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% — ear ae a nase Se aE Ae x POLICE AT BURIAL OF ROT ETN Mamaroneck Specials With- drawn by Sheriff to Avert a Clash. ‘The village of Mamaroneck, the scene Of the fatal battle between police and striking Italian road workers on Mon- dey, waited nervously this morning for the funeral of Rafaclo Pino, the one Victim. of the fight, and it was with a Italiane pass through the town toward Larehmont of their way to the Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in New Rochelie shortly before noon. Previously there had. been funeral services in St. Grog- ory’s Church in Harrison, where the feed man had lived, and other ser- views at his home, a little flat I two-story brick building over @ sa- loom, where two years ago he had beought his bride after the bixsest Wedding ever seen in the Italian col- ony. ‘An@ the funeral to-day was the bia- geet funeral ever held there. There were forty carriages, @ big band, and a ‘nearse drawn by four black horses. ‘There was a carriage filed with flowers, and through the long journey from Har- tison. to New Rochelle, some seven jindies, the marchers tramped to the of Chopin's Funeral March, jameroneck folk filled the streets ep wateh the cortere, but there was not ry Pane in sight nor was one need- Brom the time they entered the town to the time they passed out to- Larohmont the paraders main- tained & decorous quiet. There wan no @ieorder of any kind. SHERIFF KEPT THE POLICE OUT OF SIGHT. Bot tt wae due entirely to the fore- thought of Bheriff William J. Doyle the quiet funeral procession was imo @ riot more dangcrous encounter of Monday, for in of serious-faced men, march- bowed heads, wore cores who ie i @ murderer’: fate, and as they marched of Mamaroneck they peered ih lowered brows for a the men they had come to but for Doyle they would them standing on guard fee and shotguns, for ff reached Marmaroneck ing he found that more icemen and speciais had heavily armed, in plain guard the line of parade. instantly ordered every man Headquarters, whence. they @ dash, if necessary, but they would be invisible to the aroused paraders. Doyle himacif 4.4 the qne or two deputies who had accompanied him kept out of sight. STRIKERS INFLAMED BY SPEECH BEFORE FUNERAL. ‘Tho etrikere wore inflamed by the im- words of an Itallas member of Foresters who addressed dead man's house, Men wept openly, and it was heard the threats against who had slain Pino, But f Father O'Sullivan as he funeral services in St. the throng and they quietly to the outskirta of of Capt. Monroe @ dosen policemen. At the 3f plitey il ce t il TL af At Barry avenue, the scene of Mon- day's conflict, the procession halted and Meany of those in line crossed them- selves, while others spat on the ground ené made signe which the few onlook- ete took to be oaths of vengeance, Then the moved on. aes Garces some twenty men, taking the place the police had been expected to Ail. Behind them came thi then a carriage containing t! bearers, then the hearse and the flower carriage, the carriage containing the parents, wiiow and infant eon of *|the white goods trade, | BETTER Not Curse and Insult Them, Is Their Plea THE EVENING WORLD, THURSDAY, APRIL 17, 1018. Copyright, 1913, by The Press Publishing Co, (The New York World). “How Long Would It Take to Educate 30,000 Girls if You Teach Only Sixteen Every Other Week?” Asks Florence Zuckerman, an Intelligent Worker. “The Girls Know as Much About Morals as Any- body Else,’’ She Asserts. to Be Educated by Employers, Who Are Not in Earnest.” By Nixola Greeley-Smith. Why not educate employers? Why not overcome the disadvantages of sigh of relief that Mamaroneck folk saw] @ lack of carly training in mental and moral hygiene on the part of cer the great parade of more than 1.) tain manufacturers by inducing the Board of Education to provide part- week at work and a week at school. Mr. Sicher expressed the hope that his plan would bring the employer and employee closer together, but apparently it ts not meeting with unt- # me that fou? pupils will be provided “They Don’t Want Such Men as Their time education for them? This was the sense of a meeting held in Labor Temple this week by| New York working girls to protest against the action of Dudley D. Sicher and three other New York manufacturers, who have influenced the Board of education to provide part-time classes for the sixteen young women in their employ. In an interview in The Evening World on Monday last Mr. Sicher explained his Project to me and outlined the plans | of the special classes, which will be held in Public School No. 4. He told, from each factory and will be paid wages while attending school. That two girls will receive a week's in- Treat Girls Fairly, FIHTS FOR LOVE AS GUS WAT GETSSTAB HOUND | Sweetheart of Vanquished Stu- dent, Knifed by Her Brother, Helps Carry Him Away. CAMBRIDGE, Mass., April 17.—Witl- jam J. Rounds jr, a page in the Magsa- chusetts House of Representatives, who is alleged to have stabbed Herbert B. Larner last night in a fight over the latter’a attentions to Rounds's sister, pleaded not guilty in the District Court to-day to an assault charge. He was held in 8600 bonde for a hearing April 2%. The girl in the case, her sister and another young man were witnesses of the fight. Larner, who is @ student at the Cam- bridge Latin School, is in @ hospital, whore it 1s sald that he will recover. His opponent's father, ex-Gtate Senator William J. Rounds, said that the boy acted In self-defense. “My son was badly beaten and bat tered,” he said, “and he drew a knife to save himself from further injury.” Both young men are nineteen years old, Young Rounds, it Is sald, objected to Larner's aitentions to one of his sis- ters, and the youths agreed to settle the matter with their fists. Two of the Rounds girls and a young woman friend witnessed the fight. Larner was getting struction and then will be replaced by two others from the factory, so that each student will alternate a versal favor among the girls in the white goods trade which it will affect. POINT OF VIEW OF THE GIRLS rye But, really, the girls are EXPLAINED. to leave the factory that they can’t pick and choose as they would if Mise Florence Zuckerman, @ very| there their working conditions were fit Pretty, earnest and intelligent youn#|for human beings. Why not edu- worker, came to tell me yesterday ofjocate tho employers to treat thelr the meeting of protest against the em-| girls properly? The number of em- ployers’ action and to explain the point | Ployers te far less and results would of view of the girls. ee ¢@ be more encouraging than they can/|hsppy. “There are 3,000 of us employed in bpoap be when you start to educate “and even assuming that the employ- ‘she explained, | %% women—sixteen at a time—every other week.” ers are in earnest and want the girls/QIRL® MAY NOT BE LACKING to be better educated, how long do you think it would take to make an im- Pression, taking only sixteen girls Out | man may be taken as a fair exam} Of 20,000 and giving them lessons every | the girls in the white goods ‘neuer other ® 4 i EDUCATION. Certainly if Mise Florence Zucker- are not suffering from @ lack of edu- cation. This pretty, brown eyed girl, whe has been the upper hand when, it ts alleged, Rounds drew a knife and stabbed his opponent several times. Wihen the tight was ended the sister over whom they fought assisted in carrying her* wounded sweetheart to a nearby house and later went with him to the hospital. The other sister accom- panied her brother, with whom she had sympathized, to their home, where he was arrested. The elder Rounds sald to-day that his family had not objected to Larner’s at- tentions to Miss Rounds. FRIEDMANN DENIES REFUSING MORE SERUM News Oddilics Binghamton woman died from eating flowers of the trailing arbutua, Crab season will break all records, and Annapolis, the original Crabtown, ts ‘Miss Alma Haas, grain plunger of St, Louis, has closed her offices to plunge into matrimony, Kansas City man objects to having his cork legs taxed unless the assessor Gete after all the false teeth and glass eyes in the county. Da fr ons srt trae «man ene wed we ronsten 1 THE GOVERNMENT try | elarm dido’t hav. | ——.—_ alckel to drop in the slot machine. Shukri Pasha, the Turkish commander of Adrianople, desires to contradkt America seven years, the statement that he was captured by the Servians, He says it was the Bul- Declares He Has Not Received began work here at $2 a week. She has | S*8Ns. learned to speak Dnglish so well that she has made speechas at public meet- (ngs, and she possesses a fiery elo- quence when relating grievances of her fellow employees, “In seven years,” she said, “the only ince where I have worked where the Girls get human treatment and are not sworn at and ineulted by foremen is Go to mig | outs Wolf & Bons, where Iam working now, There some girls can make as “Only 8,000 of the 90,000 white good |much as $15 or $16 a week, and they are workers are members of the union, but| well geated and do their best. In the they all got the beneft of the strike! other factories I ehould say the most a |», by which their hours were shortened | girl can make 4s $13, and there are men from fifty-four to fifty hours a week and the employers’ agreement that no girl should be paid less than % a week, - Instead of 4, as formerly. ‘The girts | Suse OF Water they ewear at you tr themselves don't think they need to be educated by the employer. They feel that more good could be accom- Plished {f there were part time classes for the factory owners or for thelr foremen in which they would be taught how to treat girl employees like human beings, TREATMENT PRE- FERRED TO EDUCATION. “The only way to get a girl to do her best work ie by treating her well, giv- ing her decent shop conditions, fair wages and forenien. who do not swear or use foul language. Meny of our employers when they firet went into business did not know how to read and write, Many of them could never un- Gerstand the works of classic literature ‘which are read by their employees, “Em: some places girls are fined five. every minute they are of one place ah fast wae Gscharged. “Mr. Sicher told you that if the sins watching you all the time, and |f you look up for a minute or stop to get & fragiets trouble makers,’ he told me. Another thing they say is that they see the girle going in and out of the fac- tory with paint and powder on their faces. Poor girls! They want to look pretty, and after years in the factor- jea, crowded, overworked und without fremh air, one can hardy expect them Pine end then the Jong ranks of march-| eave the factory to get married, they |‘ lok fresh and charming, The only ere” Nearly forty carriages brought up| almost always come back. That means the rear of the procession. the girls have no judgment in choosing SHH! LADIES! SECRET TO DARKEN ~ FADED GRAY HAR-USE SAGE TEA Sage Mixed With Sulphur Restores Natural Color and Lustre to Hair. Why suffer the handicap of looking old? Gray hair, however handsome, denotes advancing age. We all know the advantage of @ youthful appear ance. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mare the fece. When it fades, turns and looks dry, wispy and scraggly, few applications of Sage Tes and enbance its appearance » hun- lees thn boataphibemse on ) ady to use; but listen, avoid preparations put up by druggiste, as they usually use too much sulphur, which makes the hair sticky, Got “Wyeth's", which pence! upon to darken by the best thing known to remove dan- druff, stop scalp itching and falling hair, By using Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur no one can possibly tell that you’ dark- ened your hair, It docs it so naturally and evenly—you moisten a sponge or soft brush, hair, taking one which requires but a few moments. Do tole at gray hair ication disappears; after another or two its natural color ii stored, and it becomes glossy and any drug store 0 60 cent bottle! trous and you appear years younger, dre, Mary pleasure the girls have in life ts in trying to look as well aa they can. “They know, too, that im looking for positions their looks will count far more thas anything else. You were led to underatand that the ‘etrike by which the girle won #ome Denoft wes due to their ignorance, One employer e@aid the strike coat him $16,000, How many girle would that sum have educated? Or how janany employers who need to learn #0 many things about sanitation, in shops, in morals and in thair rela- Sage and Sulphur Hair | Uon# t their ein employees?” aE sce rl al APPRAISALS OF ESTATES. Deputy State Comptroller Wallace 8. 9 be de-| reser transmitted the foliow \. iituly:awal| ieee 1 the following ap estates under the inheritance tax law to-day to the Transfer Tax OMeo of the Kurrogater’ Cc ct: Julius Wile, dled April 12, 1913, total estate $182,962, net value $124,333, ry A. Sheldon, died Deo, 8, rawing this through the| 19% total estate $12,274, mot vulse all strand at u time, | $10,587. Mary J. Lancer, died Nov. 2, 1910, ight, and by morning the | total estate, deposits, $24,608, net value p- | $24,038, Sam total te $20, Request From Blue—Fixes Price at $20 to Patients. ‘The town of Elk Point, in South Dakota, has just elected two official saloon- ke ‘Vice-President Marshall, in bis inaugural address, spoke of himself as one who was just “entering upon a four - PROVIDENCE, R. 1, April 17—A ‘The Federal Goverment collected 2,186,000,000 eggs last year. They were fish | genial that he had refuscd to furnish ar se Surgeon-General Blue of the United A Detroit manufacturer imported 500 songbirds from England and set them | States Public Health Service with a second sample of the vaccine with which he ts treating tubercular patients was tree on his farm, Woman suing for divorce in Justice Giegerich's court fixed’ the value of her usband'’s wealth in Mexican moncy, but asked for alimony in American gold, The * wae Fmmretnenean anes cit Acre ran mo and xine « siesoe (ReCOVEred FROM Tt has come at last. Domestic servants have formed a union In Chicago, and Severe Lung Trouble will demand regular hours, Saturday and Wednesday afternoon: rent is off and Plenty of fresh alr and good food are Drivilege of entertaining in the parlor on designated evenings, $2) uecensafy fo persons: suffering from. lane dut something more is needed to A ewe | bring h out ay pele ptamedia Alter ! ‘@ medicine for throat and i aboard the ship outside of the officiall troubles, and so many reports have been complement knew at the time that any-| rece! snowing Sha5 At BrOMRes Shoat Ing unusual was hi ood results in a number of cases which Pe jappening below t- ifterers ’ fiting ‘other! i Chief Engineer Erler and his force| *: nvestigate what it has done for 8, bi total estate $22,036, net value Maria Christian, died March €, 1911, total estate $4,980, net value $3,630. Mrs. Alice M, W died April 8, has done for ry total estate ) met value fighting a atiff blaze in a Way such | o1he ie : ¥ robably never before was adopted ae ae Joseph C. Cornely, died April 3%,| at wea. They disc “Gentlemen: In December, 19 1912, total estate $4,235, net value paar itehdae a CBee ERTL ton of coal ablaze in a starboard bunker | with hem While some of the crew kept water | fined me 93,535. William H, Lang, died Oct, 15, 1912, playing on the hot mass others’ shov- |: 4 total estate as, Ast value ORCI, elled the coal into barrows, and at one| arter my New York Stock nge, who was time these were pushed to the fur-| who, upon @rowned in Long Island Sound ai he had fallen from the Steamer “Pri 2, 1910, total estate $311, 606. Race and their contents emptied into] ™¢ to take iickman’s Alterat the fireboxes, In twelve hours the| ‘® mune t bean, at 6, {last bit of burning coal had been con-| in Maran, 1910, 1 @umed in thie way, the bunker had|! am entirely well been thoroughly wet down and all] $4,215 165, bf : vera ttid Smithers, died Jan. 9, net value | di jor to the ship had passed. incredulous Passengers were STOPS FIRE ON LINER; WHEELS BLAZING COAL fought as Erlers and his men fought ‘ i : FROM BUNKER TO FURNACE. i ry in had vane tial prt na or engine room force, Novel Plan Adopted By Engineers of Cincinnati After Water Dr. Erwin A, Gallsbury of No, 62 Fails to Quench Flames, West One Hundred and Forty-third | The 3.45 passengers—t0 of them in) siFeet, was found in a parlor car of the New Haven line on the storage level of the cabine-ot the Hamburg-American | the Grand Central Station to-day. He Uner Cincinnatl, which arrived to-day| refused to leave when asked by from Palermo, Sicily, after a vo; |cleaner, Detective Charles Stein of af thirteen days, talked of Ifttle else | the Recenina| speci Bolles ek Sim fo the East y ~firet reet ation, le beng ne fy BD 0 gael, Denker walen | ctedL#o queerly that ho wae sent to crew Tiellevue Hospital for care and observa- twelve hours last Tuesday. Not @ sou! tion, . vi ihe ——————____ Doctor im Observation Ward. | | IMANAHANS A'CHEL FORMED The Effects of Opiates. TMPANTS are peculiarly to end its verlou | Preparations, all of which are BS wert Leow Riven tr toe | TARINE deses, if continued, these opiates causo changes in the funo- | aE growth of the cells which are tw becouse permanent, causing VE VION Ea MoU GC) ain OE rin aed tack of wazing er sruake nd wrapplt m dinoees, Sak of tninepatie nervous dyepryne cod Mek of staying TARI E M infancy. The rule ameng p! fs thas children should never | Cae ee sereve mea cenlon Gare f more than a day at o time, and Soldat alldepartmcat anddrug stores then if unavoiduble, ‘The administration of Anodynes, Drops, Cov’! Southing Syrups and ,, nates ahlideee be are Lar aiphscician tenn be top ceoegiy FREE TRIAL and tho druggist should not be ». party to it Children who areill tin your own home, without obligation. wed attention of @ physician, and it is nothing less tham a orime to §The MAGIC ELECTRIC VACUUM dose them willfully with narcotics. LEANER, dhe only cleaner made in New Castoria contains no narcotics if it wn LM ia dgnabure of Chas, IL, Fieicher, ¢lbon’ Chel Genaine Castoria always bears the signatare o! es: made by Dr. Friederich F. Eriedmann to-day. “It fe not 80," he said, comment upon the report from Washington, ha vaccine and I have not refused any request from Dr. Blue.” Dr. Friedmann will go to New York to-morrow presumably to give the seo- ond treatment to his patients there in | gi accordance with the wish of the medi- cal authorities who are observing these cases. He intimated that probably he would see Dr, Blue during his stay in New York, ‘The German bactertologist opened for business to-day at the office of Dr. W. G. Dwinnell with the fixed price of twenty dollars per patient. So great was the crowd in the vicinity when he arrived, the doctor department for assi that an officer be office to inform visitors that he charged twenty dollars for the injection of his alleged cure, His request was not granted. The physician would not deny @ repor! that his market soon. His secretary, C. De Vidal Hundt, is in New York to be arran; hey for some disposition of the remedy. RESINOL STOPS ITCHING INSTANTLY received no letter asking ter more ly clears away all trace of ee ly °° 4) fackhead tormenting, unsightly eraption, the skin clear and healthy. ‘And the best of it is you seed never hesitate to use Resinol ond Re ees There is scibieg is to injure tenderest su is « doctor’ which rey for ah “ phe a ei ful kinds of feetfons. ‘They prescribe Resisol freely, confident that its soothing, healing ee tion is brought about ye 0. bland and gentl suited to the most delicate of irritated skia—eves f} atiny baby. Hesinol a sold by every draggtet 1a the United States, but you can at our expense what it do for and we wil ond you by parca pow and we you by liberal trial of Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap. pealed to the police ince. He asked joned outside the ind to make appointments. ine was to be placed on the is reported vith the owner's attor- ames McCreery & Co. | 34th Street 23rd Street MEN’S WEAR Special Values On Friday and Saturday. Shirts of Silk with narrow stripes. Plain bosoms and French cuffs. value 3.50, Shirts of Mercerized Fabrics, English Madras and Flannel. Various sleeve lengths and models. values 2.00 and 2.50, Pajamas of Silk Mixtures in plain colors and neat fancy stripes. Regular and extra sizes. values 5.00 and 6.00, 3.45 Spring Uvercoats, made of English Worsted in - _ all the latest models. Custom-tailored 15.50 values 25.00, 30.00 and 35.00 Extraordinary Offer MEN'S SHIRTS TO MEASURE Made in Workrooms on Premises. : Fabrics include decided novelties in French Silks and Satin Stripe Peau de Crepe. 6.25 Plain Bosom..........value 8.50 to 11.00 Plaited Bosom........value9.50t0 12.00, 7.25 A large assortment of Scotch and English Plain Bosom..............--value4.50, 3.50 Plaited Bosom. --svalue 5.00, 4.00 Shirts of Embroidered and Russian Cord Madras and Satin Stripe Mexicaine Cloth, value 5.50, 4.50 Plain Bosom.. Plaited Bosom. . Men’s Sorosis Boots & Oxfords 3.85 pair. former prices 5.00 and 6.00 34th Street _A Real Mystery Story ENTITLED “TheLest Million’: Written by a noted author, whose identity is concealed under the nom de plume of Winthrop Alden, BEGINS IN NEXT Sunday’s World