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Dee | OFS citizens should have the to choose the employer for hey shal) work and the con- ‘ditions under which they shall work.” ~ Ninety per cent. of the employees oe the Colorado Fuel and Iron Com- OR _ Bany, Mr. Rockefeller said, were non- /~ @aion mon, who had no difficulties i “2 with the officers of the company. He W mald that he “could see no reason | We why these men should be forced to * Join a union and pay duos by the © other 10 per cent.” is your opinion as to the re- of employee and employer?” Chairman Fos' “I believe that the omployer and the employee aro fellow mon and © ghould treat each other as such.” “As a director of the Colorado Fuel a4 Iron Company, have you ever fuveetigated these conditions among your employees in Colorado?” “Mo. I have been trained to act on the reports of trained and compotent s oe HH ~~ have recetved the reports of the men im charge of the work out there and have made them responsible,” said © Mr. Rockefeller. Officers have re- ported to him that by the end of the _ .© present year the strike will have cost re $1,000,000, He said he did not know om: \ econ any money had been spent 7 ; import arms and ammunition Into -y the strike district. >) > But i the State authorities were < tmable to protect the employees of {ee company I should say the first Guty of the officera would be to ace * ‘that the workers were protected,” he added. + TELLS OF FATHER’S HOLDINGS 4 1% COLORADO FUEL AND IRON. © Questioned by —Reprosentative | Byrnes, Mr. Rockefeller outlined bis * tather’s holdings in the securities of £ “yAhe Colorado Fuel and Iron Company, eothtist- Common stock, 189,807 out of ~ 03,855 shares; preferred stock, 7,943 i. .. Shares out of 20,000 shares. Bonds— 2 © Colorado Industrial Company 5 per "cents, $14,450,000 out of $33,437,000. od_Other holdings were Colorado Fuel Iron Company general 5 per j 14986,000 out of $5,638,000. 7 Mr. Rockefeller. that the only 5 @ividynds paid.by the company were im 1918, A®guMulative dividend of & per con® en’ stock ha “4 foyed tliep be maid, accumulated eat ofzthe capital stock. Boose 6 per Gent. was paid on the @ividend and 4 per cent. eo dividend due that a terest of his father in ‘the ‘concern so represented, he said, iy the directorate by himself, Starr y and John D. Green. J. H. and L. H. Bowers, he said, indirect representatives.” “You are what is called a dummy @irector, aren't you?” asked Chair- ‘man Foster. “Well, we don’t call it that,” said ‘Mr. Rockefeller. “Don't you think a director of a company ought to know theso | thiage?’ asked the Chairman. “Don't } yom think if he hasn't time he ought put some one in his place ‘wag ‘would have time?” “If I thought I were not conacien- ly doing my duty I should of eoturme at unce resign,” pid Mr, Rock- “but my co entirely acquits me in this case.’ Rockefeller said he could make no \Srecommendations for Federal legisia- , them to deal with contests between 3 eapital and labor. Z believe in labor organizing, but I dc not believe tn forcing labor to organise,” he sald. ‘Labor and cap- must learn that what is best for fe best for each.” 448 indicated his opposition to ar- cetion of the strike, although he t recommended it. He sug- € i it it would be undertaken if the that “if men like Federal could be on the board, he be favorable to arbitration. —— FUGITIVE CAUGHT IN ITALY. ‘Vineens> Lattaiulo, wanted here for Jareeny of more than $50,000, and, to @ cable despatch from arrested there yesterday, or to-morrow. Although this city Dec. 20, the against him was never eub- to the Grand Jury. “Ascording to the information on file | $@ the District-Attorney's office, Lat- tatulo obtained money by forged drafts @@ eome of the leargest leather mer- fm Buenos Ayres, to whom $3! was cbtained from the United Commercial Company and the ‘Trading Company. jon showed that Siders and had fo forged, ‘and th contained principally waste fo an Itallan subject, it, | ted, crime im In that et attorney hitman wil to the Italian Government all in his posse porns EATING? isi pon si*youest you will MAN-A-CEA WATER pea . Pee ee Reckefelior said he believed “tree! men who do make Investigatons. 1 whose eure band and geod eye laid PARROT & CO. | THOUSANDS HONOR | POLICEMAN SLAIN} PERFORMING DUTY Remarkable Tribute to Joseph Guarnieri at His Funeral To-Day. CROWD BLOCKS STREET. | Members of Force ‘Carry Casket and 100 Boys Bring’ Flowers. For aix blocks between the high- rearing tenement houses of Sullivan street the casket contathing the body of Detective Lieut. Joseph Guarnieri was carried to-day from the home of his wife's people at No, 61 to the Church of Saint Anthony of Padua. Six of the biggest men of the uni- formed force upheld the casket on their shoulders while ahead of them rolled the empty hearse, preceded by seven carriages drawn by white horses, The side# of the vehicles spilled cascades of roses, lilies of the valley and other flowers, One hundred amall boya represent- ing the Italian Chamber of Com- merce and the Itallan press of the city march@ ahead of the carriages, each boy carrying his cap in one hand, a bouquet of flowers in the other. The sidewalks were jammed with people and the tenement win- dowe and fire escapes were so crowd- ed that the police had to clear them to prevent accident. + Behind the body of the latest of the policemen to have’ bis name put on the bronze tablet at Police Head- Quarters and hia life anuffed out by the bullet of an assassin walked De- tective Lieut. George Haerle, who ‘was with bim when he was killed and the assassin with three bullets, mea one of ‘the shots I fred ‘land. ed,” said Haerle with grim satistac- ton. HIGH POLICE OFFICIALS HONOR SLAIN POLICEMAN. Behind the man whose quick gun- work bad avenged the death of his fellow walked Polico Gommissioner McKay, Deputy Commissioner Ruben, Inspector Faurot, Father Sullivan, the police chaplain; Acting Mayor McAneny and a hundred other men {well known in plplio life, Back of them came a detachment of one hun- dred uniformed policemen under the command of Capt, William Jones, The police band, sixty-five strong, first played “Nearer, My God, to Thee” as the coffin was brought down the narrow and dark staira of the little apartment above a grocery store where Guardinicri had met and court- od his wife, ‘Then as the men lifted their clubs in the last salute to a departed com- rade the band struck into Chopin's Funeral March and the procession to the church was uncer way. More than five thousand people had been crowded into the narrow street be- tween the house and the church and many of the women sobbed bitterly as the coffin passed, At the street crossings great patches of brilliant sunlight struck the funeral bier above the broad blué shoulders of the men carrying it. There were deoep-throated murmurs of pity from the men and occasional stacatto cries from the women. At the entrance to the church two monks of the Franciscan order in the black habits used when the of- fices for the dead are sald, their black cowls dropping back of their shoulders, gave a touch of the mediaeval to the scene, Back of them were the officiating priests in their black robes, with acolytes holding Yghted candies, With no-trace of disorder the great crowds from the streets surged into the wide church entrances as the organ thundered out its solemn pro- cessional of death, In the pews for the pallbearers were Haerle of the quick gun action, Detectives John Cassett!, Constanzo Mancini, Edward L. Elson, Herman Kahn, Charles Carrao and Ralph Micelli, Aji these had been staunch friends and com- radea of the victim of William Hor- gan's bullet. They eat with fixed features and dry eyes as the Inst word of church and man for the dead was sald, A solemn requiem mass with all the strangely stirring music that one hears only in the Italian churches was celebrated by the Rev, Father Alexander Scapigliati, assisted by Father Sullivan and Father Anthony Sousa, Father Sullivan delivered a | panegyric to the heroism of the slain | | detective who had served seven years jand given his life to the city enly to | leave penniless his wife and three little girla, “The soldier in time of battle dp 3 ‘the atirring effect of music and he | Ba ARH RAH ORI IO RI HO OI Sa I, Poli march of his comrades with him," Father Sullivan sald in his funeral address, “There is glamor to work of the man in the army or navy, but with the policeman it is differ- He muat grope his way in the k and be ready at a second'’s n tice to Aight for his life, and alway: ready to stay to the end of whatever struggle comes. “Guarniert faced bulleta before the God spared him to face them again, ‘Twice did he serve as an example to ajl the other men of the force. While we have such men as this one who! died in performance of hin duty we need have no fear of the fiaf of red in our atreeta, The Stars and Stripes will float forever here and our army of biwe will #ec that it does.” Among the men who heard the praise of Guarnieri from the altar of St. Anthony of Padua were Lieut. De- tective M. F. Fay, who was shot four times in combat with two thieves in the Bronx and who stil carries two bullets in his stomach; Lieut. Detec- tive Mulhall, whose specialty ts mak- Ing river rescues, and who once do into a sewer to save a small boy; Carrao, who grabbed up a lighted bomb and ripped out the fuse in time to prevent a Black Hand murder; Lieut. Detective Stajl, the first man to receive the Rhinelander medal for bravery, and a score of others who had come within an ace of paying with their lives for their devotion to duty. At the end of the requiem mass the procession moved—the casket now being placed in the hearse—east on Houston street to the Bowery and then to the plaga of the Williamsburg Bridge. ‘the body was taken thence acroas the bridge to Calvary Coin- etery in Brooklyn and the police escort was disbanded. For the immediate relief of the little family left penniless in the dark little flat over the Sullivan street grocery store Commissioner McKay to-day supplied $200 from the R. A. C. Smith fund. There was an abundance of roses and other flowers in that tiny and dark flat this morning, but the little grocery store cownstairs, which supports the mother of the policeman's widow, was closed and there was no money coming in. The sale of the entire stock of the little shop would not have paid one-half of the expenses of burial. Before it was time to close the casket practically all the members of the police force had climbed up the narrow stairs and had taken a last look at the face of Guarnieri, The body was laid out under a canopy of lace and roses and was dressed in uniform. In his hand was the ecap- ular he had worn when he waa killed and beside him was hia night stick and on his breast the badge he had not dishonored. He was of maasive build, deep of chest and broad of shoulders, His set jaws were those of.a fighter, Until the final moment his widow, a young woman of the black ey black hatred Italian type, sat bes! the coffin with her three little girls at her feot. There was no hysteria from any of them. They had cried out the final bitterness of their distress, Police Commissioner D. I. received to-day a check for $250 to be added to the $1,000 contributed by Commiasioner Smith to the of Honor fund, vi ert_H. Mainzer, at No, 5 Nassau atreet, known by all the firemen as a “buff,” being an honorary member of several of their soctetics, “Aa a trustees of the Neustadt Me- mortal Fund of the Fire Department,” he wrote, "I have full knowledge of what immediate relief means to the families whose breadwinners have Yoon taken away from them by sud- den death, Commissioner Smith's idea in starting a similar fund in the Police. Department ia an excellent one. It ts high time that our citi- gens cease their criticism of the po- lice and remember that almost to a man they stand ready to sacrifice themselves when called upon to do McKay with offices a the | sete teeceoampamet M onl da} bat ke ra 3,000 CANARIES SING {UNION MEN ACCUSED WHILE A ROARING SEA ) OF TAKING PART IN The Moltke had bad weather all/ the way, and rode out of one storm side the Banks, the steamer ran ‘into| @ blilzzard, with snow in the air and foe on the deck, pagsengera were sent below; the 43 second cabin passengers were in a steerage had only breathing space. ‘The boat seemed at times to stand on her stern and forward ends, wireless man had to lash himself to _THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, APRIL 6, 1914. MAKES TOY OF LINER oltke Makes Port With Birds Trilling, Though Wild Beasts Are Sick. the d man, ly to pitch into another, On Fri- y and Saturday of last week, out- himse from Everything ‘The four first class | was | | ttened down. sent with e fix and the 508 pasengers in the The il was carried away by the storm. Fatal Worker Fwo Arrested To-Day, ¥\ trade was in the throes of its bis sang in the first gleam of sunshine Fourth street, on the same charge and two now prisoners, Liebowitz was a striker who found N.Y. omployee. together with fourothers who had gone jaccording to the Grand Jury, one of the ¢ to Liebowitz and the other “You'll get yours when you reach | headquarters.” of the earth Y2 ¥3 INSPECTOR FAVROT | That's OLD STRIKE KILLING! Beating Policeman of No at Garment Laid Door of man, his man, “but ain't implored the polic you change It to jetectives are looking for a third happened?” indicted last Friday with the lf starving. Failing to get aid the union, he went to Hunter, where he became an open shop ‘The union heard of it aii @ committee to bring him back, him, On the way to this city, testimony to the | ittee said Battalion Chief John Moore, his seat, Great mountains of sea! ‘pnree of the five escaped at the washed over the decks and tore the | (Grand Central Station. Sigman, as|CO*l truck, wh forward lifeboats from their fasten- | chairman of the picket committes, met | Ninety nisti etree ings, banging them about deck and lithe others at Iquarqters and took broke. clear of damaging them, Part of the port) them into a room with the picket com. | Say. but w | West Seventy-r Connell 473 Sixth avenue, ‘Theodorotoulos has a Greek resaurant. As he approached the place a young arms filled with boxes of AMAR LRH OH, SADT Ee PRUKREN AK KANKR AH TKN L ALA REH LOR MAM EE RICK EAR The story of an exiled New Yorker's strange adventures on the other side 4 & ceman 2 Murdered on . Duty Borne to Cemetery While Thousands Line the Streets to Honor Him' THIVONKINTOS 1S SAM | FOR POLIGEMAN’S SAKE the Way the Greek Name Will Appear in Report on Burglar Chase. A crash of glass early to-day sent) running there “It's all the same as Sam in Ameri- “Then by all the Greek gods, and ing work for me,’ strike, Morris Strupnickel also was] shortening your first name?" that penetrated into the hold andj arrested this afternoon by Detectives) | ; | can," said the Greek. they sang when the storm was rag-|Steincamp and Woods of Headquar- ing the worst, |ters of the cloak union, No, 85 Kast | for the sake of man, ‘Sam’ BATTALION CHIEF AND HIS DRIVER HURT | Auto Coal Truck Comes in Collision With Them While They Are Making a Run. Pp. J the Fire Department and his driver, were both badly cut and bruised to-day when the chiefs hors ind buggy dashed tnto a heavy auto == IT BEG od 4s 34 To-Day’s Evening World i ae HE SRNEXE: WR Ta Ta ed Bellehccnan Md INS IN = PLUNGES 127 FEET FROM HIGH BRIDGE | INTO HARLEM RIVER a ne Charles McFee Eludes the Po- lice and Does Moving Pic- ture Stunt. | pone Charles M@Fee, a youth whose ob- ject In life it is to do things more foolish than the professional dare- devil and Rodman Law, dived into the Harlem River from the centre span of Highbridge this afternoon, Two men have been killed by leap- ing from Highbridio, and efforts of Mr. McKee yesterday and one day last week were forestalled by the po- lice, It was just 2 block when he climbed to the parapet to-day and, placing the palms of his hands to- gether high above his head, bent for- ward and shot to the river, 127 feet below, in a clean, graceful dive, head- first. A fountain of spray rose as he struck the water. There was no boat to meet him, But on the bridge and along the shore were a number of ,men with moving picture cameras, | MeFee came to the surface a few | seconds after he shot into the river, ; shook the water from his hair and struck out for a canal dont on the ast shore, swimming straight into the muzzle of a movie camera, When he had pulled himself to the deck, a policeman who had run down from the bridge put him under arrest, Hugh K, Whipple, the camera man, at once set his machine to clicking again, Tho policeman promptly took him and his camera along too. Supt. McGaffney of the Highbridge reservoir appeared as complainant ‘against McKee, charging him with | attempted suicide, The photographer H Capt. John Reith |. was not arraigned. of the Highbridge station sald he had been on the bridge with five of his men with intent to head off the feat, but McFee had slipped past them In an automobile before they recognized him, ° Magistrate Krotel refused to take the'attempted sutcide charge, sayin that McFee waa @ professional diver following his profession and had shown hia skill by making the dive without the aid of a parachute or other device. He freed McFee on a suspended lende after finding him | gullty of disorderly conduct. —_——_—._- EARTHQUAKE IN NEVADA. a Sharp Shock, but | Tonopah Ge toward here George pes Damage. TONOPAH, Nev., April 6—A sharp earthquake shock jarred Tonopah early to-day but did no damage, cigars and cigarettes, ran toward — Seventh avenue, pursued by another - whose costume was more abbreviated egestas ‘ . " sate than the regulation Greek “kiltte, ; ; To the trill of 3,000 canaries and one Beet tlie er resident} after a sprint, Connell captured ROTEST TO BRYAN : of the International Ladies’ Charles Novo. The policeman waa] ww “ she) thet Gt w AuopeMmlOR OF SerFIAG | At ere Union and and | questioning him when another cop, al |W ASHINGTON, April 6.—Mr, Riano, storms the German steamer Moltke | preanurer of Local No. #5, Cloak and | £900, loyal son of Erin, spoke to the| the Ambassador from Japan, received Aiassaived ad Vaaged ber way karcanlaueatckere’ Unies te im ihe Posvc, [ano Cpe Dale nolidey slotnes official notice to-day of Villa's ex- What's your name?” he asked, pulsion of Spanish subjects from the Atlantic and reached here this|charged with having taken part in} “Thivonkintos Drakos.” was the re- | Torreon and prepared to make repre. morning. “The birds sang ax aoon ag | th© Murder of Herman Lisbowits on | ply. “I was asleep tn tho restaurant | fentationa in protest. to. Mecrerary | they wut together in H ie | Aug. 1, 1910, when the cloak and suit en an th, aid the pollce Bryan. Spain not only objects to thetr expulsion, but also to the confis- eation of their property, which ts estimated to run into the millions, any way of “why didn't | before this joy Loft Sweets our chain of stores is another stantly increasing popularity of Special for Monday. cnocovare COVERED PA Graham of eves 1 aanurtment of Chocolate Cov- 3 dot driven by | East | {The chief's horse | shafts and stopped at the foot of || ot ran RONX-ITES and Bronx-igettes now en- Third Avenue (just' south of Westchester Avenue "TWO EX-POLICEMEN GET PRISON TERNS Eagan Four to Eight Years, Seery One to Three, in Sing Sing. Ex-Pollceman Henry A. Eagan, for- merly attached to the Lenox avenwe station, was sentenced to serve not less than four nor,more than éight years in Sing Sing by Judge Nott @ General Sessions to-day after con- viction on the charge of extorting $60 in cash and a diamond ring, valued at $100, from a disorderly house keep- er, Thomas Scery, a policeman of the same atation, who was with Eagan at the time of the extortion and who pleaded guilty to his in the crime, was sentenced to serve not less than one nor more than three years. Judge Nott, in passing sentence, sald that the offense of Eagan was made worse by the confession of Seery that he, Eagan, had raised $500 with which to get the woman who had been victimized out of the city. That was the reason that Fagan got #0 much the heavier sen- tence of the two There are No Extra Charges in the cost of Harris Glasses Our prices for Harris Glasses, whether $2 or more, are always the same for the same kind of same at one Harris store as at another. Whether our Oculist (Eye Physician) examines your eyes or when we make glasses upon the Prescription of YOUR Oculist—the cost is Absolutely the same. “There Is Nothing Figured n. We're the largest retail dis- tributers of Eyeglasses in the United States, consequently the cost for glasses to you Is exceedingly Iqwer than is .pos- sible elsewhet 442 Columbus ‘Ave. . ‘See and 8@d Sts, 70 Nassau St, near Jobe St, | 1009 Broadway, nr. Will’ 489 Fulton St., opp. A. ay ne 597 Broad Si } ol1co. WILLIAM SNOVBR i ELTON, beloved husband of Lillian elton, Funeral service | Rutherford. N. J | ing, April 7. Cometery, ing. his late residences. Brooklyn, Wednesday mera- By the recent opening of our new Branch Store at 149th Street and ful dorecretion co the eae ful t . ft Candy. ™ ne Special for Grane t OMIPS—TI Tuesday. Me crlepye psy : 10¢ open eve ine yn ston 1 our stores open Saturday an mittee, Both were beaten, tt Brachman Besides the canary birds there were | wnarged, and when Liebowitz was poacocks and swans, There were taxon out he was carried to Bellevue 4, according also leopards and tigers, twenty white tospital and died the same night, — | a bank te foxes and fifty monkeys. The tigers i Gorcneria dure at the time found'| collision he went on his w roared when brought aboard and the inat he came to his death at the | 1 leopards snarled, ‘but when Boreas janay of “men unknown to this | ing. After the began to rock the boat the monarchs ju14" jut a private detective em-| Graham and d nt tot of the Jungle were very seasick and! jloyed by a rival union, an out. | Homes the case axalnnt ty agnrann very quiet. But the canaries were growth of the old international, re- | it Ri ietan in the Wost Side Pos blithe and gay and sang on, ‘The| cently brought evidence to Assistant m th average passage of the Moltke ts 370 resul jles a day. Most of the time on is trip she made not more than 160 District-Attorney Oe MRS. WILSON OUT AGAIN. | kinridge which ited in the indictments. Annual Exhibit taster Toys, Gifts and Favors No greater pleasure can be afforded children than to bring them to see this beautiful display of Toys, Games and Novelties for Easter gifts, Eaxter parties and enter- varlety of every conceivable to, Faater-time most enjoyable, dren with you—no obligation to buy. EAD SCHWARZ ‘Filth Ave. at 3ist St. miles in the twenty-four hours. = Leaves White I nF LIND SAILS FOR HOME. Fall Six Weeks Ago | WASHINGTON, April 6,—For the first | taininenta: Wilson's Envoy to Mexico Leaves! time since she was Injured by a fall in her boudoir at the White House six Vere Cups on MeySower, weeks ago, Mrs, Wilson, wife of the VERA CRUZ, Mexico, April 6—John President, was able to leave the White Lind, personal representtive of Presl- touse to-day, Ac anied by Dr, Cary dont Wilsub, With his daughter aad te +p, Grayson, shu went for a lony vide. family of Kear-Admiral Frank F.) It was stated that she had practically Fletcher, embarked on the Mayflower overed from the shock that upset her to-day to pro 1 direct to Washington. system following the fall. % he William W, adda, privan Consul, a aie, here, and the Consular staff, went on| is. ras ‘* 2s board t bid them furewell . Mapltineme' pate, vars ee ninidhiag bots wudifen hare, Here you will tind, at lowest/prices, a great and novelty for making Come and bring the chil- Tove The Home (fal DAVE, (south of Westchoate cludes the a case? Cornce Him Miaces Ee ntainer In each case. 30 Tuesday even- Interment Cypress’ Hille