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THE EVENING fa tin = Thousands of Men and Women Snap Impre Their Fingers at the Weather and, _ Providing Themselves With Um=q ~ brellas, Plod ‘Watery: Pavements, TAKE rr, MAURICE, ny LAD~ TAKE IT From Youn MELE Dick? 7 Rain’ cannet sate the: spirit of organized labor on Labor Day. !. | The big parades of the Central Federated Union and the Building’ Trades ‘Organizations moyed' the length of Manhattan Island over slippery pavee ments and under umbretlas through lines of damp but enthusiastic “spectators, and few there were ‘who minded that the sun was not J ing. ‘It was no day for mpllycoddles. Because of downpour in early morning there was delay and confusion in assembling the marching hosts.at the starting points around the Park Plaza. For this reason ti Central Federated Union parade start was postponed from 9.30 the FATHERS: and while the ranks “were not so full No. as they would have been had the day ‘deen pleasant the marchers made an ith. Division, Thamas Rock, ma How Senrly. {all the} Heth street, | West—Puvars’ excellent showing. — Nearly e nial eatinet iW est * floats were In line despite bad weather etal Polishers conditions. of the Trat- ted men han- Inspector Schmittberge fie Squad, with 150 m 5 and Excavators: Union By_ request of the Dfstrict Council o the Bridge and Structural Tronwork members. of that organizatior mourning badges for the ninety who lost thelr Hyves through the co'- lapse of the cantilever bridge at Que- avenuo from One Hundred and Tenth | street to Washington Arch was a point of vantage for spectators, Horses Had Non-Union Shoes. A committee from the Horseshoers’ { Unlon caused all sorts of excitement | ec. A welcome sight wae the ae Before the parade started. Members of [eo eam turnout, and “Bis the committee examined the hoofs of every horse ri@den by a marshal of the | Oresntzation In t parade or drewing a float or a carriage OES pits BRU RAZ ER OCs RES) ES mortals had to walk and] BfAKE SPECIALLY FINE SHOWING. scores of carriages were denied to those The “Buildisig Trades organisation of | Six.” the most powerful typographical who wished to ride. | Former State Senator Plunkitt, of the ssi0ns O’ Brien on “CRORBR HANOLD JOR ON A SULVER TRAY.” died the crowds th an ner. There wero fully people Rerrerits grouped in and about the Plaza to see} Electric Workers No. 20. JOULONSTICET: ¢ Tichratact: ot -the parade. aud every | Tenth. Division, James Ve mar- MAURICE RETIRE ath aah Yery | shai. Forty-elghth street. West—Rock- | = Wid SHANNON doorway and sheltered spot in Fifth EIB LGN Begs mora intial WORLD, MOFDAY, LABOR DEFIES THE RAIN AND ARCHES IN ANNUAL PARADE of Leaders ship Battle of Ort GEE! AND SUPPOSE SOME 'TId Sip THE TWO BiG FELLERS ARE wid Paopy | on THe 40.30 o'clock, and the Building’ Trades parade, which ‘was to tS s anf i i PoE ss as) \ started at 10 o'clock, did not get under way until halfan hour later HAW!-MIR oss oes xs From Fifty-ninth ‘street. the Central} W tommerclal Telextaphers, MAURICE, ( 07" Aik, Federated Union marchers arted | mint inion bast ‘ ) down Fifth avenue and from Sixtieth| Serene; Division, Robert Ri ETNS hte € Clr = street the stalwart meno} Ing | Marshal Fifty-firet etreat. |v Ag trades started nortl. The rivalry served | (S;PA07 al ae to Increase the interest in both paredes, | Bast Meat © OBRIENS {HEADQUARTERS ~ “we'LL Pur. MAURKE on fh Bony FOR EUROPE!" ~ O'BRIEN tle dealers with arms loaded with um. eres breilas were in) the van. Then came | Consolidated Board isiness Agents | Dig trucks packed with umbrellas. of the Balding T of New | 4 lied up down ork and | A These trucks trayelied up and down Seanad | With O’Brien as Candidate, avenue for ny before the ing busines Not al water-proof, parade sta as Mu umbrellas but, Murphy and Sullivan War on McClellan's Leader. Laborers ic Lathers, ble Tals: ting Engin Testing —-(yretonie | mush do You i ia described an CHAri@N Fo Mir Sprinklea~ parades w yin attack on the lendership of Mau Of other ci Igamated Bluestone atharsaniialayor fence Vator Cons SECOND. DIVISION reat aay agltan ae dent Hami Marshal, Val. Hoffman, Untied Team. |ltical adviser, starts in earnest to-day Mearns, stem of Amactoa, ie th . : vated fat Aldoah Tiomiastnea eat (ns, Locay i? the Twentieth Assembly District mA and a 6H. Durty, Local BH liFeatherson wan. broi Bor Vumore x headed py F | ent by Richard Croker Atteen years azo and was then and for many ea WOMEN OUT WITH OPERATORS WHO ARE.ON STRIKE. Chief in the Central {following the youngest member of t | Executtve Committee of Tammany Hall He sat at the counsel table with gray- [hatred 4 time and Tle Lawteie! Leipers, t ‘ment Mase was one of Crok Tinton young parade the atrii eK Elevator ees, eusene nts raphers, with women pick Bricklayers’. Laborer Patrick O’Brien. employed in the ctr- leading the six sion of the parad: i, Langsho: eulation department of one of the big yeMeni ith “nplre Martle Putte Shera and| newspaper plants, is after Feather The line Samet: [non's scalp. Ho has the best wines at Fifty-ninth | ———— | WOMEN PUT TWO AUTOMOBILES IN THEIR DIVISIO} Tea bos tier a9 fetter — | and. his followers report, t narlen F. Murphy and “Big Tim an, Toe Bowery leader sent O'Brien |« floral horseshoe on the opening night af Agarcam Club, No. 1M3_Third avenue, ard on a card the following w: attached ‘Housesmiths and Past— ‘Theatr ion, Compressed A 4h wanker District, one 3 the Taira Division sa" abratam } Woman's! of the largest tn the State, rina from Fitty- arr RAY Leaxue Jolned the parade Seventy-third to Eighty-third street and ‘Apprent cffth mireat and Fifth avenue | trom fon avenue to the Hast voment we down io Washington ivan pe Pes Basi ty pograp eee Washington A Rive far wen side of the dis- No. 6, Franklin Assoc: ORK EY elas live, and at the Feeders’ Union tothe f ind Peer Pec Un! piste yo. 1 eadership at nrH0) auikers nnd Tap Teunder Srum Ifolsters, have been me, but I © Executive Com many Hall dy not eal! tt mem: rott ee of Tani What O'Brien Gayp “Paddy” O'Brien 14 well” known on the eaat wide, and his war on sonal or financtat t He lives at > Engt $e enth str and has three nusky vere all work 5‘ Ings for newapapera—t Dan and Jin T Printed O'Brien t exactly Featherson ¢ m ‘the allent 105,847 | rae O'Uren Separate Ad: nd Cian any bos Keolatetn Mies Annie inv, Mf vertisements ; 35,986 MORE than the Herald. Maintaining its Supremacy ~and Increasing its | Bac and Pat und win eur Feather is notitted by Crow whieli 4 Ve Maur been an tment, Ming enginee and subpoeva Depar the leaders from John Kelly's Eleventh Assembly District, was in line |New York assembled In Sixtieth atreet Fi with the Chauffeurs’ Union, of which |and presented a fine appoarance. The | server in the Court of Spec he 1s a member. “The McManus, who | veterans of the bullding trades have | was appointed Water Pu Voted against the Five-Cent Fare bill |¢ver been the backbone of Labor ree |Q |dectded to nominate himself, which ‘other measures that would have | demonstrations, and thia year thelr | walectic t he State. S eats SO ~{turnout was marked hy great Increases mmeanteerecHlona cane ean, Senate benefited organized Jabor, “had Me@Y}iy the number of men by the various Atter that —Bocie Commissioner passed the last Legislature, was not} ns. these places he secured by virtue rat in the parade. The int time he ap-j The order of mare! eee be Reiner alvandersa ictar aa nsiria Now peared in @ parade was in his Oi Union, when the organization asks Sts rs district, where he was seed and made eph Aa ‘Slulianes, ‘of t ores {fis stand the old ship | ‘a target for empty bottles. 3, rice, of Port- Feath 1 Wasekt c : | Rar tend ison beioe0! | Featherson shows the white Enterprising SEE a as Soa ae Vanaliclnapauiyoriotct to a ean cea ar aie esr: eat Of | Marshal, noe L. el ardvon, Steam W. O'Brien, D. O'Brien and J. O'Brien ters of the Varlous labor organtzations | titers’ Union, nodded approval and predicted aa ne lit- | Ald x ‘d 3 Soun- | i 1 with the first sprinkle of rain. The lt- | Aldes, a cheb tel Ge ventait cera foun | Fea thersoniwould be staking)ia (is ship for some Europy4n port afte: | primary election Others After His Job. To make the sera: ~ ‘ Pas | more candidates “have Labor Should Work With t are after Tr nbaum, of the C Them, He Declares. ward Nicholson, Club, say that ‘the }deen on the job too beat interemtscot ot Twentieth Assemb! William Shannon, sioner of Public Works ck administration, rson will win out five to o rs of the east Shannon nuld not let Featherson retire “ he desired. wc ther ssple trom all hie exercises nwing stand on the sald Sh nanno: n friend, and th o: this morning from py_man, woman or child In the ds B npanted by Mrs trict who happens to need his supe, arst, Max i wit, Dremdent at tons or Influence. Take 4 Hearst Independonce League, and of the Cherokee Club: Charles W, Walsh, former Democrat} Commit { secured out of our Civil 1 Indiana, are, policemen, 38; t by large Sdelegation$ from men, 3 b and. business organizations fuel of Virginia, and was celved by. thc through this ac! Mr. and Mrx PL O'Brien. replies: th: proceeding. {1 son faction gor more position ervanida, Hlowing an President 3iarry the Exposition ddreas of welcome by GarEeT Company itted _ why didn't he give the mai ‘ihe district a free park, or a pler, or fn Candidate O° (enement district ot got han the streeta, ers blame Feath Gause heshad the power but “he a free br tn xt eificlent on earth ands wre or dest Utle of another as treat one . on and toler- Teen: Nirmontously to cording t at Chere may on to be 4 onl, w valuable ret rs but to the organiza- but to the combinations in restraint £ monop Iitations for paxtuction, werkvity hits he th ze and reward the good Witte t corporations aceom- | plist. ve, with equal justice, cone hie ballots are. sem i punish the evil which cor corporacions spread.” ype “The Silent’? Featherson noKer, ot} Sh Ptr oS Ear | | 2, 19 0%. ‘ ig fi } " zy STATEN ISLAND : | JAMES McCREERY & CO, & FAIR (IP NS WITH LSrd Street. S4th Street. . RUG DEPARTMENTS. . rv Both Stores, AG AT] NDANC On Tuesday, September the 3rd ; | Sale of Oriental and Domestic Rugs 4 Rain-Defiers Flock to.the Rich- at attractive prices. id mond County “Bir Very fine quality Kermanshah Car- { Show. " pets. Average size 9 x 12 ft...375.00 each | : B Unusual Serapi Carpets......... \ CES ID ACER: | (otc eeseeeeeeeesess+ 2,00 per square foot 1) RACES —AND BAS FBALL.| Mahal and ‘Ghorovan Carpets Ay- | Borough President Cromwell Opens Epoch-Making Exhibi aniiint —taterstata County Agri¢u mposed. of § opened will be opening the the inds were crowded with people who m Manhattan, New Jersey . Brooklyn and ad Jang Is ome est vther ne: boroughs and cities, and when President Cromwell, in an ap propriate add ally opened the | were on promises to The fair this year has a ya y seen in thin pa the State reediow ork, work is on ex aphic departments are {torious exh! poult partment thete ary ¢ than eight hundred entries. ‘The yw is & marvel, and the Sorse show will be the finest exhibition ever ween on State ‘A feature of this yeas’s event will be trotting Prominent hor: ; Pennsylvanty and Sal some fast rac 1 for on the three-quarter race track, which Js sald of the fastest In lhe State. and ting baseball gamoe trom New J Istand, Broo fuve entered, an of a to be ex for | tie champlongaip of Staten Island are expected. fast been snake The cided fair open t nd if it bs patronized w NOUR, hold sessions of the week FROM LEGGETT? Ss, Legg place DENIAL the i tH yi Hl i Mh alk f i a a i has purchasec Next Sunday the original * Other *“‘Sunbon OR FREE distribution’ among ‘its readers, pictures—New Studies of the famous and i is going to give away, without cost. one of the pictures (all ready for framing) with each and every ’s World in Greater New York. For the Den, the Library, the Nursery—in fact, for any room in the home—thére is no set of pictures more unique than this of ‘Sunbonnet Series." , to get them all, don’t miss this first one of the set. Ae It Goes Free with Next Sunday’ s World in Greater New York. erage size 9 x 12 ft........150,00 cach Kerimanshah and Sarouk Rugs (fine { est of the Persian weaves). Size 4x7 { ftee. 5 .40.00 .and 60.00 each I Large, Pine Aidictan and Mosul | | ' Rugs." Average size 4 ft x 7 ft 6 — 1 INCHES. 0.0... ee ees cee oe essere ess + 20:00 | Mosul, Daghestan and Karabagh i Rugs -:.++sser 19,00 Domestic Rugs and Carpets. Royal Wilton. Size 9 x 12 ft..27.50 Axminster. Size.o x 12 ft....... Wetec «2 21.00) 80d 23;00 Best Tapestry. Size 9 x 12 ft..13.00 Plain Axminster and Velvet Carpets. Best quality. ....1.10 and 1.35 per yet) Best Tapestry Brussels.75¢ “ Best Inlaid Tile Linoleum...... ~ - 1.10 per yard The Rug Department of the Twenty- third Street Store now? oéCtipies the Fifth Floor, where the increased space affords unusual facilities for the exhibi-- tion, comparison and selection of Rugs, 23rd Street. ‘34th Street, The Adventures of Mr. and Mrs, _ Newlywed and Their Baby Pages—Lithographed ir Board Covers. PRICE $1.00 Sixty-four _ Colors—Illuminated AT WORLD OFFICES: PULITZER BUILDING, Park Row. BRONX, 658 East 149th St, near 34 UPTOWN, 1393 Broadway, northwest Ave. corner 38th St k Washington St. and HARLEM, 249 West 125th St. 317 F OR BY MAIL, | A VERY FUNNY TRADE SUPPLIED BY SAALFIELD PUL. CO., i 1905 nn conytighted, 1. AUSTE: The World 1 nore than two million beautiful colored “‘Sunbonnet Series,’ apy of net’’ pictures will be given away later on, Bie sctieesse avr!