Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
ebeartes of life have gone up to such n extent that @istress has been @ocasioned among the poorer classes. to restrict their, were have had | @upply works have been compelied to featrict their delivery of {iluminants, the mat) services have been retarded an@ many ooean steamers have had to be laid up in harbor. . The British Government has been trying to bring the miners and coal ewnere together, but has not yot suc- geeded, and it is thought probable that @ & final measure a minimum wages ll for miners will have to be intro- G@uped in the House of Commons. Many of the mine owners have ex- thelr sympathy with the prin-| of a fixed minimum wage, but! @here decline even to consider the iéea. } March = 11.—The! Paul, which was due on March 23, and | due to fm consequence of the British coal) strite. The White Star liner Olympl however, tas coaled and will sail for ‘New York on March 14 ARSHIP MOVIES TAREN BY COFFYN (Continued trom First Page.) most tactful, seeing the child had @wered the same question probably a Wendred times since the fight. But bor ere ie extremely poilte fo, thir,” he replied, stunding with feét, wide apart and rocking back ferth like a miniature of his father. “T ‘wouldn't be afraid anywhere with my *énd-G04.' He always usod ta promith me a ride when he had tho with the wheels, but I like the one with the Doats better, I was goin’ once with ‘Mr. Hoxthey only there was too much ait.” “How Goes it feel to ny?” “It makes you lght all o Ee? whieh you go too quick In the elevator, Bi ‘end {t takes your breath But it's “ great.” a Pear ie entirely lacking in his make y ns wach 19 evident at once in his ase, with tho I i my Dad-dad calls ij i his heed « nroment entered. i i t I'm goin’ to be when said. to be an aviator, like aren't yout’ asked the Aviator” shook his he replied, “I thought qmough tun, 1 talki 352 a H 1 i ‘ Littlest thie, F gf with my ma, and I'm goin’ to # tee & thallor—on a tugboat—so's I can ‘there you ere! A ead biow to but—he may change hie mind next flight around Miss ‘Ldberty, — CARNEGIE ADMITS HE HELPED MOT SPRINGS, Ark., March 11,—And- ra@ Carnegie contributed money to help ‘Getrag expenses involved in Col. Rovse- African expedition, but the con- was made atter Mr. Carnegie Rad+ talked to Col, Wolcott of the Simithsonian Institutton. Col, Roosev mover asked Mr, Carnegie to contribute it for any purpose. information is contained in a @etement made here to-day by Mr. Camesie, He does not say what sum he contributed. " IE ree BAG DRAGS HER TO DEATH. ‘A woman about sixty years old wes late this afternoon by a Broad- y car at Alabama and Jamaica ave- East New York. The woman, the officials say, was passing be one Broadway oar as it was turn into @venue when ‘her were several papers fame of Amelia Ketser 18 Refiroad avenue, Jamaica, 7 a aeltal CHARLESTON RESULTS. purse cond} four furlongs.—Hthel- TH., 108 (Bkirvin), 3 to 1,6 to 5 and to 5 won; Silver Bill, 10 (Koerner), 1, 4 to 5 and 2 to &, second; Ra leva, 104 (Borel), 12 to 1,5 to 1 Z hird. - Time, 0,40 2-6. ‘Folia: sume aver, ran and Miss Raith fell ‘Four-yeaf-olds and bar ures ; welling; five and a furloags.—Chiiton Queen, 107 (Tur- » @ to 1, 8 to 1 and 4 to 1, won ica, 107 (Hanover), # to 1, 9 to 6 # to 6, second; Jacobite, 114 Jensen), Stool gel to §, third, Time, jodkin, Pennyroyal, Maezi Tolson d'Or, Cardiff, Starover, Light: and Mark Antony also ran and hed en named, THIRD RACE—Three-year-olds; purse ; conditions; aeven furlongs.—Puck (Peak), 6't0 2 9 to 10 ani 2 to 5, + Col. Holloway, 110 (Turner), 4 to 1, 6 and 4 to 6 second; Grif, 110 (Lot . 1 to 1, 4 to 1 and 8 to 5, third. 25. Fiamma, Hempstead, A » Mad River, Oohre Court also -vear-olds and conditions; one 101 (Wilsor), 7 to 5, won; Mock.er, 1M (Tur- 4) ever, but says that does not indicate ANUNDSENS DOGS gOKED FoR FOOD AT XMAS FAST South Pole Discoverer Party Returned Fatter and Than on Departure. TRIALS ON NO TRIP. Only Hardship Cfimb Over Icy Mountains and Breathing Rarefied Air. in LONDON, March 11.—-Added detalles. cabled by Roald Amundsen, —from| Hobart, Tasmanta, serve to establish | that the voyage of discovery to the South Pole was in the nature ot a) Jaunt, Practically no hardships were Jexperienced by the adventurous ex. | Plorers except in the high altitudes, | where they had dificulty in breathing. Amundsen says he shares the credit or being the first to reach the South Poe with his dogs. He brought back ven of these hardy animals with him. rest were sacrificed on the way for Th food for the other dogs and the men The piece de resistance, #0 to speak, of the Christmas dinner of the exploring party, eaten at no great distance from the South Pole, dog stew. According to Amundsen, the flesh of the Esquimeau dog is palatable and nutritious, Only one of the doge! that started out for the South Pole from the | adquarters became sick, This one showed signs of distemper and was im- mediately put to death and buried in a ‘airn of snow. THR DOGS RAN AWAY AND FORAGED IN DEPOT. Later three dogs broke away from the party and scampered back to’ where the carcass of thelr former teammate had been buried. They unearthed tt and ate most of ft, and also broke into one of the supply depots and consumed a box of pemmican ang other food. Amundsen does not state whether these dogs were recovered, Possibly, even with the ald of his equipment of strong, thy doi which were able to pull the sledges at the rate of from fifteen to twenty miles a day, Amundsen would have fatled to ach the pole but for the favorable woather. He happened to set out from his'last camp for the final Gash just as the spring season became settled. no time after that was the cold and the gales which perpetually aw over the Antarctic regions were mod ate In thar force. Because of the mild weather he en- countered Amundsen {a disposed to be- leve that Capt. Scott, the zlish ex- plorer, also reached the poie. He found fo signs of Capt. Scott's purty, how- fallure on the part of the Engllsn ex- plorer, Amundsen thinks that if Capt. Scott preceded him to the Pole he would have left some memorial of his achieve- ment, The alr was still during the four days Amundsen and bis men spent at and aroun@ the Pole, and signs of a party having previously been there would probably have remained, Capt. Soott, In Amundsen's opinion, reached the Pole, if he was successful, after the Norwegian expedition had started north. DRAGGED SUPPLIES UP STEEP CLIFFS, The exact location of the South Pole is about two miles above the level of! THE - WAITING FOR THE CALL IRAE LT ay | Kutone. TH EVENING WORLD, “e ie First of the Army ot Strikers Quitting Work in British Mine. MINERS As0UTt ASCEND FROMAI EG ~ the sea, but in reaching {t the explorers had to surmount ico peaks con: higher. In these climbs they from the eflects of the Ii coupled with the terrific exertion of drag! thelr sledges of sup almost perpendicular elifts, The explorer says that bis and himself were alw: although they called in Arctic explora But what might be y are not suff bitter hausting nature ts ¢ rule, —ooo DOG MEAT IS FINE WHEN NO OTHER FOOD IS AROUND, SAYS P: WASHINGT fe delic!ous—sometimes,"” Such was the comment to-d \ & N \ Ni Nt Wa QUA q outward Journey from the exertion of an ex-| March U.—"Dog meat \\ NNN NN AINE \ @ reminiscent grimace, of Admiral Rob- ert E. Peary, North Pole discoverer, up- on the eating of his dogs by Antarctic Explorer Amundsen, and siderably suffered ent alr, bouquet doesn’t pplies Up when you're cold and hungry and have nothing else to ea! Working his larg: leticall, men ant ays hun- were on : t isn't so bad, but a ation full} bite from the lind leg of w sledge dog full ra-| rivals a chunk of gutta perch: iclent in) nothing tougher on earth. meat 1s not fried, as a rule; tt and then bolled,’ But It can be com- pared favor © meat or that of any carniverous animal, Of course, it is nothing Ike meat of grass-eating EARY. trips, And every other explorer has probably done the same. Meat can be carried ‘on the hoof’ th eful to draw the sl needed for the men and for the dogs retained.” ay, with S ) sth pir onDay COURT DECISION % iy! aot a ONPATENTS SPLITS SUPREME BENCH Chief Justice White, One of the Dissenters, Criticises Majority Opinion. WASHINGTON, March 11.—A far- Teaching decision upholding the right of ‘Patenteen to absolutely dictate how their Patented articles may be sold by retall- era and declaring legal the Investor's “monopoly” in his selling contracts was made by the Supreme Court of the United States ti Tt was a divided court ruling, for afainst this majority ver announced | by Justice Lurton, three members of the | bench—Chief Justice White and Justices Hughes and Lamar—disaented Attorney-General Wickersham, Sollct- tor-General Lehmann and a large as- sembly of lawyers were present in the court and apparently regarded the de- cision as epoch-making. Chief Justice White deciared that should act to head off “untold that would follow to-day's con- struction of the present laws. He sald that under the majority's ruling the Patent laws could be stretched so as to include in a patent every conceivable thing used in every American house- hold, The Chief Justice arraigned the ma- Jority opinion as breaking all prece- dents, the court in its past histdry never having failed to do its duty to the whole people and to stand as the protector of every househol: In the dissenting opinion, Chief Jus- tlee White said: | “The ruling now made in effect Is that the patentee has the power by con- tract to extend his patent rights, so as to bring them within the claims of his Patent, things which are not embraced therein, thus virtually legislating, by causing the patent laws to cover sub- eg to which, out the exercise of the right of contract, they could not reach, the reauit being to not only mul- tiply monopolies at the will of an in-| terested party and to destroy the juris. | iction of State courts over subjects which have been in the deginning with- | in their authority. “The effect of the ruling 1s to make the virtual legislative authority of the | owner of a patented machine extend to every human being in society. ‘Take a patentee selling a paten engine. He will now have the right contract to bring under the patent laws all contracts for coal or electricity used to afford power to work the machine. “Take a patented cooking utensil. The | power Is now recognized to Lind by con- | tract one who buys utensils to use it in connection with no other food supply but that sold by the patente i | “The Mustrations might bs multiplied indefinitely. They are not imaginary. If ft be that so extraordinary a power ts vested in a patentee {t should, | luke every other power, be subject to the law of the land. | “My mind cannot stake off the dread of the vast extension of practices which ‘must come from this decision. Who, I submit, can put a {lmit upon the mo- nopoly and wrongful restriction which will arise if by such power a contract, 14 and against pu! may be successfully maintained?" pei inilh Alaa da SENATOR WORKS HITS \ TAFT HARD IN SPEECH. | Talks of “Humiliating Spectacle of President Travelling About Urg- ing His Own Re-Election.” WASHINGTON, March —11.—Genator | Works of Californian, in a speech advo- cating a single Presidential term of six years, to-day declared that such a con- atitutional change would spare the American people the “humiliating spec- table of a President travelling up and down the country guarded by an army officer and private detectives, making | political speeches and urging his own | re-election. | “It was an unfortunate day for this! country when one of its distinguished, | honorable and well beloved citizens in- | aumurated the system, as a candidate for Presiient, of ré ving delegates at hie home and discussing political ques: | tlona, ostensibly for their information, | but ‘in fact to be went broadcast | throughout the country. That was the | beginning of an evil and wholly inex- susable custom, by which the great office of President of the United Sta was brought down to the level of seeking politics and personal appeals for office.” ioriciecratbiouanpsnar IT WAS NOT CAPT. SHEEHAN Who Was Piloting Ferryboat When It Was Delayed Two Hours, George W. Sheehan, a municipal fer- ryboat pilot, asked The Evening World | to-day to correct a statement published | last Saturday which credited Capt Sheehan with being at the wheel of the ferryboat Bay Ridge when she was de- layed in one of her trips for two hours. Capt, Shoshan says ‘he did not report for duty until after the Bay Ridge had docked following her delayed trip. For Sprains and Bruises It is the first thing to think about when you meet with an injury. Trial 1919 THE YOUNGEST PLYER ASHE GOES UP IN | DAD’S HY DROPLANE| | ! HERE WAS REAL HUNG JURY. Cor Blocked Whi Were Suspended in Elevator. i. Jurymen Half a dzoen parts of the Supreme Courts were seriously hampered this afternoon when one of the elevators in the County Court House stuck between two floors. A score of persons were in the elevator, mostly jurors, and several cases on trial were heid up twenty min- | utes. Something wént wrong with tho ele- vator between the first and second floors. All the courts on the third floor of the court house were convened promptly at 2 o'clock, and the Judges were fuming and fretting over the de- lay of jurors, when some one informed them of the accident. Meantime the en- w@ineers and others about the butlding got busy and finally managed to start the elevator, The jurors who were tm- prisoned in the big car cheered joyously when they were freed. 5,000 Taxi Hold-Up Tri Post- poned. At the request of former Justice George F. Roesch jr, Supreme Court Justice Seabury to-day adjourned the trial of Geno Montant, the taxicab own- er, indicted for robvery in the first 9) hold-up on ay, Ex-Justice Ri todd Justice Seabury that he had been retained by Montan! on Saturday and had no opportunity to talk with his client. ——_—_—— Used Razor to Rob Passenger. Wiliam Sommer, a steward on the Coion of the Panama ling, wae arrested in Hoboken to-day charged with steal- ing $206 from Sepple Mire of Muncte, Ind., who arrived from Panama aboard he Colon last Frid Somnier ted he had found } chatr and with a u pocket and helped himself to a wallet containing $206 {n cash and $200 In inuney He tore u orders. the money orders. ' Spring Medicine There te no other season when medicti ls so much needed as in the spring. The blood is Impure and impo" rished—a condi- tion indicated by pimples, bolls and other ‘uptions on the face and body, by defi- cient vitality, loss of appetite, lack of strength. ‘The great spring medicine, according to, annually, 1s Hood’s Sarsaparilla It purifies and enriches the blood, cur eruptions, buildy up the system. Got it to-day iu usual liquid form or chocolated tablets known as Sa abe, ‘atacle to-d | portance, the experience aud testimony of thousands" T. P'S BOOMERS CAN'T GET HIM PLACE ATOP TICKET. Justice Bijur Refuses to Place Roose- velt Delegates Contrary to Election Board's Plan. ‘The Roosevelt forces met another ob- and unless they can find a new Inte ation of the Election law, {t {8 more than likely the emblem of the square, tinder which the nal of the Colonel's Presidential delegates will appear, will be about three feet from the top of the ticket. It will, of course, follow tho’ regular party em+ biems. Congressman Bennet, Chairman of | the Roosevelt Executive Committee, | asked Justice Bijur, in the Supreme Sourt to-day, to direct the Board of Elections to place the names of Presi- dential delegates at the top of the ballot to be used at the primaries. He declared the intention of the Legislature was to arrange the names of committeos and delegations in the order of’ thotr im- although he , admitted the lection law made no specific mention of Presidential delegates. “In the section of the law to which you refer," said Justice Bijur, “I find no warrant for my interpolating names which the Legisiature failed to mention. Uniess you can show me some better ‘reason I shall not entertain your motion. It is reasonable to assume the Legis- lature did not fofmet there are Prest- dential delegates and intentionally the Board of Elections power to s their place on the ballot.” Justice Bijur expressed the . opinion that the Board of Elections had ceeded its power by placing the Con- greseional delegates at the top of the ticket. a CAR GOES INTO GROCERY. Leaves Tracks in William Several Persons Are i A Bushwick avenue car bound toward Ridewood from Williamaburg Bridge and going at high speed ran off tr: to-day at Marcy avenue and south Fourth street, Williamsburg. The mo- tormun, Jo!.n Clark, of No, 22 Stanhope atreet, was trying to make up lost time. A misplaced switch trog threw the for- | ward truck off the track, The car slanted acrc east corner cf the street, an tremendous crash tore int» the front of the grocery .tore of Josepl. Stephens, All the windows of the car were broken The eighteen pa eng: 1 ~ers hurled to the front of the car, Clark was badly cut and bruised about the face and hands; Samuel Schwarts of No, 559 Bushwick avenue, .saac Hen- wig of No. 228 H anhattan; Joseph Farkas of No. wi South Sixth street, Wililamsburg, and Samuel Slat of No. 455 Grand street, Willlumsburg, were all attended by Dr. Sil'erstein of the Eastern District Hospital and sent home, Morgan Brother (ESTABLISHED 1851.) Storage Warehouses g80. 232, 234 & 230 W,, a7ty, 9 Wo Bats © Mingus ba" syvaraie compartments for storage of Bouse bo) ve entire charge of ‘Hmovals tm cit atey, Tursjahing padded. Ti ! » the north. We are reserving dates 3 months in advance for the ‘| REMOVAL OF | Office Furniture, | Libraries, Files, &c. We furnish made for removal of law bool papers, de Our vans are perfectly edayted and aie sealed while in transit, URNITURE and WO! 1 BOXED AND SHIPPED te Gl per of the world, | SEND FOR ESTIMATE, | I\AsOoOD | WATERS Open Monday and Saturday Ev' 8 Rooms at...878 [acre cor our 4Furnishedat $165 | **",Caision 5 Complete at $225 | Malled ae XY iss mh see A Grand Rapids Furniture CREDIT ACCOMWODAT ON TERMS $100 Worth $1.50 Weekly or $6.00 Monthly 150 200 “ or 8. « | NINETEEN MEN MISSING sels of San Diego's fishing fleet, their crews, missing to- ceived from them since they put to een Jearly Saturday morning. mile-an-hour gale which Saturday Is belleved to the floet. ' & Ole pee ee ON SHIPS HIT BY GALE. No Trace of six Fishing Vessels of Crews Out Three Days From San Diego, Cal. 1, March 11.—Six vee SAN DIBGO, Ca! with numbering nineteen, are ay. No word has been Fe- The forty- swept the coast have ecattered with the poor, cheap instru- ments was are Lacy ing S markets, the brains are put in' SELLING instead of the MAKING. TRE o “With the tone yeucan’t forget” men whose art is their craft and whose craft is high art. aay Payments. Booklet W. on Rediuest. 425 FIFTH AVENUE Entrance Seth 8t..N, ¥. Clty Formerly 208 Fifth Av FITZSIMMONS—On Sunday, 1, at her residence, 463 Bast 24th at Mrs, JANE FITZSIMMONS (nee ske! e of Bigstoun, County Megti, Jre- March land, Funeral from Churoh of Immucniate Conception, 150th et. and Melrose ave., ‘Tuesday, 10 A. M. LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. end white Angora cat, Libesal_re- ‘ ward if retuned to Mrs 1. Clark, ‘837 W, 87 ih. BUSIN Ess OPPORTUNITIES. up equal amount in new budn 8: TO INV in On eelablinied, paying li Vy Me eet ae that will bear int tong of mil form, partner "with party patitng Tele ad Wee HELP WANTED--FEMALE, DOWSHADE OPPRATON, Cat Linde & Oo, 140 W. 24th at, NEAR G" AVE Special for Monday, the 11th ASSORTED NUT ¢ Bee VOUS BOX moxDay n SHFERING SAN BLAS. Ci KISSES, 400. Sa nox 20c Miik Chocolate Covered Fresh Pineapple Delicious tittle cubes of plneappl b and luscious; encased In & Cove of our Premtum Doitle 10c, Large bottles agc., sor. ering matic cnoedtints Box 10c| y utores oven Fark How and Cortlandt, street penne oi -838c ». sa | (Trade Mark.) {Special for Tuesday, the 12th SMe waco tate: 10c | 4 ton WAFERS, "de vas POUND BOX 20c ry evening until 11 o'clock, until 11 o'e | Conjurer-Poet stands for the Xtra Circulation ads. ‘get When sent to The World, So why should you fret? When things turn up missing A World “Lost” ad. phone, And that which you seek May soon be back home, If your “Lost & Found” ad) ts printed In The World, morning or Sunday, it will get a circulation in New York City greater than if pub- lished in the Herald, Times, Sun and Tribune COMBINED, And it will be displayed in a prom- inent position on page opposite ed- itorial page mornings and on first page of Want Section Sundays, To Telephone Your “Lost and Found” Ad, Te The World Call 4000 BEEKMAN