The evening world. Newspaper, April 1, 1912, Page 2

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68 the Civ: War, when he joined | corre ors = DEFIES THE UNION ‘with mMtary enthusiasm and pre- upon Gen. Grant to take him if campaign when U. 8. arsc'secctom! OR ELEVATED LINES 3 regiment in Texas and iater| tacks Chief Stone of the Lo- 4a aide to the staff of ‘ comotive Brotherhood. log dust a boy young Grant was Rises es =) 10 TIE UP SUBWAY BOM, before Nashville, at Vicks- ‘through the latter portion of ¢| General Manager Hedley At- Sheridan. As a member of Bheridan’s ataft he took part in campaigns in the South. | fH OF We CHILDREN BoRN | GIVES HIM LIE DIRECT. WHITE HOUSE. Oct. Gi 5 hth * : ’ Mt iaeutccovsecs, wees" | Declares He Has Situation in lonore, daughter of If. H. eae The children of this| Hand and That There Will Julla, born in the Be No Strike. during the Presidency of it, June 7%, 1876, and Ulysses | bora in Chicago in 1881, In t accompanied his father on World-girdling tour and re- | Penounc commission upon his return | Stone a @nter business in New York. {@ “skunk,” Grand Chtet Warren 4. mned Nai “eur” and General Manager Frank he was appointed Minister to | Hedley of the Interborough to-day de- by President Harrison, Two] fed the iabor unions to call a strike. later he failed of election to the | 4 ated all he + Papert of State of New @aturday night, when he de- Pree cet. HS WES | craves that ne unie ‘ Police Commi by t inion can exist on the and held that go- | !terborough lines. ; Mr, Hedley's attitude has operated to the Spanish-Amer- | hasten matters on the Interborough to volunteered his ser-| a crisis, Chief Stone han not replied to appointed Colonel Of} the attacks upon him, but he has Heu- New York and later] tenants in the city who are taking ad- vantage of Mr. Hedley's remarks to work wp sentiment among the motor en- sineers, eapeciaily those who have been employed at one time or another on steam roads, whether they were for- Merly members of the Brotherhood or ‘Texas, the Department of | not. Department of the| One factor that serves to feed Mr. on hth dae | Hediey's indignation is knowledge that hie guards, conductors and employees in other grades have been joining the Amalgamated Association of Street and Electric Railroad Employees. Organizers for this powerful association have been working right under the noses of Mr. Hedley’s spies, UNION MEN CAUGHT AT CLAIMS OF HEOLEY. Mr. Hedley claims that his espion pian has furnished him with the of every union man on the subway a! “L" nes but the union men taugh et his claims and say that « epy system & sure accelerator to union movements —— = 2 Interv! ia any line of industry, General Manager Hedley is not at all careful of his language when talking (Continued trom First Page.) about labor unions, The sub‘ect arouses him to remarkable facility of expres- sion. time who was not| ‘I challenge Stone or any other labor A Gog was|union official or any labor union to and landed |order a strike or try to embarrass the Now Ready to Tap in City Hall. / | i He Lugeing « keg of beer into the City; I'm a stranger In town and can't give Mayor Gaynor's office. Policeman Me-| the keg.” Kettrick held him up. “Where are you] “Didn't you know ft im the first of soing with that keg?" said he. April?” said McKettriok. The young man produced a note read-| A gleam of Ueht shot from the keg. ing: “To Mayor Gaynor, City Hall.| bearer's eyes as he dashed into the Day the bearer off in #miles.| whirl of Park Row. han by one which In subject to} sald, ‘No, Frank, I won't tell.’ And The men in both Manhattan and| wouldn't tell.” on street, suvway and ele-|/LEFT HOSP; #, are allying themacives with ee ree ee the Amalgamated as individuals, A corps of skilled organisers is at work, and realising the necessity of caution and secrecy, the agents allowed no in- timation of what they were doing get out. ‘Mrs. Nicodemus told how she tried qualify as @ nurse in the Children’ Hospital et Lexington avenue and FY. baby died in rms and the shook & majority of the men have|® rolled they will be called to-| yee, 0° reat she could not stand the| t wether to elect officers at @ secret meet- ing and will then have a full-edged road and its methods as Mr. Hedley end when I came in he put ‘The fact that so much headway has been made by the Amalgamated is cor- Brotherhood. William D, Mahon, presl- etaire screaming. of the leas reticent motormen that many | you, Frank?’ ‘Look at me,’ he said. more of them have joined the Brother-|‘Do I look Itke a dope” ‘If you say hood than ts suspected. The two things |you don't use a drug, Frank,’ I.eaid to now expected to stimulate the work of jhim, ‘I'll ‘believe you.’ And he said, organisation are that the conduotors| ‘Well, I don't.’ ” and guards are organising, and that Mr,| Later he gave her a voitie full of Hedley’s statements, including his at-| pellets which he tom her to keep him, tacks on Chief Stone, do not tend to/from taking If she gould. she believed Rearest | Interborough,” he eald when seen by blown jan Evening World reporter this after- tn the | noon. ‘ and; “I knew that Stone meant to open a ‘A unbroken window | fight when he came to New York. I know everything he says and does, I down ala know that there are « few mal+ MB | contents left on the Intertorough. {There are three good reasons why St} the Interborough rune an open shop nine] system. The chief one is that undei the men may be classified merit and ability. Under the ‘Wayne, there was wide-| closed shop rule this ata? of broken | WEDLEY VIGOR Notch CHIE “I have agents in every labor or- along the| anisation. I want to know when but the shock |@tone sends a band of troutle makers Pas-| down here to help him hold his Job by ing $60 @ year out of members, organized the Interborough When he saw he was & statement over the controveray raised by the brotherhood to-day. Mr, Bhonts takes the stand that dent system, with no outside alliances, ‘and public interest demands that it shall Not be subject to the effects of disturb- ances started on other lines, Ho does not want the Interborough mixed up :n © sympathetic strike. “The Interborough’s relations with Mr. | Btone’s organization,” said Mr. Shonts, “have been very unfortunate. Some years ago we had @ contract with the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, which contract was violated by that or: @anisation and which violation eesulted ti" 5 i i af 33 tide i = i t on the public and immense suffering to - | numerous employees, o'clock. | “Phe policy of the Interboroush Is to ba 4 have working conditions for ite men 1, | ¢4ual or superior to those provided for dar a week |eimilar classes of employees on other Were sure | lines or in other parts of the country. more severe | We aim to lead in rate of pay for the mame class of service under similar shook 3 conditions. “Our company is an individual unit. We have no relations with any other atom or any outside connections, We Uke the electrical departments New York Central, the New or the Hudson and Manhattan where the electric motormen side by side with raiiroad em- ployees under railroad conditions. SAVS THE MEN BENEFIT BY IN- GURANCE FEATURE, “We have relief, accident and insur- palght at the Waldorf by the! ance features for our m f who'has been aces fy lird oer Pith Avenue Cothedral| which they secure bigger returns in eearee Tenn ee The | these respects and for less money than . band one ot ote. through the BrotWerhood of Locomo- Engineers. In a word, this mov ‘will bee Jonge ‘at- t on the part of the Brotherhood other $ e He fH is not necessary even in the interests ofomre ta rn detter thet the 09 yh 4 rh be served ewering Mr. Hedle; ‘tack, but he ie, the bottle wack to Gim. After he took — Se — ty-aeoond street because of her love for | Sixth A children. She eft the hospital because | landt street. “The police have the foods on me in _THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, APRIL 1, 1919. i a a ane Keg of Beer From “Dix to Gaynor’” Any OF 18 SAYS ( HE NEEDED COIN, any \ eCONSTANTINOPLE, April 1—An SIX VARIETIES been lowe of iife. Detatis are lacking, | F rections how to plant and grow _—— cinanaijinones ] | Matthew Finn, Alias F. White, Confesses Attempted Rob- bery and May Have Record. BULLET THROUGH JAW. Hold-Up Youth Captured Hall to-day, # perapiring man made for] the address of the place where 1 got| After Dash From Cortlandt Street Station. In the arrest of Matthew Finn, alias oan Gev, Din” ‘The Kew of beer ta ia City Clerk soup. | PTAM* White, @ child in age and alse, “I have carried the kes four miles. ly's office, ny Clerk Soul! tue police elleve to-day they bave the “L" station hold-up man who bas ter- Forised women ticket agents of Brook- je influences,”” jen he made me promise to God that I aoe men ticket sellers on upper ith avenue. “I was hungry end out of a job, I Needed money and that was th of getting it,” was the simple tement he made to-day, following his Test last night after he had shot -An- drew J. Dwyer, ticket agent on the ue Blevated station at Cort- case, and I won't try to deny it. @train any longer, But they haven't got anything on me in én tee & dear iKtle boy,” ghe said,| Any other case, and they needn't think union of their own, frends working in and out of| they can make me tell anything. They've bated Wy eos of. the’ faone Sevuta the fringes of her ehawi. “He td a| Compared my finger prints with all those organisations in the country. Gear Uttle laugh. I was throwing a| they've got up here at headquarters and “You can publsh the fact,” sald one |U>ber ball against the wail to amuse| they've examined the pictures in the employee, “that the employees of the tt rolled out the door and 1|Ffosues' gallery—tut they haven't got system are not so much in love with the aby down and went out to get | Anything else on me,” he insisted. Young Finn was taken from the would have the public belle’ ‘hia arme to me and cried and shook | Tombs court back to police headquarters Went into convulsions and died in| @nd put through an extended examina- arms. The dead weight of the poor;tion by Deputy Police tain to encourage the motormen ané thing in avy arms drove me crasy. | Dougherty, Detective Inspector Russ make them more eager to get into the|! Ot tt down end £ ran up and down/and Acting Captain Price, of the Bronx, poh Meaney . ied. ed agents of the Brooklyn ain dent of the Amalgamated, has paid sev- erin Nicodemus it Company who have been he! eral visits to New York fas, wut | told her, she aaid, ghat Frank “looked | up recently, have been summoned to the heade of the big roads, with all thetr |e a dope flend to tim. Police headquarters to identify Finn, if costly surveillance, it appears, have| ASK®D NICODEMUS 1F HE WAS | Possible. The police expect to wring a been unsuspecting end his agents put A DOPE FIBND. fall confession from the prisoner. in mx weeks of good work before the! “1 went to Frank; I was crying,’ and| 7%? youth's effort to held up Dwyer "iL I SUUREG nba bathe hana” rath, Wart saya vou are a dope! Cortiandt street platform last night Tt ip delleved talks with some/fiend. You are not a dope fiend, are 10,90 o'clock. Patrick Woods, a former edidier, now the gateman on the station, was the only other person on the plat- form. ‘Thrusting an old etyle pistol, with a long barrel, through the window, Finn ordered Dwyer to hand over all the money in his cage. & peaceful termination. Mr. Stone left | they were morphine tablets, He threat-| “You'te kidding,” laughed Dwyer as ° Woods atarted toward the childish ban- yesterday for Cleveland without an- she gave ait. ike care known to be @ born fighter, and his is a| the he brightened up and said “T've got bullets enough to tal fighting organization. I'm a brute. I ougnt not | of you both," Finn warned Woods. As Tt is understood that as soon as he spoke, he nervously pressed the tris- the organisation is in @ position to as- jeast six jurors were | ser and Dwyer fell, with a bullet wound wert itself a minimum wage of $3.05 a Mr. in day will be demanded. This is the wage! Gee, Fook spe agreed to by the managers of the Mo- ‘i | Adoo tubes on Saturday. Their pay, the jaw. TAKEN AFTER CHASE THROUGH DOWNTOWN STREETS. based on the number of miles run, vir-}/MOTHER OF THE ACCUGED| sinn turned to flee, pursued by Woods. tually amounts to $3.00 0 Want Better WOMAN TAKES THE STAND, Finn etuffed the pistol into his pocket rate: ‘The first witness to-day was Mrs. and ran through Cortlandt street to at Better ‘Fas Tee. "i Somervitte, the girl's mother Fs thy Ba Brosdway, followed by Woods and Po- 7 Organisation officers representing the| on the etand when Mrs. Nicodemus| liceman Charles Stileon of the Green- carmen, telegraph operators, dispatch-| collapes?, causing the adjournment of | wich street etation, who heard the ehot. ets, signaimen, trackmen, clerks and/ the teiafiast Thuredey night. Stilson caught the boy et Maiden Lane Peery told of brute! attacks of Nico-| and Pearl street. He was carried be- demus on his\wife. The man slapped| fore Dwyer at the Greenwich street jaime for better pay should | hs wife ia the face in the presence of | station and identified. Dwyer was sent ther salaried employees. to act like that, Greseed. a are ch TD “Mommer,” ehe testified her daughter| Finn was taken to Police Headquarters oald, “Frank te my husband and not| thw moming. He declared he came to yours. If he wants to hit me, it is his] New York last week from Albany and right. I love him enough to stand it. | that he attempted to “stick up” Dwyer le told her I never felt Mke that,” Mrs, because he was hungry. Later he ad- Somerville sald simply. The mother mitted that he was born in New York said ghe ned seen Nicodemus kick his City and hed lived in Albany only two wie, Years. Finn told so many conflicting The night before the shooting Mra, stories that after he was sent to the Somerville wae very nervous and un- hapl “T asked her what she was troubied about and he said she was going to see Frank.’ — Mrs. Nicodemus came in ister that night and seemed in a ae Ce from First Page.) “Come, baby,” the witness tcatited Sepengneee: 1 she eaid ¢o her daughter, ‘come, go to bed with your mother and let ine put pathy for the girl's shame for her | 70U to sleep.’ if I woukd do as he said—and J—well, 1/ !n @ glased-eyed trance all night long, didn't—I dida't understand at thet time | The gir! alipped out of the house to go thinking I hadn't heard him right, and | band while the rest of the family were fhe said: ‘Why, Gene, it woukin't be| st breakfust. hard work. You could make enough| All the time the mother was testifying for doth of us to live on just Gaturdays | the big eyes of Mrs, Nicodem it N and Sundays if you will do as 1 aay.’ n AT LAST 6H UNDERSTOOD WHAT HUSBAND MEANT. wasolle-like eyes met those of her mother “Then I began to understand, and I the shoulders of both shook with began to get angry. ‘What do you! sobs. mean? I asked him,” The testimony of Mrs. Cherie Gray ‘There was another long period of cry-| of Ni 261 Kast One Hundred and ing before Mrs, Nicodemus could gather | Fortieth street, taken on Friday by att mus wi Frank Nicodemus, who was in the country recuperating from « 0 ‘Why, Frank, you don't mean it? You|her to stop making loving appeals to |‘" can't be asking me to tp like that. I] him in her letters, don't believe you love me y You can go away and leave me if you| Mrs, Gra: don't love y more than to ask me/and cut that woft talk out.” to do @ thing Iike that. I'm going to| Mra, Gray, who let furnished rooms, tell ima. I'm going to tell papa.| told of meeting Mra. Nicodemus at They won't t me live with you when | the moving picture show of which tho they hear thet.’ girl was oy ler when forced by her ent away and that night he| husband's neglect to earn her own liv- k and I woke up and saw him T looked at him and re you going to do what 1 Want you to? J said, ‘No, I am not.| full of dolls and things. She didn't Never!’ Then he said, ‘Are you going] want anybody looking at them or to tell your mother?’ 1 said, ‘Yes’! laughing at them.” ‘Then he took hold of me by the hair] Nicodemus served divorce papers on and pulled me out of the bed on the| his wife the night before the shoot. |Y' Nicodemus was hyaterical ‘and told ine it was ‘Now, are you. going ¢e tel) x i your mother? our times he did that, forte to keep| Justice Maddox, in the Supreme them rushed away. Now and then her | Court, Brooklyn, to-day truck at the supporters of Col, Roosevelt by refusing to @rant the application for ‘new primaries in four Brooklyn Assem- bly districts. ‘The applications were based mainiy on the fact that in the be considered before the rallroads| his mother-in-law. Mrs. Somervilie| to the Hudson Street Hospital, where ranted any further increases to their) sald she ¢old Nicodemus he ought not| his would, not a very serious one, was Tombs court for arraignment Commis- aloner Dougherty took personal charge of the case and had him brought back to Headquarters for further examina- tion, Finn is only eighteen years old. He Goes not took more than sixteen, He is emall and undeveloped end has the clean-cut face of @ mere boy. Acoord- ‘ing to the police, bth (all eA ae description of the man who has ory. GEEMED IN A TRANCE NIGHT lterrorising the women ticket agents of “He eaid to me," she went on, “that BEFORE KILLING. the B. R. T. { could enslly make $100 or $160 a week | Mrs, Gomerville sald her daughter was|, Later Winn was arraigned before Mag- Appleton in the Tombs Court. He admitted then for the first time that name which he used what he meant. I just looked at him| to the scene of the killing of hor hus-| jest wae was pop te, . Magietra: ‘the boy without bail ja 1S 0 NEW PRIMARIES FOR T. R. istribution of primary ba. aureouient, was read to the jury. Mre.|er of polling places we: "sho faltered after «| Gray told of the grief of Mrs. Nicode-|end the vote was consequently much smaller ¢! ni deen. han it shou! addox he! in order to chronic disease of the blood, w have primary charges of fraud vi the original primary must be sub- etantiated. No fraud was charged In “ a the applications before him, he sald, y more. ‘All he inted of her,” teatitied end in distributing ballots did wap to send him money |mot conatituio sumcient cause for the Hoods |= Sarsaparilla| atte Be Will purify your blood, clear We will r our CGM. F 9 store ‘our appetite, relieve your feclin » build you up. to take it this spring, ,° Wp VP Ts aR att Whee aes ah sceetertaa iano \ sleet ‘ommissioner Dick Mimeograph decided, also asks ummcesititsaielion EARTHQUAKE IN SYRIA. Heavy Damage Reported of Life Feared. "TWAS APRIL FOOL "BLAZE UNTIL TT id Loss Six hardy, strong two-year-old plarits, but {t is &nown that many bh wrecked in interior towne,” “°™ | Proses successfully, for CHARLESTON RESULTS, TONE DOLLAR FIRST RACKE-Three-year-olds and For 25 cents extra in Stamps upwart; purse $360; breeders’ purse; five | [we will deliver this collection free and one-half furtongs.—Lucetta, 99 | J anywhere in Eastern States. ‘ (Martin), 8 to 6, 4 to 5 and 1 to 2, firet; in Ashes Now. ok Corinth, 111 (Wilson), 3 to 1, even and : 1 to 2 second; Pocatagtio, 117. (Miller), eu ek % to 1, 8 to 1 and 4 to 1, third. Time, This ts an April fool Joke that wasn't {1.09 1-5. Roseallo, Miss Stann Bauch Was Wise—Sure He Was—but the Laundry Is Jey Obrien, Skillute, Dacia, L: 5 & Joke. |County Chairman, ‘Leon B. and Silk 50 Barclay St., N. Y. Oharles Bauch of No. 20 Wayne ‘aiso ran and finished as named. wtreet, Jersey City, was driving a wagon ao of the Manhattan Laundry Company Ehilichd Secret of Success y Lon, east on Thirtleth street this afternoon. He had twelve big crates of ‘towels and ls merit demonstrated. its quality holds those who try it table linen or the Pennsylvania Rati- road at Sunnyside, L. 1. Near Fifth avenue @ boy yelled: Estab. 50 year! mister, you're wagon's on fire.” chase yerself, you April Fool Don’t Postpone the t ; ut,” repled Bai ne e Correction of Failing Eyesight. Pm cal 0 a . Bmich, telling kin bis wagon was afte. | White Rose The first signs of eye “April Fool, I got you the first time, trouble and not the last 1" said Bauch, . "Then Bauch felt @ hot breath on his CEYLON TEA signs should rouse evety neck, and glancing around, saw the fire Avoid Imitations. reasoning person to im- was no April Fool. . . Bauch never descended from his perch mediate action. When 1 cl before. " ET nati ! Sein he nme ec | Wie Rove Ooo, Oxy Sa Poet | Our Beyer prea, Some one turned in an alarm, This is * 4 what followed: = _ Oculists of Long Experience, Deputy Chief Martin, four engines, Witheut two hook and ladder companies, a water Examine Your Eyes *Ostere tower, fire patrol and the reserves from Perfect Fitting Glasses, $8.50 to $12 the West Thirtieth street station re- With Bifocal Lenses, $4.50 '» $18 sponded. There was not much left of the wagon and its contents when the! ales pot and pan Chukich & spared Bor. ort Foo! joke,” was spick and span a me ata! sf eat = venue, PATENT MONOPOLY CASE Soap and muscle won't we re ea REHEARING IS ASKED,| Clean your pots and pans Hot Nets et Ann SHY. hae sh he haa Properly— oroughly. : 498 Fulton St., Cor. Wickersham Asks United States Su- inary washing of| preme Court to Again Passon | cooking utensils passes over Merits of Claims, whole hidden nests of little WASHINGTON, April 1—Appiteation| Wigglers—commonly called for rehearing of the Supreme Court! germs, Tide to-day by te, Government,| GOld Dust ig” a sanitary through Attorney-General Wickersha! washing powder that not The Government asks leave to int wene in the case, declaring the court's| Only removes the visible recent decision sustaining th ight ot| dirt and grease, but digs patentees to restrict the use price p of their products, thus creating @ pat- deep after every | trace of ent monopoiy, is of “gravest import to| germ life — sterilizes pots, the people of the United State: A Hee, ‘The Attorney-General says the decis- 8, pails and ket ton affects enforcement of the Sherman | Jeaving them clean, whole- ‘Anti-Trust law, stating in his~drief: some, safe. + “The decision extends the power of s, rs patentees beyond the limits of the con- Shake a little Gold Dust in ” your dish-water and see the P aaarcteet Henry, @ party to the sult] startling results. ——= ‘Bese Mere Underwear “‘Let the GOLD DUST TWINS de your work’’ For delicate, appetiz- ing flavor in soups or salads, add a dash of auce It’s great for meats, game or fish, too. 10c. At Grocers and Delicatessen Stores, Made byE.Pritchard,881 Spring St.,N.Y. cause—-it’s cool and lasting. We guarantee it. Uni $1.00. Separate Gar- mente 50c. At YOUR retailer's for the asking, ELMIRA KNITTING MILLS New York. Ma MONDAY’S OFFERING “ital Noor EASTER BGGS_AND_ NOVELTIES frem you DGRT SPICKD © M Dew! y Ea aetialis nih ah eae ~ ROUND Box 10¢]. shapse with Reavy chocolate 10. cqoeaxys CREAM Finest! ded cocoanut wit de-| felons te RASTER ath Cute ttle chicks, rabe| OW ‘TR COVERED MA) bits and ducks) made of ‘pure “wite| TOW Rute. a superior mena fatty ‘marshal ow ana ‘pagked 10c| thas others’ai' twice’ the rice. FILLED | inB ed f sis March 80, 1913, in aN wi Fe open ep SS a a a aes (| New Crop French Fruit in 5-pound Boxes - $1.89 || “s8in scr soun veisvea "Bizet ™! 9 . KF 429 Grant " . | Noms hi Gur chores open tatarday etealeg weit hE Sebel? ecto. mond Will, Tuesday. 2 Pr Md,” Interbrens Lutheran Cemetery. eee ee LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. CRTLaa agit on Wen Tats v6, bear Ae

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