The evening world. Newspaper, April 20, 1903, Page 3

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BROTHERHOOD: OF CARPENTERS IN THEIR BIG PARADE TO-DAY AND SOME OF THEIR MOST PROMINENT MEMBERS. hee ‘Demonstration of the C. American’ Brotherhood of Carpenters in Which, Every Man Carri¢d a Small Flag. MARCH LED BY “UNCLE SAM” fi Parade Organized to Show Oppos! ‘tion to Ite Rival, ths Armaigamated Association of Garpentere, an Off- spring of the British Society. , Bill, why don't you get out ana “That's what I intend doing es soon as “I get you lined up, boys,’ yelled William Te Fartde. THE: WORLD: | MONDAY EVENING, APRIL 20, 1903, STRIKE MENACE rendsy, at GC ! | THE SUBWAY Domestic Departments, ‘ Unless Sinan ef Ueto Work- Special Sale of men Are Granted 18,000 Are| 4,000 dozens Fine Sheets & Pillow Cases, Likely to Walk Out on May 1/f @ superior quality, beautifully made and finished, at and Tie Up Operations prices less than cost of material, Mail Orders Solicited. ' MORE PAY IS THE cCRY.| Sheets. | Prtlow Cases. Pe inches, Boao each. 42%38% inches, 15¢, each Business Agents Report to the Cen- “ «“ « fl tral Federated Union that There Gas “ oe « 45%38/4 : BY Is General Dissatisfaction on Ac- ookee “ He “ | 50x38 14 . Ige, be count of Wage Schedule, gox108 “ 86c. “ 54x40%4 “ 2ac. a a Unless the demands of several classes In addition, of union laborers for increased pay are A Special lot Chevokee Mills Sheets met by May 1 a strike of 18,000 men Is threatened which may seriously retard 3. Gould to his fellow-craftsmen as he ) ‘Btood In a carriage in Washington Square ~¢o-day and watched the formation of the Dig parade of members of the American Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners, “It was a parade in which every one of the eleven thousand or more partict- pants walked. There were no ‘‘citizens in carriages” and the bright rays of the springtime sun were not reflected from a single silk bat. ‘We're not here to put on style; we're here to show our opposition to the Amat- gamated Association of Carpenters, an f) offspring of the British Society,’ explain- OUT meeting pf the Executive Board on ‘Thursday \night and next morning Wall- ed one of the men, ‘The men were highly fam J, Gould, an offcer of the associa-| Reading, Lehigh Valley and Sus- AUTOPSY SHOWED REMARKABLE CASE, Woman with Fractured Skull Walked to Hospital and Described Symptoms. @lated at the success of their parade, considering that it was net suggested until three days ago. The demonstretion was proposed at a Dr. O'Hanlon, Coroners’ Physician, rerformed an autopsy to-day on the Superintendent of the Freak}toay or ritza scof, thirty-two years old, of No. 148 Rivington street.” The Building Robbed and Beaten} roma? atrere ‘una’ winth avenue yenter. Z fe : +. a tractus Hon, ted red hi . lo @ | | the'men to turn out "®t! Guehanna Coal Companies in the Street by Four High-|in ne nemo tthe Wom e Every Man Had a Flag. Clash with Their Men Over waymen. Ride vork:aiosplial Here she eave hee name, address and antecendents in a rational manner, but son became irra- tional and later unconscious, and died GET HIS WATCH AND $67. clght, hours afterward. | Dr.’ O'Hanlon . as re 5 he wor Tégained consciousness at all, as either injury, the fracture or the hemorrhage, was sufficient to cause death. HOUSE BURNED TO Amos. th VETIEZAN + and William Gerdi, of No. 32 East CONCEAL MURDER? gion by the Philadelphia and Reading, Tiyan aliases were coal htt beines “Hooray!” answered the men. Lehigh Valley and Susquehanna Coal men Sander and Lang and held in $3,000] FARMINGTON, Conn., April 20.The *Fenthi Companies, District leaders of the mine tail each in Yorkville Potice Court to-| charred remains of Reuben Brown, § Ply Re ee workers who are gathered here for a day. colored, were found to-day in the ruins tall, spare toler, dressed as Uncle Sam,| Conference with President Mitchell rela~ Mr. Cavanagh lives in the Flatiron | of @ small house where tie ved dn the v" * woods off the Hartford road on the moved up @fth avenue in step witn| tive to the differenveg arising over the Building. He was on his way from the répol tuskirts of this willage, Berke: Comant an spor enous east side to take a Broadway car when| it js believed that he was murdered Sixty-one gnions were represented : . Byery man carried and waved a emall| Nine-Hour Ruling. American flag, and the patriotic char- acter of the organization was further manitested by. banners bearing the in- soription: “American Labor for Amer!- MITCHELL TO TAKE IT UP. can Citizens!” “As ‘the marchers passed beneath Krank Cavanagh, Superintendent of the Flatiron Butlding, was held up, ow (Special to The Evening World.) beaten and robbed by four men early Washington Arch, Mr, Bould and other y. Two of the men—\William Hus- sere chied: Thirty thousand mine workers were sey, of No, 405 East Thirteenth street, "lt win the strike to-morrow, | !¢cked out to-day in the Schuylkitl re- ; officers who stood in the reviewing), WIUKESBARRE, Pa. April 20.— inspiring marches (played. by several the progress of subway work. Busine: agents of ‘the boilermakers, rockme: for 4-foot beds, 2%%x2% yds, 53¢. each, value 750.) excavators and p'po calkers and ta and pp and 700 dozen Fine Pillow Slips, Union thelr demande for Increased pay | Sttitable for Hotels and Country Houses; size 45x36 inches, and recelvod assurance of the support oe th ormanlaation, 10% cts. each, valuerse. ¢ For the International Brotherhood of Balermakers and Iron Shipbullders, Two Special Items For Tuesday in i Frank Mexay ported that 700 men! Crochet and Satin Damask Bed Spreaa shipyards would strike unless their new wage schedule war accepted. He aald| prices respectively Q5C. & $1. 75: that the bosses had perststently refused to give the men any answer to ther! SHreno [Importation Steamer Shawls, demands, Constantio Laudadlo, of the Rockmen all the Scottish Clans, beautiful specimens, + and Excavators’ Union, said that unless the rockmen got $28 a day and the at $7. 50, $9. 50, $12. 59, $14. 50 upwards, Sainte eva: ain CORTE! Mey" One Special Lot at $3.98 * associat! had ipariotently, (snared (helt boecisnaa? Opening of Summer Blankets, tlons. Over half the members of the organization are employed in subway Caveat Quinlan, of the plpe-calkers Lining Deparss and tappers, reported that the 1,000 men in his union would walk out unless their - demand for $200 a day was. granted. A Large Parch “the Mailcruve Workers’ Union report:| Fame Light Weight Moire Pescaliaae ed that the New York Mail Tube Com- me. pany dad redheed) wages troan Soa 08 in black and white; value 25c.; on Sale Tuesday 4 molovce eho, face, pointed ‘to at 12% cts. yard confer with the board of directors of the COMPANY. cing Mayor Low to|All Silk Waist Lining, 58c. yd. Ail Silk SkirtLining,gocspd Resolutions withdraw his oj pasion to the Elsberg sy Re bil were Pp: by the federatoin, Y a & : =f Ra Lo Taylor, Leiters to Sail for Home. Ly 4 oy LONDON, April 20.—The White Star line steamer Oceanic, which 1s to wall Broadway and 2oth Street, from Liverpool April 2 for New York, A. Hazan’, and Mits, Levi 2 a Miss Leiter. bands. news with a show of indignation, four men accosted him in Thirteenth ang the hut set on fire to conceal the is "i ve. | crime. An empt, it .| They claim that {t {s a concerted street, between Third and Fourth ave- | © kta Ait ide ood ashe movement on the part of the operators. nites, and asked him to take a drink. ‘The lockout ig the direct result of the ‘He refused to drink with the men and was going about his business when one of them struck him over the head with @ blackjack. Being a husky citi- Some One Hurled a Flaming | en, Cavanaen was not knocked out, but he was no match for the four, who used it simply ® point of vantage --leaped nimbly to the ground when|*<ton of the men om Saturday in stop ont “Hthe boys, got going well” and took |™me Work after eight hours instead of i thelr places in line’ Dven the Mac.|'Woring the full nine-hour day. They hal, Secret claim that the Commission held that - puaeerel tary Frank Duffy, | except in cases where concessions were “Of Indianapolis, “hooted it.” framed the working conditions shoula| Gasoline Stove from a Win-|'suscssded ia, throwing “him down’ and i Attracted Much Attention, be the same as tn 1900 and that then| 4 A Child t Pl ‘The yells of Cavanagh brought | the ‘/ “The peraders attracted much atten-|the Schuylkill region miners worked iow Among FEN at Play) two policemen to the spot. but they tHon and caused considerable specula-|oniv eight hours on Gaturday. in the Street Below. watch and a bank roll of $7. tion as they went swinging up Fifth| The operators declare that the Strike ne, ‘Commission report provides for a Who oan they be?’ remarked an|nine-hour day for every day worked * aristicratic looking jgentleman, stop-|and that ‘the mine workers are violat- } ping at the curb and adjusting his|ing the agreement when they refuse to thieves who escaped had the booty. battered up Today to testify against hus easadinnes def: hi LITTLE VICTIM IS DYING. The men had no defonse to make, They glasses, work the dull time stated, dba sou, RD “We're the men who build homes for} Accoringly to-day the mine owners! Little Mina Coella is dying in the Long t )-you,” proudly answered a sinewy ar-|ordered the collieries shut down and rsiand College Hospital from burns re-|ITALIANS TO FORM A UNION, } “tisan who was marching close to the|'When the men reported for work they | ceived in a pecullar accident as she was ——_ , sidewalk, found themseives locked out. playing near her home at No. 372 Bond] Five Thousand Now Enrolled—Will i The carpenter removed his slouch hat| Ever since the Strike Commission's street, Brooklyn. A blazing gasoline Affect All the Trades, . and, belf turning, bowed: report has been received the mine {stove was thrown from the upper floor ‘The ‘gentieran raised his glossy tile} Workers and operators have been at) of the building near the child's home. , @ud returned the courtesy. odds over the nine-hour clause. The] The blazing oi! set fire to her clothing ‘Phe interesting incident caused afresh|™Iners claim the Commission decreed Gheer to go Up and rattle the windows| that the nine hours begin when they 4 the Waldorf-Astoria, enter the mine; the operators from the ‘High spirits mark time they reach their working place. As 26 hs art Nisan saab trary, it drequently takes half an hour to which they turned and proceeded to Bo-|#¢t from the mouth of the, mine to hhemian Hall, where a mass-meeting was|‘h® Workings there thas been a con- held. tinued cla’ Mad to Hunt for Food, ‘The men reached the hall exactly an| “L’’ CONCESSIONS hour from the time they left Washing- ton Square. The long march had given PUT TO. THE VOTE. them a keon appetite, and they tmme- diately began to scour the neighborhood r something to eat, The restaurants | Employees of the Roads Ballot on the that i “fe pet tng ua fund? tito der Compromise Terms Offered by Maat ae jue} ui er than’ the supply, “here was, however, the Company. fatto ware’ with ion Coruinatecome| Union employees of the Manhattan ns whatever they were successful|“L” are voting to-day on a proposition securing. ‘There waa hardly any| presented to them Saturday by the and not a single case of into: It {8 reported among many big city contractors that a movement is on foot on the part of Italian laborers to organ- and before she could be rescued she was] jze for better wages and hours. The fatally burned. movement started among the 17,000 who ‘The police have ¢ried in vain to find out] have found employment on the ‘subway from which apartment the stove was| nd has since spread through the bulld- ing trad thrown, They were convinced from the] Ww, J, Rodgers, son of the contractor stories of other children in the street that] and a partner, said last night that he it came from the rooms occupied by Mrs. pad heard at furch a movement, Rose Salvia, Mrs, Saivia insists that] “™O"jtgerstend that about 6,000 of there } ear Basth she knows nothing of the acedent and] laborers have organized now and that Se ANieus wan not in the house when it occurred. | before another month 1x fence Fusy eh BouwineRSSociAtions ect to Ret all thetr ellow:workers in ‘The little girl and several playmates| fhe organization with t were at their games on the sidewalk. Of a sudden one of the children gave a startled scream and fied. ‘The others tried to follow, but Mina 1s only three years old and her small legs could not travel as fast as the others, Persons in the street were horrified to Tuesday & Wedn'day dow ena send basing oft n every uree:| 4 Dyed 2rst Cr 22nd, tion, It etruck the pavement within a few feet of the child and in an instant ~ Company through General Superintend-| ner clothing was ablaze. Sh De Zt ‘At ‘the ball epesches urging the men ent Frank Hedley, The first ballot wa8) Two men in the street ran ¢o the child 0é . gatinue the strike were made by|cast at 11 o'clock, and indications are} and tore the burning clothes from her Dutty, J. Sullivan and other) that the men will accept the terms of » Officers of the Executive Board, body, but not before the flames had the company, a singed off her brown hair and burned ‘The voting is being done MB Colonial! the nesh of her arms and legs. A po- , One Hundred and First a Women's Buca Saye Columbus avenue, International Preal-| Heeman sent, for an’ ambulance and ; Exceptional Values. dent Mahon and Looal President Pep-| "titra policemen were sent from the| Kid, Patent Leather Vamp hand t xpli ly the par were on hand to explain fully tH0| giationenouso 0 solve the case, They and isited every apartment in the build- . Appeared to feel satisfied that they had| \)*! . : He Discusses Terms of Strike Settle-| won @ substantial victory. Iba under tae diner net oniieren Ox ‘ora Tres, ‘ y By the terms of tho agreement all| They were so. frightened, however, mont cole tha Benes aanie plattorm men are given one dav am in| that they could tell little of what they | weltedand hand-turnedsoles, j ae every thirty with pay, ‘There are about |" Pett 0. pointed out the window $2 85, i. (Frank Buchanan, President’ of the | 80 platform men. Slight increases in| from which she was positive she a . . {International Ussoctation of Bridge and | Salary are «ranted to guards and em- value $4 & $4.50. Ms ployees of other classes, The increases ) @tructural Iron Workers, called at the ‘pwlandébat Ise, she could @illoes of the American Bridgo Com-| Will cost the compayy about 2,00 a} fol’ ull ‘whothe woman,| Datomt Leather pany, No. 100 Broadway, to-day, to con- | ¥°™ had thrown out the bla: Y , fer with the officials of the company Mrs, Galvis ¢ pled that 3 j x . fesarding details of the setuement ot| ST, LOUIS FACES CAR TIE-UP. [42 Suse Yentung (uf the imutued th Oxford Ties, MB cenident ‘Buchanan refused to" ma ‘ 4 RAN ies noche hand welted soles, Cuban Breniden sue) hanan refused to make GALE BATTERED SCHOONER. | heels, newest models, oF to say what propo- : Sioate out ‘would be considered at the con. | Strert Hallway Men WII Present Bayard Marnes Lost Rigwing and $3.05, veil Demands After Falr Dedication. —_—_——.—— 8ST. LOUIS, April %.—It is stated that CARPENTERS STRIKE, unless ¢he St, Louls Transit Company Had Hold Flood«d, regular y;ric: $5, NEW LONDON, Conn,, April 2.—The A bo dey Delay Completion of Richmond | ces which haye been formulated and are| {UemPartied rhooner Bayard Barnes, | Fine Kid, Foxed,Duli KidTop Meneh Sani ium for Child. ready for submission immediately ve Jewpo: New ¥. Avout Atty. carpenters, members’ of| the Work!s: Fait dedlentory exereaen | aa, aitived from Newport News. Val Bagttore CF Lace Boots, Axsoclation of Street Rallway Employ- grants the demands of the Amaigamatea at New Haven, Capt, C. I, Crouch with ooal, after an eventful experience. the Amstgumiated’ Brotherhood, om;|# strike will be ordered, ‘Che transit) me Barnes encountered the heavy wales also ployed erecting several new bulldings | company controls all the ear lines In Bt] or tay: week and lost her foresall, mlz- fat Richmond Beach for Charles M. | 1ouls except those of the urban aystem.| ei gam and three jibe, ‘The coach-| Patent Leather Button Boots, hwab, the steel magnate, failed tp | 4: W- Morrison, organizer of the Amal-| {VERN MO Uiime om ripped off, At ‘report for Wuty this morning, and it females Union, ls authority fon the 1 here was five feet of water $3.25, | Gas learned that they had gone on | {oinertore with the dedicatory exercives, Jom Lor Ciees. ; pI \< in WM MUA members, of rad a Mod warn ait the Stew ites value $4.50. Manhattan 4nd else) Wotiand Keeps Leber Guards) [out wit anaras atuling iti the ele ob hae agntracted to Neve! ME HAGUE, vAptil a.—The with Tinteeda ri i wie fe Be Lord. & 7 a lor ‘ Fh sr ane drawal of the line anes Ne ye | agit of cap , et : yh iL Richi railroads The mightiest competitor of Imported Champagnes — The Proof: Sales of Budweiser during year 1902 83,790,300 Bottles Averaging 25c per bottle - . $20,047,575 Importations of all champagnes for 1902, according to United States Custom House records, 360,708 cases, equal to 12 bot- tles each, 4,328,496 bottles. If sold at $4 per bottle - - - 17,313,084 Budweiser’s Lead $3,633,591 Further: The sale of Budweiser exceeds that of all other bottled beers combined and it is therefore justly entitled to the term— “King of Bottled Beers” The National Beve

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