The evening world. Newspaper, January 3, 1912, Page 2

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ik Vas y he thought he would have to to keep even with the demands his creditors.” fs Believed that Vanderoet tort the | pay his personal expenses and wife $2,400 a year alimony. AD- tmoney he stole in street, Hi qpeculations are said to-have extended | evér @ period of years, He has been | ‘Treaparer of the Van Keuren & Thorn O6; ter fiftenn years and entered employment of the concern as @ @ TREASURER HAD FULL CHARGE OF FINANCES. Van Keuren & Thornton Com- ¥ fe an old house in the dry goods ‘The senior member the firm several years ago, The officers of the concern are William Thornton, Present; Lewis M. Thornton, Secre- tary, and Percy G. Vandororf, Tri urer. Mr, Vanderoef had complete con tral of the finances of the house and! ‘the trust reposed in him by the Thorn- ‘wae implicit G, Vanderoef's home tn at No | 4, Washington Terrace, Kast Orange Separated from his wife weven years @nd subsequently the wife of James BK, Wilson, an actor, attacked her hus- on the street, cusing him of too friendly with the wife of the man. his long business experience Van- made many friends, Ie w One time President of the Arkwright| & social business ization, membership of which ts confined to jowntown business men. Ut te mat that the Thorntons have “4, been pussied for some time over the ——— $$ (GOW SAID “O. K.,” SO BOROUGH BANK BOARD GAVE LOANS Director Big Notes Passed Over That He Never Saw. | | | $26,000 WAS “SO Dealer Fish Walker | Became “Company, and Collateral Was Not Asked. Alb Third atreet, Hrooklyn, the the Borough Bank, conducted by Jer: mish Mahoney, counsel for the Sta’ Kleinert Tells How EASY’ | Just, t Kleinert, a builder of No, 622 wan the chief Witness to-day at the resumption of Investigation into the affaira of BAUDOUINE WEDS ASEX-WIFE TAKES Rich Yachtsman Honeymoon- ing at Atlantic City With | Woman Named in Suit. © GAVE DIVORCE. Former Mai Chatterton Took’ Marital Express Train to San Francisco. John F. Baudouine, yachtsman, whip | and motorist, declared a bankrupt and | enjoying an income of $%,000 a year from @ trust fund, has taken unto himself a third wife and is now on his honeymoon In Atlantic City. Wife No. 2, after tn- ANEW HUSBAND SINGER WHO WINS HER DIVORCE FROM HE RIFF BOB’ CHANLER | | ener Said SE Reaves (opera singer | Chan nergy II ‘CAVALIERI WINS - DIVORCE DECREE FROM GHANLER Court Quotes American Hus-! band of Singer in Deciding Case Against Him. PARIS, Jan. 4—Lina Cavallert, noted and beauty, to-day was Kranted @ divorce from Robert Winthrop millionaire and gx-Sherift of Du a County, N.Y, Chanler filed No opposition to the div: uit. In the divoree decree the Court de- clares that on several occasions Chanter refused to live with hin wife, saying, when served with the divorce summons: “I have had enough al despite me, my wife ent I would jump through the window.” The costs of the case are assessed against Chan’ The American millionaire was mar- ried to Mile, Cavalier! in Paris in 191 after a courtship that attracted inte __ THE EVENING WORLD, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 3, 1912. LAUNDRY STRIKE. MUST BE ENDED, ent Wash Contractors at Their Meeting. machinery, of the “Hand laundry” m on contract, The merely the smoothing and polishin machinery. Nt oe PATRONS CLAMOR Employers Mobbed by Depend- A meeting of employing laundrymen, to discuss the strike in the trade, at Association do all the real washing, by “hand laundries do sometimes by hand and sometimes by Besides the “hand laundrymen” there changed. We believe that people will inaist that we wi DRIVER DRAGGED FROM SEAT BY STRIKERS. The firat violence of the strike occurred to-day, when John Schwarta, a strike- j breaking delivery driver emiployed by John H. Heath, ownet of @ chain of Hartem Jnundrics, was attacked by ‘rikers in front of the strike head- quarters, No. 275 Kighth avenue. He Whipped up his horses, but his agsailants clung to -is wagon and pulled him from the seat in front of the Lord's Mission, at No. 1417 Righth ayenue. Policeman Tracy rescued the driver and escorted him back to the laundry, at One Hundred and Thirty-sixth street. Mr. Heath has a private strong-arm squad in front of his laundry, and saya tht under’ such protection he finds more than half-his people willing to con- tinue at work. After this episode the Employe: sociation sent to Police Commi Y Waldo for help. Wagons that were Harlem Casino this afternoon Wwas|sent out in the upper part of the c'ty mobbed by the owners of so catled|had policemen: on the seate with the “hand laundries,” who clamored for a| “tives, and police guarded the doors [of the laundries to keep pickets from settlement of the atrike, The twenty: | ontering and disturbing the workers, one mombera of the Laundrymen's| "Co: 'M. J. Regan of the State Departs ment of Labor came to the city to-day to try to work out a peace treaty. There were a féw other instances where drivers were pulled from their wagons, There was a fight which blocked traffic tn West. Forty-third street in front of the Elka’ Club, when A crowd of strike sympathizers tried to wreck @ wagon ofthe club laundry, were delegations of hotel and restaurant keepers, who insisted that if the strike PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD Off for Cleveland! Cleveland is 579. miles from New York, but you can reach the Lake ‘ity in 14 hours by using the train leaving Pennsyl- vania Station at 6.32 P. M. The train ar- tives in Cleveland at 7.30 A. M., in time for breakfast before business. If you are destined to the residential section, leave the train at the Euclid Avenue Station, if otherwise, at the Union Station on the lake front. The train is limited and affords excellent service. ‘There oo __—=" NAVY-YARD MEN STRIKE, were not settled within @ few days a is, of course, a well- co-operative association would be Manking Department, in Horough Hall, Hrooklyn, before Deputy Superintend- kering in the courte hereaboute for nine years in various suite and counter-suite national attention, Chanter deeded all the property he owned to the singer at ¢, dlepraportion vetween the ofits and f4he amount of business done. Finally | 4 of Vaendercel, end he disappeared last S Experts were mut to work on Van- ‘ determined to have the books In- vestigated. Thie reached the knowledae Beroet'a accounts. They found that, acting within his authority to sign he had been drawing checks to ewn account mn @ back of the To! books and arranging the bank repancy by entering fictitious pay- ent of Banks Kdward Graham, Mr. Kleine he bought ten shares of atock. jaya later he was made @ director and & member of the examining committer, which included Gow, Campbell and Mutton. Mr this cor mittee upon I ments to big corporations with which firm Gid business, This method of jmeat was possible only because his associates had confidence in his “gd and never checked up his = ur Mabbett, acting for the Van Keu- said Kieinort, “and I sat at the other with Gow, Hut- ton handied half the notes and I the remainder, When neither recognized the name of a maker or indorser of @ note we would ask about GOW AND CAMPBELL’ id that three months before the bank falled the frat time ‘Three Kleinert described the parsing by Involving the marital relations and all- mony, got a Reno divorce on Dec. 16, boarded an express for San Franc and was immediately married at the Golden Gate to Montgomery H. Clark, | a civil engineer. The immediate successor of Mra. Bau- doine-Clark was Mre. Genevieve Mann, 6 ERA coe LABOR FEDERATION who was named in one of the many apirited papers that were injected into the many Baudouine ve, Baudouine suite that felled to climax in the New York jand Westchester Courts, It has taken Ine years to disunite the Baudeuines, but only two weeks to square monial circle and place them again in the honeymoon atate, ORGANIZER SEIZED BY POLICEIN IOWA the time of hic marriage, vast deal of trouble in release the claims she thus held against his estate. It is understood he finally settied with her for approximately $100,000, apincitilieestenten JEWELS LEFT AS MAID MOVED TO NEW PLACES. She Was a Model, but She Had Planned Robberies Ere Leav- ing Paris, Mile, Eugenie ®chumann, lately of that dear Paris, will not see the fair city on phe Seine for a much longer and had a| tting her to| | formed to do such | members, the association agreed to confident of winning mort demands. the Jobs in their shops. Thirty-five thou The employers, as the union worke: had expected, tried to relieve the situa: dry" work to Brooklyn. work at cost, for Under this pressure the members of meet Col. of their Laundry Workers’ Local No. % joined Local No. 126 to-day and the workers went on a strike as fast as they finished sand had stopped work before noon. tion by sending much of their “rough As @ result, NORFOLK, Va., Jan. &—There was a walkout of 20 mechuntes at the Nor- Michael J. Regan and representatives of | folk Navy-Yard to-day as a protest the strikers and draw up @ peace treaty | against what they claim n effort to to-morrow morning. The strikers are | introduce a scientific time system, The men refused to slgn, time cards offered to them. A meeting of the mechanics was called for late this afternoon, when @ final decision as to thelr future course will be announced. A ‘total of 900 men had quit work at the Navy Yard late to-day and gone into conference. There are upward of 2,000 men employed at the yard. WASHINGTON, Jan. 3.—All of_ the hinists in the, Norfolk Navy Yard appointed dining car serving dinner. A club car suggests smoke and refreshment and com- panionship. As a of its equipment there is also a barber, who tidies up men’s clothes, and a bath. The observation and library car suggests its ewn fo It is to mgers an ‘ i |have threatened io strike. ‘The men| @ Social exchange, a read- { 4 & Thornton Company, appeared in WAS ENOUGH. PELL IN LOVE ON GIGHT AT (Continued from First Page.) lime than she had hoped. Eugenie, by| Local No: $7, which rules the |fuspected that the time cards in some) ino room and Set olitisok H{fCentre Street Police Court last Satur- | phen Campbell or Gow would assure LARCHMONT PARTY. TRAC her own sadly smiling confession, is a] Shirt ironers and neck and way indicated the purpose af the Navy 4 afternoon and geked for & warrant | ug tha in the Rubberplant borough, declared the person was ‘0. K.’ Bome | “sgox' While these explosions were going 08) thier She came to this country with | Depariment to install the Taylor scten- | } | f aa ve" Vanderoef's arrest the specific of stealing @12 by means of a made out for a fictitious payment. trate House advised that the mat- lest Mr, Mabbett went to Deputy Assstant trict-Attorney Platt, who had charge the complaint bureau, and laid the before him. At the same time the Were notifi\ed to look out for fanderoet. \TTORNEY READY TO DUCE MIGOING TREASURER. Apparently Vanderoef had been keep- track ef the movements of the tens, for Mr. Mabbett had no eniteted the ald of se Distriet- than Terence J. M@Manus aj ae Vanderoef's counsel with o ition «for negotiations, Several ferences have been held between » Mabbett, Mr. McManus and Mr. fiat. Mr. McManus told the District- yesterday that he was ready produce’ Mr. Vanderoef this afte StS {r ]Rumors that there was something if" in the Van Keuren & Thornion Giroviated through the wholesale ¥ afternoon brought out all the and econ the defaloation was 4 of common news in ¢ trade. oe, created widespread sur- janderoef, although lived Grew & good salary. Few of his aeeeuar™ oer Matbett, on behalf of the Van @ Thornion Company, gave out wing statement this afternoon. Van Keuren & Thornton Com- hee suffered a low by the defalca- of one of its officers, ‘Nhe amount ‘Rot suMciently larce to impair its lity to pay ite obligations Wone will undoubtedly fall entire. | @n the stockholders, The buaine ee thee nigger} jad due cour he old company are, wealth althy they will furnish the capital for th @oncern, which will go on with t Le, game way and in the place as Raecanmsencais to are being made now the formation of the new com any will be conducted by Mr, Willlain | ton and will probably be known | 2 The William Thornton Company.” Bast Orange Vanderoef was known fow people. He occupied a houre ae ° The people most tnter- ieilat rents for 9 a month, and in his 7, besides himssif, were his alster, Raith V, Wells, and an elderly Ned to be his mother, The The World’s be placed before the District-At: | gai \drawn on the People's Hank of times we would ask if there was any collateral, whereupon either Gow or Campbell would go into the bank vaults and return with securities which, they 4, mecured the note, had confidence in Gow, Campbell and Maxwell. If I had an inkling that there was anything wrong, I assure you this investigation would be unneces- sary.” The witness professed ignorance of the 8 KE, Mace note for $%,00, a C,H. Rood note for $2,000 and note for $106,000, How do you think these notes passed through without you hearing of them?’ he was aso it must been done in a very slick, ahret underhand way," he said. Dummy notes may have deen passed, he said. Kleinert testified that while he was bunting in Nova Scotla, he heard the bank was in trouble and returned to find President Maxwell tn jail. Hoe offer- ed ball for Maxwell, but Lawyer Paul Grout dissuaded him. “What was your view of the matter at that time?’ esked Mr. Mahoney. “I understood that Gow, Maxwell and Campbell had wrecked the bank,” sald tho witnoss, John W. toatl. | fled that John yin the proprietor of xt w some rich men in ho wanted to invest some capital, “As a result of that,” testiNed Walker, “we formed John W Walker & Co, to ive capital a chance to invest. The Horough Bank financed the company Neither Hill nor myself put @ dollar in he enterpria “How did you get the money? asked Mr, Mahoney “Mr, HM Introduced m. teplied the witner firat borrowed $3,000 on a mote without giving collateral, In all 1 borrowed $26,000 on notes without putting up ee- ourity.” Walker said Hill owned 196 shares of stock In the company; he controlled 100, nd two of Mr. mployees had family moved to Montclair in October, 1908, Orange trom intermittent. were paid by M: Orange. She closed her account ¢ a few daye ago, before Nicherd Tovin, her landlord, had cashed the last check ; for rent. Th eck Was returned to Tobin marked “no funds.” Tobin visited | the house when an Evening World re- porter called to-day and she was evi- dently primed to receive visitors. Be- He te not Remarkable Lead in “To Let”’ |} Advertising— During the year 1911 there were printed 282,856 E. World “To Let” Advts. [ 79,938 More than the Herald, Times, Sun, Tribune ‘and Press COMBI NED. i that both Sad tenants should year 1918. He ia not in New York | That is all the information you can get | out of me.” “Are you aware thas fe in some trouble? as “1 know all about tt Mr. ed the reporter, answered Mre Wells. “His company knows all about | Hon /it, too, but they won't say anything. —_> | And we have nothing to eay over here.” |re sac Tobin, the landiord, says be expecte| comm i] o Syatem. the Vanderoets will move soon, He hae | CommieMoner Thompson, of the De- had no oMclal notification to that effect, | PA'Heat of Water Supply, Gas and | but be feels that he is going to lose a] Mivetricity, has forwarded to the Hoard tenant, of Wastin & request for the issue of) —_ $1,090,000 tn corporate stock for the ex | _ | ST. LOUIS “ONLY PLACE” | FOR THE DEMOCRATS. Martin Be- | | That's the Reason Cot, _ lieves National Convention Will | Be Held There, WASHINGTON, Jan, 3—Col, John 1 | mortin of Bt. ‘Lous {arrive here, prepara’ jof the National Com: day, Was at th pant twenty years Col, Martin Bergeant~at-Arme of the De | Conventions, He le here a» an officta of Ue party at large, ‘fumt naturally certain’ that St. Lou would get the Convention, because 1 | was “the only place for it," Capltol te | » Mrs, Wolls and she made good the amount Mrs, Wells appeared to be alone in fore the reporter hed had a chance to state , a: Vandoroet the fret of the | Democrauc Convention City boomens to ry to the meeting ittee nest Tues: or the but said he was Baudouine ts only two years away from the interesting age of fifty. He is @ big, athletic man, devoted to outdoor sports, He was thirty-six and & widower when he married sighteen- year-old Mat Ciyatterton in 1900. They met at a dance in the Larchmont Yacht Club in July and were married in August. It was a case of love at first eight, they both declared, and for a year or 0 afterward they were called the “honeymoon couple.” Life to them, they sald, was une long ' sneymoon, aid honeymoon, however, soon went Into @ state of eclipse, and in August, 1902, the twenty-yeur-old bride went home to moth There was a, reconciliation in No- Vomber, then another spat, then another reconciliation, Cupid seemed to be performing @ perilous feat on the high trapeze in the Baudouine homestead, and finally he came down with « bai ‘fnd caromed into the law courts, Mra. D. began with a separation suit in 1908, in which the name of Genevieve Mann was mentioned. This sult got lost somewhere in the divorce mill and t ease of Baudouine versus Baudouine was not again docketed until 198%. Then Mr. B. came to the front in an action for divorce. He charged his wite with misconduct at the Hote! Remington, No. 129 West Forty-sixth street, and namod a Larchmont phyastolan, Mra. B. coun- ter-charged that she was the victim of an unscrupulous plot, that she had been trapped into a compromising position, WAGBN’'T SATISFIED WITH 9250 4 MONTH ALIMONY, Mr. B. granted his wife $250 a month alimony. She was not satished with this and asked for $600 @ month for her- self and six-year-old eon, In her peti- tion she sald: «ule fortune yearly, and has many intimate friends among men of ques tlonable character who are likely to back him up in any unconscionable scheme he would undertake to get rid of the defendant and their child, and she believes he will use every effort to do eo, and to meet such achemes and lots ich the plaintif® has been iay- ing awainet her it will require the use of considerable money, which she deems necessary for her own vindication and for the future of her chi" How- over the Court held that §20 was suMctent for M. Baudoulne's nee Later Mra. Baudouine alleged that her husband maintained fifteen horses, « dosen servants, thirteen equipages, « yacht, two automobiles, and that he was @ momber of half @ dozen expenaive ba. ‘When we lived at No. 18 West Seventioth stroet,” said Mre B, “1 discovered for the firet time that he had @ yacht, Lt was called Genev: weed to give dinner parties on boat costing $1,600, That yacht was the beginning of our troubles.” Yet notwithstanding all these charges md counter charges nothing came of e multe and the marital knot wae nally taken out to Reno for dissolu- | na f the tn porvice oot Mgh pressure fire ser- Manhattan. The high now ende at ‘Twenty: | The Conmiasione fee ayatom pressure third # street ning. and thence to place of begin- * ntinue the a n from ‘Twen- ty-thind street and Lexington avenue. | along Lexington avenue to Thirty-third| street, goroms Thirty-third street to Madison avenue, to Thirty-fourth street, jto Thirteenth avenue, to Twenty-third who wae responsible for them?” ‘Gompers is the general of « great army and like & general he did not imquire when any of is men were engaging in guerrilie warfare, But if this were called to the attention of the general naturally he would re- uke them.” “Do you think he could have stopped it had he tr “I do not, an the tronworkers were only an allied organization to the American Federation of Labor. John J, McNamara was not the kind of man to, take orders from anybody.” Hookwalter asserted that his invest! @ation convinced him beyond any doubt that MoNamara and the iron workers were guilty, He sald the Inquiry, al- though lasting only forty-five days, was @ thorough one and was dropped be- cause his term as Mayor expire: “L myself had financed much of the work,” sald Bookwalter, “and when 1 left oMice 1 had no further intergat as & publle offictal in the matte Mr. Hookwalter shortly afte came identified with a larg houge patronized chiefly ‘by ih this be= printing labor unions, He denied that Mr. Gompers had any interest in the concern, and aid the sole owners besides nimselt were Hugo Thorach, Frank W, Ball and Leo M. Rappaport, counsel for the In- ternational Association of Bridge and Structural Iron Workers here. Rappu- port defended John J. MoNamara in the extradition proceedings prior to his removal to California, William J. Burns, who ts here tn re- sponse to @ Kubpoena to testify before the Federal Grand Jury, admitted that hin detectives were working on the de talla revealed in the investigation by Hookwalter and the circumstances that attended the dropping of the Inquiry by olty authorit “No union labor leaders, not even Samuel Gompers, head of the American Federation of Labor, have lifted a hand to help us in cleaning up the big dy- hamite conspiracy, elther before or after the McNamara confession at Los Angeles,” to-day said Oscar Lawler, Special Government Prosecutor for the District of Southern California, GOMPERS DENIES HE KNEW OF M'NAMARA DOINGS, WASHINGTON, Jun. 3.—-Commenting upon a statement by former or Bookwalter of Indianapolls, that prom!- nent labor officials were informed more z than two years ago that J. J, McNa- mara was engaged in dynamite out- Samuel Gompers, President of merican Federation of Labor, to- aid “No person, living or dead, ever made such @ statement to me, or even gave @ hint that J. J. McNamara or any one else Was engaged In a dynamite exploit or dynamite campaign.” —_>-——- BETTS FAILS TO APPEAR, $5,000 BOND FORFEITED. Man Charged With Theft of Wid- ow's 100 Was to Go on Trial, The case of Frojurick A. Betts, un- der indictment for grand larceny, was called before Justice Davin in the Criminal Hranch of-the Supreme to-day Court. Hetts failed to respond to the call, and his bond of $5,000, furnished | by the Hipire State Surety yany was declared forfeited, A bench war rant Was issued for Betts’ arrest Betts came to New York from Hart- |ford, ‘He was formerly insurance Comminsioner tout and one of the State of Connec of the best known men Parente’ Party There is to be a parente Washington Lrving High School to-mor- row evening at 8 o'clock. The parents and elder relatives are generally invited party at 1 to attend. Joseph Barondess, a achool i» commissioner, will preside. The course t lof study will be explained by puptie | and there will be am exhibition of the work of the students, The echool Ca Under" the ‘supervision of Mss “Marthe jer the supery Wiichinsky. in that commonwealth Mra, Mary HM. Drake of No, 1632 Riggs street, Washington, complained to the District-Attorney last June thay Betts had robbed her of $2,000 by & breach of trust, Betts had friend of ber father, who h and Betts volunteered to invest $ | of the | > her by her father 1 noney Was never invested and ts Betts his own uses, it charged converted indictment, the bond was furntehed and nothing further wan thought about caso in the Distrigt-Attorney’s ee eee el a Oy ERs oy peg Gay. intent to steal and stuck to her purpose, When Eugenie was a chambermaid in the Paris hotels she noticed that those Atnerican ladies were most careless with their Jewelry. She came to this country to work as @ lady's maid and rob her employers. She was the Jewel of the household wherever she went, in the home of Mra, 8. L. igverg of No, 316 West Bighty- firat street Mra. I. A. Powell and Gerard Bilas of the Hotel Luzanne at Amster- da venue and Seventy-ninth streets missing from all these she e@tayed in them. But rf euspected by the people of the house. Mr. Elias a few dave fo called in the police, While Eugenie was out on an errand the detectives searched her trunk, They found all of the miasing Pilas jewelry and much more, worth about $5,000 in all. Eugenie pouted when the detectives showed her their digcovery. She told them where it all carhe trom, “Ah, It is sad," she sighed. “T was going ‘back to Paris to have oh, such a fine time.” Magistrate House tn Harlem Court held her for the Grand Jury without ball. eee GIRL DEFENDANT YAWNS AS STORY OF KILLING IS TOLD Margaret Flyne, Accused of Sweet- heart’s Murder, Hears Evidence With Calm Indifference. Margaret Plyne, calm, self-posseaned and apparently little interested in her surroundings, took her seat to-day In the Court of General Sessions before Judge Foster, where she is on trial for the murder of James MeInerny on Aug. 22 last, in a tenement at No, 3% East One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street. She fs a young woman who dresses well and whore sole Interest in life to-day beemed to be the neat fitting gloves that covered her hands. McInerny and Margaret Flyne hed been Hving together for some time prior to the former's murder. MeIner- ny's mother knew of her son's rela- tions with the woman and he had prom- ised her he would leave Margaret Policeman Andrew Undervast told how he hi gone to the apartment oc- cupied by Margaret Flyne and MeIn- erny on the morning of Aui and had found the gas meter in the place punctured with bullet holes ani the dead body of Mctnerny lying between the kitchen and dining-room. “His watch pocket was pulled inside out,” said the policeman, “as if the contents had been removed. His white prt was covered with blood.” At this the defendant atified @ yawn, Bide hdd Lan BLIND PAIR ARE WED. je Thom as They Are ted at City Hi Ferien orKge Richardson, thirty-four rs old, Buffalo, N ora Sehwarta, thirty h of whom are totally blind, came to the City Hall to-day and announced their Intention of getting married. The couple were accompanted by Mra. George Stignet, Mra, I, Cowen and Florence Hart Jerome, who guided them through the ritual and acted as witnesses, After the Hcense was pro- cured ‘and signed the blind lovers’ by the witnesses, Alderman James the room in ment used for such ceremonies, hands being guided they were married All Humors Are impure matters which the skin, liver, kidneys and other organs can- not take care of without help, Pimples, boils, eczema and other eruptions, loss of appetite, that tired \ feeling, billous tur fits of indige: tion, dull headaches and other troubles are due to them. In their treatment be sure to take Hood’s Garsaparilia Pe acco, quia form or tm choco for the strike to-day and will quit to- night. JERSEY WON'T WASH NEW YORK’'S DIRTY LINEN. The Jersey City Local voluntarily sent word to Wifliam Armour, president of No. 12, that if any attempt was made to shift washing contracts té the other side.of the Hudson, the Jersey unfons would not hesitate to start a sympathetic strike. ‘True to their training, the delivery boys lived up to the spirit of the trade by abandoning thelr wagons, filled with packages belonging to patrons all over the upper city, to-day. They were kind enough to unhitoh the horses and take them to the stables. But the children of the street were free to sack the wag- and parade the sidewalks in my inky ‘6 most intimate apparel. And they ot the shops where workers were finishing jobs before going on strike, they humorously showed their con- tempt for their employers by writing jokes and jibes on shirt fronts (of pat- rong) with greasy black pencils, Such merry jests they were, too! Mr. Armour eafd to-day that he had no doubt of a complete victory for the tifle management system. The navy of- ficials here have instructed Capt. Doyle, Commandant of the Norfolk Yard, to explain that the cards are in no way connected with the Taylor system, but the following out of a practice of keep- ing time on. each Job. The men have Just received an increased allowance of elght cents per day per man. ———— EGAN GETS A STAY. TRENTON, |N. J., Jan. 3.—Former County Collector Stephen M. Egan of Hudson County, who was yesterday sentenced by Justice Swayne in Jersey City to pay a fine of $1,000 and to serve not legs than seven years in State Prison, to-day filed a writ of error in the Supreme Court, asking that the sentence and conviction be reviewed by that court,. Egan was convicted on an Indictment charging him with embeagle- ment in having Joaned the sum of $31,500 of the county's money to the late “Bob” ‘atic leader of Jersey City, * Louis Huhnle, Republi can of Atlantic County, who was recently convicted of graft.in con- nection with the building of a county road in Atlantic County, also filed a writ of error. The writs act as stays until. the cases are settled. on the passing scenery. A ladies’ maid and a nfanicurist serve the pas- sengers. Drawing-rooms or state-rooms may be chosen by those who wish more seclusion than the berth affords. This train is one of the famous trains of the land, and it is a great favorite with travellers between Cleveland and New York. The excellence of its equipment and the time- liness of its schedule make it so. The time table shows five other good trains to Cleveland leaving at convenient hours. strikers within a week. “This 18 no fake strike cooked up to Justify the organization of a new unton.” he said, “Our union has been in exist- ence twenty-five years, Our demands are founded on rights. Our people work in rooms where slop and suds are at times ankle deep. “They work in an atmosphere of steam from foul linen; many shops are in. sup- basements and are not decently lighted; in shops where machinery is largely used there are constantly accidents which could be prevented by the sim- plest protective devices; the days are unduly long, running from twelve to eighteen hours, With the general tm- provement in the condition of labor, the time has come for these thing: be “a Sore Throat Cold inChest The Oil penetrates through the A Delicious Salad Dressing and Fish Sauce by adding vinegar, At Delicatessen and Grocery Stores. CENTS, Spoon with each Tone 8 Quality ‘Unequated Superior to All Others Send for Catalogue and Prices WISSNER WAREROOMS 06 bth Ave., cor. 15th St., N.Y. 58-57 Flatbush Ave., Brooklyn res of the skin to the sore, in- WnO SNOKES? ed parts, and gives quick relief. | 41 cued Melt, |) Uilatatte, "nd iunuble, Trial bottle roc. ; large bottles asc., 50c, ten cents now io 2145 WAS Raton Ate vow tty, Special for Wednesday, the Srd Special for Thursday, the 4th Meee, pare 10c NEY QRLEANS OOCOANUT | 0c UND BOX, a a POUND BOX, "ET to nox, SOC] WR nox, BOC se.04 xe) Milk Chocolate Covered od x Tangerines ~ we sau “The Pride of California.” That's the apie aaa rand of the frutt, — Premfum Milk lav Chocolate — thas’ — i. e pchtet Sot perm pride, The com to indescribable. OPULAR E ANOS A Piano for every purpose and every Purse. Player Pianos from $475 with free. music library. New Uprigh' s $225 Spears Used Pianos of our own and other good makes, $100 up. Easy terms if you wish. No matter how much or how wae you may know of a Piano, the reputation is your paipreil For aes seven years it has been recognized as one, of the most durable Pianos made. Write for our complete catalog of prices and tarime PEASE PIANO CO. 128 W. 42d, nr. Broadway, N.Y. Brooklyn Newark bal Flatbush Ave. _10 New D New St. Manufacturers’ Sale FURS Prices Reduced 50% efbiatis FUR SETS Fitts yern Mia a OFFERING” Genuine White Fox Sets, $37.50 50 e that you cannot di than $75. le Coney... 188 2:60 Black Cone? Men’ 's Fur-Lined Coats, siz, 50 Chantieers’ Blegk'Dog Skin Coats, $14.00 weer: 6th Aver, Near 3 St, usiness 40 Y. | BRENNAN.—On Jan, 2, BRIDGET BREN- | NAN, wife of James Brennan, | Funeral Thursday at 10 A. of, from Jate residence, $0 Ocean pl Mass oc Presentation Caurch, St, Mark's ond Rockaway ave., Brovkiyn, sbereeudiet| ee ———E Fat a Se had lait teas Sunday World Wants Work . Monday Morning Wonders,

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