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5.” sas unadle to see why they should keep ** un riees...4.33|Sun wets, ..7.22|Moon geta...10.50 ewe TO END TIE-UP OF BUILDINGS. ‘Unions to Vote on Monday to ___ Drop Material Drivers and End | War That Stopped Work on $100,000,000 Structures. f i ‘LOCKOUT TO BE ABANDONED. Employers Will Come Half Way to! , Meet the Workers, Who, on Their ‘ Part, Agree to Cease Affiliation with Drivers’ Association. ‘The tio-up in the bdullding industry tn Greater New York will, in all probabil- ity, come to an end Monday. ‘hen 110,- 0@ skilled mechanics who have been idle for a month will return to work and Work on buildings representing $100,00,- 000 will be resumed. It is expected by al! labor leaders that at its meeting Monday in Brevoort Hall, Fitth-fourth street and Fourth avenue, the United Board of Building Trades will ‘withraw its support from the Material Drivers’ Unton. The Lumber Dealers’ Association and the Building Material Dealers’ Associa- | tion are pledged to open thelr yards and | Fesume business the moment the United Roard ceases to support the Teamsters’ Union, At a meeting held yesterday it was almost the unanimous opinion of the del- egates representing the thirty-nine labor unions in the United Board of Building Trades that It was cnfair to the 110,000 skilled mechanics they represented to Keep them in idleness because of the claims of a few hundred unskilled men. t the meeting were in favor of vote'then and there, Which undoubt- Sly would have resulted in the breaking of the strike and tie-up, but the ieaders counselled a delay for mediation, and the vote was put off until Monday's Meeting. But {t 1s said that nearly all| the delegates are strongly in favor of| jputting their men back to work at ence. They have been locked out since @fay § Many ‘f them hav- exhausted thelr éavings. Few have any sympathy with the teamsters of lumber wagons who have struck in demand for more pay and fewer hours. Teamstre’ Organtzation Weak. Another argument was that the efforts to successfully or- @anize the teamsters had failed; that there were more teamsters who wero Mot members of the unlon than there ate members, and that most of the team- wters are not in sympathy with the few Wo are striking. ‘The United Board had accepted the teamaters into membership in the belie? | that all the teamsters in the business “would join the union. Tnasmuch as the Toammers’ Union itselt was a wenk Body, the delegates expressed themselves 210,000 skilled men in idleness because of thé claims of a few hundred un- @kitied and not thoroughly organized wwagon drivers. ‘When the meeting was over it was the unanimous opinion of the delegates that Monday ‘would see the end of the strike. With the end of the tie-up business in the building trades will again boom. Work on thirty-four public schools will be pushed forward for completion In the fall. Hundreds of other partially built structures will be finished. In the time “the sympathetic strikers have been idle Mt 40 estimated that they have lost over ‘$18,000,000 in wage: a i THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING. MAY 30, 1903. COLUMBIA AND CONST CITY HONORS MEMORY OF NATION’S DEAD. (Continued from First Page.) staff. The troops and other organiza- |tions were then dismissed, and imme- dlutely avter the review the dedicatory ceremonies at the monument began Minn Roosevelt Wan Prenent. Governor Odeli arrived at the re- lowing stand at the Plaza with his ull staff, and war escorted by the Old Guard in full uniform and with thelr full band. A uniformed company of the Society of the War of 1812 formed the guard of honor. When Gen. Greene, who was with the Governor, reached the reviewing stand, ho saw Miss Alice Roosevelt sitting tn An obscure corner of the stand. He es- corted the President's daughter and two women who were with her into the acc- ‘tlon set apart for the relatives of Gen. Sherman. Willlam E, Dodge, chairman of the Sherman Statue Committee of the Chamber of Commerce, being absent be- cause of {Iness, Cornelius N. Biss pre- sided ‘ After the band had played “America” Archbishop Farley offered prayer. Then Mr. Bligs tendered the statue to Mayor Low, who accepted It in be- half of the olty. After his address Mayor Low turned the statue over to the care of William R. Willcox, Com- missioner of Parks ‘This part of the programme completed, the band struck up ‘The Star Spangld Banner.” Secretary Root's Speech. Chairman Bliss next introduced the orator of the day, Elthu Root, Secretary of War, who mado a stirring address. Secretary Root said ip part: “The part that Sherman played in that great struggle was not merely courag- eous, loyal, devoted, briliant. It was essentinily decisive. Erase it from the pages of history, and no human mind can divine how the blanks would have been filled. No one will dare to say another could have done what Sherman did. Shiloh and Corinth and Vicksburg and Chattanooga and Missionary Ridge (Views of Some Leaders. crowned him with laurels. ‘The desperate ‘Wiliam H. Farley, Secretary of the United Board of Bullding Trades, speaking of the probability of the sup- port being withdrawn from the material wagon drivers, sai “The Material Drivers’ Union ts rep- feented in the United Board by hew Rohan and James Geelan, two leade Thelr influence | will ly determine the attitude of tho ness agents of the thirty-nine affiliated In the United Board.” ward Kelly, who is chairman of the Committee of Five appointed by the Onited Board to obtain evidence against the material dealers of violation of the law. said: Ja my opinion the material wagon vers should be supported by the TMinitedl Board. Whether they are or not f€ will make no difference in our work.” James Sherlock Davis, Vice-President the Lumbermen’s Association. is of the opinion that the tle-up is near its e and said he had been expecting ‘the withdrawal of the support for some Gays. “WwWhen this 1s done, and the agree ments presented to us to be signed a: minares everybody will go back to It is absurd for an organization that has a membership of 63,000 to be P,and locked out ‘because It hag itself with 200 men who are not even skilled mechanics, and with whom ‘they have nothing in common. | ‘Ine Reamsters may come back as individua’ @nd there will be no question as to wn ther they are union or non-union m ——_ SHIPPING NEWS. Vou ALMANAC FOR TO-DAY. THE TIDpS. ‘High Water, Low Water. AM, PM. AM. Piaf. 10.16 10. 4 4.2 1087 9 4450 451 i223 12.60 «6.17 6.38 5 GaN Gae PORT OF NEW YORK. ARRIVED. Perry. Bonthampton . Havens Demerara Nama Gantos DUE TO-DAY. Bolivia, Gibralter, de Mars in 1899 and and resourceful campaign which ended in the capture of Atlanta established his placo in history as a great com- mander. “The march from Atlanta to the Sea, and still on from Savannah northward through the Carolinas to Raleigh and the surrender of Johnston, ranks among the great and impressive mill- tary events of history. But more than all these, in the general maintenance and conduct of the war, the powerful influence of his military genius, the strong support of his indomitable will, the forward impulse of his tremendous energy, the singular nobility of his un- selfish character, which, meeting like characteristics in Grant, enabled them to work together like brothers—all these made the personality of Sherman an essenilally decisive part of the great consummation which determined taht America was to be free and united." ITUTION WORKING OUT TO THE LINE, AND RELIANCE, CLOSE-HAULED, HER GREAT CLUB TOPSAIL SET. a trip up the river the at the foot of One Hund: Afth street and services will at the grave of Gen, Admiral Farragu VICTIMS DROWN IN RIVER FLOOD. Dix, in Trinity grave in Wood- morning by the members of Farragut (Continued ‘from First Page.) 3. A, R, Members of the alumni of Manhattan College met in the Church of the An- nunciation at One Hundred and Thirty- fitth street and Broi y And attended the twel ridges in the city onl yone is open for at 10 o'clock “second annual deceased members of the association. Other celobrations not of a memortal day character were tho observance of the hundred and twen ——_ | DISASTER FEARED IN | KANSAS CITY DISTRICT. KANSAS CITY, flood. situation along the banks ¢ Missouri ang Kaw Rivers here and qost e serious than on yesterd mencement exercises of Now York Uni- {Presentation pendent Sons MoManus May fest! Fifteenth Assembly Park meatal tho children of the cursions were sched- organizations. Many went t record of 1881 when the rain The dedicatory ceremonies wers brought to an end by Bishop Potter pronouncing the benediction. The Sherman statue is considered to be the crowning achievement of Augus- tus St. Gaudens. It was exhibited in plaster {n the Paris salon of the Charmg there put in a place of honor, A reproduction of it in staff at the Pan-American Exposition brought a special medal to the sculptur William T. Sherman ‘Thackara, who unveiled the monument, is the son ot Eleanor Sherman, who is the wife of A. W. Thackara, the United States Con- aul at Ho France, Immediate membars of the Sherman family in the grand stand were the General's only surviving brother, Major Hoyt Sherman, of Des Moines, ia.; his son, P. Tecumseh Sherman; his daugn- ters, Rachel, who is Mra, Paul Thorn- dike, of Boston, and Fileanor, who 1s Mrg, Thackara. Mr, and Mra, ‘vnorn- dike were realy Perturoed | decause their gon, . T. Sherman ‘Unornaike, developed symptoms of acariet ever this morning and had to view the cere- monies from the window of his room in the Hotel Netherland. atner Thomas Ewing Sherman. the General's GOING STSAMSHIPS. BAILED TO-DAY. New Orleana, of Govannan, | Mostos, wortoie*™*™ eldest son, who is a member of the Jesuit Order, was not present, Mrs. Gen.’ Milet and Mrs, Colgate Hoyt. nieces of the General, and his nephews, Thomas Ewing, jr., and Will. fam C. Ewing, were present, as were Mr. and Mra, Walter Damrosch, James G. Biaine and many other relatives and family connections. Whitelaw Reld, Chi ox-Judge Jeroloman Tracy were among t ed off. Thous: doubtless be rea’ damage so far sustained morning and afte at the Polo Grou ta and the Intereo at Berkeley Oval. gee, MORE THAN 10,000 IN BROOKLYN'S PARADE. | » the Harlom Regat-| at Kansas City Nexiate champlonships i It is estimated that 2.500 persons five miles of #10 month of te MISSOURI RIVER TOWNS INUNDATED. Tn Brooklyn more than ten thouasn the parade at Willtamsburg, ‘and marched past the stands in front of the Hanov Club, et eBaford avenue and Rodney The members of Troop C, the Signal Corps, the veterans ty-seventh and - teenth, Twenty-third ang Firty-seventh Regiments were in line. was a noticeable feature of the parado that a far greater number of| the old soldiers rode in acrringes, y. there were hundreds who insisted on marching over the long course, continued to-day with no indication f rn half of the Brate has been thoroughly soaked and rg of damage by the floods continue to come veing in towns the Thirteenth, Missour! River tBiiffs (and Missouri valley is a lake and the water te beginy railfoad peas. —.—-- 16 DROWNED FROM BOATS. Plantatlog Workers Thrown Inte west side physician, was murdered by Water hy Waves from Steamer, and Willlamsburg to the final reviewing reception at Commissioner and county ome Grand Army men of Brooklyn Micha ‘esented a handsome to Gen. James ——— New Bronx Route to North Beach, The new route to North Beach from One Hundred Younge and other On behalf of the negroes composing «wo, faanitios af dot+ bn inuds, Were drowned in pt Hiver near Pecan Potnt,| wes asking him where he had been i Taey| when fwormed enfered the store. Both ntation after dark in glerk, thinking th gives the patrons of the Bronx an 0; portunity of viaiting North Beach w pei Aten ds) y 30-—At a meoting| fre on Dr. Forbes and fled without at. at Grant's Tomb. ‘The neual memorial exercises at Gen. Grant's Tom, in Riverside Park, were hed at 2.80 o'clock this afternoon. At the same time the Dr. MeGlynn Monu- ment Agsociation devorated the grave Dr, MoGiynn in C Cemetery. through, the borough o} thence to the Beach. ft One Hundred ‘and ‘vairty-tourth all-water route trom arth, Beach and ¢ varied and amusis Bittastions at North Beach are now in # Manhattan and | Of represéntative Prohtbitton an@ tetas | passed indorsing: the bovdicrs, as a étnor on the ndh-par= Hsan, anti-boodle and anti-whiskey plate Pleasant, wal, John A. Dix. Peat, G. A. ss leavin, OLD JUMEL MANSION TO BECOME MUSEUM. City WIIl Spend $164,000 on the Historic Property on Wash- ington Heights. ‘The old Jamel mansion and grounds on Washington Heights will soon pass into the hands of the city. The Board of Estimate and Apportionment ay proved the plan and Park Commissiont Willeox @ heartily in tts favor, ©A "pa and his ‘al museum will be estab- ed there, A great number of persons representing d the meeting to consider the project and it was de- led to spend $164,000 for the property, around js bounded by One Hundred and Bixtieth an@ One Hundred and second streets and by Edgecombe histo: 1 socfeties attend Sixty avenue and Jumel terrace, An effort was made to authorize the purchame of property surrounding the Plymouth Church on Columbia Heights, |Trooklyn, as a park fn honor of the | memory of Henry Ward Beecher. Cha nut_as far as| Mr, Beec Fornes, after being told who er Was, obsected to the plan, saying ne ald not believe his reputation was of enough national importance to warrant the plan. The matter was re- ferred to Park Commissioner Young, of Brooklyn. CALLED “HANDS UP,” .. THEN SHOT DOCTOR, Chicago Police Believe a Woman Is at the Bottom of This Remark- able Assassination. CHICAGO, May %.—\While he was oliatting with a clerk in the drug store at No. 42 West Randolph street, last evening, De. J. M. Forbe a well-known two men, Dr. Forbes had just returned to his hone after a mtyeteriuus Abpenoe of ve days, Hrnwat Semsratt, the clerk, carriod revolvers, “Hold up your hands! sald one of them. The physiclan and the dfug were robbers, com- Piled, The two strangers then opened tempting to take any money hey ve gol me’ at last.” were the dylng word’ of their victim, Mie motive for the murder isa mys- [oD Deb alt gis thouen to have. Been 08 site-fog revenge, ‘Tho i dy, treat police ate were on the theory that a woman figures in the Cry ere f 'RELIANCE | LEADS TO (Continued from First Page.) a substantial lead. Columbia was to leeward. At 12.51, while off Hunting- ton Harbor, Constitution and Reliance made short tacks. Columbia was stand- ing swith thom, - At 12.58 Constitution, wihfle on port tack, ‘crossed the bow of Columbia, shoWing she was in the lead of the old defender. At 1.02 o'clock Columbia went on the port tack and headed towam the Long Island shore. ‘Rellance was on the star- board tack and Capt. Rhoades followed with Conatitution. “Both boats stood across Columbia's bow. After a short tack to starboard Reliance and Colum- dla came about n the port tack. Rell- ance was ahead of Constitution. Constitution Ready Early, Constitution was at her moorings at Hempstead Harbor, 100 feet away from Columbia at sunrise to-day and looked none the worse for her mishap ot ‘Thurs- day, when a puff of wind carried away her topmast. It did not take the ship- builders at City Island long to eling a new spar in place of the old one, as the damage was not nearly as bad as at first thought. Wher Capt. Rhodes boarded the boat with his crew there was a stiff sailing breeze out of the east, which blew at the rate of ten knots an hour, It was what yachtsmen would call r nice sall- ing breeze. The velocity was about the same as on Thursday, when Columbia and Constitution began such a promis- ing race. Visitors first drove out to the New York Yacht Club Station No. 10 and had a near-by look at Columbia and Constitu- tlon. It desn’t need expert experience in yacht building to see at a giance the beautiful lines ofthe sloops. The crowds stood around the landing watching both crews at work, and then as each ninety- footer raised ‘ner metrsail, they scat- tered to various zotnts along Peacock ‘and Matinnicocs Points to see the face. Another reason for the big crowd to- day was the fact that to-diy’s race ts the last of the series, Next Races Off the Hook, From here the yachts will go to Bris- tol for a thorough overhauling, and then, on June 8 10 and 12, they will race off Sandy Hook, where Conetitu- tion and Reliance will have a better op- portunity to demonstrate which is the better sloop. In all caleulations yachtsmen do not now include Columbia and will continue to ignore the old champion until she makes a better showing than she has in her cont No one seems to understand what is the trouble with the Columbia. One New York Yacht Club member said to-day: “I cannot believe that Rellance ts so far superior to Columbia that she can beat the old champlon by fifteen min- utes, and yet that has happened. On Thursday the new boat beat Columbia by elgnt and one-half minutes, I w the committee would shift skippers. With Charley Barr on Constitution I think that yaoht at*least would show her heels to Reliance. |COUPLE HURT, BUT NO HOSPITAL FOR THEM, Man and Woman Thrown Out of Buggy on Ocean Parkway, but In- sist on Driving Away. Mystery surrounds the {dentity of a stylishly-dressed man and woman who were thrown from a carriage and me jured in Ocean Parkway near Avsaue M late last night, Although the wor. an’s ankle was sprained and the man's shoulder was dislocated they refused to 0 to a hospital, They gave the names of John and Mary Smith but would give no address, The couple were driving a_ spirited horse in Ocean Parkway. Tho man was evidently unused to driving and hancied the animal poorly, The horse Suddenly shied at something in the street und both man and woman wero thrown from the seat of the Nght bugey. A polloeman ran to help them and cadled for ambulance ‘trom the Kings County Hospital, ‘The surgeon oth badly hurt.” He pulled the ‘# shoulder ‘into place and bound the woman's ankle, urging both to go to the hospital, Both refused to go and gave what the police belleve fictiious names, They sald they and and wife. The policeman ambulance surgeon helped them Into thelr bugay and they drove aw: toward Brooklyn, $$ Mrn. George Alfred Townsend Dead WASHINGTON, May 90.—Mrs. George FIRST TURN. | Hanged Despite Desperate Appeal to Governor. TWO WERE OLD FRIENDS. DALLAS, Tex. May..%.—John Shutt has patd the penalty for the murder of Mr. Whitenor’. Despite is’ wealth and influence and a -Ifélong acquaintance with Gov. Lanham; he was hanged in the courtyard here on the day appointed, At midnight he called up the Governor on the long-distance telephone at Aus- tin and pleaded try vain for a commu- tation of sentence. Shutt's lwwyers had tried every pos- sible method to get A reprieve for the murderer. In the counts they had plead- ed for n new trial and for several days had based thelr hope on the friendship between Shutt and Gov. Lanham. In the afternoon they recelved word that the execution must be as planned. The word was taken to the murderer in the death cell, and, although the time seomed short, he was not dismayed, He asked permission of tho Sheriff to talk to the Governor on the long-distance telephone and the request was granted. The Sheriff himself called up Austin, but it was midnight before he succeeded in getting the Governor at the other end of the wire. 0 Shutt was taken from his cell to the Sheriff's office. There was a perfect connection, and for ten minutes he plead- ed his case with the Governor. He asked for but a few weeks, that addi- tional testimony might be secured by his counsel. Not one word of the friendship exist- ing between the two men for years was Ure, and the Governor listened in the attitude of an official, fighting back the emotions that came upon him for the man he had known in bovhood, with whom he had gone to schuol and who had been his etanch political advocate, when the murderer had finished his argument Gov, Lanham told him that he had reviewed the case thoroughly trying to find an excuse to grant a re- prieve, but ‘aad found none. ‘The Governor, his yolce broken with sobs, tried to console his friend, la- menting the fact that his official ‘duty compelled Mim to refuse life to one he had known and loved so long. Shutt assured him that he would die with no malice in his ‘neart, and hang- ing up the receiver, turned sadly away. He told the keepers that his last hope was gone and he was ready to die. Thinking ‘that, the Governor would perhaps change his mind and commute the sentence at the last, the Sheriff delayed the execution. "The minutes seamed hours in the jail until at last the murderer asked that the exeoution might proceed. His last measage was to Goy. Lanham, assuring him again that he died with #he ame friendsnip of their boyhood. a RICH MEN LIKE THE TRAIN. Millionaires Give Watchea to En- wineer and Conductor of “Brokers! Exprena. Benjamin Day, engineer, and David Sanderson, conductor, of what is known as the Brokers’ Express on the Lack- awanna Rallroad, are to-day wearing new gold watches, the presents of their wealthy and pleased patrons, The Brokers’ Express has left Morris. town, N. J., each woek-day morning at 8.22 o'clock for twenty years, During those twenty years Day and Sanderson have been In charge of it, and of course they know personally nearly every ono of the passengers who live in Morris- ite and who do business Qn New York y. The presentation ‘took place at th Morristown Club last night before 2 score of millionaires well known in New York. Alexander Harvey Tiers mado the presentation speci and President Truesdale, of the Lackawanna, told how much the success of a railroad depend. on the popularity of its employees Sanderson proved a versatile ‘story- teller by humorously telling how he had handled the crowis in twenty years wnt he watched them “grow fat and rich. CANADA CUP DEFENDER HAS BEEN LAUNCHED. New Bont Is Christened Strathcona by Owner’s Sister. OAKVILLE, Ont., May %.—The Can- ada cup defender nas been suocesstully | Jaunched. She was christened Strath- cona by Mra, R. 8, Smelite, sister of the owner, Norman Macrea, The defender will be rigged out im. mediately and will be taken to Toronto on June 6, Her general dimensions are as follows: Water line, 40 feet; over all, 69 feet 3 inches; beam, 13 feet 8 Inches; draught, 8 feet 7 inches. and Jong nose and narrow a broad nose. I it fs don id all pain er leaving marker Any sign of mere than yor. Conmultation and book 8 free, Ss write personally to Alfred Towasend, wife of the well- known newspaper correspondent, dled in this city to-day. Mrs, Townsend was | Mine Bessie Evans Rhodes. Sho was through her grandmother Evans of the Welsh stock of Marian Bvans, (“George Ellot.") She was married to Mr. Tow- fo the Aust ran igo) war ustrian- % 1am, ‘The burial. iv! niladelohia, + a ate ey ‘ mi DIE HUGHESJOHN HUGHES, aged 78, Ot ie reat- dence, 67 Legnard at., Greenpoint, Brooklyn, Funeral Monday morning (6 Bt. Ane thoay's Roman ‘Catholle Church, Manhattan mentioned. Shutt was pleading for his | Cavanaugh for hours went to Borton' Grove and found his body. baggy, puffy eyelids, eradicate wrinkles, lines and furrows—in faet all | of tl atures are painlessly, scientifically and eatisfactorily corrected and made to conform artistically and harmoniously with their surroundings, Come and see how T ently remove moles, warts, wens, red veins, moth blotches, End all other Uneightly, humiliating blemishes on, former existence. M. perience of thirt; rears is of it value to 1 ‘{ntn’ 20.000 each Your, and what I have done for cay’ of inten tton demos 7 JOHN H. WOODBURY D. |, 22.4 B45t; NEW YORK, PLEA FOR LIFE FOLLOWS YOUTH BY ‘PHONE VAIN, SHE AIDS 10 Ole J6hn Shutt, Condemned in Mary McAndrews and John Texas for a Murder, Is Cavanaugh, Children, Ended Life by, Agreement Because They Could Not Wed. ‘SHE SOOTHED HIM AT DEATH. SCRANTON, Pa., May %.—The par ents Who opposed their marriage are burying to-day the bodies of Mary Mo- Andrews, elghteen years old, and Johm Cavanaugh, her nineteen-year-old lover. The youthful sweethearts took their own lives to be united in death because others cought to keep them apart in Ife. ‘Thélr suicide was planned when they learned that John McAndrews, the girl'a father, had gone to the marriage license oMce and left their names with the clerk, forbidding him to issue a license, | as they were both under age. Tha’ night Mary slipped out of the house and met her sweetheart.. They attended a theatré and after the performance they walked to a lonely ,spot near the foot of West Mountain, where in the thick underbrush they decided to end thelr Ives. Evidently Cavanaugh relented and tried to eave his sweetheart, for he drank the entire contents of a bottle of jaudanum. The girl watched nis death struggle, sitting beside him ia the darkness and solitude of the moun- tainside until death closed his eyes, Then #he covered his face with her handkarchiet and walked to her hime. It was after daybreak whan arp en+ tered and her mother upbraidea ter for having remained away from home all night. The girl said nothing ana went to her work as usual in Klosa'e eltic mill. During the morning, the stfain became too much for her and she had togive up. She said good-by to all her girl chums and was taken home. While her mother went out to summon @ physician, aMry hastily scrawled thi not “Good-by. Forgive me if I did wrong, as I wish to be forgiven in heaven. Do not accuse John Cavanaugh. He ie gutity of no crime. By this time he ts on his way. You will find his dead body in the rear of Borton's.” In a kitchen closet #he found a bottle of carbolic acid and drank it. 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