The evening world. Newspaper, March 28, 1911, Page 2

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7 { 9 ‘ PRO ENIERREERR Ce re ra oreo anand smecassal — "5 a eT NT LL TT TT A 2 THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MARCH 28, 1911. When two struck the net at once they threw the men holding the pets head- first into them The heaviest part of the came from the west wall, The ole 1 floor was full of flames, and tnen sie blew an to the northeast, and t ean ome down from above for Koo: Tattoo to Show Speed. The Chief paused and beat a tatt to indicate how the bodies fell when th 6 vil wind awitched around and drove the flames toward those who had n clinging to the silis of the windows above. “Some of them hit the sidewnl! some of them struck the head over the base tarough them.” “Then we have no apparatue in department to cope with this sort fire? Why not us asved the Marshal. a “It was all done in such short time that there warn't time to take them from the trucks, I beMeve that when { reached there al! those who had bh umped or shown at the windows were ead, They were smothered by the smoke, The lon jadder we have is w ninety-foot ladder. “Did you seo any lattice work or gate sroee the door leading to the stairs on e eighth and ninth floors?” “1 did not.” Bodies in Solid Mai “Where was the greatest n wodies, on the ninth floor “They were on that floor piled five feet high against t seemed to have a yer of been a partition. It had been destroved by fire and the bodies were stacked t@ere in a solid mass. Nobody could ve counted them, they were stacked closely together. “The photographs you show me (he s handed ome showing an iron door id to have been on the ninth floor) not correctly state the case and re not taken on that floor. The floor y, he technical value of the chief's | mony war in the fact that it wed there was no indication that the had been uscd, although there evidence that buckets had been used ihe ‘rooms Where the fire was located. the standpipes been used the fire Wd have been put out and the loss of life greatly reduced if not prevented, thought the Chief. = One Man Not a Hero. Pilliam Grunspan of 166 Bast Ohe Hundred and Twelfth street, was mpohinist on the ninth floor, but not a nero. He did not claim to be one. He tegtified that he was dressing when the fine started, and ran to the roof, call- ing to others to follow him. He said that he did not rescue any of the others, and that he went up a ladder to the roof the New York University Butiding and there he fainted, The invextigation will be resumed by Marshal Beers probably to-morrow. EHOSEWAS SCNNESTED IN BURNED FACTORY ld no tron door to block the stair-| WHITE HEARSES ~OFFREVICTINS DT EAST SE Multitudes as Pitiful Cor- teges Pass By. ‘| STALLINO GIRL BURIED. |Widowed Mother and Three Little Sisters Form Sad Mourning Group. This was another day of wad proces- sions following hear most of them white, from all parts of the eset side | into Delancey street and over the Williamsburg Bridge. But there was 4 change In the temper of the thou- ands on the sidewalks, who paused to Watch the mournful corteges go by. Grief possessed the mourners, but wrath and revengeful growls murmured on the sidewalks, Now that the first shock Is over, there is an ugly spirit working on ghe east elde which 1s making itself plainly felt by all ob- rervers, Among the incidentypt the day which Stirred the pity of onlookers was the funeral of Jennie Stollino, an eighteen- year-old victim of the Asch Bullding disaster, It was like @ bit of life taken out of a corner of Sicily. Jennie Stollino’s Funeral. The Widow Stollino and her three re- maining daughters, all of whom lived by Jennie’s wages, walked all velled in black from hea@ to foot, with bowed heads from thelr home at No. 815 Bow- ery to Bonomolo’s undertaking shep at No, 24 Elisabeth street. Tho streets fell allent as they passed, At the undertakers where the girl's body lay with those of Sara and Lucy Maltese, also victims of the horror, | there were sixteen little girls, fellow members with Jennie Stollino of the Children of Mary, They were all dressed in black and wore white ve! caught back with bunches of whi carnations and roses, The undertakers men lifted the white coffin from its tand beside the others, under the im- age of the Virgin and the little altar on which the candies flickered, and took it out into tho street. The sixteen .girls in white formed a hollow square, inside of which were the (Continued from First Page.) each side by wing walls. Around tho entire tower is @n iron baloony at each floor and the exits from the building lead to the tron balcony. “For neany @ year,” said Acting Su- perintendent Ludwig, “this department has been working toward the installa- tion of these improved protective fea- tures on all factory and loft bulldings. We need legislation, however, before anything can be done.” “Has the needed legislation been drafted or any step taken toward it introduction?’ was asked. ‘ot yet," was the reply Immediately following the Newark factory fire Commissioner Waldo ord- ered a complete investigation of fire ,e@capes in this city. The result was that Commissioner Waldo, about two mé@nths ago, sent to the Building De- partment a list of more than 13,000 buildings in Manhattan which he de- clared should be equipped with fire es- capes. Acting Superintendent Ludwig to-day sal that up to the present time the Bullding Department had issued orders fer only 90 new fire escapes on the complaint of the Fire Commissioner, and that he had no record of how many of these orders had been complied with by property owners. 18,000 Complaints Sent in. “Of the 18.000 complaints sent to us by ‘Commissioner Waldo,” said Acting Su- Derintendent Ludwig, “2,000 have been investigated and. 200 orders have been feoved. In a great majority of the cases reported by the Fire Commissioner, while the fire-escapes may be needed, we have no authority to order their installation.” The cost of maintaining the Butld- widow and the three sisters and the coffin, A®d so they marched across the Loretto, Father Liberante met them at the door and walked before the coffin to the great altar between rows on rows of sobbing men, women and children, most of them dressed In the costumes of Sicily and Southern Italy. Outside a great crowd stood allent in the street, listening to the voice of Father Liberafte, chanting the mass. Aged Man Halts Funeral. Another funeral that blocked street cars for an hour was that of Essie Bernstein of No, 77 Easex street, who was related to Partner Blanck, one of the owners of the Triangle Company. As the single policeman who tried to keep the street clear was whirled aside by people who were frantic to achleve the superstitious virtues of the feat of touching the coffin or hearse with the tips of their fingers, @ black coated graybeard climbed the doorstep and lifting his hands commanded atlence, “@ur poor childre: he wailed in Yiddish. “To save their souls from | shame they go to work in fire-traps. And if they are spared at work they return to more perilous fire-traps to sleep. They are condemned to fire.” The uproar which followed was such that reserves were summoned from the Eldridge street station to prevent the mourners from injuring each other, street to the Church of Madonna dij MORGUE MOBBED BY GAIN SEEKERS Lawyers Morbidly Curious Driven Away by Police Reserves. TWE TY YET UNKNOW ‘Whitman Examining Sur- vivors for Evidence to Present to Grand Jury. ' A swarm of morbidly curious women and “‘body-snateht lawyers and un dertakera Mingial with the throng of heartbroken friends and relatives of the Asi) Buliding fire victima that hesleget | the Morgue again to-day and fought their way Into builing, causing the [were thrown out | One undertaker was thrown out five times, but still persisted in returning and dogging the footsteps of the rela- tives of the dead. hese parasites grew #0 nufherous dyring the day that the attendants in the Morgue were unable to cope with them and appealed to the police for more reserves, Among the merely morbid were several women in furs and velvets, displaying fortunes In Jewelry on their hands, and when questioned they confessed that they had pressed their way through the doors “Just to look them over." When they had made these brazen confessions they were hustled out bodily. Only twenty of the 142 victims of the fire horror remained unidentified. There were nine identifications to-day, all at- tended by the same heartrending scenes that were #0 common yesterday, Of the remaining ‘bodies only two can be iden- tifled by physical charactertatics The others are little more than shells of ash, the clothing merely caloined filament, Rings and bite of jewelry may lead to the identification of some, but there are halt a soore that can never Be certainly identified, according to Commissloner of Charities. Drummond. Women in Hysterice, A report in a Jewish newspaper that there would be a public funeral from the Morgue this afternoon brought an army of young women, who were stopped by the police at First avenue and Twenty-nixth street. Five hundred had marched uptown and five hundred more were'on the way. When the police stopped them they fought hysterically, crying that they were be- ing deceived and that the funerals of thelr friends and relatives would be held without them. More reserves were called, but the gentler the per- suasion of the police the more turbu- lent became the mob of girls. It was almost @n hour before they would be convinced that no public funeral would start from the Morgue to-day. Mr. Drummond sald this afternoon that none of the unidentified dead will be buried in Potter's Field. If a ceme- tery plot isnot donated for the purpose, the Department of Charities will pur- chase one. The boihes will be placed in coMng, with numbered plates. If any small possessions were found with these bodies or of any fragments of clothing remained on them these will be stored away and numbered in the hope of tu- ture identification. Decent Burial for All. Ne body of a Jew will lack decent { burial, A representative of the United Hebrew Charities assured Mr, Drum- mond to-day thtat provision had been made to give every Jewish man or girl who died in the fire a funeral and to lay the body to rest in one of the Jew- ish cemeteries on Long Island. ‘The death in the New York Hospital last night of Mrs, Daisy Lopez Fitae, who Jumped from the tenth etory win- DEMAND FOR VENGEANCE IN AN ANARCHIST CIRCULAR. TPEN LY YOON NS AND HOURNER ent openings and broke | Wrath Mingles With Grief of | Undertakers, our | t the scaling ladders?” | and reat confusion and Maorer, until they | dow of the burning building, raised the toral of the fire victims to 142. Miss Frieda Celaiowek!, who occupied the oot beside Mrs. Mitze, was not expected to live to-day. Three have died Bellevue afd three in 8t. Hospit The State Labor Bureau sent several agents to the Morgue this afternoon to warn the relatives of the dead not to have anything to do with the lawyers who were rushing about in the crowd drumming up business and getting rela- tives to sign papers, The State Labor Bureau volunteered its services in the case of every person who desired legal advice. Members of District-Attorney Whit- man's staff began paving the way for the Grand Jury investigation this niorn- ing. This work is in charge of Assist- ant District-Attorneys Bostwick and Rubin, and they summoned to their office: all of the vitnesses who testified before Fire Marshal Beers yesterday. Their testimony was taken in more de- tail than at the hearing in Fire Head- quartei Prepare Case for Grand Jury. «= Tile two engineering experts, J. P. Whiakeman and John D. Moore, who were engaged yesterday by Mr, Whit- man to make a survey of the Washing- ton place factory bullding to-day made @laborate drawings of every feature of the ten-story building. Mr. Whiskeman was formerly chief engineer of the Building Department, Mr. Moore has served as foreman of several grand ju- Mes and ts famillar with the mode of Dresenting evidence to that body, When they bave finished’ taking photographs and making drawings they will go be- fore the Grand Jury and make their re- port. Judge O'Sullivan in the Court of Gen- eral Sessions, thanked the ‘additional March Grand Jury, this afternoon, for fta offer to take up the work of investi- gating the fire horror, but informed the jurors that thelr services would not be required, The Court sald the District- Attorney would not be prepared to pres- ent any evidence until next week, when it could be given to the regular March Grand Jury, which would continue into April. The same body will continue its investigation of the Carnegie Trust Company scandals next month, Two bodies were identified within a few minutes after the slow-moving procession was admitted to the bulld- ing. he terribly burned remains of Cora Dockman, nineteen years old, of No. 62 East Eleventh street, were identified by her cousin, Louis Shul- owlts of the same address. He recog- niged two false teeth. The other iden- tification was that of the body of Yetta Fichtenhults, eighteen years old, of No. #9 Bast Eighth street. Teeth Identify Girl V.-.im, By a careful examination of an in- cinerated skull Dr, Glassberg, a den- tist, of St. Mark's place, identified’ the body of nineteen-year-old Jennie Stig- Mite of No, 231 East Thirteenth street. He had been working on the young woman's teeth and ashe had an ap- Pointment at his office on the evening after the fire, Frank Panuo of No. 49 Stanton street Mourning Zone Created by Factory Fire; Scene of Disaster and Homes of the Victims mae ee in ee in Vincent's 7 MiScene OF Fire <_A @ffomes 0 The Dea Ei He was sure hers wa bodies at the Morg He said there were three rin; fingers, one rather large diamond ring id two others. Zingall reported the disappearance of Rose Pristotipiliipo, his cousin, who worked beside the Cammorata girl. Trinkets Sent to Coroner. Police Captain O'Connor, who has been assigned to special duty at the Morgue, collected the ‘belongings of each body to-day, tagged cad carefully associ- ated the effects of each and, locking each parcel in a ballot box, took the boxes to the East Thirty-ninth street police station, They were taken to the Coroner's office, and there relatives can view them and if possible make the identification. ‘This moasttre was adopted in the hope that the bereaved relatives wil! be spared the ordeal of gazing at more than a soore of charred corpses in their efforts to Identfy some missing member of their family, and to shut off the morbid crowds of people who have lied, pleaded and cajoled in their at tempts to get inside the morgue to gaze at the bodies of the victims. —_—_— PLAN REFORMS IN THE FACTORY LAWS. ALBANY, March 2.— Bills making radical amendments to the laws for the Protection of the lives of employees in will be nekt week by the Wainwright-Phillips Employers’ Liability Commission. “We shall recommend,” said Sena- tor Wainwright, “that the responsi- bility for fire escapes be concentrated in one department. between the Bureau of Buildings of New York City, which has authority over the metropolitan district, and the State Labor Department, which is charged with enforcing the law in the rest of the State.” —— COMMISSION SOUGHT TO INVESTIGATE FIRE AND DRAFT NEW LAW. ALBANY, March 2 for a commission of nine members to Inquire into the cause of the Asch Building fire in New York, to investi- the adoption \t factories and mercantile establishments | submitted to the Legislature | It 1s now divided | —A bill calling} to each of the borough building super- | intendents, Rudolph P. Miller. including Superintendent ‘The latter on Dec, 6—weven day, of the acknowledgment after written to Clerk Scully, Nelther report nor suggestion asked by the Board, nor a “reply of later date,” promised by Superintendent Miller, has been recetved. _—_— LAWS TO PROHIBIT SMOKING IN LOFTS MAY BE RESULT. The investigation of Fire Mars! William L. Beers into the Washington | Place disaster was suspended to-day. ¥ | wit be resumed to-morrow morning. The temporary let-up was made ne essary by the pressure of routine work. No doubt exists in the mind of Mar- shal Beers and other Fire Department officials that the fire was started by a cigarette butt or a match thrown away by an employee of the Triangle Wai: Company after he had lighted a cigar- ette. Out of this fire will probably grow legislation prohibiting cigarette, pipe or cigar smoking in any loft, factory or office in any building above a certain height in*which more than fifty per- fons are employed. “My experience,” said Fire Marshal Beers to-day, “establishes as a fact that the great majority of the numerous factory and loft fires which are discov- ered between 6 and 8 o'clock P, M. are resalution—made | 75,000 TO MARCH AT FUNERAL OF UNKNOWN DEAD | Greatest Cortege Ever Seen in City to Follow Fire Vic- tims to the Grave. M Y UNIONS IN LINE. Procession of Mourners Will Cover Long Route, Including Scene of Horror, A quarter of a miliion mourners will follow behind. the hearses of the uni- dentified victims of Saturdayfe dead- ful fire on the day of the great public funeral, which 1s being planned. Every union shop and factory in the city will be closed during the hours when the greatest cortege that has ever been or- ganized will wind its way through the east side, and through the streets west of Broadway, lined with the shops and lofts of the garment~making industries, while the thousands of workers from these hives will elther swarm the streets or fall in behind the hearses. Day Not Vet Set. The day on which this great demon- stration of the city's grief will take place has not been definitely settled. The committees representing the Inter- national Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union and the Women's Trade Union League were desirous of holding the funeral on Thursday, but Coroner Holts- hauser ts of the opinion that, in view of the clamor of relatives of missing ona to have another chance to try ® find their beloved ones among the charred remains, the rule which re- quires the removal of bodies from the Morgue within five days will be stretched. Pending the arrival of the committee appointed to confer with him, he was busy getting legal opinion on the subject The Coroner declares he is moved by a sincere desire to help those who have not already found and claimed their own, Meanwhile the unions and the vari- ous Sommittees which have the matter in charge @re going ahead with thelr arrangements, Definite promises have already been obtained from unions rep- eventing a total of 162,000 working men nd women; that they will participate in the funeral, These are the Joint Board of the International Ladies’ Garment Workers, with @ total of 50,000 members, working in 1,28 shops; the Ladies’ Waist and Dress Makers’ Union, Local No. 25, to which the hap- less victims of Saturday's disaster be- longed, with 12,00) men and girls, work- ing in 250 shops; and the United Hebrew Trades, with its sixty unions and 100,000 members, Many Unions to Join. The Women's Trade Union League, through its committee, Mrs. Theresa Malkiel, chairman; Mrs, Bertha Mailly, Mrs, LeRoy Scott, Rev. Mr. Eliot White and Mr, Wililam Rice, has com- municated with abour fifty Engitay and will proceed westward, and, if the Po- lice Department permits, will go up Broadway to Washington Place, march- ing past the scene of the fire. Winding its way through the other streets in the manufacturing centres the procession will cross Broadway Again, and go through the Itailan dis- trict. Thence, it will return to the st Side to the Williamsburg Bridge, and the hearses will proceed to Mt Zion Cemetery, where the charred and unrecognized remains will be laid away in a@ common grave in the plot of the Union. The committee in charge s: 1. Wit askin, A. Goldstein, B. Foodin. L. Bp stein, 1. Wagman, L. Welnglass, Miss Rose Gitlin and J. Elmer. On Wednesday night there will be a big memorial meeting at Grand Central Palace, Forty-third street and Lexing- ton avenue, Which will be addressed by Miss Leonora O'Reilly, Meyer London, Morris Hilquit, Abe Cahan, Jacob Pan- kin and others. OTHERS’ favorite for preserving the natural purity and beauty of the hair and skin of infants and chik dren, is Cuticura soap,! assisted when necessary, by Cuticura ointment. No other emollients so pure, So sweet, so speed- ily effective. No others do so much to prevent infantile humors becom- ing lifelong afflictions, Bold everywhere. Bend to Potter D. & > (Carp, Boston, tor 32-page book on skim SAVE YOUR OLD PLUMES Bring them to us. We'll trans- form them into beautiful WIL PLUMES OR FRENCH PLU Impossible to detect from a brand new article. We Remake them at ALF the cost of New Oues, FEATHER REPAIniNG Amazon Bands, latest hat trimming, made from old feathers; Marabout Stoles made into capes. atte bt ches | German speaking unions, including the | “"ga Mea fret Peo nauign eg beeee ee Job Pressors, the Neckwear Cutters, the |) Fle 260 West 125th St. sie. refuse or dark corners by employees as | Sheet Metal Workers, the Skirt and they are leaving their work. The rule|Cloakmakers, the Lithographers, the] againat smoking in the Triangle factory | Bookbinders, the Plano Workers, the was violated all the time. Pattern Makers’ Union, the Interna- “The men employed a§ machine op-| tional Brovherhood of Bakers and Ce erators in those clothing factories are Workers, Tyr inveterate cigarotte fiends. The hunger for a smoke is so strong that they will run any sort of a chance, While at work, when the foreman’s back ts turned, they will light a cigarette, take a few puffs of it, blow the smoke u! der a table or into the goods they are working on, or even swallow it, pinch off the lighted end and drop it in the most convenient hiding place. Many fires are started that way during work- ing hours, “As the time approached for quitting work in the Triangle factory Saturday night a number of the men undoubtedly lighted cigarettes. One of them threw a hard Tt te fire originate those who escaped do not appe a p Bonnaz Union, and the Allied Printing Trades Council, All these will send delegates to a conference to determine what part , will start from the Morgue, und rort of the Shirtwaist Mak Union, and proceed through the streets of the east side to Clinton Hall, where the union headquarters are located. Mean: while the other untons will assemble at their various headquarters and proceed Ask for «i these unions will have in the planned demonstration. It is expected tha: “Tig |] SPECIAL | en SeDAY, THE 287d, |SIx" will also turn out a large quota | A teRhE OF, raven nox 10c ‘The cortege, according to the present |f WHLGMaES MOUND nox 25C SPECIAL FOR TO-MORROW, THE 29TH, SPANISH UT, 10 |] CCARAMELS. |. POUND BOX le CHOC, MOLASSES it CHIPs.. no match under a cutting table and that|to a central meeting point, probably ce act resulted in the deaths of neadly 150| Seward- Park, on tast Broadway, where parnRow a” | people. | the main procession will form, as each Sone ct LS NASSAU ; | “T am trying to get hold of all the | organt! ation falls into Mne, ‘Then tt yor? 206 BROADWAY, survivors of the fire who more A of | ee ee ee —= 55 147 Was rth st | ec able on the 5 ql ae eae eee the’ buliding were the | At Fountains & Elsewhere | ,,, , er DO elfied weight in each Instance In- giudes the container, identified the body of his wife, Provi-|Sate and fix the responsibility for the | anxious to involve anybody but 70” ing Department for the Borough of dende, forty-three years old, by the | loss of life and to recommend legisla-| bosses in responsibility " Manhatten 1s over $900,000 0 year. Of shoes he had bought her a few days | tion for the safety of lives in facto-| through the foreman and the firm's pay: | ver ,000 i spent in in before the fire. The upper part of her| ries and large buildings in New York, |Tll I hope to get the right people. | ection work. Thi Pra ap ree ody has ray, ee eee ao S tis) Be Gar Trace iat | tw Fes Te eT RENN PP NgAME WT Te OMAN body been burned away, but her| was introduced to-day by Assembly: Fire vic-|_ _ The Original and Genu oe aii daw Boidines a sietriota, y shoes were scarcely more #han scorched. | jan Guvillier. ‘Three of the commis-| Sectal Service for the Fire Vic-| aod all new Dulldings and alterations | ny eve sayets sperm eTwE SerErh Tem ONM EFM TH TERE HT TH EW enya | The Dody of Ida Pearl. cwenty yours | loners are. to be appoiyted by. the tims at Grace Church. MALTED : M I LK h 4, of No Past Fourth sir " ‘ M, fn memory of the victims of ‘Acting Superinte: ? ined ae, 5 Governor, three by the President of| A service fn m t | q ip denen Oa buekion oe ype wey eazey SEUNE PH ET TNT enENeEs py | MMeh was also scarcely more than 4) ihe Senate and three by the @peakerdthe Triangle Shirt Walst Company fire | The Food-drink for All Ag | ——_— } i iment's responsibilty for Saturday's fire, fin a Ne ae airs rorniys | ie, Sf Nov 18) Forayth atreot, Of ihe Assembly. An APDIOPEBHGR OF cpa ald AC eon Poort church, | At testaurants, hotels, and fountains. vile it is customary for H yeen ougH ar burned stoc Se, San enone prev iced. a PbIACO - 0 Tpoapagy ae “ e World to pr ousands ; “There are some things I would |ike FRIVUATE GD HEUER: RROD State Commissioner of Labor Will- Broadway and Tenth street. An ad- | Delicious, invigorating and qudaning. more “To eer patarionents to way, but I think they should be said Cope e cyte oh en a Ghastly Entertainment, jams said to-day that a careful ex-| gress will be made by the Rev. Charles | Keep it on your sideboard at home. every week than any other New it first to Borough President McAneny. 1 | A defurred and bejewelled young amination of the records of the inspec-| 1 giattery, rector of the Church, and Don't travel without it York iorning and Sund it am drafting a report which I hope to | ' ay ye FI OND > Woman, in velvet shoes and a big pice tion of the Asch Building, made Feb.| 14> py the Rev. Willlam B, Eddy, as- ut it, _ morning and Sunday H have ready for him ina short time” | ture hat, presented herself in line at 27, showed that the inspector pointed] 8 ant rector \A quick lunch prepared in a minute. pewspaner, Tt is worthy: of —-- ! YT YT AYR Aye PYM IS BHD the doors of the Morgue and said she out viola ns of the Bia F sary ——__—— Take no imitation. Just say “HORLICK’S,’ special notice that Funeral Rit: wished to seek among the unclaimed 14w by the occupants of the second, | z is | | A * u eg on Steps, a al eraabattatie VHT RaiaiEme uni esere en Caaee’ Seen To Rnrawn ce Dodion for a slater Bee tag igiaimed third, fourth and nfth Noors, the doors| NEW YORK LINER In No Combine or Trust| LAST SUNDAY'S WORLD many persons gathered the * | and made the rounds of the rows of to the workshops being locked during AGROUND AT HA YTI. | contained eral of Dore skowlta in the | yes ave qpoyt quien pant Powe yeeays ae eynyysmyny iy pw | CoMlns until her strangely animated ex-) WOrkINK hours: if a panes aye | 1 23 “T L ” es ae'tke conersatinn Ananea| #1 y | pression attracted the attention of Mias| “The records of our office,” said Mr. __ SPECIAL ONE WEEK ONLY 6 ‘o Let” Ads. tok Se, $4 Park at at atter| “cemetyry poe yey | Baumearten, « Bel rape | Williams, “show that an order was Im-| CAPE HATTIEN, Mayth March 28 | pope aster gulte Res j tie body hhad been « the vene “What are you doing in here? asked | Mediately issued directing the occu-| ne German steamer Allemannia of the finest matertalss Frames Not only MORE than any fe rabbl made his address to the | vewsey onpiyy erin yee the nurse the moment she laid eyes on| Pants, Bernstein & Meyers, Harris Atias Line, which sailed from New York tehed Wk other New York Sunday Me erdard’ fan te etcetera, | SAMS IIIT pet 4 han Bros, and) Maurice Blum, to comply | last Thursday for Haytien ports, 1s | gay newspaper, BUT 2 or e steps. ‘They filed hax: Fi : . ; as | aground off Po! Mardi G: in tie geet ih houuetrnt (0 No erie nme chin foeiioumy iow young woman | with the lew” seeaand 26 Mase Maes ree aad lo © We A Gain of 261 for a block h ‘ WN oe 7 " . ater ten passengers are aate. ‘ Tabb! told’ them the story of Following is part of a circular addressed to “ail slaves," distributed| ,, Yin Pm Just looking tem over, Got BUILDING REPORT Ee Pry Slip Covers Complete, over corresponding Sund & hard Ufe and of her effort to today by Anarchists of the east side at funerals of victims of the fire in the| dull day: ORDERED BY BOARD ) oP , last year, j@ enough money to justify her in) 40M te lo Sus Baunipatian’ reachede oureacd | Say , 4 ies el | Cut to Order, Sewed, eee . mbrrying @ young man she liad loved Ash Building: seized the young woman by ant) IGNORED BY MILLER| Q Bound with ¢. The World's supremacy and many, 3 nthe i eae Workmen, slaves! Leave the shops, cast off your slave chains! None too gently she yanked her to the —— if all (0 er Shrunk Bind- gontinued growth as a hdart unde? the wedding canopy.” he Out into the streets with you and emphasize your protest against | 00F ant pushed ev out in the atreet. | Following the disastrous Newark fi Ing Any Size. . Let” aaivertising medium 4 |The enraged nurse put so much for in November last when | tall, write or and natural enough when you con- wiouted. “But to-day sb ja bensath the the rotten bourgeoisie and its Institutions by word and gleed. Take In the Duan that yen penne 5 ee aoe ‘ i lost are {| (Batabianed 2873+) Tian willy call” with altie ‘that THe Wi RED'S cr and Will know rev for the young lives that have fallen on the altar “of the — json in sealskin vet eat down in Folks of this city introduced a | W houses Cee lc culation in New York City i bly Was very much affected present system, Take revenge * * * bloody revenge of those 8 puddle jn the wutter, whereupon she yesolution, which was adopted, calling | rage are far greater than ANY OTHEL and the wails of men and wome who have conspired against your lives! Give them that ® © © bring calamity upon ¢ upon the borough byilding superintend- | New York morning and Sun- xo, loud that the rabbi had to wait for p ei ) lena lncauthoction in ins to Inspect uli lost and factory | AND MOVING VANS day newspaper thpm to subside, He then launched into which they have prepared for you | Two names were adde buildings, “with a view of iseuing and} _na,, &jtolemn indictment of the generat Death to your murderers, the bourgeoisie! | missing employees ¢ enforcing orders to abaate any danger |, Hundreds of new vacan- Which has forgotten the Fabwath of the Tenth tA lia Aston Gara the! Gavan amant! | Waist Company when Giuseppe ous condition that may dkist on aecount | oreo. S|* cies are advertised in The fathers and follows the cu the bs ' morata and Josef Zingall, both of No. of lack of adequate fire protection,” WATTS, —GRORGR W World every day in the week, Géyim (Christians) by resting on Sun This should be your answer!! * * * Do not return to the {17 Cornelia str went to Police The resolution further directed that bany of Mary Watt | an 3 a Tle bald the dinaster wan a t - 1 Héadauarters to por e disappear> ivuiidin perintendents repor he his residence, % | [ — | ent til deat} ruetion shall wipe out th ani acdc # to report the disappears Wuilding superinten report to t ; Al ixtiinent for just such » © older fire-traps until death and destruction shall wipe out the presen ance of girls related to them. Cam- Bo men all dangerous con- Op, Mash OTs Bide papsons in the crowd sho oval accursed system, and on Sta ruins we shall build a new, free society Tanabe aatiriiar Riaiuinae aeuannlan ae red and furnish sugges: 1 Perel RnTnaer SoM Look To-Day For Present } oa * bed pravers to 2 A GROUP OF REVOLUTIONARY WORKMEN venteen years old, had gone to work roe the laws if the lat- Seth’ at. where & requien en and hold fast to ¢ thodox ae | a few months ago to earn extra money bo sald,” Interment, Holy me: fae, { Own Press. 4 | for her marriage, which was set for | Citysfierk Scully transmitted « copy! tury. New Jersey papers please cupy. and May First Vacancies. ° Ase mene me et NNR Sa sees es ee ES ARTIS CRT SS r Bs)

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