The evening world. Newspaper, January 27, 1913, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

a ‘WOMEN THREATEN VOTE RIOTS IN LONDON ’ Waiters Break From Union, Beg Old Jobs at Bosses’ Terms \SZ (ain to-night) Teesday rain or enow) colder. ein 0) cen ess “ Circulation Books Open to All. ide CSAs KI ke Ole Sned S Mubtiching NEW YORK, PRICE ONE ” OENT. Go. (The New York World). y*STRKING WATERS STAMPEDE Pk NTE 1913. Ve “PAGES BUILT NEW FACE MONDAY, JANUARY 27, YOUNG STUDENT |" DROWNS IN PLUNGE PRICE ONE CENT LONDON SUFFRAGETTES SUPFRAGETTE LEADER WHO THREATENS RIOTS IN LONDON STREETS. FOR OLD J0RS AND IGNORE "Srey NEW “DEMAND” OF UNION Hotel Men Destroy Leaders’ “Or- der,” Applicants Begging for Work Tear Up Their Cards—500 Are Locked Out Permanently. The leaders of the striking waiters, demonstrating a naive inability to recognize when they are beaten, attempted to serve this afternoon upon the restaurant and hotel proprietors and managers a protocol in the form of an amended “agreement,” which they must sign before they could get their waiters back and resume normal business. In every instance the employers, who had been besieged all morning by their former kitchen and dining-room staffs seeking reinstatement, even at the cost of tearing | up their union cards, received this proffer from the union leaders in a comic opera spirit. Some of them did not read it at all; others read no turther than the first article of the “agreement.” This stated tersely that insignificance beside the first !mperative sentence. UNION AGENTS IGNORED BY WAITERS AND BOSSES. The union's agents were not deterred from visiting hotele and rewtaurants where union men were waiting, anx- fous-eyed, the decision of the Dosses upen their application for reinstatement under any conditions obtainable. They watched the form of agreement go into the managerial wastebasket with no outward sign of excitement. Diizabeth Flynn, the girl orator who was the most active figure last week In atirring the waiters to an acute strike fever, Visited several hotel and restaur- @nt managers this afternoon to make a personal plea in behalf of the men seek- ing to recover their old jobs. Her re- ception may have been more polite than that which was accorded the union dele- gates bearing the protocol, but none ti leas futile were her efforts. More than 6 walters of the Interna- tional Hotel Workers’ Union who tri- umphantly paraded the streets and smashed hotel and restaurant windows in the height of the strike fever last week found themselves permane out of employment to-day. The rush of the waiters, cooks and kitchen helpers to get back their old jobs to-day was met by fully half the employers with a flat refugal of reinstatement. Holdii that former union agreements we! broken and that all unton agreements ¢ worthless, these hotel and restaur- Ant owners and managers closed the door on the striking waiters, who] ootten mot the party at i versed humbly to be allowed to return. rted them to the library in the rear, here the General, feeble and worried, ‘oprietor of the | ™ i credited mith having precipitated a] @Teen shade over his eyes to shield them crisis by discharging offhand more than ey she Aehy. 28 waiters and ‘bus boys, heads tho list} , Sheriff Marburger sald UNDER ARREST FOR JUST TWO MINUTES taere should be semi-monthly pay, no discrimination against union men and no fines under any conditions, paled into Sheriff Serves Order on Him and Immediately Approves Bond Setting Him Free. For two minutes this afternoon Gen. Daniel E. Sickles was under arrest. This brief formailty was necessary in order that @ bond for $80,000, insuring the pay- ment of $23,176, to the estate, might be Dut Into effect. Sheriff Harburger, with his personal counsel, Albert Blumenstiel; his bond clerk, Lawrence Wolf; his secretary and bond clerk, Lawrence Kennedy, went to Gen. Sickles's home, No, 23 Fifth ave> nue, at 8 o'clock this afternoon. The Sheriff had with him the order of arrest issued last Saturday by Juetice Rudd in Albany at the request of Attorney-Gen- eral Carmody, Dantel P. Hays, counsel to Gen. Sickles, met the party at the door and ye had a pain- ON SUBWAY DEAL! Shonts Himself Says So, and Seems to Think that Settles It. RUSHING WORK ALONG. Employees of Service Board Hard at It Sunday—Bond Hearings To-Day. Final hearings upon proposed traction bond issues aggregating $225,000,000 were held this forenoon before the Public Service Commission. These are the bonds behind which is pledged the city’s credit for the next half century under the subway contracts which are now be- ing rushed to their final signing before Chairman William R, Willcox’s term ex- pires on Saturday. The proposed bonds are divided into two lots. One is an issue of §170,000,000 by: the Interborough, and the other ts an issue of 965,000,000 by the B. R. T.’ baby—the New York Municipal Rall- way Corporation. Private bankers reap & harvest of millions between the price} tn, for which they take the bonda end the price at whioh they are finally Gurmped on the market. The Evening World learned to-day that a score of employees of the “om- mission worked all day yesterday look- ing over proofs and correcting them with relation to the B, R, T. and Inter- borough contracts upon which final pub- lic hearings were held on Jan. 20, This would indicate that the contracts are going to be Jammed through the Com- mission and Board of Estimate this week. The,next public meeting of the Commission {s to-morrow at 12.15 P, M. It ts regarded as practically certain that the contracts will not be voted upon then, but at a later meeting. STATE GETS $1,000,000, BUT THE CITY PAYS IT. The State of New York will collect about $1,000,000 In taxes from the two mortgages, the rate being one-fourth of one per cent. Evidently this all com out of the city, for the city hi to wait for its Interest upon its great contribution to the subways until all the charges of the two private cor- porations are paid. In connection with the big bond issues of the two companies the printing 1s done by J. Pierpont Morgan's Bank Note Trust at 50 cents a bond, This amounts to $117,500, of which hree-fifths is “velvet” above the cost of the same printing by an outside concern, “So far as we are concerned every- thing has been cleared up except a few points in phraseology that must be ar- ranged,” said President Shonts of the Interborough to an Evening World re- porter immediately after he had pad @ call upon Chairman Willcox of the commission. re the changes which have been le in the contract fundamental in character?” was asked, Of the employers who have shut thejcu: duly to perform, After some con- a a the beaten waitere, He save! Yereation, in which no mention was positive refusal to-day to more than| de of the General's shortage in his 100 applicants, though it 1s understood | A°coulits with the State Monument oP vow of his best walters will later|Commission, the Sheriff served the tne vastated by request of some of nie/S¥mmons and complaint In the suit ee ee brought by the Attorney-General and 1 Iso the order of arrest, ¥ c have torn up| ® Waiters by the score ha PALO CACC ee aie thelr union cards to placate their for- mer employ In some instances this sacrifice, insisted upon by the employ- era, was sufficient to restore them to food jobs, which they ‘had elther vol- ‘intartly given up or from which they were forced by intimidation. ‘At the Hotel Rector twenty of the old waiters rushed for thelr jobs after desk without looking at them. Sheriff Harburger then approved the bond, which was issued by a surety compan: and Gen, Sickles struggled to his asa notice that, so far as he was co: cerned, the incident was “There is a fee of ter," eald Bond Clerk Wolf. “Who gets it?’ snapped the general, sharply. “Phe State gets it, not the Sheriff,” re- plied Wolf, (Continued on Second Page.) The Philosophy — Gen, Sickles summoned his house- keeper, Eleanor Earle Wilmerding, a tall, pervous spinster, whose presence in the Fifth avenue house has been a of a Crowd sore point with Mrs, sickles and her ede is one thing. It might|son Stanton, Miss Wilmerding was ue nothing more than uncontrolled very nervous. A peg jut when you se Rly “Eddie,” said Gen, Sickles—a name throng of persons crowding to the he calls Miss Wilmerding—"I've got to vertising columns of a newspaper EVERY | have 8.35." DAY OF RY WEEK OF EVERY! iiss Wilmerding retired, She returned YEAR it is safe to say ‘there's some-|in @ ow moments with her hands full of thing doing.” dimes, nickles and pennies. In her great 11,847 agitation she dropped much of the small change on the floor, Finally she pro- duced a five-doliar iil, two dimes and a “HELP WANTED” ADS. PRINTED nickle and the Sheriff and his com- , EE ’ panions withdrew, LAST WEEK IN THE VOR LD Pe sicklen's friends must now Indus- 6,550 MORE than in ALL THE 6 OTHER New York Morning and Sun- day newspapers COMBINED, Why fritter away your e, patience triously prosecute their search for $23,4 ‘That this sum would be raised sa guarantee given to the security company that furnished the bond There has been uo intent on the and advertising money in small “by- ‘ 4 paths” of publicity when in search of /P4it of Attorn ral Carmody 0 competent Ree when subject Gen, Bickles to the indignity of actual arrest and imprisonment in (Continued on bocond Page. erid"' Help Wanted" Ads. Pe The We jeip fy iy bot} ur py | “1 don't know what you mean fundamental,” he replied, ‘They have | been skinning us right along. Every saw a patch of skin they liked they jumped in and time they thought they took tt. “Just where has the Interborouglh been ‘skinned? was questioned. “1 know very well; it 1s sore enough, but 1 will let the other aide tell,” he said, “All that remains now ts the phycal details of getting the contract | to the printer, So far as 1 can seo| there will be no necessity for furtwrr | conferences, Still, there may be more | details arise at the last moment.” | R. Col. Tim Williams of the B. also reiterated his former stat that his corporation was s'ving away Its Dirthright to the city in the con- tract with his company, Bota Will- jams and Mr. Shonts keep perfectly straight faces when telling of their “gifts” to the city. INTERBOROUGH APPLIES FOR! APPROVAL OF BOND ISSUE. To provide funds for the financing of its part In the construction of the dual] system, as well as for the financing of short-term notes, the Interbvorough | Rapid Transit Company filed a petition v. AT CITY COLLEGE Isidore Thomaschefsy Was Noi Missed Until Long After Com- panions Leave Tank, TOO LATE TO SAVE HIM. Not a Good Swimmer, but) the Others Did Not Notice Any Struggle. A dozen students In the College of the City of New York and its prepara- tory department took advantage of a lull in the mid year examinations to- day to take a dip in the big plunge in the gymnasium bulldng. One of them was Isidore Thomaschefsky, a seve: teen-year-old boy of No. 136 Avenue C, who would have entered the col- legiate department next fall. Thomaschefsky was not a good swimn- mer and kept away from the others at the shallow end of the hundred-foot tank. Gathering courage he struck out across the tank, where the water was well over his head. Half an hour after they had entered) ink, the students hustled into thelr} Sling and left the gymnasium bluld-| ing. It was not for another heur that they missed Thomasachetsky, and it wae still another three-quarters of an hour before they told Dr. Thomas A. Storey, professor of hygiene, of hie disappear- ance, No one remembered having seen after he had ancery made his way) into the plung Dr. Storey, Peeearine by Dr. W. B. Boyd, hurried through the gymnastum. | The tank room was deserted, except for | an attendant. @everal of the undergrad | laates stripped and plunged into the tank. They dived and groped along the bot- tom of the tank for ten minutes; then one touched Thomaschefsky's body lying on the sloping bottom of the plunge | under eight feet of water, It was| brought to the surface and stretched out on the tiled floor. ‘The pulmotor, a device that has brought back to life many apparently asphyxiated persons, has been sent for. When ordinary first ald measures had failed the machine vegan to pump com- pressed alr into the Jun A half-hundred of the boy stood around, helpless, while the gul- motor whirred. The chest rose and fell naturally with the action of the ma- chines But after three hours hope was ost and the pulmotor was wheeled away, inquest will be held to-morrow to SHOWER OF GOLD RAINED INTO COURT Roll Unheeded on Floor From Old Belts. The lights had been turned on gloom of the thick-set weather, glittering gold coins that ineandescents wink and Magistrs )Corrigan shade his eyes, As th ran out, mouth of a hopper, clinking of the gl sounded through the the ming metal plac away, classmates table hypnotized view into action every one the stream of gold, a cramp and drowned. HEIKE MUST SERVE HIS PRISON TERM, COURTD DEGIDES Wild West as depicted on ‘the screen.” “T guess it belongs to them, all right, continued Phelan, “for nobody's put a claim for It." And 80 more. |tilapo, John Perrizini and John Zader, all accused of being “high grade’ | which isn't as paradoxical as it | for in Leadville, Col. oners worked as miners, « out of the vein, |rested at the ‘station last ¥ Pennsylvania Railroad K by Detectives Phelan Jury Does Not Save Him. no iimmunity from prosecution for his | almost half a ton. Alw Heike was convicted of conspiracy | a gun-fignt to defraud the Government. He had | 4 he four were held till to. Jan, & 193, asking for the approval of the commission to a proposed bond Is-/ sue not to exceed $170,000,000, These are! the bonds witch J. P. Morgan & Co. | will get from the Interborough at 9% and concerning which price Willtam BR, Willcox say lic concern The petition states that the company Chatema is not the pub- «(senna on : Fourth Page) endeavored to secure immunity because Bg jentificd Lecture ibe Gragd sure te vier matter and hie guilt in (iat connectio jag Clearly established, DAZES MAGISTRATE Coins Pour on Table and Some In West Side Court to-day to dispel the when a short, man stepped up to the at- torney's table, and from four battered leather belts let loose a shower of made the gold ke yellow wheat from the pleasant ra- A few coins dropped to the floor and rolled unregarded for the moment. The sight of the stack of coins piled on ihe within “W-what is all this?" demanded Mag- {strate Corrigan of Detective Phelan of the Central Office, who had turned on ancertain” just what caused ‘Thomas-| 1¢'y $2,001 took from those four men chefsky's death—whether he was @ vic- 4 ” tim of heart disease or was seized with| "ere, "evolned Phelan, indicating with @ Jerk of his thumb four swarthy men with sombreros, flaming handkerchiefs and other evident symptoms of the the pile was swept back again into the four worn belts and the | gloom of the gray day shut down once All this occurred during the arraign- ment of Romaine Molsire, Eugene Bor- where the pris- “high Appearance of Former Sugar | srader” is a chap who steals gold right Trust Secretary Before Grand | | The alleged’ high graders were ar- uid tne when Daputy-saeri® Wiillam An- FOR SOCIETY GIRL; SUES FOR $7,900 Dentist Seeks to Collect Rec- ord Bill From Estate of Mill- ionaire Guggenheim. FELL FROM HER HORSE. Dr. Buxbaum Specities What He Did to Restore Miss Gug- genheim’s Facial Beauty. What with steam yachts, and villas Newport, and cottages in the Adiron- dacks, and town houses in New York, and winter palac it Palm Beach, and residences in the capitals of Europe, |t hap been hitherto considered almost pro- hibitively expensive to be a million- aire, In fact, the cost of living high has driven several well known persons Of wealth to forsake the millionaire pro- feasion. More of them are destined to drop out of the whirl when they read of the latest item of millionaire expense. ‘Thie last and ditterest incubus to be borne by one of the unfortunate rich ie & dentist's bill of 87,000, sald to have been run up by Miss Marguerite Gi Serheim, daughter of the late Benja- min Guagenheim—one of the seven fa- mous Gugsenbeim brothers. Mise Guggenheim had a most wu fortunate tumble from her saddle horwe while taking her morning canter through Central Park in April, 1911, Her fe: tures were severely lacerated as a re- sult, and Dr. Asher F. F. Buxbaum of No. 311 Madison avenue was called in to do the necessary dental work to re- inforce Mies Guggenheim's physto; nomy, The dentist declares he has duly Presented his bill of 87,500 and has been refused payment. Hence he is suing to recover that sum in the Supreme Court from the executors of Mr. Gugmen- heim's estate. Dr, Buxbaum declares he treated Miss Guggenhelm both at his Madison avenue office and In the suite occupied by Misa Guggenhetm and her mother at the Hotel St. Regis, when they are in town, Follows a list of some of the things which the doctor says he did to restore the young lady's pulchritude, and which, he says, should cost her $7,500 Replanted the teeth in the upper je gold splints for both jaws; Aided Dr. dwell in taking an Hammered the fractured portion of the lower Jaw into position and set it by @ splint after Miss Guggen- heim had been anaesthetized in the presence of Dra. Meyer, Strausburg, Sternberger and Burnett: possible for Miss Guggen- helm to eat, by making Impressions of the upper right and left sides of the Jaw and reproducing the upper gold and platinum, and then mouth open #o that the ult mented the upper splint and ultimately removed all the splints, after Miss Guggenheim had recov- ered fully from the injuries, and otherwise took care of her teeth and mouth, The executors of the Guggenheim es- tate deny Dr, Buxbaum is entitled to’ any such fee as $7,500 for his labors, —_— OUR WILD, WOOLLY CITY TEEMS WITH GUNMEN, ENGLISHMEN BELIEVED So They Came “Properly Armed, Jand a squad of picked men. The ar- ‘ rests followed a telegram from Sherif| Were Arrested, Indicted and WASHINGTON, Jan, 27. — Charles ade a aes bak Sie | hea | Fined Right Off the Reel. R. Heike, formerly necretary of the pei tiie, vame being contained in| .2homas Connor and Thomas Smalley, American Sugar Refining Company, has| their trunks, which were {8 ianalishinen, who arrived in this city on the steamship Baltic Jan. 20, en route to knowledge of the “sugar welghing | dewpaten, all four were oad m ihn | MOR ARAKI Cats Bile Alem OF Oe onem frauds” against the Government be-|e price on them. Seale eT sutee Bose is ae aay cause he testified before the Grand| trunks were tralied by the Jetec- — Be cag i gerd ftiagiices Jury, The Supreme Court so held | the check numbers having been Benue ‘on &@ spree. veil to-day from Leadville. When the four! goth were penitent to-day. They had The Court held that Heike must!» same to claim them, all were | pee, indicted the majesty and rerve his elaht months imprisahment | placed in custody without trouble, al- | quickness of the law dazed them. Fach and pay his $5,000 fine. | though the detectives went prepared for| explained they were Weailly and car Hed! to protect their property. testified at a Grand Jury investiga- | gus and Assistant Distriet-Attorney | 1): tion, under tie Sherman anti-trust! Quentin Bo Bonner arrived from Lead- x Beg Ps law, Into the affairs of the American | vile with requisition papers TP NPANiaG the BRaTIanT ERE GRIAT TEE Sugar Refining Company, Later he} Deputy Sheriff Angus, a small man] streets of this city were full of bloom- Was prosecuted in connection with| With @ big mustache and an over} ing gunmen.” |the weighing frauds at the customs) shadowing sombrero, told @ thrilling —_—— docks in Brooklyn —_——— Workman Killed in Shaft. «Continued on Fourth Page) Michael Lorenti, toirty-four years old, le somet ntervencs that 1) = " living at No, 1838 Inwood avenue, in the Know nothing a Heike wil » 10 lations of the sherman Law in con) + was instantly Killed this after: ail,’ wuld United State District-A tion with the the caving ef reeks and dirt in} Wise tals afternoon, | Prost tn 1ss7 hing f » of t Aqueduct torent! Hin sl really had no weight. He in Brooklyn in 1907 a different king 10° feet oelow the # land the sare Started clus to the rend des phe spas DECLARE GUERRILLA WAR WHEN VOTE IS DENIED Led by Mrs. Pankhurst, Statement Is Shouted They Will Make Lives of Public Men Impossible for Withdrawing Bill. POLICE THRONG CITY TO CHECK RIOTING. Storekeepers Barricade Windows When Warned of “Something Worse” Than Smashing. LONDON, Jan. 27.—A declaration of guerilla warfare by the sue fragettes, including sorties and riots, to start from to-day, was made by Mrs. Emmeline Pankhurst, the militant leader, at a meeting this evening - at which-the action of. the Government in throwing out the Parliament votes for women bill was discussed. The threat was loudly acclaimed by throngs of excited suffragettes who had been held in check all day at the Parliament buildings and in various sections of the city by a force of 2,000 policemen, while the entire reserve force of London was held ready to quell any rioting. BANKER EDEY’S WILL CREATED TRUST FUND FOR WIFE HE KILLED Only Child Will Now Inherit Whole of the Residuary Estate. His The wih of the late Banker Henry Edey who shot hie wife and then shot himeetf, waa filed this afternoon in Riv- erhead, 1. I, It ts dated July 19, 1912, which was just before the scandal which developed when Mre. Edey and Gardne Murdock left Bellport at about the samo time. Under the will the wife was to have ‘Mrs. Pankherst called for the mames and addresses of were “prepared to take Gallant onslanght with me. Blsagiad that : AY | i it | iy? E [i 4 if E i - HEH ul i ? E jTEO RIOTS, city to-night Is under heavy guard @ suffragettes had declared seme days ago that should they be defeated in thelr attempt to get the vote ali their riotous acts of the past would compared to what they would do in retallation on the Government. Votes for women in Great Britain, a9 Th ae tl ‘been one of the principal heirs, being the far as Parliament ts concerned, “died beneficiary of a trust fund as well as a | rewiduary legates. The will makes provision for @ trust fund of $90,000 for the benefit of Char- lotte McComing, firat wife of Mr. Edey. It also provides that $1,000 shall be paid 0 his stepmother, Fran Z. Edey. Hach servant in the employ of Mr. Edey 1m to receive $@ for each year of em- ployment, The house at Bellport and its contents and the contents of the stable left to the wife whom Edey killed, A $30,000 trust fund for the bene- fit of the wife was arranged for and a similar fund was to be established for each child, the trust to cease and each recetve the principal when thirty years old, As there is the one child th will be only one trust fund. ‘The will provided that the residue should be divided into two parts and the Income of one-half paid to the wife so long as she lived, provided she did not marry, in which cane the payment was to be cut in half, As Mary F. Edey is the only child she is the sesiduary lega Charter and Frederick Edey, brothers of the decedent, are made ex- ecutore and trustees of ¢ ate, They are forbidden to invest more than $60,000 in any one security, No estimate of the estate was filed with the will, ENGLISH WOMAN AVIATOR FLIES 11,880 FEET IN SKY WITH A COMPANION PARIS, Jan. Legagnoux, an aviator, this afternoon ascended 11,- 88 feet in # monoplane, carrying Miss ES a-bornin’” this afternoon when Premier Asquith arose in the House of Commons ‘and announced that the Government for- mally withdrew the Franchise Referm bin. He vigorously repudiated the charge of trickery imputed to the Government by some of the flery advocates of equal ffrage, and explained that the Cabimet exceedingly regretted its inability to carry out its pledge to the women to submit equal suffrage to « vote, because of the ruling of Speaker Lowther that the adoption of the Grey amendments necessarily would entail the reintreduc- tion of the bill, Previous to the announcement in Com- mons by Premier Asquith the @ritish Cabinet to-day decided to drop the Fri chise bill in deference to the Speaker ruling that the form and substance of the measure would be so materially altered if the amendment granting the vote to women were adopted that it ought te be presented in the shape of a new bill. CROWDS OF WOMEN SWEPT BY THE POLICE, Those suffragettes who had been ad- mitted into the outer Jobby of the House of Commons and those in the vicinity of the House took the rebuff to their hopes with ominous quiet. The outer lobby was safely guarded by Mnee of Police s0 as to prevent any possihility of the women breaking in, and the inner sanctum was crowded with representa- Uves of various suffrage societies, but there was mo demonstration when Premier Asquith's announcement be- came known, The great display of police effectually dampened any projected outbreak on the open space fronting the Houses of Par- Mamont. The crowds, including umpes- ing parades of wemcn i } } — pai ig

Other pages from this issue: