The evening world. Newspaper, May 10, 1921, Page 14

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| ae PLUMBERS TRIED {eontne him he wae still a member of OPEN SHOP ISSUE J eat n to reduce operating expenses. | Siippir med that the|two have been held up for two days] PRINCE OF WALES | the association |The committee members, who are {mora s was fast dis-}in the port. | rege ont You know you can be, ar. being asked to recommend to Con- | appearing sirike would] ‘The United American Lines an-| LAUDS SPORT BOOM GRANDMOTHER'S Ay Nes xh penis: is 5 ress appropr running jnto nd Friday or Saturds Peleerams | nounced to-day that {ts steamship -—— | Q You know you were guilty nillions to cover deficlencte Were shown from ports on the Pacific | Virginian had sailed from New York | Declares Anglo-American Contests 10 SHAKE DOWN doo't you? Fou pleaded gulltyt A pressed their approval and Atlantic consis telling of the de- | yosterday for Alexandria, Keypt, with Will G th sande Of peed teat Gat as be ae | en Jmarture of ehins with full arews jn full complement of officera and il Cement Friendship o| \) § GOVERNMENT think f did anything wrong ONLY THREE SHIPS = |_ Stotements vy omvere of ihe Mars | mon etened on at the new wage sale, Two Nations, Q. Are you guing to get out of the | ine W Unions calovlated {| ombraoing the 18"per cent, reduction. | LONDON, May 10.—The Prince of . t . lhe to ethy A e | \ ‘ , of rar Rok te eer ea |LEAVE NEW: YORK; 12) ancy ins muccens of tho strike were! Eieplanatory notes in reference to| Wales la enthusiastic over the buon A TASTY LOAF — | counsel é a nn WERE SCHEDULED | tiatiy contradicted this oon VY | saliings announced yesterday by the}in Anglo-Americar oatinued Mom First Paws.) |. 40 BAG, Batter, aes f lawyer Hued From Meat Pi | Winthrop T. Marvin, Vico President | steamship Owners’ Aesociation were! While he never consents to an In ONLY AT Sr an " r wod Gi ai Manager of the offered to-day by the wirkking engl-|terview or to a direct quotation in uererT We Han eines, inavall Ste dovoee Coastwise Liners Expected to Sall) co. nship Owners’ Association. neers, ‘The latter sald tha Virgtalan| newspapers, the heir to the British evidently oniiusive bids to Untted| vauihowis, His story was ike that Place In the country at large, It tn » Still Unable to Com- | tie tala in part | nad a crew shipped «! Naltimore and| throne let the United Prose kaow ni y was : me ay Still Unable to C | v States Attorney Caffe Of the sales manng not beyond the bounds of poralbility | slate Thelk Grae ie delarat #| just put in at Gin Bay tolday through bis secretary, Sir Gou Q. Nothing was gained by (that?| —_ t further wage reductions wil) ete Their Crews 1 thig gore OL : clear from this port frey Thomas, that he views with tt! A. It helped Cr Knowing what | ave to be enforced in the Govern-| ty hour this afternoon only | ang only 278 are Of the Hamilton, of te Wid Dontn. |greateng intereet the Increase tn the we had on the plumbers who had bid, ent service | antpa fist te tnisiead f tlion Lne, they sald no attempt wav }oordial Polations between Brit! thr we vipa flying the Aun , 5 | nobody war in a 5 | = The “open ship” tig ws on thy ; : i hips that dle were p|made to delay her ns the line tud|Atherican athletes. with Creasy or his prompt Sntehing vskeround, ond df the strike Bt Ree cee caesar fer | netore the strike begar o| “stgned He belleves the wnusuaily of the Job nut the Govert to-day had passed Quarantine botnd |, : ai The West Hematite, of the Sitp-|Mumber of contests between 1 mean they didn't dar rt] ith the wages of Jout, ‘They were the Shipping Boned] 36 4 in an ste aw ping Boa e engineers admitt and Amer arranged for th ‘ les or strikes on him? union aq well as union workers | tar Misk New Orleans wiagse ce with fc but they added she|Mer months to be an indic f They didn't dare start enything vee ‘enched whict eon | ce insport St. Mihtel, for C ships wi y at anchor down the bey off|close Anglo-American friend: knowing what we knew obeut them i jand the United I 16 declaration 0. ‘ k Plat They had no com rack CASE WENT BY OWING TO WA n Henson of thé Shipping | Marts, for the Weat Ind | chat only Sipttend obite Jefe this port | cient Gorkathe Gh ihe eating of cael Mell PRESSURE. | - Board has definitely declined to Panama, The Coton of the Panama|netweon midnight May 1, when tho|Misktanga, another shiv ‘ng Board{ The Pri ' om Mr. Untermyer went at some length continued de binek BA yn the programme of reducing wages | Line, the Algonquin of the Clyde Line | ke went into effect, and midnight | boat is particularly interested ; ate tato the reasons why Assistant Siecle rvent. The representatives of |and the City of Savannah of the Ocean} stay § is inaccurate and misle ndquarters of the engineers|ing international polo ontot United States Attorney Harold Har-! or the bikie: chats 7 strikers are equally adamant in| Steamship fAne, which were to havel pie records of Unite cram wan recolved to-day from |And hopes to attend every match. 1 per failed t ve the plumbers in-| Kes comintnleated WIEN The ‘police furmai t ee to the wage cut, | departed y were till at their] Naval Commissio ) Taneise) announcing that eo ceae coe jesec ret redealt om dicted hy Huy lophe tack Ba ca Gee kane MOY int etary Davis at the | piers unable to eave becau «| forty-one ships sa t Mall Company had | since the war and plans to the Far) ft t GF WAR 10° th6| cucuie “arid tile waa dane by mossens, final conferct day RrtePHOOA | wuthOIeHt ohOWws i oaened i suit ment with the | An _ineelt. He wa ae United Attorney, satd that| t ( that re Hound the attit Officiails of the striking merine nty-one to 5 the oa ” is r, who went to the Seventh Avenue t scond | Personally how welcome they Senin's ware Ke t ~ Ii Mad bleed amet P aE werter 1 the departure : z coyditic a second | na 4 W welcom prevented co} ‘i cali " duction q hree ships oat of twelve v - om poe Pr Mr. Untermyer invited 3 ‘Gunes; Pane ween? on the wage tsttike has prett Re Willam T. Tilden, ¢ tall to stale formally to the as becaae porcaieag bby . upport of /khipping. The rere he HE: tke. anena any explanation he His hei ivan Ce “6 © of the | succeeded Killed, Three Will Dio. singiea ch garding Mr. Ila a : being 1ouse ' 1 LLE, Pa, M 10, Particular wing to hi sie : ndietment : ar ne ; : a baa C8 Mond tern tod ! were Killed and three | the decision of the Oxford and c b 1ey is on} boxes al Belmont Park. Tut Cu i ff | ee ESCH UN | MnoAc HIP: WEA MOR' 16 Mente Your ; : waid Mr,| refused to return the ite nad On. the 1, nis ” ut Fayette and Harvar VICTROLA | pe who ordered x ae enemy eneeamamnenneeen (unjaravunmmnpseestaneemrmnsmemnesrenerstertene ue : si is Here ing the United States Attorney's of. Mr. Schwaria wuld 444 ¢ ay~ NG) WC} for as little as $25 and on ul but he did want. the| were stolen as follow nm Ve as much as $1,500--with o record to show that Commander | Oitice Sub-Station No 171 from id of: tsea betw Brown again and again demanded | sub-station No. 181 and 162 Crom & TNC ETONGS CENISee uecween Prosecution and offered evidence with | station No, 172. All these stations are A small down payment the! Only result that Mr. Harper} in drug at secures immediale delivers wrote tho Secretary « Navy say-] te said to have , 3 ing he wa convinced | worked sonvict in a Fed to your home ; that an t would result in} prison. He confided in fetiow con Pay balance in convictic ® a hen Rot o1 licy en i ran a € 1 tid Went to wo tary of tho so-called pen-pric he plan war 1. monthly dealers and manufacturers, added| drug store with @ branch vit himself to-day to the list of those} He would wateh his chan m pianqueqere, have surrendered uncondition-| posiai mon order blanks a Y OoVrmeri ) SO 07 Ma to the Toc od committee | stamping chines. {[t was nittee of Confer and Associations the Greater York Asgociation of Job- bers. He promised to urge them to Ainsolve disband and not to get together in any other form of organt- zation. “In other words,” said Mr. Unter. myer, “you are tired of living in the legal twilight zone.” "said Mr. Hanley, solemnly, but smiling It was stipulated that (he Fastern Supply Aseociation might as a Crodit Bureau WATER METER COMBINE Quit. It was announced that a week's ex- | tension of time had been granted to A. A. Ainsworth, go whom the com- mittee gave until to-day to report the Afesolution or modification of his nine open-price organizations affecting continue MUST building. Mr. Untermyer said that the water-meter combination must g0 out of business altogether. It had no legal excuse for existence and no Feason for existence except to enforce an unfair monopoly. ™r, Untermyer said he thought it was the duty of the committee “to Jearn whether the brick manufac- turers who have pleaded guilty and are asking clemency are not still to-day—continuing their ille tices.” It was arranged that a sub-com- mittee of three should go to Buffalo May 23 to take evidence there, with Leonard Wallstein as counsel if his duties as associate counsel to the Meyer committee permit. Mr. Untermyer suid be wanted to be free to put before the committee more facts about the “Fire Insurance Trust,” which he described as eon- ducting a “hopeless, impossible reign of monapoly and despotism" requiring remedia} legislation. COULDN'T INSTALL WASHBOWLS, The first witness to-day was An- thony Joyce, general sales agent of the Manufacturing Equipment and Engineering Company of Cleveland. He told of bis sorrows in trying to sell patented ready-made washbowls connected in series in New York City. ‘The device was approved by the Building Superintendents of the five boroughs. It cost from 80 to 60 per cent. less than the ordinary wash- bowl, but a general strike was threat- ened in the Pathe Freres plant In ‘Brookiyn when the patent bowls wore delivered there. They were taken away for a time and put back after the rest of the building was completed. : ‘Then came friction with the Master ‘Plumbers’ Asyociation and the Jour- neyman Plumbers’ Union. The master plumbers demanded ‘that Mr. Joyce cease selling conneot- fing piye and other fittings, thus inter- fering with the Master Plumbers’ ‘volume of business. The journeymen plumbers, repre- sented by Herbert Smith of the employing plumbers, demanded that the under fittings of the series of ‘washbowls cast in one piece be each gut off, threaded and connected again Dy union plumbers, “to give the union men more work." Mr. cree refused to cut the cast~ patent bowls were black- although many prac- PATENT thousands of them are used in other cities. Charles Y. Darmstadt, and put ander & euspended sentence as a member of the Bete aberenye A money to forge the limit Last dri nine orders $100 were passed on New York t Sunday many florists cashed th y orders up 0» $100, + and pass them on tradesmen, theatres and other places af | 1 as payment for Mothers’ Day flowers All the blanks used in these last cases (= were stolen from three New York @) drug stores by men who bad posed as porters, Other cities that suf fered are Bridgeport, Cleveland, Chi cago, Cincinnati, Paterson, Rochester, , Syracuse, Albany and Boston. Two alleged membera of the band were caught in New York before tho conspiracy got a good start They deseribed themselves as David Bach- | arach and Theodc Atkins, and last | week they were sentenced to two| years cach at Atlanta Prison. It wag! said they had passed $4,200 worth of | forged money orders.” They "did | Fifth Avenue in a taxicab,” accord- | ing to a Federal oMcial, One with a) pocketfnl of orders stayed in the| taxi, and the other got out with one order, which he passed wherever he could. One favorite “stunt” was to buy! flowers and order them sent to some} actress they didn't know in order to | cash the order. One of the men| finally was caught by a florist at| 160th Street and Broadway, and the other in lower Manhattan. | per hital NA | WANTS MAN DECLARED DEAD Bawar. Schaah Has Been Missing | jor Thirty-EKight Years. William J. Burke, referee, recom: | mends in a report filed to-day with | Burrogate Cohalan that Edward Schaal be judieally declared dead and that his | sister, Mra. Mary Zahn, No. 793 Hudson Avenue, Weat New York, be appointed administratrix of Schaab's estate, which is valued at $21,000, Burke in his report says Schaab has been missing aince 1883. He was then twenty ears old. The last heard from him was when he wrote his mother, he waa in Baltimore working on a oyster seliooner. The police of Baltimore and extensive advertising, failed to find him. ‘The estate consists of pi erty left by his father, who died in 1918. It is in the hands of the Public Administrator. pelt dh Dien of Auto Injurtes. Menkich Sujimodo, forty years old, of No. 44 Weat 57th Street, died at Roosevelt Hospital to-day of injuries Fecelved when he waa struck by an automobile in front of 19 t bith Btreet last Tuesday. Let’s Grote Together! | NE year ago we started build- ing, as an individual, with but one in mind—Growth Thru Service. Upon a firm foundation of character and ability, strength- ened with definite ideals, practical methods and personal | co-opera- tion, we have been slowly but surely rearing a lasting structure. Twenty-two selected clients have been growing with us—growing so rapidly that it has been necessary to increase our facilities in men and equipment. By doing this we are not only able to give better service to our present clients but are just- le) in Fagen icy friends. | ou ore eligible if your proposi- tion is right. It makes no differ- ence whether you are big or small. We're only building in one direc- tion and we'll take you with us. Douglas Wakefield Coutlée | Advertising 1 West 34th Street New York City | Telephone | Fitz Roy 5376 | $] 15° $] 359 THE EVENING WORLD, TUESDAY, MAY i0, $145° 1921. $16°° Reduced to TEN DOLLARS The Big Event This starts the greatest—the most unusual sale of Shoes that New York women have ever known. We have selected from our great stocks and marked at the ridiculously pe — of ie 50,000 pairs of I. ler Sprin; and i Shoes that havetons selling right along for $11.50, $13.50, $14.50, and $16.50. 87 different styles of one and two strap pumps—Louis XIV, Baby Louis and Walking Heels ~—made in all leathers and every conceivable combination of leather and fabric. Shoes suitable for every occa- sionare included in this great sale. The Big Reasons There are three important rea- sons why we commit the sacri lege of offering such seasonable, beautiful I.. Miller shoes with a low price plea. First: A rainy, reluctant Spring season dampened our usual heavy Spring business. Second: Our factories were late in delivering these shoes to our stores. Third: We must clear our shelves for White Shoes before Decoration Day on May 30th. Whether you contemplated buying shoes at this time or not, you cannot afford to overlook this unusual opportunity. lL, MILLER All the shoes in this sale grouped in the three sie-es mentioned below 15 WEST 42nd STREET 1554 BROADWAY 50 CHURCH STREET BROOKLYN 12) Flavmuah Av vieeable and g »y careful dentists, Treat Pyorrh Successfully We 243 W42 our salesmen will ect 5-Pc. Covers Hade to orde sine Shrunk binding. 1 50 Vatue B35 5Pcs.Re-upholstered in latent style tapestes tm it aiton leethe Sie gimp. Main Offi e ard Fa tory 511—ith Ave,, sits. Offer Also Applies to Long Island, Now dersey and Stoten Island

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