The evening world. Newspaper, May 31, 1912, Page 2

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} | "ern, with pay with @ ifberal Christmas box, | but they went out just the same. | « ‘The strike leaders are taking metlv steps to offset the invasion of New York by negro w sas sitike: aro walters’ W ers. Officers of the ne nee with the'officers have been In con Internatio Union of Hotel and the ald of mijleters and philanthropists engaged in uplift work among .the negroes has. deeb enlisted, Tt te claimed wh e Held am e| fegve javor.in New York is already overcrowded, and that the threatened | Introduction of negro walters would | work great harm. Manager Mulligan of the Hotel Hires ite, advertived yesterday for lege students to wait on table in nie hotel In the piace of strikers, thir he has solved the a ployed forty-four stud bia University, New ¥ | and Stevens Institute of Hoboken this afternoon. One of the Stevens men is & member of the football team. COLLEGE BOYS GO TO HOTELS) FOR WAITERS’ JOBS. | Notifloation has twen petit to all the big universities! of the Bast that jobs ae waiters in New York hotels at good pay ‘are open. ie expected that t | will be an afmy of ‘rah ‘rah boys! swarming into town looking for watts 8" jobs before the end of the week. It ds reported. that 1,60) negro waiters from Florida and other resort hotels afe on théir wayto New York, A mass meeting strikers held at a@dressha by J. "Elster, orie of the ore ganizers of the union, who detlaret that the strike*was spreading: of te) own ‘momentum anQ Would soon om- brave’ all the lepding hotels and rea: |° taurahte of Manhattan. There were 600 men present and more wildly en- thusiestio gathering bas aever assom- bled in Bryant Hall. Elster declared that the union had not Advised the strikes at the Great North- the Marte Antionette or the Calu- met Club; “We don’t have to order them out now,” said the o “The men. are striking on their own hook and as the news spreads the strike wall spread.” A new ‘angle of the strike became Apparent at the Manhattan Hotel at 1 o'clock this afternoon, when twenty of the twenty-five cooks walked out of the kitchen on strike, The waiters remained, but It wae pald by the union officers the strike would be made general this eve ning. The unton'men ate jubilant over | their inereasing following among the cooks as they figure t cooks are harder to replace than wi About a ‘hundred walters walked out of the Motel Marie aAn- dipnette, Bixty-seventh strest and Broad- way during: the breakfast hour. Thin strike was gat and the hotet pais 2h ri do = lot of hustling to keep the meal serving ma- chinery in mivtion, Over 2,200 walters and about. 90 cooks are on strike in fourteen leading New York ‘bevels, one big restaurant and a club te figures tur. nished by the we Unien, to-day,, - one of rovkere’ the hotels has ceased cerving meals, 1m the public dining rooms, The others) are running with forces of strike breakers ,and except for unavoidable detaye.. tw the Piash, ote | Astor, Aton" Regis and Gotham appey to be running as smoothly as thelr walters walked out. strikes are to be called to-night ac Ing. to the union leaders, The Hotel Mens’ Association held a meeting to-day to discuss th: lon. The strikers insist that the unton shall be Fecogniged and the hotel men are unr animous in saying that they will close up their houses rather than agree to thie exaction, Tho union leaders threaten to call strikes {n overy hotel and restaurant of any prominence bw York, the “Ham. en, a tise of places against been declared, ané e ni rt t H H i Ps be < alld Fred Berry of the Pinan has promised to furnish the hoted men from $5,000 to 10,000 ekilled negro waiters if theyyare needed. The New York hotel managers do not look with favor on mesro help as steady inatitucion, but they are willing to employ negroes to | break the waiters’, strike should that move be forced updn them, ATRIKE-BREAKERS MARCH UP, PIFTH AVENUE. Mr. Bterry has indtalled Atty negro waltersin the Plaza, They are engaged in room service and do not appear in ing rooms, A corps of fifty white | atrikebreakers marched up Fifth avenue | to the Plaza at 10 o'clock this morning. | The mon were quickly equipped with | uniforms ané sent to the dining rooms) to be Grilled. ‘The declared programme of the hote! saen to import negro waiters for the pose of breaking the strike undoub: hastened action on the part of the un! to-day. While the striking waters pro- Ee fess to belle that negroes will be un- able to serve meals from a French menu; the hote! men @ay they have no fear on that ecore, In several of tho hotels where strikebreakors have been ine 4 it has been found necessary to pince interpreters in the dining rooma and thie Plan could be followed with ro Manager Slocum of the Marle Antoin eat this afternoon that he had arrange te equip hie hotel with a complete outt | of negro kitchen and dining room help, Frederick A. Reed, President of the Hotel Mens’ Association and propristor © the Park Avenue Hotel, said this afternoen that while his walters huve Met struck, he ie prepared for trou hie walters waik..out:he will Mi places’ with pogroes, The Florida «} | Preparing to house their strike break. union,"* “are bulldosed most efectuaily by the unton men. violence bring |fokd all my old m back when the trouble ts over, because [mood walters are Aart to get, but none aghin \€ their re-employment {ingent upon recognition of the union. 1 bave recruited a staff of take th it that entirety if the union officers make the recognition of thelr organisation ole insue.” COLLEGE ATHLETES Cornell’s Team Rules Favorite Tun off to-day. testa! to-morrew. ful. hopeful of scoring elahteen points, pared to see some surprises handed out, but on past performances and present condition » fo] b) fancied as @ close second, with 26 points Michigan aml © }for third plac Joutered in 100 yards ran in four heats to-day, nix men in each heat, first three | tor Mr. Taft {# openly taking the pos'- to qualify in semi-finals to be run to- | morrow, Fast Coast Raliway has arranged to ship negro walters to New Yorks from Southern resorts as rapidly aa they! are requ In the larger hotels where the Kitchens | manned by high priced sand ° nder * afe skilled tn their profess fion the strikes have been confined to Walters at their assietante. ‘The kit hen staff of the Plaza, for inst ia | not to a man The cooks the emailer hotels have grievances ani} marched out with Ue waitera, A vuul | started the strike in the Marlo Ancol nette Pmployment agencies ace from Philadelphia, ree cities in the F ion | pickets are watching the railway sta. tlous for arpivals from outside, but hot succeeded in stopping any of the fneweomers ar yet In anticipation of as the Airlke spreads, the | are ers, The Viana waiters are not com- Pelled to leave the house unless they want to. Quarters havo beon prepared for the negroes and they will bo kept inside all the time, According to the hotel men @ majority of the strikers are not members of the union. Proprietor Muschenhelm of the ROOSEVELT DARES sHk 6 MR. TAFT TO CLAIM J CHIO DELEGATE ha| EX-President Says to Try for Single Buckeye Delegate- at-Large Means War. WON'T BE IN CHICAGO. That Is—Not Unless He Alters His Plans About Con- vention. Hotel Astor, although the strike has put him to @ great deal of tnconven- fence, says he does not biame his old men, “Those who are not members of the Mr, Muechenheim = explatue, UVaually threats of physical jem mround. I have they can como {of them will ever atep inside this hotel is con. places of th ff will become pe a IN TRY-QUTS TO-DAY ~ON FRANKLIN FIELD in Annual Intercolle- giate Meet. FRANKLIN FIELD, PHILADEL- PHIA,- May 31.—With the cream of ath- letes from largest colleges contending the annual track and field championships of the Inter-Conegiate Association of Amer- fea was begun ‘on Franklin @eidck thie afternvon. Tri track events and the field games were The finale will be con-| ! thirty of the country’s ld at 3 in the ‘Up anti! the leat mipute Cornell favorite, but the Cornelian ned atrength took tumble when W. H. Bennett, their star aprint- r, pulled a tendon in « tryout. Ben- ett will start, but whether he will be ble to make a place now seems doubt- ‘Trainer Moskley of Cornell was Felowers of college sp t were pre- local “dopesters" conceded Pennsylvania w strong contenger for the lue ribbon of tho association, with a otal of 2 points, while Harvard w nell looked about even with 18 each, Summari Twenty-four men out of ninety-six 100-Yards Dash—First heat, won by | aM, D. FE. Robertson, Syracus Amherst, second; Rudeli, ‘Yale! | third, Thine, 19 2-5 | Second heat—(Roy Mercer, Penna, qenalized one yard)—Won by J. P.| Malland, Princeton; second, F, | Mrown; third, te, H. H. & Fan, and F.C. Cornet, Cornell, Time, | 1193-5 seconds. Third heat—Won byi J. E. Bond, Mich- | ‘ian: a third, R. 8, Degosgald!, Harvard, Time, ds. the | Dui Columbus: gle delegate-at-large would met ry the people and by a trick to nullify their expressed will. and equity no claimd whatever to & Single delegate-at-large from Ohio, and any attempt to secure him so much as jand any individual who attempts to ae- | large 4 ond, C, 0. Olson, Dartmouth; |'@ the People and any man who con- | Roosevelt, | Princeton; second, H. H. Jacobs, Colume bia; third, J. A: Piner, Penn State, Ime, 10 8-58 The Ue foy third place in second heat | was run off. Won by F.C. Cornet, | } Time, 10 4-5 Penn did not qualify in 100 yards, | Meif-mile run, trial heats.—First heat won by H. P. Snyder, Cornell; second, HB. Gerinan, Massachusetts Institute; third, J, M, Dolan, Dartmouth, Time, Im, 678. Sevond heat—Won by J. P. Jone Cornell; second, es, Princ ton; third, J ring, Pennayl- | ania, ‘Tim ‘Third Hea N. Putnam Cornell hy Harvard; thir ©haplin, Princeton, Thine, Im 58, Shot Put (five mes nUAltY Won by R. L, Beatty, Cc ia, AT feat iy inch AW ler, Michigan “ A. Bartlott Brown, 43 feet rth, RB. Bathchelfer a 1% Inches fifth, A. MH Kissell, Princeton, 42 feot | 6% inches, tnter-collegiate record war broken Jwhen R atting the lead for a et M inch, breaking the rk made by J.J. Horner 3r with @ put of 46 Michigan, ‘Always Does Good Thousands Take i it in the Spring. “T have taken Moot's Mares; Reeded for a number of year ‘James Hey, 8070 Amber A., deiphia, 1 nd have alwaye found | thet Tal fake it tn line with the best row 1 have tn Ing tn the morning and eun bor ot this Aitfereut pers | needing & tonic to toine always feel like | give tte tate on Get tt to-day tn usual Maula. fo: chotviated tavlets called Sersatade. a but after taking two or three |= Ex-President Roosevelt rata to-day that the feorts that he Intended to go to the Chicago Convention are untrue. His Attention was called to @ statement made in Chicago by Col. Harry @. New, Chairman of the committee in charge of the Republican National Convention ar- Fangements, that the former President had engaged room: for uae during the Convention, “Pure fake,” said Col, Roosevelt. “OF OPURSE, I MAY ALTER MY PLANS, but at present I have no intention of going to Chicago.” Col. Roosevelt remained in New York overnight after his return from Gettye: ’ VENING WOMLD, id went to his editorial office th He will return to Oyster Bay this afternoon. In epeaking of his re- ception at Gettysburg he said that he had been Impressed with the attitude of the people. He mentioned the fact that his arrival attracted little attention, “In the morming,” he continued, “the People seemed imbued with the solem- nity of the occasion, as they should UT been. In the afternoon they warmed up in @ demonstration wich was one of the most gratifying of my experionce.” ‘The sugi tween the at the Ohio & to elect six de! tea-at-large to the Chicago convention next Tuesday, was denounced to-day by Col. Roosevelt, ‘The Colonel sent this t ter F. Brown, his Ohio tion of a compromine be. “I have just meen the telegram sent by Mr. Taft to Mr. Vorys about a com- promise in Ohio. Until I saw this tele- gtam I had never heard. suggestion that there should be any comprom! and I of course assumed that any au Buggestion came from the Taft forces. In the first place, I would not consent ta comproshise anyhow, afd ii ‘the! next place we carried Ohio by over] 20,000 on the popular primary. T GOING TO LET TAFT HAVE ‘EVEN ONE 8Lick. “Any attempt to give Mr. Taft a sin- to ction a deliberate effort to defraud Mr. Taft has in morals one delegate. ate effort to ple as expressed freely by them In the primary, and we cannot afford for one moment to consider such an effort to defraud the people of their right tn this struggie for justice and for popular rule. “L wish the issue clearly made, We stand for the right of the people to choose thelr own candidates and to have the del tes carry out their will, cure one delegate-at-large from Ohto tion that the convention is not to repre- sent the will of the people, and that the poltimta: re to be encouraged to defy the popular will and to commit an out- | rage on justice, and to defraud the peo- | ple of their just right. “Any district delegate to the State Burna, | convention from any one of the districts vard, Michl-! whieh went for me in Ohio who him- self votes for a single Taft delegate- committin gan act of treachery Jones or approves such act {s condoning and approving treachery. “THEODORE ROOSEVELT." Chauncey Dewey, Roosevelt's manager in Ullnols and’ Medill Me- Cormick of Chicago, one of the leaders of the Roosevelt campatgn, came to New York to-day to confer with Col. Hoth Mr. Dewey and Mr Col. OLLAR Distinctivety i Bary er 9 pegenety POPULAR ONE-DAY OUTINGS MoCormick said thi there was no truth jn reports of serious dissension among the Illinots delegates elected for be Roosevelt. Mr. MoCormick said some -of the delegates had ox- praseed @ wish to see the Colonel be- fore the convention and that he had In-| vited all to visit him at Oyster Bay. Many of them, he continued, were unable to make the trip and he sald that there would be about a dozen in the delegation, which is to reach here to-morrow. HELD AS “JACK THE SHOOTER,’ MOB VIOLENCE FEARED. Ex-Policeman of Little Rock Ac- _ cused as: Mysterious Assailant of Women. LITTLE ROCK, Ark. May 81.—The Search in which oltisens of Little Rock ngaged for a mysterious “Jack the Bhooter” ts recalled by the arrest at Searcy, Ark., of Samuel Brasafeld, a former Little Rock Policeman, Brass flela on y 12 of nine-months-old Paul Coulter, who was shot while In hin| mother's arma. Miss Marion Smith was | at the Coulter home at the time, a she declares positively that the prisoner 1g the man she saw there. Brassield je confined in the State pet nitentiary as | 4 precaution against possible mob vio- | lence, Ife denies that he is Bullty of the erlmo, ‘The Killing of the Coulter infant was| tho last of a weries of women, apparently by tho who terrorized Little Rock for weeks and cauyed the Mayor to {ssue a proc- lamation calling on citizens to arm themselves and aid the police, of men responded to the call and Vigilantes patrolled the streets at Y wuarding the residence sections. Mra. Coulter who entered her home early tn the morning. She picked up h eamed for help. Her aseullant shot at her, the bullet striking the child Killing it instantly, Previous to thay one Woman had been criminally as- wnulted, several attacked and shot at, charged with the murder he-o| © Tung |f attacked by a man| | baby and} fui BOYS street, and Frank has hin search, picion that of his help. \SUM and two of them wounded when they, Uke Mrs, Coulter, made outery. DISAPPOINTMENT U NNECESSARY jt, 20, kof time? Ne around for Genfecitons Decause of | Wits lng Yve" xourcearetuily: selec alae, Baas teeeant ane FRIDASs AND Speciai for Lita May 3lst \dithon| Frank Basmeiy Hai Frank Darmoty, | who lives in the Home for Industrious | Boys conducted by the Mission of the Immaculate Virgin at No, 875 Lafayette | ‘Tm be ‘king % a week now,” 5: ind, ety ASpoorl her 1c =| “Pranks last memory of Nis mother was five years ago, When they were Mspomessed from thelr flat, at Ni Weat Thirty Ath street, soon after, his ago went to wor! , Duval & Co., brokers, at No. 3% mreet. well as a toni whg are weak and run down, var, ve a bd |Elopers Whose Expected Heir May Reconcile Bride’s Family A EEKS HIS MOTHER. | | | in| { Five ra. thirteen years old, | works in @ broker's office in; Broad street, has asked The Evening | World to help him te find his mother. | been playing detective on) his own account for several weeks. | Besides the natural love that prompts he is influenced by the sus- Mis mother may be in need He hae been In various that time, and seven jo te with MERCOLDS| | Summer colds are the result of lower vitahty. Ifneglected, they urcapttodevelop into chronic ie] trouble and long. standing coug! asthma or ca- tarth. Cure them in using F John’s Medicine, which has a his- tory of 50 years of success in the treatment of coughs, coldsand all throat and lung troubles, as nd body builder for those (Trade Mark.) | Everett stroet, and, what | again. 4y dyad. 1S. AK GERAGHT - WAKES BABY CLOTHES, FAMILY CONTRBUTES | Stork May Prove Messenger of | Reconciliation of Eloping | Bride and Relatives. NDPWPORT, R. 1, May 31.—Youne | Mrs, “Jack” Geraghty is making baby [clothes tn the honeysuckle cottage ia nificant, Mr grandmother, h Vanderbilt, her aunt, are contributing jto the layette as well, When Julla Steele French was mare ried to “Jack” Geraghty, the Newport ghauffeur, August ¢ of last year, | her parents refused to eo her Mrs, Elsie French Vanderbiit, who has always regarded Miss Julia aq her favorite niece, was not quite #0 unyielding, It was reported at that time, but nevertheless she Was not reconciled to the marri The upshot of it was that the bride was told to take her choice of returning to her family with- out ‘her chauffeur husband or of cling+ ing to him and being ignored by her Telatives. Tho girl clung to her husband and de- Voted herself to housekeeping and the duties of any wife in ordinary cireum- stances. But now the stork may serve ae h messenger of family peace and re conciliation. Amos Tuck Fi A horse drawing the delivery wagon of Abraham Prince, a atationer, of No. 110 Ludlow street, was scared by the exhaust of @ taxicab at Central Park West and Ninetieth street to-day and ran away. Abraham Prince jr., the | driver, was thrown into the body of the | wagon, After knocking down & lamp- | post at One Hundred Manutacturers of the Famous Weser Pianos This Chance Best of All Chances Come in Today ana take at- vantage of a life-long opportunity to. purchase a GOOD USED uP. RIGHT at a most unusually low A big variety of leading make: to select from. ThEMS LOW A Santer r Send Catalone i. WESER BROS. SALES HoOM 1 W. 23d st. | This Week we offer at our Two Stores the largest assortwent of $20 & $25 Summer Suits for Men and Women at $12.50 & $15.00 on CREDIT 4 Down 4 a Week No Reference or Security Required aie @ 316 West 125th St.,nr.8th Av. 2858 3d Av., 149th St., Bronx Open Evening: new vonfectlong, yp Then whtedy Oc A of about popus nox 250 Kode, POUND BOx POUND Box Sti Park Row and 1, Meregs ae MILK CHOCOLATE COVERED FRESH PINEAPPLE it ite beet now—mo: and sdvies every one) SUNDAY WORLD WANTS WORK MONDAY WONDERS Indescribubly deliclous. POUND BOX re TOR rn AND SATURDAY Pw ee 4 tes dir ti Vales WOE naite toe here thai sane 10¢c Films Developed Free When Printe Are Ordered, I. DAVEGA, JR. Harlem's Leading Sporting ¢ sal Hise, 123-125 West 125th Si. Good on hot meats, Good on cold meats. Fine for flavoring soups and gravies, rivet amore ety aewhere ro sight In exch Instance in+ ne container, sd EDDYS = ean uct Made Made by B. Pritchard, 321 E, Pritchard, 331 Spring St.,N.¥. ~ HELP WANTEDMALE, cn Te etal shoe storey valereac om Save "shop. foe ae ‘oe “= | disappear ‘and soon you can si ne “e190 street, the runaway went onto One Hundred and Tenth street and tdrned east, Mounted Policeman Thomas | King headed the horse off at Lenox avenue. His right arm and hand wete bruised. Young Prince's wrists and hands were badly cut in his effort regain the reins, ——a— Promoter Giv Edwin F. Cragin, a promoter, with of. fives at No, 100 Broadway, surrendered himself in the Centre Street Court to- day and was arraigned before Magis- trate on a charge preferred by Richard in furnihed a bond. one week. © If your lenses are mounted to a Rontis Suchen City | your eyeglasses can’t fall off. You can’t jar them off and you can’t shake them off. Attached to your glasses for 35 cents in German Silver, and 78 cents made in gold filled. Forealeonly at oureight stores. | er 499° eieeaytay. near Willo’by. 9 Fulton DD. se 597 Broad 8: Treat your bunion kindly. it will under such usage. WEAR THE COWARD BUNION SHOE ye riddance to a bad bunion.” SOLD NOWHERE ELSB JAMES S, COWARD 264-274 Greenwich 8t., N. ¥. (NRA WARREN STREET) Mall Orders Pliled | Send ier Catalogue BURNS AND CHAPPED HANDS “MUCH BETIER’’ Little Accidents of Childhood Do Not Worry Mother. “Mammal myself!” How often does the mother of a fam-| ily have to minister to the trifling ills and accidents of childhood. Scratches, burns, ehanped hands, and trifling wounds must be treated and the little sufferer made to feel “all right again.” The mother who has a tube of Velogen within reach is armed for minor ills. Velogen soothes irritated skin, allays inflammation and paves the way for the healing process. Used night or morning or beiore 4 poing out of doors It prevents chap; ands and Ips and keeps face and ey smooth, white and flawless. or sticky. It will not soll the finest dress fabric. In collapsible tubes, at all Sraneists, 25 cents, Mammat 1 'WISSN PIANOS WAREROOMS; 6C and 57 Flarnush Ave.. Rrook- dyn; 06 Flith Bets» Wi New York KEEP IN sicat—Use EVERY NIGHT KEELER’S (2lo"cre Cold Cream The Perfect Skin Cleanser ‘Tubes and Jars, 1c. to, 23.50. Drug and Department Booklet, “The Secret of Meautyy* sample, mailed te any address. CHAS. E. KEELER CO.,'*'4¢ EXTRA CH. nO JARGE FOR ren | wt Sea pi World fh re, | 1 have burned! It ts not greasy | **Good J$ | CUTICURA SOAP SHAVING sTIGk For Tender Faces Indwpensable for those subject te red- hess, roughness, and other irritations ‘of the skin. Ashaving luxury. Notmug. ‘soap, no germs, no waste of H. King of No. 2 Clinton aveni {ime ormoney. In aickeled box, 266.,at Hrooklyn, that he had misused §2, stores or by mail. Uberal sarapie free King gave him to prom the Im- |STIGA} Address "Cuticure,” Dept. 28, Boston, perial Sliver Company. Bail was fixed ——— jat $1,000 and the examination over, 00D ATERS anton EASY PAYMENT FES i PLAN att ‘Rents or Pier oF fake Bfossh Quartered, 1 1 Tees 4 ‘x itehe ible, | Kitchen Re 5-ROOM OUIFIT Vawue $22 14 Dress Well in the Best Up-to-date, Hand-Tailored MEN’S OR WOMEN’S Clothing at either of our 2 stores on our easy Credit ries of down 4] Weekly No matter where you live or what your occupation may be, it will pay you to call and convince yourself that there are no “ifs” or “strings” to our terms. All our goods are priced 14 less than you are accustomed to pay. Men's and Women’s Suits Elsewhere $18, $21, $22.50 Here £12, $14, $15 The same low prices rid liberal terms apply to a!l our immense stoct of Spring and Summer Clothing. e ier I By onder of the Board of Dire: MILTON $8, KISTLER, no CHAS, HH, J, DOU wf Dated Mav 141912 PHELAN, Pat bS0'%. Bee uf Lady of Tours, brated. Inter: Jersey City, William Wal HH—Died May 20, 1912, FRAN ALM. ag RANGIS Puaerst from residence, 1198 ‘Neleon ave. Saturday, 10 A thence to the Churoh of The Sacred Hoar bridge, where & solemn high ini be offered for ¢ 1 AL. é wrest & dase eurenb ess Ba.

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