The evening world. Newspaper, September 19, 1911, Page 3

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)

a? q, | f 1 7 tee ry THE .EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, BEPTEMB LADIES’ TAILORS 'Mrs. Ditmars, Hunting Rattlesnakes as Sport. CALL STRIKE OFF: ~ VICTORY THEIRS Treaty of Peace is Enthusi- astically Received by Work- ers and Employers. “UNION IS RECOGNIZED. Permanent Boards of Arbitra- tion and Sanitary Control Proposed, Overtime Defined. Tf the example of the first meetings of the striking women’s tallors and firesamakers this afternoon is followed by all sections of the union, the strike Wil be declared off by sunset and the workers will all be at their benches | to-morrow. A settlement reached be- tween the union's representatives and ssociation was ral east side halls this af- | tornoon, and in each was greeted with | whoops of triumph and assent. Bolomon Rosman, organizer of the un- | fon, with compantons who spoke all of the languages used on the east side, went from hall to hall declaring that | the settlement was a mighty and hard | won labor victory and that any worker who did not abide by ft and get on his| Job was a traitor to lis trade and an enemy of his fellow-man. Makers of women's clothes whose pa- trons have been worrying them to des- | peration since the strike started got | word early of the hopeful news and be- | gan telephoning assuring messages to homes throughout the citst where the ruining of plans for new fall dresses had brought ebout deep gloom and the fidgets. SUBSTANTIAL VICTORY FOR) STRIKERS IN PEACE. ‘The peace agreement represents a substantial victory for th left their shops a week ago to-morrow. Of the 1,100 employers affected, 150 were members of the Merchants’ Society. These were ali large dealers and the rest of the trade, in the opinion of the workers, will be compelled to accept the term n which the society has agreed. ‘The main points of the settlement are recognition of the union; abolition of all plecework; a fifty hour week; Saturday holiday after 1 o'clock; an average In- crease of & a week in wages; no Sun- day work; all work to be done in fac- “tories and none in the nomes of workers no overtime after 8.80 o'clock at nig no overtime except in the rush seaso! of epring and fall; holidays on Labor Day, Election Day, Thanksgiving, Wash- ington’s Birth Lincoln's Birthday; | no discharges for violation of unipn rules; a boart of grievances of eight membere evenly divided between no: nees of the workers and employer: ‘board of sanitary control of aeven mem- bers, two nominated by the unton, two by the employers and three representing the public, to be chosen by Meyer Lon- don and Jullus Henry Cohen; a perma- nent arbitration board, of which one member shall be named by Mr, London, one by Mr. Cohen and another by agree- ment, from which there shall be no appeal. ARBITRATION BOARD TO FIX OVERTIME RATES. It was stated that the permanent ar- ditration board would be chosen from men of the type of Louis Brandies of Boston, William Jay Schieffelin, Louis ‘Marshall and Hamilton Holt. ‘The first issues to be settled by the Arbitration Board shall be the rate to be paid for general overtime; the rate to be paid for overtime on rush orders for mourning dresses and the rate of wages to be paid on legal holidays. ‘At noon Meyer London went out a small army of orators from the settle- ment office at No. 3 Union Square to take the news of the proposed terms of settlement to the halls where the union workers were waiting. The speakers were instructed to do everything in their .power to bring about a favorable vote Before night. —_—_—__ Albany Notable D ALBANY, Sept. 19.—Peter J. Flynn, one of the oldest and best known resi- dente of Albany, died last night after a Mngering Ulness. He was prominent in the establishment of the public school system in this city and served as a member of the Board of Education for over twenty years. He was the owner of many well known race horses, As a guide to bargain stores, markets, hotels, cafes, most, not even being ap- proached by any other New York newspaper. bate: e strikers, who | g wearers samenan nnn mannnnnnnes, Declares They’re Gamest of L ving Creatures ar re Wife of Bronx Zuo Curae ; i oa tor Seeks the Deadly Reptile in the Wilds of Sullivan County and} Children Aid Her. Hunting Defenseless Ele- Phants, Lions and Tigers With Firearms Is Simply Butchery, ae, She Says—Rattler Is a| Real Fighter. Mrs. Clara Ditmars, wife of Curator Raymond L. Ditmars, of the Bronx Zoo, 1s the only woman, #0 far as there is any record, who hunts the deadly rat- tlesnake for the pure sport and ad- venture of it. Mrs. Ditmars ‘8 the rattlesnake te the sportiest of all game to seek, and 4 trophies of her prowess she has a big bag of the squirming reptiles, thelr fangs In perfect working order, which she captured in the wilds about For- estine, Sullivan County, N.Y. The in- trepld sportswoman, tanned and glow- ing with health, is enthusiastic over her trip. She took her two little daughters, Gladys and Beatrice, aged seven and five respectively, when she accompanied Curator Ditmars with his snake nooses and bags for the rock-strewn surface of Sullivan County this summer, The trip, just ended, developed the fact that \not only are the ittle girls un of tho snakes, but they them as bravely as do their parents, “Of course I am not afraid of snakes,” said Mrs, Ditmars to-day when discus- ig her hunt with a reporter for The vening World. “In fact, I rather ve I love the sport. You don’t think {t's sport? Why, the rattlesnake ts the gamest of all living creatures of the wild! Hunting defenseless elephants, lions or tigers is a horrible butchery, an unsportsmanlike advantage with fire- and explosive bullets! “With Dr, Crotalus, as I call the rat- tier, it Is a different thing. Here is and the pretty little woman threw back her head, while her dark eyes shone with the joy of the chase. LEADER OF THE REPTILIAN ARISTOCRACY. “Do you know that the rattlesnake Is the leader of reptillan aristocracy? He {s the most gentlemanly of snakes; his code of ethics compares favorably with that of some members of the hu- man family; an accomplished duellist, | slow to take offense and loath to pro- yoke a combat; but when the confilct 1s not to be avolded he issues a formal declaration of war in conformity to the best tradittims of civilized nations, and begins to fight. For his prowess as a| fighter he commands a great deal of pect, please remember that. ‘Now so much for his value as an an- tagonist to be hunted and captured; a worthy antagonist of any who 1s willing to enter the Ii in the balance against the other. Dr. Crotalus has another side, a virtue in fact, and that 1s why I dub him an Mes. CLARA DITMARS HIGHWAYNEN ROB LAWYER WALKING | WITH GAYNOR’ One Says, “Hello Bill,” as} OLD Others Jostle Mayor’s Com- WATER 2 SNAKES eee CANADIANS FLOCK BRONX IN REVOLT VSITTO THE SOO, HER CONGRESSMEN M. D. and call him @ useful and de-|% Broadway, while he was walking sirable member of the earth's society. | home with the Mayor from the City A few years ago such a suggestion would | Hall yesterday afternoon, have been derided and perhaps !t will| Mr. Goodman lives at Grant city, | District late Threaten to Resign Unless Murphy Will Change Apportionment. be scorned even to-day, but such ts the | Staten He and the jayor left we. Sclentiats who know have dis|th» city Hall about 6.90 o'clock and covered that tho rattlesnake carries! wrixea acrosa the bridge. As they with hin reat. : Bhim Medicine potent in the trent-| tmned into Fulton street from Wash- | ment of certain serious human ailments; 5 " that the venom by which he takes the | inton a elx-footer in a blue rt. | President ee a Big ves of his enemies may be used to|coatless and with sleeves rolled up, | grasped the Mayor's hand and said: | at Sault Ste Marie | livers a Speech. | | | Greeting restore to health the victims of certain and De- “Hello, Bill! I'm coming over to the affiictions, Mader sreataent by hypodermic in-| city Hail to see you." Jection of rattlemake venom patients | Ne who have suffered from idiopathic eee | eee ee eee nena: APG SERIES epsy have been cured. Crotalin, as the |! Pats om. The ble stranger, who ap- r 2 venom is called, has also been success. | Peared to @ longshoreman, stepped SATUD ATE AAI Mich tween the Mayor and Mr, Goodman, | Big crowds from Canada and 3 d the latter was shoved toward the|Michigan gathered here to-day to wei-' fully experimented with In the treatment of forms of insanity and other serlous curb nst two men, one of whom!come President Taft, who against a pole and tue|! noon, The @ or deadly atlments for which science has yet found no cure,” Mrs. Ditmars proudly points out fine ng to kim, rief tour “big fellows” in the snake house in the Goodman had left the Bronx Zoo as ones she caught herself yor to continue to his home in ghth avenue, Brooklyn, he started to the subway, and discovered th ! The Tammany district leaders in the gruntled over the new Congressional apportionment, ‘They, assert that the apportionment will an- nihilate borough autonomy fectively than any plan Leader Charles Y. Murphy might devise. Under the old apportionment the pnx could boxst of one Congressman, pt, 19.—| Bronx orthern arrive more ef- and the whole Ditmars family are look- ing forward to next jear's vacation when they will again unt the danger- ous but “sporty” rattler in his rocky 1 Und roll had been stolen from his righ 1 ‘ trousers pocket. It consisted of a borough loses its full Congres» Aletrict, | haunts of Sullivan County, bill and three $1 notes rolled up with but participates peacemeal in the elec- - half dollar, sa tion of four Congressmen—four dis- FIREHOUSE DOG SLEEPS He turaisned the police with a de- rah ng the tricts going into and overlapping the IN FLAT AFTER A BLAZE. |tisor ana "partial ono of ts a ratie cane Salecly Of 28 9F neek Hin? sive ean a ‘4 districts—the Twenty-fourth—lies in Women Fail to Dislodge Him and| the police é ae trying tac and’ thank, Westchester County, while the other ah three have thelr largest voting the Fire Fighters Are Recalled. Mrs, Emanuel Pearson walked out of |grankiyn W the kitchen of her apartment at No. 600 West One Hundred and Seventieth etrength in the upper part of Manhat- tan. ‘The Bronx leaders have already pro tested to Leader Murphy, and threaten down and out tf he does Saye It wit | Aantgnee ntody of! Reni Business Soon, y | | street to-day and saw smoke pouring tosday. 10'| ,,nnneuncement » today not restore to the Bronx the right to from a bedroom door, She screamed. $14 Hemiock | Elliott: Norton, the Wall’ ave @ Congressman of her own. Mrs. E, W. Cope ran in from the next from Freder\ yy, | Street brokerake H an alck apartment, She screamed. esi & Compexy that the brokers will be == = — en came. aI. Tn able to resume business in about ‘U lly G a the vas held in che th month, and the fire was held in ch ieivo her the Ruratng to Mr, Norton, ealieios nusually oa bedroom until the firemen from No, 67|°! rf ststanding debts of $700,00 Engine house, @ few cocrs away, ar- 1 and pay $25 a Hep bot Beg Ae ad rrr —filavor rived and squelched {t, rial of the case Friends of the members of the firm| rn When the firemen had gone and the , Prepared to fight have offered assistance to the extont| aroma women were having an informal con- ass was broug st of 000, ‘The friendly attitude of the -_ gratulation party they discovered that |Prnuary bu erning the natiine tore: bas Aided fof mreat: saten one the fire was really a'minor catastrophe, [Of {he evidence against him put In no BANEFASIOED ROtsiamient 6! | —qualit the long, lean smoke-eating Ne diMculties of the firm. | q y and were only two witnesses, One yer, who described d who Is the pet of Bnj “@ ‘unusually low lie 1,287 World “Business | Opportunity” Ads. | Last Week—- 239 More Than Deuble the 524 in the Herald. More Than Eleven Times the 115 in, the Next High- BEST. men cst New Yorks Newspaper. jt bis proper home, ves the smell of smoke. T! “ n soothed his nerves. He lay down on the © nt inveatian atet a . Pre 7 ee ie area irae tay Gama On Cie wae been Mr, | Tucker chauffeur f More Than 5,000 Present When jeep, When Mrs. Pearson and Mrs. aa LO pe cried the Show Binrts, ro en Cope tried to make him understand that MW Mises eine jeri Ae ns the fire was over and his services were Myiye.s Slat eae WHIT ALTA, Hanh Wi-¥ no longer required, Chicf merely opened | yint iM i them back ¢ his blood-shot eye: and growled, They |}\, trled to dislodge him with @ broom and pe yaa anon aw the mow ots, Ib, he showed his long teeth and they re- at wouter Waa ¢ tired to the hall. ‘They threw soe- Aes two.y - was the ters Nothing Jone thand jb, cold, Free del | brushes and rubber over: and roused himself in i eo. hiate he vee Order by Portal, or Telephone 8471 Cortland ma Jain that he had come to stay. | f PR so oie ah hennh The volunteer fire brignde of wemen | ™ ade |* : od reassembled and after a long diacus- fo ead shiean ‘ ! fon a small boy was sent to the fire-| trust bak " Py py sai ve) , semen a a lon of flremen rose to) ime " » . ax he saw the blue < ‘ ‘ ‘ «4 buttons he meek! 1 and ears and followed them back in t Union will Established 1840 233, 235, 237, 259 Washington ay oN Bok, Hors Place and Barclay my Pittsburgh, the expend ' { —--—- r the proposed apportionment the | ER 19, 1911. ‘ 8 ] ALL GUESTS SAFE (MOVING PICTURES BUTPENNILESSIN | MADE CRIMINALS ROCKS HOTEL FIRE) OF BOYS, HE SAYS Report That Woman Was!Dr. Wright Advocates a Board Bumed to Death Denied of Censorship in After Roll Is Called. Jersey. (Spectal to The Prening World.) HIGHLAND FALLS, N. Y., Sept. 19.— While searchers dug into the ruins of the Rocks Hotel, which was destroyed by fire last night, for the body of a Woman who was supposed to have met death in the biase, Mra, Mary Logan, proprietor of the hotel, announced that ail the guests had been found and that) t16 blames the moving picture shows the reported death was an error. for the troubles of most of them. ‘Tho rumor originated from the frantic! “Five years ago," he sald, “we had l efforts of several women to recover|all young men tn our institutions, hut their jewels from the burning hotel.|now they are almoat ali little boys. Nearly all the women guests left their) Those despicable ‘Wild West’ shows valuables and as the flamos shot through | which are to be found in almost every the $0,000 ructure, several tried to) :moving picture theatre in the State, rush back {n search of diamonds and|do more to make criminals of our money. The firemen restrained them, | young than all other affillations, There | but spectators were positive they 2 | es one woman get by the Iines and Into the! butlding. Tt was only after a careful checking! of the persons known to have been registered that the report was set La rest. All the guests were awake when the! za started at 7 o'clock Inst night e West Point Fire Department rushed over to help fight the flames, and, though the soldier boya were too late to save the hotel, they did keep the fire from Ladycliffe Academy, located on the sai hing the Hud- gon just ow West Point. ‘The Rocks was a seven-story butiding. It stood on a rock that overhangs the Hudson, and the blaze brilliantly tiiumt- 1s entirely too much ertme such af murders, holding up trains and stage coaches, and escapes of murderere and others from jail, shown fn these Ger. ing picture pl and I strongly a& vocate the establishment of « Bend of Cennorship in this State.” ea ee Mra. J. R. Drexel Recovertag NEWPORT, Sept. 19.—Mrs. John Me Drexel was able to leave her rocme to-day for the first time in @ week, having been under charge of Dr Charles D. Easton of Newport, for ea attack of bronchitis which caused Mra, Drexel to recall her social engagements, Dr. George B. Wight of the New Jer.) voy Charities and Correction Commis- ston reported at Trenton to-day on the result of @ apectal investigation he has nm making into the reasons why undue proportion of young boys are to be found tn the criminal institutions of { the State. | Anew Coward | — last, for men’s feet’ This new Coward Shoe is for men whose feet are slim and narrow ‘ through the instep. The waist is graduated, made much smaller than ordinary, and cut well in under the arch. _ It not only gives a Nera instep fit, but furnishes a beneficial support to the foot-structure which helps arch weakness and prevents Ms flat. foot.” Save on Rent You can add a room to your present home or save the rent of one room in a new home by using the famous OWEN DAVEN-O yerty, Over nated the river for many miles. Boats Sate eam bale sauemnasts | Please ask the slegnan te view the spectacle. | show you the Cow: the guests wore Mra, G. 8 NEW Combination Shoe, wife of Col. Bingham, and just arrived from Japan on Mrs. | Bingham iost her jewels and $00 In . . esate allan, mother-in-law ot |} Which has at night all the com- | Major John Bigelow jr., lost everything, |Q fort of a full-sized bed with Mrs, and Miss Finn of Paris lost ten|§ separate springs and mattresses vote en ean mt and by day all the uses of a of Lakewood Ne J: ReG. Maranait of (@ beautiful Davenport. Poston; Mr. Marsh, an artist of Rich- Let us show you how it in- mond, Va.; Mra. Robert Huse, son and {2 stantly makes a bed rocm out of any sitting room. maid of New York City, Miss Hunter of | New York City, Mra. Eberts, mother of | $28 and up In 100 Different Styles SOLD NOWHERE ELSB JAMES S. COWARD 264-274 Greenwich 8t., N. Yo { (NEAR WARREN STREET) Mail Orders Filled | Send fer Cotetogme daughter, |thetr way to Jeffersonville, Ind 14thSt.U; Cadet Everts of New Orleans, and Mrs. }and Miss Hoff of New York City. The | |tatter lost a diamond necklace valued at | | $5,(00, Mrs, Hoff had Just received word | Made and sold only by of her father’s death. | (tn the fire was a mahogany donk iQ D. T. OWEN CO. which belonged to Gen. Robert KE. Lee 34 East 23d St., N. Y. City which he presented to the late Col Neb Tus ’ Beginning to-day we ask the shopping public of New York to give our announcements their close attention. We shall not offer you promises or fanciful state- ments--our earnest desire is to give you facts. These will appear from day to day until we open our doors and forever after. We will tell you about our business methods, methods upon which New York's newest department store will lay the foundation on which you may build your confidence. These business methods of ours are refreshingly different and they will add to your comfort, save your patience and incidentally save your cash. ‘*There is always room for one more,'' so they say, but you will agree that it must necessarily depend upon that one. The actual date of our opening will shortly be announced. To-morrow we begin to lay our plans before you. J. L. KESNER NOTE—The Mr. Wizzle contest, the last number of which ap- peared in yesterday’s Evening World, will close on September 30th, instead of September 25th, Owing to the thousands of answers received the winners will not be announced until the Thursday after our opening, when full information will be pub- lished and prizes awarded, ‘Constipation | | Vanishes Forever | | Prompt Relic CARTER’S LITTLE | piven PILLS never |. Purely vegete eel ourel) Wo ttiuldhta! Pak] Qe ith « Our Liberai terms} THIS of Payment $60 wenn 83 00 TRS wy GAP AE She RASS iD 00M GRAND RAPIDS an R aenanee URE $225 $500 $30 $3. 50" $400 $40" $5.00" 3500** $50** $6.00% “Whi ao Miieatot RA | om ind. gor re the complexion — br Pill, Small Doce, Small Frice "Gostne eutbes Signature _ MATERNITY DRESS = if MAKES NO DIFFERENCE WHAT YOU NEED— Worth or Over FOR CATALOG Ep PRE? Ip ail the wet | aNd’ ayant, and fabsicg foe every gy, dia. Se A WORLD WANT AD, WILL GO AND GER ST, / ; i | ng

Other pages from this issue: