The evening world. Newspaper, March 27, 1912, Page 20

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\ fi i my 20 OWEN es! STRKERS |4e Yet Day of —— THE BVENING WORLD, DEFY POLICE: MILLS} Zs Only Dawning, Says Marconi Workers Sleep Beside Looms, Fearing Vengeance of Fem- inine Weavers on Guard. -WOMAN IS ARRESTED. ‘Situation in Passaic Grows ; More Serious as Strikers ) Fight to Gain Recruits. © Gtriking weavers in Passaic, N. J., are aPthing but daunted to-day after their of yesterday in the Botany ‘Vorsted ‘The strikers have placed pickets, MBostiy women, atout tho mill, and these Jere making strenuous efforts to induce workitlg ‘rethron and sisters to their ranks. stuation with respect to the , yy Worsted MMi, which employs Persons, of whom 1,409 are weavers, “Ee recognised to’ be critical by the mill Qewners and the Passaic authorities, Laat JisAt 1H weavers were kept in tho mill, + $e Being deemed best not to let them out Yor fear of vioienco, These weavers ‘were provided with cots and slept alon ‘Mite their looms, ‘They were provided With wupper iast night and breakfast M@his morning. Fifteen uniformed policemen and forty wpecial detectives are stationed around » Re mill to prevent the pickets and @trikers from getting into the mill to finduce the workers to leave th 'r looms. he forty special detectives wore sworn last night by City Clerk Thomas R. fatson. GIRL 18 ARRESTED WHEN SHE 3 COMBATS POLICE. This morning about «0 weavers who M84 not strike yesterday and who were “an thelr way to work were inct by a foerdon of pickets, who attempted to Prevent thelr entering the mill, The Police and special daivctives at once rounded the strikers and drove them jek. An eighteen-year-old girl, Yewa ‘Petrik, was not easily driven back, and Wer efforts to hold buck men and wom- QB weavers led to her arrest on a Charge of disorderly conduct. Altogether there are about 3,500 strik- | [era in and about Passaic, The New | Wersey worsted mill at Garfield in run- Bing with half a force, for of tts 600 mmomrers 900 are striking, These Garfleld ; ers are holding a meeting to-day * organizing picket squads to help Met the other workers to strike. ‘Phe Industrial Workers of the World, Who inspired the weavers’ strike, say that before the er the week they will have all of the n Jersey mills up. The I. W. W. leaders are vig- jusly denying the charge of mill op- tora that they are inspiring the Workers to violence. Boris Reinstein, who is in charge of “the Passaic situation, suid he had un- Geniadle evidence thai the riot of yes- ferday in the Botany mill was due to the efforts of the foromen ard fore- women to hold back the #0 strikers When they attempted to leave their or | The mill owners have formed an as- ion and say they will combat all | Moris of the strikers to enforce thelr ‘They say to grant increases y AB wees now would bo to court bank- » for they have contracted for output at rates that make for the f Possible margin of profit. AMAUBSON COUNTY MILL CAPITU. WLATEG, GRANTING INCREASE. he strikers. are working hard resentatives the I. W. W. are going about the mill of New Jersey soliciting funds the union workers. The leaders Ghey expect to have sufficient funds &@ week or two to continue the 1f necessary. In have been as. cents each for the of March and will be assessed otrile situation in the mills of Hudson ie anything but favorable for . Of the fifteen mills in the end of*the county, but one, R. and H. Simon silk mill, is work- at full capacity. e mill granted increase demanded and to-day the Of the strikers thero went back to ir looms. This mill employs 1,000 A ten per cent. Increase was nded and granted. ws County the: . fer strike the owners in this section have to the fe the leadership of Rudolph of Paterson, a cigarmaker. The tors may that clgarmaker he nothing of the @llk situation. tx retorts by saying that if he di ¥ know anything of allk manufacture does know whet living wages are. ‘The workers in the Dundee Textile i at Citfton, which employs 2,600, threatening to strie and = walkout expected momentarily PATERSON STRIKE 16 ALMOST f OVER—ONLY 800 NOW OUT, Whe mills in and adout Pat a@imort to thelr 208 silk m: and of this number all but ten nized the I. W, W., one of demands of the wea were 7,000 weay won, To-day there in forcing mill owners w England to increase the workers, {8 confining New Jersey to the weavers Say, however, they will week to get the other mfll workers B the organtzation. ———— ns 18 Pounds Is One Tooth. and Mre. Eugene A. Morrow of 0 Bast Market street, Wilkes-Barre, parents of o girl bedy weighing pounds. JAS soon a8 the infamt cried on tte ar , the muree discovered « Methods of Communication Will Be Superseded. NO LIMIT TO ITS USES. Many Problems Yet to Be Solved, but They Are Not Insurmountable. Marguerite Mooers Marshall. bang ® girdle ronné about the Tu forty minutes!” When the greatest English poet put this @peech into the mouth of his moat frnetful creation, he did not dream that in little more than three hundred years the fairy’s boast would be the aclentiat’s confident praghecy. But yesterday, when I talked with Commendatore G. Marcon! about the future of wir telegraphy, he made thin very remark: able declaration: “E believe that in the near future @ wireless message can be sent from New York completely around the globe, with no relaying, ana be received by an instrument located im the same office with the trans- mitter, in perhaps even less time than Shakespeare's forty minutes.” ‘Mr. Marconi came to New York to testify at the hearings of the United States Wireless Company, and will re- turn to England within a week. 1 rather fancy he regrets having to spend this brief period away from hin labor- atory. Even when he smiles the alight intent frown of the investigator stays between his eyebrows, and his widely set apart gray eyes seem never to lowe their look of keen inquiry. I don't mean to suggest that he affects the pose of the tireless truth-secker; tn fact, ike most great scientists and few other great men, his manner fs par- ticularly modest and free from self- consciousness. And therefore I know he would rather I stopped talking about him and repeated what he had to say about “wireless,” CONFIDENT WIRELEGS WILL BE LIMITLE! “T feel confident that it will gradually replace all other methods of communt- cation,” ho asserted, “because it will be the cheapest and most conventent way of sending messages. I do not think that there te any Hmit to its adapt- ability, although many problems till confront us. But problems only exist to be solved. “Of course such an experiment as sending a mesmge from New York around the world back to Now York wouldn't be regularly performed, be- cause it wouldn't be sensible. If you are downtown and I am uptowe and we want to communicate we do ft directly, not by wag of cable. Just the same, I think the time is coming when thelpiied frankty. | | | | | Ra 2. round tho world message can be rent as & proof of the untversul application of Wireless telegraphy. “It will naturally take some time for ‘wireless’ to supplant the telegraph and the telephone, althougn many countries, including Italy, Canada and ~ Spain, have already supplemented their ordi- ary telegraph systems by wireless telegraphy installations. “But in Europe generally and in this country there is an exceedingly ofMfclent network of land lines ulready existing. For the present, therefore, the main use Of radiotelegraphy will be confined to countries outside Europe, in some of which climatic conditions and other causes absolutely pronfit the eMcient maintenance of landline telegraphy. A roof of this has been afforded by the success, which has attended the wor! ing of the stations recently erected in Brasil on the upper Amazon.” EACIER TO SEND OVER WATER THAN LAND. “Ie i as easy to send wireless mes- ages over the land us over the water?” Lasked. "No, it Isu't—so fai " Mr. Marconi re- “The Waves seen to \"ke the clear path. They can be sent over the land, but {t takes more power, {just as more power must be used to |drive an automobtle along a road full (of ruts, than over a carefully amoothe parkway, Long stretches of land, espe- clally when Including very high moun- tains, constitute an insurmountable bar- \rler to the propagation of short waves {during daytime. Communication Is much easier at night. “But further experimentation will Probably do away with the difficulties o jland transmission, And when It ts once jestablished ‘it will unquestionably be much cheaper than the ordinary tele- Graph or telephone, Not only ts the ransmitting and recelving apparatus isimpler, but there will be no initial out- lay or constant upkeep for the miles and miles of wire which the present systems necessitate. Also, the time o' transmission will be less. . A Message By Mail or By Telephone, Which? “Every letter written in a business house costs somewhere between twenty and fifty cents. is the smallest item. Stationery, etenographer’s time, filing copies, principal’s time—all bring the actual cost of a letter higher than most people imagine.” It is More Economical to Telephone Not only does it actually cost less to tele- phone your message but you reach your man instantly, talk over your business personally, and get an immediate reply. Every Bell Telephone is a Long Distance Telephone and a Telegraph Station, Too. The stamp Jas. H. Collins. ie WE Dwaspay, aha Wireless Wonders » 1912, ho wan waiting to Join him in this Ve wae = member of the Ottendorfer nevolent Society | 4 No, 28 Cent Patt |MRS. BEACH HERE, ILL, SOON TO SAIL ABROAD. Husband and Injured. Society Wom- an Decline to Discuss Mysteri- | Baven’t bad enough stations put ‘SD, Dut af Boon as We are ready to do more tusiness I thi will appreciate our f if course they must be educated—the cables have been down for fifty years! “In time of war wireless connections | wi be invatuadle,” continued Mr. Mar- | con|. “The enemy can cut cables and) telegraph wires, but it ts dificult seri- ‘ | ously to damage the wireless service. | ous Assault at Aiken. | The British Empire has realised this,! Mrs. Frederick O. Beach, and ready equipping many of its, *eriously injured when stabbed in the) sutpoete with Wwirelers ena” throat by @ negro at her residence in| But couldn't the enemy pick up the| Alken, 8. C., the night of Feb. 26, messages with Its own wirelens receiver, |turned to Now vork early to-day wi uniese cipher was used?” J suggested. [ner husband. “Beauty” Heach, | he sportsman, HARD TO GTEAL WIRELESS MES sooriments in tiie Vanderbilt Tote. | eacrs. | Mra. ch is still in retirement, be- | “There used jo be trouble with inter-|cause of the wounds inflicted by her | ference,” said Mr.. Marconi, “but we| mysterious assailant, for whose cap- have done away with It in large degree. | ture @ large reward was offered by Ioan bay from practioal experience that |/eaders in the Aiken social colony. | Members of Mrs. Beach's family sald Fsas ereaete cat tence. Beeent, Oe y whe was still too ill to sunder- | tween properly equipped and efficiently | take any @ocial engagements and ptod- | tuned instruments, Some interference ably will spend most of the time in does take place between ships, but that her apartments until April 20, when Is because the two wave lengths in com- the Beaches will sail for Europe. mon use are not suMctent for the prop- ach refused to be interviewed | er handling of the very large amount to the Alken affair. | transmitted from the ever-! word with the hotel staff to tell umber of ships Atted with| visitors except members of the fam! elegraphy. It seoms to me! that he was not in. { that @ third and longer wave might be} Mrs, J. B. Tailer, one of Mrs. Beach's employed exclusively for communica- living at No. 43 West Forty- th atrect, called on Mrs, B On leaving the hotel she s: ‘Mra, Beach will not be able to see any one before whe sails. She is still, Present lines of operation. It been | dreadfully iN and upset.” fully proved to be both a «reat con- venience and a real safeauard. Sev~/ WOMAN FATALLY STABBED; ASSAILANT GETS AWAY. telemraphy for communtention between ships and land will doubtless be an ext eral governments have passed a law | making a wireless telegraph installa-| a compulsory part of the equipment 1 passenger byats entering thelr Mra, Louise Coll! forty-eight years old, was probably fatally stabbed early PHONES HAVE Altotay by an unidentined man, wh9| FUTURE. lescaped. Mrs. “What do you think of the wireless! house at No. 219 ‘Third avenue. tae oe tne | man, an Italian, with his wife, lived | “It has a future,” he sald slowly. | ner ami iv eaday. “but I myself have given up expert-|"’ a - menting with it. There are too many) y he reappeared, intoxicated, and | complications, The waves sent out by, Mrs. Collins ejected him. As she re- the human voice are different from those | entered the house he struck hen in the of @ telegraph instrument, and they get) vack with a knife. Her husvand, Will- lost more casily. |1am J. Collins, pursued the man to “Of course we have a lot to do yet/ond avenue, where he disappeared, Mrs. | in telegraphy,” continued Mr. Marconto. | Collins was attended by Dr. Hobbs and | “We can send 2,500 miles, but we can’t) taken to the Harlem Hospit | send 3,000 miles. We can send long) | | distances over land by night, but not by Yu FEEL EASY ns has a rooming | day. And there are many people yet to be convinced of the practical benefits of Pipettes ae one, when you wear ‘wireless.’ But if we keep working we wan eh flolepraokflostery shall certainly revolutionize present methods of communication.” ‘The soft yarns used in ff “‘Holeproof” mean supreme liam ENDED TROUBLES WITH ROPE Man Found Hanging With Din- in to Coat, se toot-comfort, But some folks Senn ee rant ih the Gest derive a heap of satisfaction yay aung.ttg bimgelt in the door- luthe CERTAIN- TY that their hosiery is not needing mend- two bare rooms at No 228 West Sixty-sixth street. Pinned to his breast was @ dispossess not which sot forth that he owed his land- etween ! ord % Attached 6. the Hones were Ing. A Million GON wo two-dollar bills, all Meyer had been eg neta? ible to scrape up before he stepped off ue aecel eles) te chair with the rope about his neck. bey Pale ike Meyer was sixty years old and was 'Holeproof”’ end mends for snown to the people In the house as SIX MONTHS-GUARAN- “Uncle Jim.” They had cared for him note or lass, understanding his dim- ulty In getting on with life. His velghbor, Miss Mamie Voght, discov- TEED. Ask your dealer: | Write for ‘‘How to Make | Your Feet Happy.’” Heleproof Hosiery Company | sred his suicide, She knocked at his, loor, and when there was no answer che pewped through a crack and saw him hanging. The dead man 1s sup- osed to‘have had a wife in Germany WESTERN UNION Day Letters Night Letters No mail’s delay The quick route for business THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH COMPANY “‘Hasten, Oh Faithful Purveyor’’ Says the Sphinx I scarce can wait for the refresh- ing contents of the Bottle with the Red Label. SirRobtBURNETIS@s London DRY Gin who was / C The | = First Distilled in 1770 Burnett @ Sit Soest wr aaa St Bow Tore { James McCreery & Co.’ 23rd Street On Thursday, March the 28th WASH DRESS GOODS. In Both Stores. White Ramie French Costumg Linen, pure flax, soft finisn. : White Mercerized Batiste. “McCREERY SILKS.” 22¢ a vil. value Soe In Both Stores, Famous over half a Century. Sale of an accumulation of Several Thousand Lengths of Silks and Satins, consisting of Skirt, Trimming and Dress Pattenes. At one-half less than usual prices. CORSETS. Royal Worcester Corsets, every type of figure. WOMEN’S HOUSE GOWNS. In Both Stores. Negligees of Silk ‘Crepe de Chine and Chiffon, lace and band-embroidery trimmed. Copies of Imported models. 22.50 Lounging Robes of Crepe de Chine, hand- made and hand-embroidered. 21.50 Negligees of Albatross, lace trimmed......... Kimonos of Flowered Silk or Persian Satin. Negligees Empire models. WOMEN’S HOSIERY. rn Both Stores, White, Pure Thread Ingrain Silk, with double tops and lisle spliced heels, soles and toes. Black or Tan. Fine Gauze Cotton with double tops.. :.. James McCreery & Co, 23rd Street N the cob you canto: get such corn as Pre- mier at all. these parts that way. Scientific seed-planting, scic ing, scientific care-taking and ning all Product Premier Corn is cheaper than and perhaps better than fresh corn. you get it when there is no fresh corn. Ask your dealer. In Both Stores, “Bon Ton” Corsets, Excellent Models suitable for slender, me- dium and well-developed figures. of Tan or Black Gauze with double tops and spliced heels. CHAPTER NINE Maine Corn is not sold in enter into the fi “fresh” corn Moreover Another moreover is that Premier Corn {5 fresh corn. 1Se Le! us urge you to try MWY Premier Perri-Walla. Tea, 30¢. 1-2 Ub. ANNED FRANCIS H, LEGGETT & (CO. CORN | 34th Street 46 inches wic 48c a yd. valve 75¢ 45 inches wide, Ww ist, 3.00, 4.00 and 5.00 many models for 1,00, 1.50 and 2.00 6.25, 7.75 and 10.50 / 00 Messalineé—loose and Satin Lisle Thread, 30¢ a pair White, 85c a pair 6 pairs for 1.10 341h Stroct

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