The evening world. Newspaper, January 3, 1913, Page 2

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North River and fought to make the sbutiding one of the tugs blew franti- ‘cally the cut-loose signal. . to meep the Dent frem eink- ly hed emettement ever this thrill Gaivage of the tug died Gown among \tehere at Lag Altre hein fefhowed on the neds of tug Gelden Age, towing o oone oR barges up through Buttermik Oban- ° r ef *ika ist | Ole man ef the Gelten Age's crow had leaped overboard Jest before the Hal- lenbesk drew alongside. le was res- qued @ith aiMoulty. ‘The oid steamship Taerus af the Iron Rteamship Companys, tied ep at Pier No. 1 Rattery, was found to be if danger o laeeen against pout peat dm the deight of the téow about é ment Gerdlict destroyer Genecs, the res- cue oat that took off the Turriaive’s passengers on Christmas Day, that ‘three-masted schooner bad gone ashore on the Brigantine reefs outside of Lit. tle Keg Harbor. anchor immediately and etarted out through the Narrows to the rescue sas TAREE GREAT STORMS SWEE WIDE SECTION LIVES LOST THE EVE P OF COUNTRY: N SEA WRECKS Atlantic Coast Lashed by Furious Gale and Damage Done at Vari- ous Points—Middle West and Pacific States Are Hit. WASHINGTON, Jan. 3.—Plerce storm of extraordinagy violence swept three widely separated portions of the country to-day, paralyzing v'olook word was flashed to the Govern-| wire communication, doing property damage and menacing shipping on the South Atlantic Coast. One storm, central in Virginia, swept the Chesapeake Bay and Hampton Roads and partially submerged the shipping section of the The Genera weighed | City of Newpgrt News with water from the James River. Battleships of the Allantic fleet at anchor there kept their moorings with diffleulty, GALE SENDS SPRAY TO TOP OF | Dut thweir launches and small boats attempting landings were swamped. Large quantities of freight on the piers were swept into the sea. Win- THE AQUARIUM. ‘The waves, piled up the custing gale out of the southeast, were tumbling over the Battery seawall and epilling gai- Jone of suds over the broad walk and the lawns behind, and spray was sip- ping clear to the top of the Aquarium round tower, when the frat accident in the harbor occurred. Two big tugs, towing a string of twelve laden coal varges belo e to the J. J. Mo- Cullom Cot jy and bound for White- stone Landing, came teetering down turn of Manhattan's heel opposite the Battery, It was like butting @ stone ‘wall for the overladen tugs, * After stan still for nearly fifteen yminutes and drifting away in toward the frimge of buildings about the ferry | ‘The barge ‘men promptly cut the cables linking up the last four barges and the remainder of the etring turned laboriously and made beck up North River. The four drifting barges, faden with from 800 to 1,200 tons of coal each, swept ewiftly down on the sea wall, with none to hinder. BARGES HIT SEA WALL ANDO ONE 8 SUNK. ‘They hit the sea wall just west of the new immigration shed with a bang that shook the ferry! promptly eplit open a three pounded and grated against too, began to take in water. Then the two tugs, having dropped the remainder of their string somewhere up North River, came plow- ing back and tried to drag the three etill buoyant barges away from dan- ger, After a stern Aight with the waves they succeeded in snatching the barges out into deep water. But not before the whole floating faenace had come within an ace of col- liding with e@ pile-driving derrick in the ferry slips and given appalling, tremors to a few ferryboat captains. The steam lightef, which was dis- \yeqry masted shortly thereafter, was the Andy, ees was destroyed by fire during the | «1: Deals of its wrecking were ewallowed jsyorm to-day, ply bey doing ais-, bert mantiod and the wreckers (wie G@iMoulty. ‘The Jamestown hed a! ‘sn the roar of the gale. TUG IN DISTRESS WHISTLES FOR HELP. i ‘The third in the succession of near ap- beaches about the Virginia Capes Revenue cutters patrolling t Communication wis interrapted. All Feached ® velocity of @n hour im some sec- “cities south of bere paralysed by wale. In thie city the gale whipped down signe and trees but did no great dam- age. Telegraph and telephone wires were demoralized np far south on the coast line as Atlanta. RIVER WATERS DRIVEN INTO * NEWPORT NEWS. NORFOLK, Jan. 8--A sixty-mile gale with heavy rain whipped the At- Jantlo coast here to-day with terrific violence, downing wires and demoralis- ing shipping. Beveral/mall craft are reported sunk with loss of life and many are in dis- tress. ‘The terrific gale swept the waters of the James River up into the lower: pore tions of the city of Newport Newe, in- undating streets, warehouses and driv- | ing people to the elevations. vice acroms the river to Newport > was impossible and the city was cut off Ferry ser- ‘trom all communteation, | ‘The 14 frigate Jamestows, for many quarantine ship in Hampton rescued \varie@ career im the Civil War and after. prosebes to real shipwrecks was a tus.) BALTIMORE, Jan. 3.—With the bare name unknown to the Battery lookouts, | moter at 24.06, lowes: whieh got inte great difficulties about midway between the Battery and ed- joe’ Island. When the tus'e abril! whistles of distress sounded, Commodore Bill Quigiey of the mosquite feet took @ jong glance seaward ané shook his head dolefully. "Ged help the poor sallore!" he ex- claimed. But just ee the crew of the tug could be geen cutting (he lashings on the Life- passed line ané towed her to Gouth Brooklyn ‘Three storms of extraordinary vio- lence, eecurring in widely separated sections of the country, were reported by no a companies here almost “eanogal to the Gret of the siorms raged south @ time there vul one wire working between Wi 4 and Atlanta. Shortly before noon tn this’ city and @ @ shipping took refuge in Cherapeake ay harbors to-day and waited for the worat ator of the winter due to-night. The roof of Baltimre's county Jail was blown away this afternoon, Several elight in- Juries to pedestrians from falling awn- ings were reported. Weather officals report thix city the center of the disturbance and heavy loss to eiipping is feared during to-night, ATLANTA, Ga., Jan, 3.—-A gale which ‘ajewept the South Atlantic Coast States early to-day resulted in considerable damage, according to reports received here. At Augusta, Ga, the army avia- tion camp suffered some damage, sev era} hangars being blown down, Tele- wraph and telephone wires generally were proatrated, At Savannah, Charleston and other poinia along on the coast the wind Averaged foriy to forty-five miles an hour, but only nominal lowe to shipping porte that the steel frames th@e wee not @ wire working south of a ; @il had been prostrated by the at 4p violence wae a wind storm in the Oiddle West, which levelled scores ot Qetween here and Chicago. At one time the forenoon there were Dut five wires working between the two elt third storm area wes in the o of Washington and Oregon. Hun- of wires had been prosirated by t hesey bis blow there, the telegraph igulo that swept along the Atlantic 0 naa this afternoon reached a oot at sear e miles an hour. Th: up @ heavy) fog which brought a navigation to @ standstill and then ted the mist in a twinkling. "ul TeOAVERD ALERT ALL ALONG THE COAST. warnings were hoisted from more te Eastport at ®8) in the motning, when the gale had reached & y of forty-five miles, A dozen steamers were tied In the har. While other steamers and eal! is, reeling up the comet, were ‘and battered by the heavy seas ving crews along the coast held je in readiness to launch their Weather Biresu reports thet @ale had mot nearly reached the ‘of ite violence. A shift in the di- e ah of the gale is expected befor morning. y oon the fog hung hes: jew York and tor many miles around. the wind euddenly whi t | carried It off in} Fifteen “hed inate from tor ‘ ‘ er Was blown out of wa and small buildings <mile-an-hour gale ts ted have swept the Morida Peainsula throughout the night, doing much dam- o wires, trees and small buildings. No lors of life is reported. pha has THUNDER AND LIGHTNING WITH SYRACUSE STORM.) at the Syracuse Bureau, The last pre- PHILADEL| PHIA, an men were injured here thie af! when a high wind almost eo wrecked @ three-story building Se A> dozen pletely \whien ‘ dows in large hotels at Old Point Comfort were blown in and the were strewn with wrecks of small he capes expect loss of life in the Norfolk has reported the loss of a number of small vessels with the drowning of the crews in that vicinity. about fifty men and woman were et work. Ail tho injured were taken to @ hospital, where it was found that none was eeriounly hurt. Several of the women employed in the place were re- ported to have been killed, but all em- Dloyees were later accounted for. <n 120 MILE WIND BLOWS ROOF OFF; MAN BURIBD. PHILLIPSHURG, N. J., Jan. BA Righ wind in gusts, at times reaching @ ve- loctty of 120 miles an hour, swept this town and the surrounding country at 1 o'clock to-day, doing much damage One particularly vicious gust unroofed a house on Columbus avenue in the pro- ceas of construction and Chester Purcell and Frank Belleszo were blown dear of the wreck, but Knight Firth was burted tn the ruins. He was rescued, riously hurt. ae |FLOODS FOLLOW STORM IN WASHINGTON STATE. SEATTLE, Wash., Jun. 8—The firet death from the flood tn Seattle occurred to-day when & house eltuated slope in Went Seattle was carried away ‘by @ landstide, killing John Larson, an dnmate, Three others were severely hurt. Rain Is falling \o-@ay in the moun- | ahat fell recently, change to cold weather soon there will tnevitably be slides in the higher alti- {tudes and floods and washouts in the The Weather Bureau gives | lowlands. ho encouragement. All Great Northern trains are marked indefinitely late. Northern Pacific trains are an hour or two late, Milwaukee and Puset * on time. ly by the greatest exertion that | time tne clear, Ho deep on the Milwaukee and Sound tracks, ‘The Evening World.) NooN. YY, Jan. 3A severe wind storm passed over iMonti+ cello, @ulllvan County, this afternoon, doing much damage about the village. Several xmall buildings were wrecked, many blown down ——»— GALE SMASHES SHOP WINDOWS AND SENDS NOVELTIES AFLYING. A piping gale wae blowing from the southeast vation of the New York y-second to Forty-e! in it was blowin, corner of Forty. Novelty window nbout twelve fee the side a Th wind increased There was a puff and The front window was blown in rectly after the side windows wer blown out, about the Interior and flowers wen: floating out on the breeze. books and stationery followed and 1 looked like a cold doors and a sno’ orm | windows was piled up at the back o . | the store and business w Octo! He wan traced to Front, rece Yo Jan neaimost ine | fF the day when the win Mexico Threatened with arrest th atantly tracing needle of an = he agreed to come back to New York ia vesording device JUAREZ ENTRIES | voluntarily, He presented himself at} fo paper here at : | the District Attorney's office New the Unites Bt Juarex entries for to-morrow's races! Year's day and was at once locked up noon to-day are.08 (ollane) in she ‘Tombs. registering 28 inches, a than FINST RACE fumes: smaltens thngs.sene-olte the charges against tning storm get in, ‘The tem: Hy de vut false invote perature then recorded was 41 degrees of goods wold and used them as | One hour later It was 4 and the barom- era) for loans from mans eter registered a pressure of 7.8 Minera ecient tisk vane the inches. This te an unprecedented record | MAB found to be insolvent On vious winter electrical storm ts recorded VARY songhite Mine | Weller Dall wae fixed at 50,00 ae breaking about lo P on Jan & Ay i A bese. «Ata: Tetoaer. | 191 To-day's atorm was not wevers Sea. huh ns «.| TAFT NOT TO SEND NAME nor lasting. Hi i q iY luge voar-eud 4} NEW HAVEN, Co Jan, &—The | Pore ne i g Bed parteaist AL ihe. Weather, Burenu (his | a ky.) OF GOETHALS TO SENATE, hernoon registered 2. the lowest olde [one sere tha iahiey of he gallon git | Opposition of Demoeratic Senators ¢ wind was blowing forty milev hour and rising, It te feared much slam | iu slerivment Hh: Halts Action on Appointment the | el MACE: nae to Panama Ottice. | Jonge WASHINGTON, 3.—Presdent ra 1: | art tord “Aigomen, ick: Was 8 1: Dr, MiNougherty We: degee of Conn tains, melting the great mass of snow Uniess there is a Sound trees were uprooted and elgns i Jackson Pleads Not Guilty to the| Little cyclones circled Pipes and nd bitter day in- in motion, The stock that didn't get out of the Te Taree venr-ahde | ENING WORLD, F BIDAY, JANUARY 8, 1918. ANDERHAK EDLDS BUCHNER AT THE PCE QUI Smith Threatens to Oppose $15,000 Award if Counsel Wastes More Time. COMPLAINTS VANISH. One to ‘Waldo ‘Has No Recorded Effect. ‘The Aldermanic Police Investigating afterneos, with Capt. Ormsby of the MaAison street station on the stand. Thie was Capt. Ormaby’s third appear- ance & Geacribe the system of investi- eating complaints sent by caiisene fegarding disorderly houses. It ts the object of Chief Counsel Buck- ner of the show that the Police Comn not adequately Informed by his omptains of what the actual condittone are in their precincts. Capt. Ormeby was questioned on specific complaints of places in his district and fent to him ¢hrough the inapector. The captain is unable to show what reports he had made on many of these; mor had the investigators been able to find in the files of the Police Depart- ment any reports of action taken. ‘The committee met 19 @ room draped! heavily tn black and purple, a mark of mourning for Aldermas Willard, who died on Tuesday, Alderman Curran, chairman of the committee was absent and Alderman brook presided. Mr. Buckner opened in hie usual vig- oroun fashion and soon aroused the re- sentiment of Alderman James Smith, a Tammany member. Mr. Smith protested against Mr. Buckner's tactics and satd he would oppore any further appropria- tion unless proceedin; expedited OMITH OBJECTE TO REITERA- TION OF QUESTIONS. “On the inst day here,” protested Al- eran Smith, “Mr, Buckner asked the game question twenty-seven tim ‘The examination soon resolved itaett into @ discussion of Form 2%, or the “gumpected places” liste, which captains send to the Police Commissioner. Mr. le to satisfy himself Mr. Buckner read two letters appar- ently showing that more efficacy applies to @ letter of complaint written to the Mayor than one written to the Commis- sioner. Two letters written on the same date by the same person, one to the Mayor, the other to the Police Commis- sioner, were traced through the files. The Mayor's letter, !t was shown, Inspector Cahalane to action, but there was nothing to show in the rec- that any action was taken on the letter sent to the Commissioner, BUCKNER FINDS ‘MUCH POLICE RED TAPE. Ormaby's examination, from what Mr. Buckner brought out. and without r erence to what he may have hidden, it appears that the Police Department ts) considerably hampered by red tape. Mr. Buckner ehowed cases in which cumationa that precinct commanders inspectors were collecting graft from gambling houses were referred from Headquarters directly to the police of- ficera accused. Ormsby said he would throw anony- ints charging pol with grafting in t hin case and thi Cabalane, his superior, he said, anony- mous charges that they were grafters were common, and he considered ther unworthy of notice. Capt. Ormaby was excused at 4.10 o'clock, and the committee adjourned until Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock. pista Matcha ican $50,000 BAIL IS ASKED FOR “PETTICOAT KING.” | | Charge of Defrauding Banks of City. 8. L. Jackson, the “Petticoat King, who was indicted early in December charged with swindling banks out of half a million dollars, appeared before Mulqueen in General Sessions and pleaded not guilty to the Jackson disap- at it | Jud it} charge against him. peared from his magnificent home Pelham Bay soon after his cone the Jackson Mack Company, falled f | pioation of Assistant Diatribt-Attorney Inter-Useanio Canals Cou d not sead to the Letter to Mayor Stirs Inspector, | Scheme Suggested by a Mem- Commtttes resumed its sessions this} that vance to take action againat President | Monday by the garment workers, which Roosevelt in protection of ita own|{# Now declared to involve 90,000 opera- interests through vigorous pubitc critt- clams upon him, and hinting that senti-|*tormed and elghteen arresta wore ment which might have contributed to| made One of the largest clothing man- the panio of 1907 was deliberately manufactured in Wall at tained in an a Representative Joseph C. Sibley of Pennsylvania to John D. Archbold of | Pounded up by police reserves in Brook: | the Clapp committee this afternoon. and purported to bi BIG BUSINESS _ STRIKERS USEAXE PLANNED A SCARE IN SIEGE OF SHOP. FOR ROOSEVELT, WOMEN PAN, New Letter to Archbold Read Before the Clapp Senatorial Committee. Into Factory and Battle With Police. | |18 MEN ARE CAPTURED. | A Thousand Rioters Invade As- tor Place Shop—Hunt for Strikebreakers. HELPED PANIC ALONG, ber of “the Reigning Family,” | So Sibley Wrote. Increasing violsnce to-day marked the Progress of the strike instituted last WASHINOTON, Jan. 3—Intimations | jg bueinena, ned far in ad-| tives. A small factory in Brooklyn was | ufactories in Manhattan was made the at, were con. | dJect of assault by a mob of about letter from former | 100 persons. |Ivn to-day after the small rming jandard Oll Company, read to the | Evergreen avenue by a mob of 400 fron- ialed foreigners, A fire axe, stones and clubs were used by the bes! | they were dispersed, and twenty cower- ing women in the factory were terrl- fled into hysterics. ‘The letter was dated March 7, 1905, followa: “My Dear Mr. A: “The iliness of Mrs, Sibley has pre- vented my coming to New Yor! Senator B was to have gone o 400 Tailors Try to Chop Way Fighteen riotous tailors on strike were | Jothing manufacturing shop at No, 192 gers before [the Hotous strikers seemed to believe that @trike-oreakers had taken the | places of the siriking operatives in the factory. First the leaders of the mob tried the doors un Lafayette street giving en- 9 the elevators that carry to he seventh floor where the factory ts. doors were locked. Discovering | the crowds sur d atound the cor- nd up the winding stairway se to the doot of the loft rance this ner the tory. and men | wedged themselves in the narrow apace of the circular stairway until the bal- ustrates threatened to give way and drop halt iheir number Into the well. STRIKERS FORGE THEIR WAY) PAST THE MANAGER. When the head of the throng reached ithe doors of the loft on the seventh floor Benjamin Marks, the manager of | | the establishment, met them and as- eured them that m ¥ working in the factor: ces went for nothing, and finally admitted three of the strikers to see for themselves The three who had proved with their Inspection the absence of strike-break- jers came out and tried to assure the | rest. Their voices were drowned in the | babel of cries and, thougt those at the | top of the stairs tried so turn about; \and descend, others farther down kep: Pushing upward. Marks, In terror, sent a call for help to Police Headquarters | and the reserves of the Mercer street | atation, carrying might sticks, were hurried around to the scene of the dis- order. EMI LOVERS EXPECTED TO caLul IN STRIKEBREAKERS. A few policemen had pushed up the stairway with the van of the crowd and these began to shove the crowd back and not gently, The reserves on the street helped to shred the out- pouring mob Into segments, but it was almost an hour before the last clamor- ing striker was cleared from the bullding. No arrests were made. The fourth conference with the C ber of Commerce board of arbitration, | which is endeavgring to Induce the man- ufacturers and strikera to consent to its) Best & Co. Gg While our new depart. ments devoted te ‘Women's Apparel are most complete, we are more than eve: prepared with the apparel for Infants and Children for which we are so justly noted. @ We ask your attention to our regular advertisement appearing on another page of this paper. FIFTH AVE. At Thirty-fifth $< $25,000 STOCK se ne haa Entire faabio % turned imo to Your o ments for Juntors of t Gard" = whi fei of with me. I think he will go anyway, ae he has business there. I bad a conversation with an important of- Acial yesterday, and he told me there was but one thing to do and that was to start a back-fire, is much alarmed, member of the Bis hande an tomgue are tied. Me thinks the work should be done in the educe- tion of public sentiment between now and the meeting of Congress im Octover. “It has, 1 think, been decided to oonvene Congress in extra eession at that time though the speaker wil! try to have it go over until] Novem- der if he cannot do vetter. know in a day or two how he euc- ceeds. “No man values public opinion or fears {t #0 muoh as Roosevelt. No man seeks popularity #0 much as hi ‘Mild reproof or criticism of his policies would nearly paralyze him, ‘To-day he fears only the chorus of the rabble He thinks it is public sentiment. I don't know whether the Industrial corporations id transportation companies re enough at stake to justify the fusion of forces for concerted action, It seems to me necessary. The Sibley letter was one of a die batch of correspondence purporting to ve passed between Archbold and sev- eral other legislators, given to the Clapp Committee by W. RH -__ ‘BAILEY RESIGNS HIS SEAT IN UNITED STATES SENATE. |Keeps Promise Made Some Time} Ago to Leave Washington Oficial Life. WASHINGTON, Janu. 3.—Senator Jo- seph W. Balley of Texas late this afte noon resigned as a member of the Up- Der House of Congress in a letter sent to Goy, Colquitt of Texas and president ‘pro tam. Ga'linger of the Senate. Senator ago he would resign, and yesterday de- livered his farewell speech In the Se. ate. —_——— APPRAISALS OF ESTATES. Files Net Val to afer Tax Office. Deputy State Comptroller Fraser transmitted the following appraisals of to-day to the transfer tax office of the Surrogate's Court Gilbert Jones, son owner of the New York Times, mitted suleide Nov. 2, state of total value value, $967,792 Clara H. Knoedler, died April 19, spplemental reprt shows asseta were $47,280; value, $4,082, William Whitridge, died February 6, 191 = of a former who 1910, left an Net of $377,907, a non-resident, supplemental te- port shows additional deduct! value of the New York estate to 29.422, Levi 1, Shoemaker, of Wilkes-Barre, Pa, dted September able tn the State, $413; net value, $4,115, Eliza W, Collingwood, of Lauryatic Ait Humors Are impure matters which Uh liver, kidneys and other organs cangot take care of without help, are due to them he sure to take du their treatment on of Col. George Wt Gover of tae Panama Canal | Zoue veSause of the oppos.tion HB Dea ecratic Senators to his appoint Goethais as | Hood’s Sarsaparilla In the usual liquid (. known os Sareatabs. tg I wil | Batley announced some time} estates under the inheritance tax law | 7, 1900, Asnets tax- Elizabeth, N. Jy dle roh %, 1910; assets taxable in New Y State, $4817; net value, $4,413 EEE THE TIDES shin, | a ee | The striking tallors held a meeting tn \the Labor Lyceum on avenue just around the corner from| Andrew Domagaiski's clothing manu-| factory, which is in a narrow yard in [tho rear of a house on Evergreen avenue, near Willoughby. After th meeting & great crowd, the majority | women, swarmed around to the tailor shop tn the rear yard as by predeter- | mined purpose. A narrow alleywa: barred by @ door, gives onto the tailor- | t |remained at work they must make every | \ing establishment in the rear yard; this led by storm as the door was | hurled trom tts hinges. | sTaRT TO CHOP THEIR WAY IN WITH AXE, Then the mob rushed in a hard| packed mass througn the alley and into! the small yard before the two-story frame building whicn housed the non- | union workers, A tocked storm door before the entrance was smashed and some of the strikers seized the fire axe hanging within the door and beran to shop down the second door, the Ia: barrier between the mob and the work- ers within. There were thirty-six of these, twenty of them women. Their shrieks sounded above the babel of cries of the attacke: Sergt. Dwan of the Hamburg avenue station, Deteotve Peter Thornton and Policeman Carberry had eeen the crowd |advancing on the tallor shop and now rushed in, trying to beat thelr way to the door, By the time they got there three window sashes had been pulied out a coursing strike were striving to clfmb through the windows against the | rain of blows showered on them trom | inside, | The three policemen drew their revolv- ers and threatened to shoot. At this the van of the crowd began to fall back ‘from the front of the building, Capt. | Becker and twelve reserves arrived in & patrol wagon just before a second rush threatened to overwhelm the po- licemen. Elghteen men who were caught between the reserves from the street and the revolvers of the police men in the yard were bundled into the wagon and taken to the Cates Avenue Court. Herman Kalb of No, 415 Flush- ing avenue, who was one of the rioters, pital to have outs from broken glass on his arm sewed up, 1,000 STRIKERS STORM ASTOR PLACE SHOP. A crowd of nearly 1,000 atriking tatl- ors, Sicilians and Calabrians of them, and many of the women, gat ered at Fourth street and Bowery to- | day and marched to the attack upon the big manufactory of the Washington ; Company at No. 8 Astor place, just around the corner from Lafayette street, i \ | Prose Log Water fants Hn An RE CEYLONTEA | het Ne La] — LT | PORT OF NEW YORK, White Rese Coffee, Only 35c.a Pound ARRIVED, aT LAUREN 1913, MAR Gariand, be- ‘Thomas ( Kast vOth at, Interment Pimples, boi cuema and other eruptions, loss of appetite, that tired | ®EED: feeling, bilious turns, fite of indiges tion, dull headaches wnd other troubles | Witloughby | afternoon. services us mediator, was held this Before entering the confer. Kugene 8, Benjamin, predident of Trade Associa- tion, declared that within three days rs would stop temporizing ending the strik inferred from Mr. that strikebreak, Nothing Benjamin's Reserved, OPEN EV.NINGS, effort to resume full operations. Established This $15.00 Coat $5.00. ‘Tee Silver last longest in laundering —hold shape. ‘Try then—it will | ad you. ‘lhe newest shape is the Pembroke, with LINOCORD SNAP-ON" BUTTON. HOLE, 2 for 25¢-—¥ sizes, OF GIAND Bt. evenings tf) 7, rok 2 ee Kemet ase in. GEO. P. pet a co. Aloe Makers of Ide Shirts TROY,N. Y. W. L. DOUGLAS $3 $3.59 %$4 SHOES W. L. Douglas shoes hold their shape, fit & attic allies ie $35 Per Karat thas any other make a for the price. *} || Blue White Pertectly Cut Storos in Front New York : Buy from the Diamond Price Cutters Lp Vale fact. these diamonm kigin or Waltham Wateh jewelry -year case, open face. Won- erful value, None .o dealers, $5 WEDDING RINGS Prices $2.50 to $25. Quality Guaranteed Kugraving and marriage certificate gratis, HEADACHE DReMARSHALL'S CATARRH. SNUFF P5}t ALAUL oaus Stonts OM SEur pat OD" PAL BY CHNETISTECLEVELAME OW10 WORLD WANTS WORK WONDDRS, , january 4th. ARBORTED CRYSTALLIZED CREAM COTE COVERED CREOLE PEPPER- cream centres, with ‘lous peppermint SPECIAL "FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY CHOCOLATE COVERED PEANUT CLUS- | GLACE FRUITS AND NUTS— TERS. Rich, luscious fruits and meaty nate of select kinds, covered by @ transparent angel fone te” Fem roveaie 29c “GFFERINGS FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TOUND BOX LK CHOCOLATE COVERED MARA- vey ane ienys CHOCOLATES OR MCHINO CHERRIES- ID CHOCOLATES —- ‘and temptingty — delictons inside # thick shell of POUND BOX 39c how. Tah Breet stores. Park Bow, Cortiontl, starce open seiurdny evenly sipiisies, ot chosen enews, Wi ity are j re Chocolate. VOUND BOX 47 TRE uwtll LL clown, YY STREET Cor. West Broadway 29 CORTLANDT ST. Cor. Church Street 206 BROADWAY Cor. Fulton Se. 147 NASSAU ster-> Bet. Beekman & Spruce ; Park Kow & Nassau Stree: 266 W. 125th th STREET At City Hal! Pars 6s Just East of 8th Ave, The epecified weight ln cach instence laclades the container.

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