The evening world. Newspaper, July 19, 1915, Page 4

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Hat ‘ports That Prospects of Set tlement Are Good. ALL OU. S uy ! “ Hope to Avoid Greater Tie-Up. _—+- Adjustment and representatives of t ted Clothing Workers Aimerica and the American Cloth & Avenue nd manufacturers seemed pleased ui occurred was placed before ¢ TERS ANOS % % _ Founded 1845 |. Nowhere is the ques- 7¥ tion of quality so vital ~# as in the purchase of a } Piano of Player-Piano _ We are specialists in ‘piano construction ; that ‘ig our exclusive work, ‘ d back of our product : | is seventy years of ex- 7 a8 “You will be safe to #) buy a Waters Piano or stere-Autola player- uit interest. a I and let us: prove gil we claim or write for Waters & Co. Four Stores: Filth Ave., ar. 18th St, W. 424 St, ur. B’way W, 125th St., or. 8th Av. i This is a recogni fe added to the regul : ‘ FDIATORS LIKELY STOP STRIKE OF BrP RES ference Committee Re- INVOLVED. DO Men Out and Leaders in~ a conference this after- noah of the Committee on Immediate urere’ Association at No. 366 it was announced was every Indication that of the garment workers be averted. Both union men ‘the outcome,sand a report of what Spring and Summer Suits Consisting of Their Entire Stock, with the exception of Dress Clothes and Silk and Washable Suits » $25. $22.50 and $20 Suits Reduced to $16.50 , 50 and $25 Suits Reduced to $19.50 9, and $30 Suits Reduced to $24.50 Silk Pongee Suits, very special to men who seldom patronize sales. i a to meet the very exact style requirements of New York men and present ~ the prevailing custom models and fabrics. 44th and Broadway Mayer Schoenfeld, ia! AGENT, the manufacturers, at meeting. “Tt seems as wettiomen' will be made on a fifty-fifty ba: both sides making concessions. Just now everything hinges on what the contractors will do.” Whatever settlement is effected to- day will only affect the clothiers in the organization, and it ts expected that strikes will be called at several ‘The workers in these places, however the 200,000 workers who would be af- jfected by @ atrike in the factories of | Having Arms Tie-Up Held Off members of the manufacturers’ asso- ciation. It was said the one topic under cussion was that of wages paid union men by contracting clothiers. The employers. maintain they they have these contractors, who hire men to do plece work let out under contract to them by the manufacturers, On the other hand, the union memberw way the bosses could easily influence the contractors. ‘Therefore, the whole proposition of/ SPRINGFIELD, Mass, July 19. & nation-wide strike hinges om ¢he/rnat Dp. A. Thomas, Welsh collier rd of the contractors, who Others to Agree With Men. he were ed to send representatives hte ton conference, They had‘ the Britis) Government to arrang> Ng | representatives from only one branch; war contracts, is the “man of mys- of their industry—the vestmakers. Before the meeting was called to order President Sydney Hillman, of ov Ts tue tase ted Clothing Worker®:| i. Donovan, Springfield labor leade: Makers’ Union, who were scheduled to waik out this morning, had post- poned their strike, Five thousand knee-pants makers, who are with the jacket makers, already are| out. The jacket makers were to have gone out this morning, but at the last moment they postponed final ac- |tiom untit after a meeting which ts to be held this afternoon. There will be a meeting of the clothing man- ufacturers this afternoon, following the joint conference with the Commit- tee on Adjustment. STATE BEGINS PROBE OF THAW JUROR’S STORY Allorney General Assigns Aide to| the !abor leader's plan in settling thi 5 | trouble at the Remington Arms fac Inquire Into Foreman's tories. “A settlement of differences a Statement. the plant of the Remington Arm strike at Bridgeport, Conn. of New York, he war purchases here. they must not retard the productio the demandg of their employees. BRIDGEPORT, Conn., ari | no nd the strike ‘This was the ident of the Association of Machin attributed to David Robinson, fore- man of the jury that recently de. clared Harry K. Thaw sane, that the jury never believed him to have been insane when he killed Stanford White. is to be investigated by Deputy At- torney General Becker. He wae assigned to this duty to- day by Attorney General Woodbury. wa will hold out,”” — Thaw Plane te Leave for Pitte- burgh Te-Day. PHILADELPHIA, July ‘he changes his mind, Harry will leave Pittsburgh to. order to avoid a demonstrat! te home city it has been agreed be- tween him and his mother that no definite hour be set for hie arrival In anticipation of a demonstration when Thaw reaches there, Chief of Police Marshall of Pittsburgh has asked for details of Thaw's plans. | Thaw spent # quiet Sunday. In Atlantic City he went in bathing twice. He is taken to the First Preabyteri: ‘hureh by J Mul lins, a former Pi ‘ania Railroad oMotal, who was @ friend of Thaw’s father. —Uniese Thaw Keppler, International Vice of the Machinists’ Union, have to believe that the negot! have failed, the Structural Iron Workers; M York Seturday, unless he heard from him by 4 o’cloc! Announce Their Annual Sale of At the Following Reductions: $12.50 appealing eilbroner clothes are zed, yearly, waited-for opportunit; Weber and articular. While you may choose from ar assortment at these clearance reductions, nota single suit jar stock for sale purposes. Ne Charge for Alterations Five Clothing Stores 241 Broadway 1185 Broadway 42nd and Fifth Avenue Bee Sah gash a ea preterm ee vot wh. plas represent but small proportion ot | terious Man Credited With »| TO RUSH ARMY ORDERS. | genera nothing to do with the wages paid by| Said to Have Asked Financier! * to Induce Remington and owner, who was sent to America by tery” who will settle the ammunition was the tatement made here to-day by Dantet | Thomas, according to Donovan, is working through J. P, Morgan & Co. who arranged the| financial details of the allies’ great He has re- quested Morgan & Co. to make it} plain to the Bridgeport employers that | of munitions for the allies by resisting July 19.— Bridgeport’s labor trouble will not be settled until an eight-hour day for all |machinists in every factory of the granted by the manufacturers. ment between the Remington ‘ompany and its workmen will aration to-day of J. J. Keppler, International Vice Pres- ists. It is the first definite avowal of Company will not ond the strike,” ALBANY, July 1%—A statement! declared Keppler. “Concession to the demands made for the city in general wanted, and until this ls obtained Labor leaders tn charge of the | strike situation in Bridgeport an- nounce this afternoon that they had failed to hear from the man in New York who on Saturday requested the postponement of the calling out of the | machinists employed by the Reming- ton Arms and Ammunition Company. “If we do not hear from this man by 4 o'clock this afternoon,” said J. J. ° sident fe will In that event the men will probably be cailed out to-mor- row, twenty-four hours after the time set for the beginning of the John G. Johnston, vice-president of} Keppler, ard twenty other labor lead- ers, walted until well into the after. | Ill noon for a telephone call expected | from the man Johnston saw in New Johnston said that! the confere: The Man | Bridgeport |Thin is first definite announcemen | and evident! {vicinity were appointed mittees selected. WASHINGTON ompers, president Federation of Labor, offort to en ton Arms July the opinion that | port t catise |i bring on labor troubles to ahippl Europ 1 about a made to cause a strike | know these things as know anythin; sonally seen. y | unlimited 2 beh Child Killed by Anna Zuri East Third out in the # provision dealers. atantly killed. The police chauffeur, M. Hopler, t but are holding him for OH it 8 nN r I = Collection of he would tell the complete story of Nifacturers’ Association of it meeting this afternoon, voted to support the Remin; | THROUGH MORGAN, #i-rai ict MOULD HALT STRIKE independent manufacturers’ places.| 1), A, Thomas Named as Mys- «& ently means a bi | The millwrights, over - tention in the Remington Arms fac+ tory is, have organized a union. Om- cers were elected at a meeting this! rning, pickets for the arms shy t Bridgeport, Conn. It is expected that the influence of the Government will be sought toward an tloment. Gompers to-day ex- je may have been part of n by foreign influences labor (roubles to out off Amer-|of Supt. William Offiey of the local xporte of arms and ammunition. now that foreign interests, well plied with funrs, have sought to f American products to} c ald Mr. Gompers. ffort was made to bring rike of longshoremen, and that when taht failed an effort wat that I have not per- ere can be no doubt ropaganda, ind it, is seeking to cheek the manufacture and ex- portation of supplies for Europe.” Pe na the child knocked down by an truck belonging to Zimmermann & C The child was f HL | 100 Waists, Formerly up to 2.85.. 443 Waists, 144 Waists, 94 Waists, No Approvals INN) “You Never FOR HELPING ALIEN GET U. 5. PASSPORT _> ine j tection of the no Arms od In entering in their lat present im str whom —_—_—__ and com- ‘Held in $7,5Q0 Bail on Charge al) of Conspiring Against 19.- A of Edward M Lg Government. day with formerly Harry Max Zelinka, an Importer of /Banking Department. clothing in business at No. 440 Fourth ‘having told Paul Grout, Avenue, was arrested to-day by order Grout's brother, tha ‘not be permitted to reope: accepted the presidency the Brid division of the Department of Justic When arraigned before United St: Commissioner Houghton he court days. Grout's coun would begin rict Attorney Content with being :and would ned in a conspiracy to defraud nited States by procuring al! passport for an allen on the false representation that be was « nat-| 1m uraliged citizen of the United States. Zelinka was held in $7,600 bail In the complaint Mr. Content charges that Alfred Bondy, an Austrian and the representative of a German cot- thought to hi ton firm, applied on April 29 for an {no family, Bi American passport as Harold Green, a Stephen prevent the “I know of seamen. well as 1 five, with naturalized citizen of this country. Zelinka, the witness in the case, vouched for the applicant's naturall- sation. ‘The passport is not believed to © been obtained for spying pur- he | poses, but to enable Bondy to get into Germany on business. Special Agent of Department of Mm li | Best & Co. Fifth Avenue at Thirty-fifth Street A Best Clearance Sale that offers a splendid opportunity to fill out the Summer wardrobe The waists in this sale are from the regular stock, but marked at prices that absolutely insure due to the over from season to season. uick sales—this is t policy of not carrying ‘‘Style’’ merchandise Closing Out Commencing Today, Monday 944 Women’s and Misses’ Summer Waists Selected from the regular stocks, for immediate disposal No Credits . Think of this!—smart, dainty waists—some of them at the price of a collar. This waist at $1.65 is just selected at ran- dom from the 944—you're sure to find several at least that exactly suit vour needs. The Sale Comprises: 3.95.. 5.00.. 7.50... 9.75... No Credits Complete Your Celebrities of the Motion Picture Stage A NEW SET OF PICTURES EACH WEEK WITH THE SUNDAY WORLD, Sif a “eat aia Si jermany, where he is At the arraignment Zelinka denied intention of committing any fraud and said that ff Green's real name is Bondy he did not know pantalla GROUT TRIAL IS ENDED. Closing Arguments WIN Ovcapy Neat Two Days. ‘The taking of testimony in the trial Grout for knowingly swearing to a false report of the Union Bank of Brooklyn was concluded to-| timony by Clark Williams, perintendent of the State | Williams dented | ) ‘The trial has occupied forty-four | c wave notice that he jum up this afternoon Diateict Attorney Cropsey said his clos- Willoughby Avenue, Brooklyn, t with a gas tube tied in his mouth. He had been dead some hours. Peavey is been a widower, with rked in a linotype ma- chine factory as expert machinist, and bis motive for suicide is unknown. —_>_- HUBBY MAY BE HOUSEKEEPER. (From the Howton Post.) A married woman is running for Mayor of EMfingham, Ml, and it is said she is @ lawyer, minister, editor and farmer, We take it that the old man ese the kitchen work and makes the 8. i tl init Pay More at Best's” lll Quality Placed Far Above Price At A‘! 250 James Butler “= Stores it Edward M. Baldwin, BUTTER Fresh from Selected Western Creameries The very highest grade of Creamery Butter—nothing choicer or more de- licious to be had at any price—for next three days, cut to, a pound, 2k Why should you pay more? New Potatoes,6«-.6;".1° Finest_shipments from Virginia; coming better every_day. Or anges, Selected California Valencias; 2 5° new, ripe, juicy fruit; dozen.. Lemons, bright and juicy; doz. 10° s Butler’s Condensed; rich and H ce Milk, in sanitary cans; pont er aie 7 Milk Lakeview Brand, rich, whole, Evap- e“ 9 orated; tall 10c can .......eeecees Milk Belle Brook Evaporated, with all 7 | 9 the cream; tall 10ccan........+-. 9 _ Highes de N. Y. » f ce Cheese, sii sift. tv Crean." 17S ill Essie Sliced Peaches s |i Choicest California Yellow Clings, in heavy syrup; de- 19° Marmalade, Crosse & Blackwell's and Hartley's i licious for dessert; tall salmon sized can; cut to... tershire; bottle. . Imported; large jar 15¢ Lea & Perrins’ Sauce, (in. |l|§ Alaska Salmon, 1-Ib. tall can...._ 8° ill { Smoked Beef, Bie rinbon, sliced thin; pkge 10¢ | Cider Vinegar, or White; Peerless, best quality; qe Salad Oil, Best he aNge bottle 15¢ Clear and pure; full pint... strips... Essie Vanilla txustou ey er 1 Be XLCR Corn Starch. . . Cc Blue Ribbon Jelly Powder Quaker Corn Flakes, vis rc.) Eacn eee, EEE ; Essie Coffee, tome orm eons Be 30 gave Stamps with ea ‘ Coftee Superior blend of South American Coffee; strong Coffee, sniiivediea: i: 1ib ‘Oolong, India-Ceylon, Ha Teas, ‘nash Breakfast or Mixed Aaeme by Essie Grape Juice, 10° Underpriced Specials for Wash-Day Butler’s Best Borax Soap, ..3 cakes 10° Old Dutch Cleanser, can......... '7° Blue Ribbon Laundry Starch, vce... 5e Clenewel Washing Powder, ticrs.. 10° At All 3& James Butler Inc. Meat Markets Soup or Fricassee Chickens, '. 16¢ Chuck Steak, from fancy beef......b. 16° Boneless Pot Roast, «1 tid mest.v. 1G Sugar-cured Bacon, «i cpiest ion, At Alli32 James Butler Inc. Licensed Stores Dewar’s Scotch Whiskey, tak $]-00 Trysome Gin, mae ve ‘ee 50° French Claret, tcncis'sictoc: botte. California Claret t, rine, it BB" si 2a Siamps with case of 24 bottles 50 Lager Beer, isp: Kecievs Deposit of 25c required for return of case and empty bottles. No aac Stamps with Butter, Potatoes or Sugar, Stores close at 7 P. M.—Saturdays at 11 P. M.

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