The evening world. Newspaper, May 1, 1903, Page 3

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| dine; ube t nee Teri cada ddan radhiadee bak Ahan Akint tl iae nieces ee eke Rial ade Ua S2e6e@ lo STOPPED BY STRIKE. About 6,000 Workingmen Attected and Contractors Threaten to Bring Negro Laborers from South—Marine En-!? gineers Partly Tie Up River and Harbor Trattic. | ey A.B. Eldridge and Victor | May-day strikes that are the fore- Tunners of others that may involve er. | 150,000 men before the of the month Mr. Dalzeil said to-day that there ts/ were inaugurated to-day in three im-|no caange in the sttuation so far as portant city industries. Une independent owners are concerned. A possible tie-up of the subway as a|He said many cooks and firemen on the Fesult of independent strikes by 4,00 | independent tugs were trying to Influ- laborers and 1.300 teamsters is the most|ence their fellow workers toward a import feature of the May-day la\or | syinpathetic Ke. Men m other | situation, trades, ne added, were wying to iniu- | The effect of these two strikes will be|ence engineers who nave stuck to their} to lle up the subway effectually in alengines io hand in their resignation few duys unless some agreement is | to-day reached. Not a*wheel is turning for Toxe Tled Up im Harlem, the subway contractors to-day. ‘The the Harlem River the n a intl of the J. D. Dailey Towing Ollveral threntent.to all on the skilled (vere tied up at thelr docks, their end workmen for help. neers ving resigned, as they put it,! A Meet of nearly two hundred and |yesterday, iso the five boain of the fifty harbor and river craft is {die to-|Marlem River Towing Company were dow! rol e day despite the agreement to arbitrate [outed and (heir eines cold: | All tne in the Marine Engineers’ fight. It is |Hartford Raijiroad Company's lighterage| estimated that the tying up of this |businegs nere still in commission, parsu:| PAY 50 » [ant to the agreement last night reached tonnage involves at least 1,500 men. The [Prt oun thescngineata: of "tke. nalirond | enginecrs say that it will be over to- !co:npany's boats. morrow. Of the Daizell line four boats were eae ereee Mundved. Ironworkera in the cres- | fan? te ake Baey eMfar a. "am BH | Agent of Concern Is Accused of Plundering a House at New Brighton, S. |. in Which Shot Was Fired at Owner. ‘ ea |laid up and two were fn commission. The boilermakers’ strike was settled | rinse in commission are tie Lohman, to-day, the master shipbullders agree- | which has always been run by a non’ ing to pay $1 day and allow them pay | anon cnginver, and the ©. P. Raymond. ve very Of the fleet of the New Yor! laroor for two hours and a half for every hour |.,Of the fleet of the New, York Haroor overtime, Edna are tled up and in. addition to ‘The strike on the Muscoot dam, which |the Pulver the company has in com- had been on for a week, was settled |Missiou the Nichols and the Millard, This company has the contract for 7 EL vent tery and Agent W. C. Moore, of the cent Shipyards at Elizabeth went on |{fry and Agent W. C. Moore, of the strike. used for this work would be In com- —-— mission to-day. ‘The Dalgell ‘Company was to have 4,000 MEN ON STRIKE, taken, out vals “morning "the Central American steamship. Ceraese, docked TYING UP THE SUBWAY. |e ivn: but mas unable to dot The steamship. backed out under. her own steam, although it was a tedious Four th who bi the newly organized Ex-/| prgineers’ Benevolent Association, sald: cavaiors and Rockmen's Union and| “The independent boat owners will have been employed on the subway, | Probably concede their demands early eee en ike teeday. They demand |Next Week. The situation Is this morn- for excavators $2 instead of $1.50 a day |lighterage business is at all. affected.” and for roskmen $2.50 instead of 82 a} fel thei All the truckmen belonging to the! o0f Company Teamsters’ Union also went out, bUt! most of the ocean greamere and that they would have nad no work to 40|there would be no interference with} had they not struck, owing to the de-|# fection of the Italians, All told, there} have been jately aoout 6,000 men en-| fF aged in subway work and company's tugs and act idle. “f Joan B, McDonald, the subway con- Baivel si anatimarl cane tractor, sald to-day that the excavators |hnd at that time hi and rockmen had been money than men employed on other | (ht OP & tie one fo. ity contracts, besides working only eight instead of ten hours. alzell, of the Dalzell Towing Line, in- areal wineer in fact. was an active ne sub-contractors have made ar-/ 1S ON IN NEWARK. rangements to fill their places If they do turn to work next week. The McLean Company and Bradley ected by the tie-up. ‘The|the masters’ organization, the commi! not bean, are m over sestions are practicaily done with |tee of the Bricklayers and Mason: their work. [Union in Newark to-day ordered about | him. ‘ 30% m Hope Men Will Retarn. PIO ids Secretary Hayward, of the Degnon-. ‘his strike will mean a great loss to t 3,000 men in their employ were | | It out, bud as it Was May Day he ho a jonds. C see Uf diem would return to-morrow. | county buildings were made on the pres- TY Gey don't.” he added, “we'll send jent scale of wages and the Increase will havesiar ehauipoad Nori eaet wae Oring |educe the profits, Work Is stopped un They . ‘ulans held a parnde to-day to i ‘one Hundred and Fourteenth street | And First avenue, and at 10 w'clock CRESCENT SHIP YARD. | mirched down to Washington Square, fag, here were twenty GABOR IT Lt: creo uhanarea emblovees of the Cres! wg ear of men in Vine was vari-|cent Ship Yard in Elizabeth, N. J, ously Caimated at from 10,000 to 2.000. | struck to-day and left the yard in a There ‘were Ia) negroes among them. |yoay” President Mason Chace said he No Exe ing Now. did not know what the men struck for, mands have been made by the union on * sonstruction and other com: | {ee Biente Ein until about June, the question has/ suca a condition that a Sirlke There are said to be about 30,000 labor- ers of this cla: plovers say eof the union. The union] STRIKE AVERTED BY men assert they A of the contractors on the subwi the office of John McDonald at 2 0 in lock. to Major McNulty, representing McNaught Z"Micatahon, and. a representative of |seemed gone that the threatened strike Mr. McDonald. The representatives of of 12,00 shipbu.lders and boller-makers Meo McDonald. Games’ ioltand, Mats !was averted, ‘The meeting vetween tre| COMPOSER ARDIT. DEAD IN ENGLAND. thew McConville and Jon OMe the | Workinsmen's Committee and the New polite but one arrest was made, It was |York Metal ‘'rades Association, repre- peleizhth avenue, between Forty-elghth senting the employers, began In the| and Forty-ninth streets, where Willlgm|iottoms offices at No. 28 broadway at Mecormick, twenty-four, of Market * PUN CAS treet, Hoboken, was arrested for ni-;noon yes.erday and ended at Dp make drivers sop work. He | muting. terintina/ co make div Tie snen demanded an increase of The polise say they do not anticipate | *ages Trom $270 to 33 u day. ‘Recog- tranbietocday but fear that there may {Ailion of the union ulso was insis cow. wasn ihe men_are/upon, shipbuilder Raab. of Brook is credited with saving ‘the day. cinp.oye hand and was 3.23 this! faw minutes Raub had effected djustment HARBOR AND RIVERS. |!" | amicable a \*"The unio 5 re it can supply tt Arbitration between the railroads em-) workmen, and anion men will! be given ploying tugs and the marine engineers! preference whenever possible, They” will| pnd the granting of the engineers’ de-| et, thelr $ a day, and the Boller telp-| of mands by mar companies rob strike of its worst feat or more tugs and lighters were Inld up. two-thirds of the harbor craft w two-thirds OF nvession of the Increared| HANNA TO DICTATE wages was far more general than the OHIO LABOR PLANK. members of the tugmen’s 0) ‘gonization had expected and nications are}—/ that they will have either to fall in ine) ofa) FA nerease of wages, | | AND. May 1.--Senator Hanna} tion, which involves recognition of the} sna 4: wil be acrictly in line with his engineers’ union, or else raise wanes. | ideas of ¢ ‘At 1 o'clock this afternoon there wag |g, a meeting of the Advisory Board of | meeting of the Amalgamated Assocla- the Association for the Protection >t | tion of Iron, Steel and, ‘Tin Workers the Commerce of the Port of New York, Teen Hye ee will further emphas.ze | whida 1s the tugmen's ori oeal bra The. meating took piace in the offices) eration in Cieveland. : of the Merritt-Chapman Wrecking |The plank will declare for the enact y N. parties to any) wa Chapman, W. F. Dalzell, EN. Millard,| Writ may be in existence. The State B. W. DuBols, J. ¥. Clark. George L. Board may bring the disputants togeth: Hammond, Thomes Toomey, Hugene by force if ne . NOTE ITT \ E WORLD; FRIDAY EVENING, MA WORK (IN Al SURWAY | PARADE OF STRIKING SUBWAY LABORERS | Y 1, 1903. PASSING UNDER THE WASHINGTON ARCH. LGdDDDD? DODO DSE | | SO THEY MIGHT INHERIT. jcie, Frank, Wilson, over TIED BABY BY NECK TO BEOPOST President of an East Side So- Room Was Full of Escaping Gas ciety the Victim of a Thief; and the Child Was Nearly As- While on His Way to Deposit POCKET PICKED GOING TO BANK. phyxiated When Found by the Janitor of the Flat. CLUB OFFERS $25 REWARD.|THINK MOTHER IS CRAZY. nd men, mostly Italians, |B sss naeer Koth, of the atarine |A WOMAN ENSNARES HIM. Having many curfous hallucinations, among them being one that the elec- tricity in the atmosphere draws words from her mouth against her will, Mary Rrown, thirty-two years old, of No, 27 One Hundred and Nineteenth was committed to Bellevue to- day by Magistrate Flammer in the Har- lem Police Court to be examined as to Edward Warren, an agent of the New} ing that on'y the general dockage and | York and Richmond County Gas Com-| Shakespeare Young Men's Club, New! Stanton street, ing World office to-day the| Jost $100 belonging to the organization id the contract to dock! nouse of one of the company's cus-| while on his way to deposit it at the two other| Emigrant Industrial Savings Bank, No. hem. men he is accused of entering the home| 51 Chambers street. ‘There was a report about the Hudson|of David P. Shaw, in First street, New ‘street headquarters that W. Freeland] prighton. was arrested reported at The Even- Ocean Steamers All Right. Brighton, Staten Island, charged with He said the New York Harbor Tug-| burglary pany, in having broken tomers. In company with s Stoleroff sald he started for the benk When the three men were| accompanied by Herman Miller. with | day they! tended to go out to-day in one of the| Caught there by Mr. Shaw one of them) whom he lives, and that Re placed the its engineer. | shot at the householder. | Brown was arrested by Calhoun, of the Society for the Preven- ago when Mr.| Warren has been employed by the | trousers. When he reached) the bam, | tion of Cruelty to Children, on the com- As company only two weeks, but is se'* ‘ctting more | union man. He denied that he would go|"0 have come to it with good recom-) One half of the money was the pro- He visited the First street ‘ceeds of a dance given by the club on girls, four years and six months old, ®8® April 18, and the other half was a $0 respectively leuxing at | deposit put up by Isaac Green to de- ‘They will get no more,” he added. | BUILDING DISPUTE meters, He received no answer to his gray the inital expenses of a picnic to house, testified that one day last week 1 ings at Mr. Shaw's, and Is said to have \be broken through a rear window. packed | o - up the silverware and then started to |<: erof on Tuesday. Failing to come to an agreement with | ransack the house. Shaw, asleep !n oae of the rooms, was awakened, and it was the burclars shot at He chased the three men down to strike. This number in-|the street, aided by some laborers, but " Union. a! three got away. all in bills, in a pocket of his plaint of neighbors that she was en- dangering the lives of her two children, Se said, {t was gone. cut on a tug. but !t was reported later; mendations. | house stoves the janitress of Brown went She heard the given by the organization on infant moaning Brown apartment, the Emigrant's where she found the baby lying on the Bank after Stoleroff had reported his floor, a rope around its neck, the other loss, and the comptroller of the institu- tion said ne had received no word of ‘The trustees gave A reporter called at then that one of Brown had left a kettle of water on the The water had bolled over nd had put out the flame and the room was full of escaping gas. John Brown, the husband of the wom- an. said that his wife had been, melan- the quarters of the club Victor Saretsky, manager of the organizaffon, sald a spectal meeting would t_ to consider the matter. Stolerof! has always borne ‘ To-day MeLean Company, said to-day that tie contractors, no matter which way it] brook, tracts taken for city and] stove. Mialage were’ Spree. {of the day bef atl the police came ea about the affair re and kept him talking the youngest child was born six He said that he had lost because his wife called him up on the telephone twenty is hardly any good positions was robbed of th ‘The affair w: meeting to-night. “Meantime I am authorized uunce that we will py Information lear covery of the person who took the $100, The joss of the affect the club's fin $200 in the treasury,’ ‘The organization ‘was formed tn 1898 | and is one of | ioney by a pickpock be settled at to Bellevue to be ex- Children's Soctety two children for the time heroes ip anere, te tae their places. /the new City Hall and Court-House |DOBLIN GOES TO INSANE ASYLUM. each maa cartying a small Amer.can —_——_——_ Perjured Witne! y a reward of |amined, care for the CANTOR AND GROUT IN WAR OF WORDS. will in no wa as we have | In Quigg-Lessier Controversy Sent to Central for sed iene Ghetto district BOATMEN SEEKIN MRS. LYNDE’S BODY. Philip Doblin, who was mixed up in the Quigg-Lessier controversy, Phere Is practically no excavating go-|but supposed it was for the general] ferred from the insane ward of Bellevue tng on for buildings In the city. De-'demand for less work and more pay | Hospital to-day 5 made to all the stip yards @bout (Wo | Mannattan State Hospital The Mayor at Last Cools Them Down by Beating a Gavel Comptrolier Grout and Borough warm exchan; Nae work in tne yard jus, now ts {n| Tsp. L. will noc] Doblin t : the regular not come to an isaue jseriously aftect it. transier wagon with several other pa- were In charge of | Many of Them Patrolling the North, “°” | River in the Hope of Earning : in New York, but em- sss | tents, all of wnom the $500 Reward. at not more than 5.00 three orderlies of the Doblin. was declared The Comptroller started ey | days go." He was arrested: for crest, camater's” committee met some MUTUAL LCONGESSION. Jing “a disturbance in the Hotel Cadiiine ” lust Saturday ‘night and: waa committed the Bellevue She office of Jonniresent were Mr, Hol-| It was after a fight of sixteen hours! for a tive days’ observation brook, of Holbrook, Cabot & "Dal¥ijand when all hope of a sottlement|that te has paresis River vetween Chris- (ionherltena fications on the hope of finding the body gusta Lynde, an Erie ferry-boat Tuesday night, and thereby earning the $500 reward offered Insane ward herself from | Court-House j Comptroller, DAUGHTERS WN AGAINST FATHER ury Decides that Charles H. and Frank Wilson Destroyed Their | Father’s Will, Bequeathing Fortune to His Grandchildren. eKitty’’ Wilson wine a victory for | herself and her sister, Mra "Addie" | Lyons, in her legal fight with her| father, Charles 1 WI and her un-| 6 $500,000 es- tate left fy their grandfather, Henry Wilson, who died in 1901 Alleging) that their father left no will, the sons, Charles and Frank, inherited the whole estate as “next of kin and heirs-at-law.”’ Miss Kityy, who had lived with her! sister at her grindfather'’s house till he died,, sued, claiming that her grand- father had made a will leaving $0 a month to her father and a like ar rangement for her uncle Frank, and bequeathed the rest of the estate to| her and her sister Adelaide } The gitls are yet .n thelr teens. They | aJleged that their father and uncle conspired to get .he estate, an de- stroyed their” grandfather's’ will the, night he died Four questions were submitted to the! Jury by Justice O'Gorman in a very im- pastial charge, after fluent speeches by! ex-Judge Augustus Van Wyck and A. C.| Ogden, for and egainst the girls. i The jury was out only an hour and anewered all four questions In favor of| the girls. They sald that Henry Wileon died June 2, 1901, leaving a will; that the will devised’ the properties at s2, | 84 and 86 Division street to Kitty and Adelaide; that Charles H. and Frank D. Wilson conspired to obtain poasas- sion of and to destroy the will, and that they did steal and destroy the will CORONER HOLDS OPENHYM INQUEST. After Careful Investigation He Finds that the Millionaire Was a Suicide. Coroner Scholer held an inquest to- day in the death of Adorphe Openhym, betty body was found in the Harlem ver last Sunday. Openhym resided at No. 38 West Fifty-second street. He disappeared on March 30. yon ioe ante Open Byam sed to ave jum: ‘om rr into. th Haniam River. A hat-and @ few cards found on the bridge supported the the. ory from the first, and the findirg of the ody Inter confirmed it. A few days after the disappearance of Openhym, who was reputed to be a millionaire, a reward of $5,000 was offered for the re- covery of the body. When the body game to the surface it was picked up| by a cunal boatman. The verdict was suicide by drowning. “AL” ADAMS MAKING MATS AT SING SING, The Meanest of All Gamblers an Ap- prentice Now In that Depart- ment of the Prison. OSSINING, N. Y., May 1—"Al" ad- ams, the convicted polloy king, was put to work in Sing Sing Prison to-day. He has been assigned to the mat-making department, where Warden Johnson says he will have suah light jobs as he is ca- pable of doing. fhe Warden says that Adams ts not stiong enough to do any bard work, but it was thought best to give him some employment so as to Keep him from brooding over his troubles. ‘The meanest of all gamblers appears to be becoming | more resigned to the situation. He ts sleeping and eating better than when ho first came to the prison and appears in a slight degree more cheerful. Warden Johnson is of the opinion that the regu iar prison fare will prove a benefit to Adams and do bim far more good than high living at the Waldorf. 'Blun Shoc — | Szie (396 -— Meas its one great fault, peeling of the grain. Our own Corons qrisut dratt! The mot | last woe hen | duced, with a highly polished surface $ beoin; 4 corect| that positively will not peel off or 3 5 Bien of" quiet § 2 become roug' e Ascdnd good styles, at : bn MEN'S OUTFITTER, 381 & 383 123 & 125 Broadway, ; Fulton St., NEW YORK CITY. If you will come and look over this showing of suits—Blackx, Blue for its recovery. Herbert S. Ogden, Lynde family, after an over in Brooklyn ihe same work | ing done for 3 per « to support these pev and make ak exhaustive in- circumstances hours of hard thinking will deve'up, ts _|We Are as Busy as Can Be. Lynde'’s suicide. Famous Musical Here as He Wa Director Familiar orrow morning some “1 went over the the pilots und men of the from which Mrs. | LONDON, t s' committee had its hat in itn well-known eaving the meeting. | his room to gO out with the order to strike CRAFT TIED UP IN |when they were Induced to return ana Pere, -» Our Suits Are “Beauties” musical conductor, died at north along wil, be recognized so tar as| Senor have arranged mpoyers' demands for! piedmont, July and tnad acted as musical director in many large cities onne to have 21 AND 21 MAKE 42. a Gig vnd Tt | THIS SPECIAL will take or to learn exactiy ers’ Union. will aso benefit by the set-| Vienna, Constantinople tiement. Having joined in the demand of | burg, borithe shinbuilders and boiler-makers they | United States. succeeded in obtaining 4 five per cent. |s.ua as well as in m: ————_— NO POLITICS,SAYS THOMPSON! New Head of Building Department to Work on Merit, oinpson, the new Superine began his dudes! , ‘* Starts To-Day, BELMONT DENIES DEAL. [Interborough In Not Reaching out! for Brooklyn Rap Henry Z 4 te the labor plank in the; tendent of Buildings, with the ratlroads and permit arbltra-|Giig Republican platform this fall,| to-day, When he arrived at his ciation and arbitration, The| dressed his staf of nstor voiced his Ideas at the Columbus | ows here will be no politics in this de-! am at its head, partment while 1 everything will be done in a fair man will do! or favor, and if] t to consult me about | anything you will find that I am easy T want you particularly to ¢ reviving the effort to es. | impartial manner, ization. | tablish a local branch of the Civic Fed. M8 Work without fea any of you ment of laws that will give the State | Of access. Company, ‘This board 1s composed of} Hoard of Arbitration power to demana | glve In full and complete report H. L, Joyce, E. F. Luckenbaoh, I, E.| the presence at its hearings of both | that there has been a laxity among the dispute or strike | men to do this and I want it stopped Mr. Thompson sald he had not as yet appointed a secretary, but would do sv ree in a few days y once and for {8 not comtampl*ted by my com- nd Fancy—vou can get more ideas of apparel in a i¢w minutes than cCOD JUDGES AGREE THAT the new fancy worsteds are favor- ites. the fancy cheviots stripes and overplaids in cassimeres—Erg- lish homespuns. are all in act’: SUIT SALE For One Week, at $10.09 value 15.00 and $16.5 ; |Specialsin Furnishings. | lost | $1.00 White of Fancy Negligee Shirts, Now 48 | vam Mii who $1425 Negligee Shirts, Neat Effects Now 69°|,5 Cents by Mail. Detached cufts with every shirt. Sixth Ave. and 27th Street, Third Ave, ard 122d Street. 609 Eighth Ave. 39th and 4Cth Sts, 162 Bowery, near Broome. ciorien 401, 403, St. May 2 ‘ |. Consumers are requested to re- ‘The way out Closefitting Collar 84 Copyright, 1903, Wm. Vogel & Som Coats That Grow Old Too Young. The trouble with ordinary ready-made sults is that they lose their shape after a little wear —the coat fronts wrinkle up, the collar sags, the shouldersdroop. A poorly made shoulder causes most of these defects. The shoulder should be the mainstay of a garment. The ordinary shoulder is obtained by “stuffing” it full of wadding which stretches and does not retain its shape. Our ‘Concave Shoulder is the result of careful modelling and tailoring— and the shape is permanent. Our ‘“‘close- fitting” collar is hand-tailored and fits snugly abouttheneck. These two important features we have put into all of our $15 Suits and Overcoats At $15—Single and double-breastsd Sack Suits, made from undressed Worsteds, Thibets, Homespuns, Cheviots, smooth and rough faced Cassimeres, in ail the new spring patterns “rd weaves, fancy effects and plain blues, blacks, browns and grays. At $15—Medium length black Thibet and Oxford Overcoats, silk lined and silk lined to edge. Anci chort, boxy Topcouts of the ever popu!ar Coverts in all the new shades. Other Spring suits, $12.50 to $30, and other overcoats, $12.50 to $35. ‘ Store Open Saturday till 9 P. M. WM. VOGEL & SON, Broadway. ; Houston St. Style 336—Men’s Oxfords of Corona Coltskin, undoubtedly i | the best wearing patent leather made. Style 312—Oxfords of Y} \ excellent quality Velour. Style 314—Oxtords of fine Vici Kid; these most deservedly popular leathers made into best cut @ Oxfords on this favorite straight draft last with $ American toes, 134 inch heels, stout oak soles; =) | equal to $3.50 and $4,00 qualities of others e Innumerable styles of Oafords in button, Bluchsr the regular lace cut ror inen and women. Every good leath) carefully made in shapes from the newest narrow toe tot) wide, straight and swing lasts. They combine quality ¢ leathers, perfection of fit, and elegance of finish far above th standard of ready-to-wear shoss, | | Other Blyn Specialties, FAST FACE KID. Think of a leather softer, . smoother, dressier than finest Vici Kid—yet without special tanning, used exclusively tor our own shoes. elegant leather ever pro- made in a number of RESILIA CUSHION VENTILATING SHOE and the only suc- cess-ul one ever made. No heating, irritating, disagreeable felt —but a between sole of live rubber that shuts out damp and pumps pure air through every part of the stoe—they keep the feet absolutely dry and comfortable, impart a pleasant springiness to the step, support the arch, $ help weak feet and prevent serious foot ailments le I, BLYN & SONS, ssaFeo"™ Refilled bottles of BURKE’S GUINNESS STOUT are being sold in New York. port at once any unsatisfactory Stout received by them, giving name and address of seller, to E.& J. Burke, LTb., 409 W. [4TH ST, NEW YORK CITY,

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