Priced tor Guesday. eribing hin vinit to the Glen witnenn antd snetderable time be- | Popular for Summer wear; me then he had flerty, of the Cen- k the trip from es that I discussed the case toh} them that Me Chis Hadvertisement Is ay he ou Mitlinery, Women's Pajamas. ven naa we | A Remarkable Special. |] CUBAN STRAW RATS; the most Phe hospital |Pregular $1.25 auality; P5o 1 attention |p Very special, (Main F or, 19th St. Side.) ho may furnish | I deem it a 36 inch (one yard wide,) all pnre silk, good strong quality Linizz Taffeta, in white, pink, blue, nile, rose, red, na marine, 5! black, etc.; per yard, < lorence STRIPE TAFFETAS. ‘4nd he| ff 20-inch, all silk hair-line Taf- |} fetas; all the best colorings; Jd) 1 dof made to sell for 65c., per yd., may try todo BLACK TAFFETAS. t S Extra bright ahd strong quality pure PAJAMAS ; Madras, White Sateen ‘oun il and Nainsook, prettily trimmed. frown | 96 Ik guaranteed BLACK TAFFETA edith white braid; spy \2\f will be offered to-morrow at the .: ‘ lowest price ever quoted for border trimming; very 4 J. Se tr. LA ec al 3 mi G “the night 0! th he w thi neteen mi 1" | road. station, minutes. per yard, $2.95; per pair, chic, quality reed, rubber tired wheels, best make; latest style gear, finished in maroon and green enamel, patent footbreak, parasolclamp, very simple reclining de- 6. 72 vice; special, each, (Second Floor, Rear, Take Eecalstor.) Wines and Liquors. A 2 WILSON WHISKEY, That's Wen’s Suits and All! Per bottle, S Gop Coats. GUINNESS GENUINE DUBLIN] Examples of fine tailoring, produced STOUT; imported in by the leading makers of America; glass, per doz, Z J the Suits comprise all the latest (eens novelties in the Black and White: ourth Floor) Veffecta, Bronze, Olive and Gray . combinations; also Black, Navy Crib Comforters. Good quality figured silko- line, in pretty designs; ruf- and Oxford in solid colors; the Top Coats are of all fabrics and fled edge; values up to 85c.; each, : J. TABLE COVERS, fine quality re- ‘ough ignorance actual value $6.00; at, h I each, was no wrong I am sure. I (Third Floor.) that he had had been ap- Is identity be- lengths; conaldaring]| the qualities represented, the p: is the lowest ever J (7 quoted, (Third Floor, Front.) Pitlow Cases. Summer Corsets. Sold in Blanket Department on] weMo SELF-REDUC- Third Floor, only. ING CORSETS; fine ba- 2 J Ready made, 45x30 inches, good tiste; dip hip, 18to 36, “"* lity Unbleached Musli site isa "8": Ol pera DIP CORSETS; value 8c. ; each, 4 ‘ : gives the erect military 2 J carriage; 18 to 30, . (Third Floor, Pront.) NEMO R. A. CORSETS; White Pique. perfect fitting, for slen- ZL 0 FUIL WOVEN PIQUE; small Tf | saute , welt; value 19c.; per yard, A COMPLETE LINE OF (Main Floor, Front) [Batiste or Ventilating Corsets; S. S, American Tay, Sonnette, C. B., R. & G, jomson’s, carts and Ohams, |i &S., PN, and Kabo; White Lawn; some with ruffledjall perfect in shape; ZL Jt edges, others with hemmed Z 1,00 and # embroidery of colored mer- 4 i . A special lot of SHORT AND cerized cotton; each, LONG VENTILATING COR- SETS, value 75Sc ‘ (Second F Doyties. JAPANESE HEMSTITCHED PLAIN Cushion Cops. LINEN DOYLIES; hand drawn open} {mported; different canvas weaves work; 10 different designs; if for Summer use; 8 different bought regularly would sell up color effects; made to retail IS to 12 1-2c.; choice, each, up to 50c.; choice, each, (Main Floor, Front.) (Main Floor, Front.) (Main Floor, Rear.) BN ip Floor, Front.) United States Dens Sasi, Four widows and five daughters are now pensioners of the War of the Revolution; of the war of 1812, 1,527 widows are drawing pensions, Of the Indian wars, 1,086 survivors and 3,479 widows are drawing pensions. See the 1902 World Almanac for detailed pension statistics. Price, 25 cents, of all newsdealers. By mail, 35 cents. n B5c, mall order for The World Almanac Monthly World Newsp )/ Will be sent free vo a three months’ sub: ne 1 copy of n to Ti Monthly + THE WORLD'S UPTOWN OFFIC (formerly at 36th St and Broadway), IS NOW bOCATED AT , s

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