The evening world. Newspaper, March 3, 1906, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

* BIG CROWD IN RAIN COURT EXONERATES AT STAPLES'S BURIAL —— Opening of the Family Vault in St. Paul’s Attracts Much Attention. Even the aotivity of Sewer Broadway Passes once in a while, and when the torle cemetery of St. Paul's where are buried some of the lived in what 4s now the city Was sill @ wilderness, Service In the Church. In spite of the great pownpour of rain Dundreds of people crowded about the railing om tthe roadway aide of the cemetery, just inside of which is the Staples vault To protect the vault from the eyes of the curtous a of canvas hed been stretohed the entire distance But this did not deter the morbid from peering In. Several men, most of them Well dressed, boldly pushed the canvas back and attempted to peer into the gtaveyard. In a moment a great crowd had collected and it was necessary for the dozen or more extra policemen to @rive them back. Inside the sombre church the fimeral services were being conducted over the body. ‘The church was crowded to its capacity with friends of the dead man, & i en of schemes to get inside the ceme- ry. When he crowd was told by the police to keep quiet, as the funeral cortege Was coming fro mthe church to the vault, they obeyed. It was the quietest | | crowtl Broadway has sem in « long ture. It seemed to be tmpreased with the solemnity o fthe occasoin, and with the main beating down upon their heads many men in the crowd removed their hats. It wns an flpressive sight. yen Wagons !n the street stopped for @ min- u ute and the drivers in wonder at the unusual One man said it was the quietest five mutates ‘he je aa ever seen on Broadway. The onk Who saw the body of Emnest f apes lowered into the vault were tie sm- fediate family and a few close friends. The eager eyes of the auititude outaide the gates wore excluded. us was the first interment that had taken place in’ the "veut ia ‘owenty years, though there is on an average ono interment a year in the churohyard. Ectore being lowered in the vault the |” cuske: was securely sealed and then in an tron box, walcn was also sealed, —— Accused of Beating Boy, the room Julius Vogelson appeared as complain- ant against }and Blizabevh R. Casselle, sisters, who are teachers in Public School No. 109, where young Julius alleges they beat and otherwise abused him. The teach- ers appeared on summonses sworn out by Utth father, at No. It} of the alleged struggle Jullus's face was | scratched and black eye when the; to-day with two score teachers and pupils, that had gathered he called the com- piainants into his private chambers and heard the case there, exonerated the teachers and eald to you any {noonventence in this matter. You should have had this boy arrested on the day he assaui @istinctly understood about her son be- sides his record as a model of the gen- tle and rule-abiding schoolboy was his| record as a life saver. last June he rescued another drowning in the swimming pool at the eohool and was awarded a medal by the Board of Education. case itself. Feb. 2, he was in a line of boys cn thelr way to the gymnasium and thet tm passing the roam occupied by Miss Catherine open the door. md asked who did this. Since it was just Birthday and the teachers she fulness of the Father of His C did it," she said to the line of boys. Wasn't no George Washington, that bunch. whon he referrad ald Miss Caseciie paivately SMa J Julius | was made him stand for two hours with his tage egainst the wall in the princlpal’s office. found the monitor in wie schoolyard and tovk vengeance. He Githerine Casseile and h ground, where they claved that Miss Hlizabeth stepped oni scratches in eviden Miss Ca SCHOOL TEACHERS Misses Casselle Explain to Magistrate. Harlem Court looked Mke a school- to-day when thirteen-year-old the Misses Catherine R. Jullus, his mother and his simon Vogelson, @ tailor living 1812 ‘Third avenue, As a result] Miss Catherine had a came into court ‘When the Magistrate saw the orowd He completely “I wish to apologize if I have given One thing Mra. Vogelson wanted it She said that boy trom | Not George Washington, Jr. Julius was more interested in the He said thet on Thursday, Casselle somebody pushed Miss Casselle came out before Washington's had been eldeat, he two days jaying stress on the cherry tree reminded the buys of, thet un tiy. “George Washington would teil if ne “there dr, in Nobody said a word.’ cucnnItor 0 “But, as young Jullus sald, According to Julie, the culprit. ‘Then, he sald, she Battle in the Yard. When his punishment was over he that Miss sister found thus engaged and threw him to the {name {8 known wherever labor is or- THE WORLD: SATURDAY EVENING, MARCH 3, 1 906. WILL DANCE $1,000 INTO STRIKERS’ FUND Local Unions’ Ball To-Night to Raise Money for Striking Capmakers of Detroit. FIGHTING OPEN SHOP.) Miss Schneidermann, Leader of | Local Workers, Working Hard . for Affair’s Success, This is the night the big ball for the Detroit strikers will begin in the Grand Central Palace. While the young men and women of the United Cloth Hat and Cap Makers’ Union are | dancing to the musty of an orchestra thelr coffers will be filling ta the tune | of “Down fala the Open Shop! And, f all this p: ral en- ‘als san to help the striking hat and cap makers in Detrolt there Is a re- markable young woman, who only last year was the moving factor in the big strike which paralyzed the hat ai cap manufacturers in New York. She 1s Miss Rose Schneldermanm, and her ganized. Miss Schneidermann is extremely modest, She is pretty and unusually inteJigent, and talks well on labor condition, because she knows about them. “We are giving this ball to-night because we are determined to lielp the Detroit strikers,” ehe sald to-day. We hope to raise $1,000, and we rely on every member of organized labor to turn out and help us,” Last year, when Miss Schneldermann and her colleagues gave a ball for the New York strikers, they raised over $8,000, Everybody om the east side was in sympathy with the strik- ing hat and cap makers, and turned out in such force that it was neces- sarv to bar the doors. ‘Miss Schneldermann, although she re- u (on) Rosd Schne/WE7 MGM. fuses to take the Sredit, is really the cause of the open shop proving a fullure in New York She is’ the only Woman member on the National Exec utlve Board of the Capmakers’ Union, and she is one of the hardest workers in the union. There are six locals here and 3,000 members. Talk of a strike In New ‘York Miss Sohnetdermann does not believe well founded. back to work last “the employers prom- When we went year,” she sald, ised us to discharge those they had en- gaged in ces as soon as their terms expired. The time ts up now, ae, ie think everything will be arranged rlptt ‘Ou ‘see. we are not anxious for trouble ‘We simply try to protect our- selves, Miss Schneidermann, yin helping the many vicissitudes. er present employer was backward. about Riving her work at first, lest she shoul. un strife. Later he acknowledged that since her active te ad stir | moth she was one of the quietest and best wrokers te had, What Open Shop Means. “The ope Toy means deuth to us,’ said Miss Schpoldermann, ** understand what it means to have scabs conle in and reduce the scale of wages, We We only want what is right. he hop means lower wages and the conditions which existed before labor organizuiyns. We cannot return to those days and live. It would mean that while employers promise to em- ploy union and” non-union workers alike, they would really employ the cheapest. It would be a death blow to our struggle for cleaner conditions, the suppression of the sweat whop and the demand for treatment as human beings.” ‘Th uN mainstay of fer home, at ‘No. 69 Becond re she lives with her two .brothers and one small Elizabeth put her. cheek to make him ee on, tes ech pets Miso Catherine showed the scars, on | her hand, When the janitor arrived he found ‘the boy cursing the teachers ang chasing them about the yard as he slugged them with his books. When this story had been borne by other teachers and Dy Miss Sutia| Burns, the asstsiant principal, Magis- trate Wahle dismissed the miaan | tithing to Mrs, Vogelsion. ‘he ald: “Your boy 1s too bright for he, pub: le schdols. He has been expelled, a: {t ts better that he should stay away. ae HOTEL STEWARDS’ BALL. Proceeds of Event Next Monday to Go to Charity. ‘The stewards and superintendents em- beat him. He de his face, and he showed some 8 ‘i, the, struggle | nerine got a blac! cl hai be Re eet ae tae a catmple, | nie, and hora anid ule ee poor Goor, Vicar of St. Paul's Chapa. ee Coleman. Mrs. Voxelson said | Member of Many Clubs. “Wh she said, “Jullus was alw: Ernest Staples, who was sixt a good boy. even if he was a little live- years old, was educated at Heid 1 ind was’ a member of twenty clave, among them the New York Yacht Club, the Union Club and the Algonquin Club of Boston. “His father was the founder of the Union Club and was an intimate | {rlend of the late Commndore Vander- bilt, Mr. Staples distinguisned himself ¢ the Civil war, and while In ac- ara. Sle A Fances Staples and . Wheeler Aspel @ of Capt. Whe As Ms oe always sending bad reporis home. Juvenile Asvium for a while. expelled him fight last mon Jullus beatt on them an in fina | With his books whieh he hell inva strap, | He was so vio! But the teachers were Por peace we sent him to the, ‘Then they frém school after that » and 1 decided es was e to do something to protect hi ‘he sisters said that en they found monitor he turned pound them ly and playful. he sake of the be, lent that Miss Hlzabeth enitor, She could For she returned she he found the toy, had knocked her sister died yest down and was lying on the her hand in his se ine was screaming with pate, and !Mss| und with mouth. Cather- | STOLEN SME 8 DUMPED IN STREE Burglars Carry Away Strong Box and Loot It at Leisure. The police of the east side are look- ing for a gung of burglars who early to-day opened a “tin safe” belonging to Simuel Schechter, @ butcher, of No, 66 Seventh street, and, after Daly's on Monday night in bassy Ball,” tus ‘Thom comedian's measure eo well with ‘The| matic Arts, Barl of Pawtucket.” “The Embassy Ball” are laid in Wash- fronase ington. of the play complications have been} Hdith Blackw started in Paris, when Capt. Hawarden- Kellie, then an attaehe of the Britlah| to-night and the Manhattan Embassy go to TWO NEW PLAYS FOR THE FIRST WEEK OF LEN1 HERE will bo no suggestion of the Lenten period in the two new offerings at the theatres next week, One will be an American comedy, | “'T! the other an adaptation of a German| Wi! also be given. farce. Lawrance D'Orsay will be seen at, “The Em- written for him by Augus- » Who took the English The scenes of A year previous to the opening in that city, 1s prompted to the aid of a young American only money It contained, $14 Russian rubles, carted tt si; and left it dn the street in No. 902 Hifth street, Tt wi taking the worth of x blocks front of one of the jobs such as were @one a year ago, when the detectives invented the name of “tin’ this particular sort of strong safe for box and averred that it could be ripped with a can opener. The safe was found by Policeman Rohloas, of the Union Market station, ‘The bottom had been cut out, ‘The outer plate of iron had been cut away with chisel, Then a layer of an inch of con- crete had been ahipped away, evidently | {ened that of her intimate friend. who with an instrument Ike an icepick, ington from France. he complt- Finally, the Interior plate of zinc hud| cations that follow keep oan Mr, 'D' include deen snipped out with chisels, From Mirlam Nesbitt, axe ot rest papers in the safe the identity of its| Robinson, Marian Barne} ling: aa Yep be | Hose, a Hubbard, Waiter iltchoock owner was learned, and the police of the Fifth street station were notified. woman who has been arrested for rid- ing a bicycle without the license re- quired by French law. He helps her by escorting her to the City Hall and there signing what he supposes to be a bicycle permit, but which @ careless official has made out on @ marriage contract. The captain is transferred to Washington, and on receipt of news from England that his engagement to a lady of title in that counrty bas been broken promptly becomes engaged to an American gin who, unknowa to the captain, 1s the lady] com hg helped in Paris, but who instead of aigning her own name to the licenee Thieves Knew His Habits. They found that the thieves viously habits. Being « bul cauwinted with Schedfiter’s left his shop at sunset last night and were ob- tober, he Would not do business until dari to-day, lives at No, 62 the burglars had a Seventh stne ad} who, Clear felt ‘The( home, writes long letters to his wife rooms behind tie butcher jaan) are ecupled by Benjamin Fecht in’ the same Dullding, but’ he “heard no_nolse during the nigi Beery the he hall door of the tenement, the tan floor of which ts Schechter’ Then they had From all: indicatons suey the safé, which weigi P Str ae ot eee ae 1 . “ingyen to. indicat aw whe room wagon, t are tore state their “oan id jow from sf or : ad burst open the| Alps, oor leading from: the hall to the shop.| 9 book on the sitbject, and recounts the icked wD led it out ere baa tl Francs Wilson will come to the Cri- terion Theatre on Tuesday evening in ‘The Mountain Climber, farce, by Kurts Kraats, adapted by Leo Di ein, Mr. Wilson will be seen in the character of Montague Sibsey, to explain his absences from relating imaginary adventures in the Alps. She believes his yarns and pre- pares to have him feted on hs return. burgiars had fim-| she also hes bis letters published. The) an4 gay decetver has never even seen the but he posta himself by reading thrilling tales as his own experiences. ‘Whe local Alpine Club becomsa inter- ested, and Sibsey finally finds himself forced to go to the Alps to defend his tion @ three-ect| 7 ployed in the various hotels and clubs, ing the membership of the 3 | Stewards’ Association are looking for- ward with great anticipation to their annual reunfon and ball, to be held at ‘Terrace Garden Monday evening, The ballroom will be decorated with flags and plants. An orchestra of thirty-five will furnish the music. All nhe boxes have been disposed of to peo- ple well known in club and hotel cir-| cies. The proceeds from the sale of| poxes and tickets will be donated to the ‘Denevolent fund of the organization, Sues Lived Stx Days with Broken Neck, WILKES-BARRE, Pa.. March 3.—Af- ter ving 61x days with his neck broken, several of thé vertebrae belng crushed by a forty-foot fall, Eygene Rocosk! ie enday in Lackawanna Hospi- tal. His remarkable vitality pugzled the physicians, who do not realize he could have survived the fall itself. Wheateroft Dramatic Sahool at the Princess Theatre on Friday afternoon. Two one-act plays, “Saint Cecelfa,"" by Pauline Phelps and Marion Short, and “The Aspirant," by Evangeline M. ‘Lent, The, first performance in English of the five-act drama “The Uhlan,” det! ing wih Incidents of the Franco-Prus- sian War, by Tola Dorian, will be given at the Empire Theatre on Thursday af- ternoon at the final matinee of the sea- son by the American Academy of D het ereae Churehiil has rewnitten. phe, t of “The Tile Mart," and 1 night Miss Viola Kellogg will | suce: Doreth Revell in the role 0} “Dhe Triangle, Rupert Hugtes's unsuccessful play, wit be withdrawn ‘Dheatre will remain closed for two weeks, when “Charley's Aunt’ will be revived, with Htienne Girardot in his old role. eri Laat aga of Zenda" bigs be played. the stock company at Proc- tor'’s b" eh Avenue Theatre, with A, H. Van Buren and Amelia Bingham In the leading roles. College Widow," with Frances Ring in the title role, will be the attcac- tion at the Grand Qpera-House. The company includes many of the original cast, amone them Gertrude Quinlan and Edwin Holt, Blanche Walsh will play her final New York engagement in ‘The Woman in the Case” at the Rexiers pores tiawe: Be Belle of Ri it ea! ‘ a om ra eels” e play ne Silian a, or % 6 posck company at the mockville prot Johnny yon at id Mayme Gehrue will come to ‘the West End Theatre with “Lovers and Lunatics.” will be at the will be seen in Service @t the Metropolis ele Theatre will have a jorered son propery tt fa ahs Smart Set." King of the Wild West, Suaee 8 of Mystery," at the at: with the doings of ‘The Old GiSien Mi 11} the ‘Third Avenue Theatre, “it *teP at phe. pany Duch Company will be “phe. Gott ‘Tho, Gotham will have the Renta ave “Gullbsr ll give the 1 te Gui wi ve the last of her recitals of old French songs at the Lyoeum_ 7 eat to-morrow nig) Bohemian Violtntst, Bilen Beach Yaw, soprano, will be heard with Victor Herbert's Orchestra at the Hippodrome to-morrow night. VAUDEVILLE ATTRACTIONS, At Hammerstein's will be Arthur Dunn and company, the Elght Vassar Aldrich | run BRONX GETS RELIEF FROM ONE CAR EVIL Corporation Counsel Instruct-| ed to Enforce Penalties for Improper Service. Relief is in sight for the people of the Bronx, who have made frequent complaints against the wretched car service after midnight. The Corpora- tion Counsel has been instructed to bring suit to Inforce the penalties that the law imposes for failure to properly thelr cars. Later on the same system will be applied ta Brooklyn and other sections of Greater New York that may call for It. Frank J. Flynn, of No. 161 Gerard avenue, !s responsible for this new move, He 4s out late at night on busi- ness and uses the Jerome avenue cars, run by the Union Railroad Company, to reach his home. According to the com- plaint, which he forwarded to the Board of Aldermen as well as to the Comptroller, the Union Railroad Cam- pany had at one time been running cars on Jerome avenue under an eighty- minute headway, Sult was instituted against the com- trienne, and "The Girl Behind the Drum.” The bill at the Fifty-elghth | Street Theatre will Include James J. Corbett, In a one-act comedy, “A Thief in the Night; Dave Lewis and com- pahy, Therese Renz, the horsewoman, who was at the Hippodrome; Eddie Leonard and others. “Out of the Fold’ will be played by the stock company at the One Hundred and Twenty-ffth Street Theatre. At Keith's wil be Waterbury Broth- ers and Tenny, Joseph Hart and Carrie f| De Mar, in “The Other Fellow;” James J. Morton, the Larsen Sisters, Le Roy and Clayton, in “A Horse on Hogan," and Post and Russell, The Colonial will ffer Rigo, the gypsy violinist, and his Tzlgania or- chestray Cliff Berzac's Comedy Circus, Emma Carus, 8. Miller Kent, Charles Leonard Fletcher, brank and Jennie Latona, the Millman Trio and Waker Cc. Kelly. Henri De Vries, in “A Case of Ar- son,” will be the headliner at the Al- thembre., Ovhers will be the McWat- yeon company, ¢ the Pi Picch!- acr\ a ag Tne and 1. kelly Kent, the Chadwick ‘Trio, Will- an Helburn, ir, an rs, Barbera: Jam ‘her OWN composion. Seamon's, where the bill will “ioolude Saar lee Burke and Grace La Rue, in foo in, A Bit of Blarnes m1 A Sam Wats and’ McBride. len will be Varin axe manipula- Allen and Del hain Irene tA Tour and her do; Zaza; Sadie McDonald and M: Stevens. A figure cif the new President ae M. Talllores has been he World in Wi ee, Monee. “the double man," will re- main at ‘Huber's Museum for another week, BROOKLYN OFFERINGS, i The Imperial will have Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Drew, in “The Yellow Dragon; Thompson's elephants, the Remos, French pantomime troupe; the Four Bards, Hayes and Healey, Sabel John- son, Grant ant Grant and others. sera Fa ler, io "trio and at the Atlantic Gas of 2 ded ‘ax" at the Eden Girls, the Three Crane Brothers, Melville and Stetson, Stuart, ‘the Male Patt!; the Five Juggling Mowatts, Ea F. Reynard, Marion Gargon and the Dano- ing Mitohells, At the Amphion will be Dixie's Cav- alry Girls, the FPlorens troupe of acrobats, Cressy and Dayne, in “Bill een Baby;" Loulse Dresser, Jack Harcourt, O'B: Sbley and Byers and Hosen 8s Operas. pany by former Comptroller Grout, and the cars were run for a time on a twenty-minute headway, Since then, Mr. Flynn declares, the schedule shows hat the company ‘has gone back to a forty-minute basis. Board of Aldermen passed a ition calling upon the Comp- 8 offiffice for an investigation, erday the oBanl of Estimate also took action. Assistant Chief En- gineer Harry P. Nichols was instructed to Investigate, and his report was re- ceived to-day. The report, among for a schedule of not enty minutes’ headway ay. y of $199 for each of the company, it offence on the part and In his recommendation Mr. Nichols says: “T would suggest that the sald com- pany be required to maintain a legal sald avenue and steps be ation, of the alties provided lw section 56 of the eu meeg’ Grataances of I8iT it the com ns to maintain «uch legal sched- hatule on heen directed to maintain suc! ’ an} to make a return by March nl) cars run. Failure to lo sult for the fines do so wall result iy @ sult, for the Anes imposed by Jaw or to ftranchise.. Meanwhfle Inspestore will keep wateh for the ¢ —_———_ Money Award for Cossacks. | op. pRTRRSRURG, MARCH 3.—The suen of $2,600,000 has beep presented to the Don, Ural, Kuban and Terek Cos- eacks osteistoty for the of their lands, but in reality it ts an exceptional rewani for their services during the war and their fidelity in | repressing the troubles in the Intertor. mprovement Metropolitan Opera-House next week. Within four days ske will impersonate Carmen, Sieglinde and Brunnhilde. The {ast will be the most trying for her, as in a prevlous appearance in the part It was thought much of the beauty of her | voice was lost in striving for effects | beyond ner natural range. | It ts the last week but one of Mr. Conried’s season of seventeen weeks, and following ‘# the programme: Sunday—Popular concert, with Mar- teau, thé French violinist; Bessie Abott, Johanna Poehlmann, Burgetaller and Piancon, Monday—“Carmen,” with Caruso for the first time here as Don Jose, Prem- stad in the ttular part, Journet as Es- camillo and Bessie Abott,as Micaela. Tuesduy—"Die Walkuere,"” the second part of the last cycle for the season of “The Nibelungen Ring,” with Edyth Walker ua Brunnhtide; Fremstadt, Sleg- linde; Homer, Fricka; Von Rooy, Wo- tan; Burgstaller, Slegmund, and Blass, Hunding. Wednesday—"Martha,” repeated, with the 6amo cust, except that Homer {n- y th Walker will be aeney Negfried,"” third part Wit Fremstad as Bronte hilde; Fes Beat Bella Alten, the Volce’ of the ; | Knote, Slegtried; Van Rooy, shar Wanderer; itz, Al- berich; eiss, Mime; and Blass, the Dr Ee “Lucia,” repeated. iay—Matihee, “Il Trovatore,”’ re- “Die Melstersinger,”” evening, Fepeated. i a_i s Concert Announcements. HE Musical Art Soctety gives the T gecond concert of Its thirteenth season at Carnegie Hall next Thursday evening. Dr, Frank Dam- rosch’s programme, while perhaps moro eclectic than usual, maintains the lofty standard set by the organization from the beginning. The first number !s a setting of some of the Lamentations of Jeremiah by Palestrina, Bach, di Lasso and Cornelius, of the old masters, are ern names as those of our own Charles Loeffler and Germany's Richard Strauss. These concerts mark the higth- water levels of New York's musical ex- prossion and appreciation. Walter Damrosch brings the New York Symphony Orchestra's subscrip- ton e@eason to an end with the twin concerts to-morrow afternoon and next Tuesday evening at Camegie Hall, Jo- seity, too seldom heard nowadays, will the soloist in Brahms's , the gifted, am-| a prof shoven's Symphony 8 will Loan lete the programme, tone @ to be added to the faculty of the ‘Institut. feasor of voice oultur: ‘Young Woman and Adopted |4n1 at last saw the woman take a bale hh woman strike leader ts the represented, and then appear such mod-4 ney PRETTY ARTIST IN| SHOPLIFTING NET Son Held on Charge in Police Court. Private Detective John Larkin, of a Sixth avenue department store, had two interesiing prisoners in Jefferson Mar- ket Court to-day. He noticed a well- dressed oman and woman walking around the store and handling things in a suspicious mamner. He says he Watched them closely for two hours, of sik, valued art $19, from a counter ft into m satchel she was were taken to the Tenderloin stition, where they gave the 's of Louts and Ida Smfth, of No, West Twenty-ninth street. On searching the woman, besides the sillc a letter was found addressed to “Mra. ‘Tweedie, No. 511 Uandervilt . Brooklyn.” The detective went aver to Brooklyn, and ihla inquiries re- sulted in the couple being {dentifled ax Mrs, Ida M, Tweedie and Louts Twee- die, both Uving at the Brooklyn ad- dress. It was also discovered that they am both artists of repute and well known in artistic ctreles in this olty, Thelr spectalty ts adn tt: on ciiewens which tiey rilanoue? of A many of the lurge department On Mrs. Tweedie were alan found S, large nunber of recoipted bills for chases at the store in question, wi showed that during the last year and a half she had purchased and pald for goods to the value of over $3,000. Before Magistrate Cornell in the Jef ferson Market Court to-day Mrs. Twee- 208 PRINTERS ENJOINED FROM BOYCOTTING Buttericks Obtain Permanent Injunction Against Striking Union Men, An opinton Justice Blanchard handed down this afternoon continues with some modifications the preliminary in- Junction granted by Justice GNtermlerve restraining the International P ssmen'a Unton and the local typ a umton. Bir Six, Psessmen's | nion No 5 and Ben Frantilin Assoctation No, 23, of press feedors, from alleeed violence by strikers’ picket the Bitterisk Publishing Compan and from sending out tover ttn ts to the omnaty and news¢ onntry, According to the Buttericks the effect wf this circular has been felt in the receipt by thom of 135 letters from sgonts, newsdealers and customers in all parts of the coumtry, discontinuing their agencies, cutting off their oniers and eppealing to them to make peace mith their striking vrinters and presa- men. ‘The strike of Nov. 25 was for an eight- hour tnetea of a nine-hour day and the discharge of non-union men who were willing to mork nine hours, There Was mo dispute about wates, as the Butericks were paying the Syne rates agreed upon Typothetae, to which the Buttericks do t belong.’ ‘The Buttericks alleged that the men hired by them to take the Pidices of the stnkers were bribed, hreatened and assaulte) my the pickets of the local unton us they left the office after work, and that the firm was obliged, in consequence, to house their amployees Akt the buflding at a cost of die admitted her tentity and said the male prisoner ree her brother. 0 is ‘The*police say that the man Je not but an Magi: s- the man, and ‘held. Mrs. meodie ‘Special Heston eon MRS, SIEGEL 10 GIVE $50 PRIZE. Wants Suggestions for Best Game to Develop Young Girls in School. What sort of a game shal) girls of twelve play in order to obtain reorea- tion tn the orginary #choolnoom, where the desks are fixeal? Mra, Henty Slegel lias offered to the Branch of the Public School Ath letio League a 350 vrize to the pers Presenting the best solution to this problem. «The rame should call for co Jerable exercise and shoubd take not oro than fifteen minutes. girls of the Athletic League are greatly excited over the offer, aint have requested the American Public School Phyeteal Training § to conduot the competition, Gullick, papers in competition at No. 600 Park avenun. Mrs, Siegel ha become interested in the fact that while there are many games that can be played out of doors there are thousands of class rooms so situated ‘than It 1s impossible for the | pupils to go Into the open air. The need in New York City ed in the clase games that can be plas room. In & school which has 2000 or 8,000 girls ft ts Impossible to have them all go out and play at once, MRS, OSBORN MAKES NEW RELEASE PLEA Lawyer Will Present Affidavits in Effort to Get-Her Out of Sanitarium. (Special to The Bvening World.) MOUNT VERNON, N. Y,, Mareh 3.— Lawyer H, ‘I, Slosson, representing Mrs, Penelope D, Osborn, who was de- clared sane and competent by a@ sheriff’ Jury at White Plains, and who is still locked up in a madhouse at Mamaroneck-on-the-Sound, where she has been confined for five years, an- nounced to-day that he would submit affidavits to Justice Burr in Brooklyn on next Wednesdey and ask for the immediate discharge of Mrs. Osborn, who owns property valued at $200,000, ‘The three commissioners who were ap- pointed by Justice Keogh and the ft. have signed affidavits denying certain charges of a lawyer who represented the, trust company that lbag charge of the estate of Mrs. Osborn and which has opposed her release from the sanitarium, he affidavits of the jurymen in an- swer to an “assertion devlare “that none of them is a saloon-keeper or that any was prejixiiced In any way against the contestants," FOUND UNCONSCIOUS, GAS TUBE IN MOUTH. When Patrick Cribben, a weigher in the public stores of Nash & Kendall, No. 377 West street, reached the bulld- ing to-day he found Charles Powers, the night watchman, stretched out in the office with the end of a rubber tube attached to an open gas jet in his mouth. Powers was unconscious. Cribben called Policeman Flynn of the Charles street station, who sent Powers to St. Vincent's Hospital in an ambulance. Dr, Corcoran, the surgeon, sald that hie condition Was serious, Powers 18 twenty-five years old and Myes at No. 342 Sixth avenue, Brook- His wife had him arrested recent- ly Ag Bop me ory oat oF a children and he has been despondent over his Jnapility to 6 oak, the quor habit. fore the gas he wrote a noto rendluet “ot. No more."* > HOUSE COLLAPSES, FIVE DEAD. LYONS, France, Murch &—By the col- lapse of a tenement-house here last children were killed yi iH. President of the society, will receive all}. teen jurymen who heard the testimony| i Lunch Poisons 75. MARYSVILLE, MARCH 8.—Seventes five persons wero polaoned vesterday by vartakine of a free Innch at e publis sale at a farm near hree. The lunch served was sopesentty cf ae bapetoe: hen ity, but soon were taken Tolentiy it nth, ‘vmotone of polsonina._ $3,000,000 Will Forgery. SAN FRANCISCO, MARCH 3.—After one of the most remarkable contests ever waced In this locality a fury alt- (ing in Judwe Kerrican's devartment of the Supreme Court has declared the Ned codictl lo the will of the late fo bea forgery. The 000000" Cubans Fight Quarantine. MARCH 3.—Cubans and nave united in urging: an Government to make repre- ons to ‘the Washington Govern- ment to terminate the quarantt Hurts of Southern States on Starch Be 1s held that the quarantine is unjust, since there is no yellow fever in Cuba. oT REUMATISH, Lumbago, Neuralgia, Sorethroat, J asthma,” % $7 a day. mrovide enzentainment for {hem take them taliysho riding nnd the Justice Bi 6 Jooal union nd ihe members in $800 ‘bail for whi however, and within then’ Timite Seen dicated, to male any tequests or ue any advice or re- sort to any persuesion for the purpose of winning support; and in go far as the preliminary Injunction is inconsist- ent herewith it Is vacated." As Big 6 and the strike committee deny that they have done any of the things complained of, this {njunction, with this modification, enjoins nothing. Justice Blanchard’s decision does, however, enjoin the use of their most effective weapon—the circulars appeal- ing to organized labor all over the country and Canada to boycott But- terick patterns and publications and COUGHS § COLDS No person need fear that dreaded gf NEUHONIA IPE cone eee ful remedy, Applied Externally. Sold at Drug Stores and PRICE 50c, and 2h. Write for Booklet, ee AMUSEMENTS, eeeaananannay VEMPIRE TREATER, Bway a oth et MAUDE ADDS aytossie CRITERION #3 r Ethel | Barrymore is THEA. Ath HUDSON! §.20, eae ‘St..2.15. OTIS SKINNER "urn Bue SAVOY SPA. way 8 BE, GARD The Engle “MR. “HOPKINSON. HERALDS THBA.. F way & soi ey. 8.15. Mata Wes Bal 2.16, Geo.M.Cohan \, 44, HINGIS Wednoslay | . Bent 1_ ALE Fein Piper ey FRITaI SCHEFF” tl Both LYCEUM 337 <5 The Lion and ia uatuie Way & 80th st. B TO. Gere es thie nae ELLIS, SJEFEREVSU? is ®& AMUSEMENTS, Princess ® “Midas onda ME is* Brown of Harvard ya, 1 Mati Casino "ava’.t at Tony, 2 Lyric wT HSU WiiLEiNe —~——JULIE BONBON- PROCTOR’S « Pari Manali 25| Ete ar Nis, Rea. 25, 50, 7 58", New Amsterdam {3.¢ rad FAY TEMPLETON in G $ “45 Minutes from Broadway” Broadway 3h: 4 j ELSIE IE JANIS: LIBERTY THE REDSKIN. \."' Buy Wy FORK be 6s "ROoes Bo’ in TRULAND, tes ine NEV YORK 9 MAT. DAILY ipp.odromé SOCIETY CIRCUS with COURT OF THE GOLDEN FOUNTAINS EVENINGS ATINEES AT 2. To-Morrow Night—Jan Kubelik, Ellen Beach Yaw and Victor Herbert’s Orchestra, Seats Now, AMMERSTEIN’S #.s: MATINEE EVERY Dag, 2 50c. CLIFF BERZAC’S le the Screamingly CIRCUS . unridable bs oI ir. & Mrs. Robt. ae Tom Nawn & Co. Reno & Richards, The Bpook Minstrels, Julius Tannen, Loulse’Dres- ser, Mallory Bron. ka & ‘Halliday, Ca- Broo! price, Lynn & Faye, Vitaeraph. Others, ee ¥ rine ts aa Av Daily its o8e. Salerno. 4Seas 20, Mats, To-day & Wed. m, Faversham The Squaw Man Mad, av. Ev. 8. “a GARDEN Witisee TO-pay ar ooHTEHCOCK 21 ST. NICHOLAS RINK, — 4, | 66th St, and Columbus Av. fa M Skates f nesta Ey ‘Aesstona 44th SLT. Atom ay. Matinee To-day. Last Times. | ‘The «reat sensation BEDFORD's Hore To-m'w.Mt& Be, Shepard's Moving Pletures JOE WEBER'S WY" wal Twioble- TWADDLE rik pul MAN'S GIRL tite GOLDEN WEST THE bk " Paul Coneh: Mr. & ai Ls ana’ |e idney Dre: im Watse uth st Parma & others o" ATLANTIC. & Pa aad Refined Vaudevile. Bventass. GARRICK % B5th St ALLS BS Mats, Wod. & Sat.’ 21st Yortville Stat re day iy: Canal }. 25. 1; 25 NEST | The Prison mda. 125\f edtorgan: Past Me nitaton Hilliard ars 15,255,885, 80,73 Huber's 45" Museum ¢ Owing to the Great Success, LIBBERA, THE veya ai D, Re t Fall ORD LA-BEE L MARIE red weeks to ee Him. ‘TAL, UDA AND BAYROOTY, ¥ he Benin Duo, Mire Collis Lo Page, & Fields, Fi gon Pictures : jun ey CONS Ee USIC, 14th St, & Irving PL The Heart of Maryland ‘eer WS BoE Cee ClSCO] BNA peat Ont at a [the ght BLANCHE BATES in Golden v. & 107t! COSTAR es ‘ite th St. Mat. To-day. w i, Mat, To-day To-day, ay Davi TLE ASCOLpreseuta 2g yen in LAVES OF NEW | PRNEW, NORE St Sth American MARRY CLAY BLANEY, Next We oaks ‘Chluntgwn ot ‘Ted stark ‘ast. Ma Min 42d IWARFIELD wéko'ikeren ati of the HILL ToWs Ro UNOLE Next Week—T MADISON: 8Q. GARDEN. #4" SPORTSMEN’S SHOW ADMISSION, 50c, QIILDREN, 256, ‘o-day—The Professor's Love Story. Grand ©.S. Willard vetk™* College Widow vamaTHE DEWEY Ast B dat, 1-4ay—Golden Crook THE GOTHAM (24%, amy Mat. To-day—Transatlantic ‘Burlesquere. f Majestic, vey ats « Aare MOTOR BOAT 10 uers. at Hoga jehruc, PAS TOR’S | Holcomb Charl uufuaRastus, rae Lunaties* Jay.8. METROPOLIS (5a ‘ay. lved a Rast Mot, eUNDDR SOUTHIEIN 1m, Choa Altrioh, Boor Py 8.15, Mat, To-day 2.15 in Man ang Su Next Wk MOp. Ui ert Laval BLA Te Maga Taal! of La Gpnegeds, will beheld tos at Murray HU Ly Ave. Piekets car F Eva 8,20, Manhattan ee vee 8, Fi ne batt le. re 5.28, 85, 00,18)

Other pages from this issue: