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STAY OUT, DEFYING UNION LEADERS Longshoremen Insist on Changes in Hours and Assert ¢ They Will Not Work, NO TIE-UP ON LINERS. Companies Say They Have » Plenty of Men and Big Ships } Will Sail on Time. Joseph P. Ryan, Vice President of the International Longshoremen’s Union, announced to-day that jobs on Hoboken and Chelsea piers wera being held open for the men, esti- mated at from 6,000 to 12,000. A time limit will be set some time this week, following a conference to start when Anthony J. Chlopec, President of the International, arrives. This would be in a few days, Mr. Ryan said. “The strike has not spread,” he aid, ‘and is limited to a minority of pier workers, In the receat vote on the wage cut, twenty out of twen- ty-nine locals approved; the men on @trike are, of course, the minority who were opposed. They are trying to rule the majority.” The steamship lumbia of the Cunard-Anchor Line, from Glasgow, arrived this morning and docked at 26th Street, North River. Marine Su- perintendent Palfrey said there was no lack of men to dock the boat and he expected no difficulties in unload- ing her. ‘The Boussillon of the French Line, @ second-class ship, docked at 44th Street. The line officials declared they | had all the men needed. ‘The river front from 14th Street north was crowded with men who said they were on strike. They Insisted the companies would know there was a strike when some of the big steam- ships arrived. The Aquitania of the Cunard- Anchor Line is due to sail to-morrow and is being loaded by her own men, according to officials. They expect her to leave on time with a full cargo of 12,000 tons. ‘The Adriatic of the White Star line has twenty-five union men at work cleaning her out. ‘The strikers declared they meant to siay out until they got improved working conditions, They said the wage cut was a small matter, but that they objected to working three hours one shift and thirty the next. They also accused their leaders of failing to see that conditions were im- proved. The men will meet to-day with the idea of organization, and declared they contemplated no picketing be- cause they didn't believe the com- panies could get suitable substitutes, saying men would not work under the conditions they put up with. To back up thelr denials of receiving high vweages, the men carried pay envelopes for some weeks past. These ranged from $18 to $31.60. Everything was orderly along the piers, the only disturbance being when a policeman chased off a re- porter who was asking the recognized leader of the vacationtsts what the men were demanding by way of im- provement in working conditions ees THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 3, 1921, Three New York Girls Who Walked to Coast In Sixty Days, With Only $100 Apiece in Pockets HOLD-UPMENCLUB FOOTPAD TRAPPED ——— $200 Stolen From Register. ant of Two Others. Charles H. Choate, manager of the After two women had been two bandits and brutally beaten be- that eity, small and slight and cause he refused to give them the combination of the safe in the rear of the store this morning. ‘The rob- sured. The other bandit stood near- wpon her. FAX PINs MIRKOED-KARFP ESTHER_EIS MANAG MAJORITY OF WOMEN VOTERS ARE FROM EDUCATED AREAS AS SHOWN IN ENROLMENT peeasty Three Times as Many as Vote in the Tenement Section Were Counted in the Better Districts. RUSH NEW SUBWAYS ISTHEAIM OF THE TRANSIT BOARD ahues| ana reflne-i Tf Plan Is Accepted $230,000,- 000 Will Be Released for THREE N. V. GIRLS WALK 10 PACIFIC COAST IN 60 DAYS Only Had $100 ces, W orked| | zi and Even “Hopped” Freights. ucated and well-read woman, 8 shown by a careful survey of the jon and enrollment lists of and the poll books of the This is the and Esther who, since thelr days of} short dresses, have been wont to hike The Bvening World, the publicity of the polls and the contamination of] to the unexplored byways of Greater (GntiAR Crom Their dresses are still) short, but they have lengthened their) wuybing shoulders with plain people| despatch was received! tne paliot box.” at bull of the feminine vote San Francisco i cast in those election | y Fink, Mildred K Fisman, nineteen, eighteen and sev- respectively, West 12th Street, h of this city ment } redominate The survey upon which this conclu- by. Suddenly the bandit standing up The plan was tried § tried to open the safe. Failing, they he was Arthur Nash of Amenia, removed the gag from Choate's Y., adding that his family lived mouth and threatened to kill him jf Mineola, L. 1. Chief Harmon sald he did not divulge the combination, Nash told him he had been tn an tn- Choate steadfastly refused. The rob- stitution for treatment for epileptic bers then began beating their fists. n up with fits. According to the Chief, Yash bandits helped themselves to several other two women on Thursd Choate managed to free himself and way, wWho' refused to gi notified the police by telephone. The to the police. The sve Jack the robbers left behind, Choate nue. In each ca SS SERS pase ie HUGE DROP SHOWN | 'ciReMAN’S HOOCH HUNT —Violent Flurries on Ex- | mam Who Interfered Wan change ‘Here. Hit in Bye. ‘the lowest conditisn report tn’ ihe !, Gere Fowler, twenty-five, of : Kingsbridge Terra history of American cotton growiDE 4 ¢ineman. attac [or Agriculture, which placed the crop early to-day at Fortham Road at 42.2 per cent. of norma res in the forecast, which now places the charge of felonious assault. | total crop at 6,537,000 equivalent 300- pound bales, ‘This, however, was weil eye 40 per cent. of normal, As a result, so. One autolat objected and ed covered several sections each of which is largely Construction. A gypsy fortune three months ago that Mil would take a long journey ¢ mer had passed, They each had $100 when they bid Mer predicted new plans of Commission are not accepted by the companies and the city, the Transit | » private house; it was learned ure above the average, ich live those who least educational adyan- In each of thes their bank rolls} t various tasks | to continue their trip. m consider- * freight cars and supplemented ability of no more new sub. by working to get money Picking berries netted e sections the be adopted ection districts the total yote amount to be expended at the rate of about $50,000,000 a year, The Commission is planning to be immediately Kind gentlemen offered them lifts took them in for the and comforted their weary minds and nights and fed private house” sections the wom- an yote was ections it was 85, while in the * sections it was 26 rst two sections of yote in the average the woman vote y : e suffering traffic | congestion, and to this end it is plan- | IN THIS GEORGIA TOWN. epentevescintermene: ull ——- | | i] According to their Mildred and Esther are pretty |: Fay and Esther are decided bt! while Mildred Js a brunette. always been interested in * that the future may be taken In a few weeks public ston distriet there cussion as to what sections of ‘e in greatest need of ad- ditional facilities. one of their accomplishm« [wHaT’s GOING ON HERE} y “‘Qany of the extibite at the New York * Fiectrical Show will be sent around the world on the St, Louls, leaving In Jan- vary, to show American manufact first hand to the business men of the world, Willlam J. Flynn, the Federal Secret a private detect! rary offices at No. 116 Nassau Apia men worked under him in Gov- ernment service. Archbishop Hayes will prestde and at the v Guild moration < ary ‘ death of Dar Ort 10, In the ¢ ransit claims in the ove been red SLR oF reault of an Int mpal sti lee and waste tr nandling fight, the Pennsylvania Railroad an- formerly Chief of ervice, has started Vat the Instance of G t to extend censors fiftlett an Pu vclation, in Merchants 4 nor of Viscount uber lunche will be hel at noon in the grand ballroom wtel Astor exhibition House, £ Bast 43th Street Hilblo' th: at ne nfere meet In Wasuing another Assistant Di n who Is to make the wr- When the girls shook the Manhattan from their feet they we | garbed in knickerbocke y carried a tent, © election district ALLEGED BANDITS SEIZED IN AUTO CHASE IN NASSAU. |; [One Hpla Sata to Be part of the 16th 4 f other Assem- hatchet at her belt. dik US 2 AS were not to lift firewood to cook their Bee eney with kemnes | yomen to each 100 n letters they as partisans, ig the right) rsons and they , oF about $9) to-day on thetr perilous car had been left The officers gave Badin = ot HAD BEEN IN EARTHQUAKE; of Kas a SLEPT IN GAS BLOV/-UP. average elp¢ or 47 women t tio of 144 women to euch nent” sections, | |BURGLARS CRACK SAFE: GNE SUSPECT CAUGHT jvatith ts Aut msrwiy’ mh $s and other on district | and 171 women, Fear of Shooting Women Prevents! iceman Firing at Rob TWO WOMEN DIE IN AUTO | RACING TRAIN FOR CROSSING | resistra about $3 women to each 100 men. joon of Frank M Ughth Avenue, trance and the three out into Eighth Avenue with his revo! Men Infure ‘voted at the primaries this year 102 but did injured when the . then run over ceed the women neurly three to one, glare’ touls weie lying about, cotton exchange trading went through | wild period and unusual excitement | prevailed on the local exchange floor. Because of the general expectation that the cotton report would be as low as 40 per cent., cotton opened up 2% to 6 points, or $1.25 to $2.75 a bale higher, and ina few moments sold up 119 to 180 points, or $5.95 to $6. ‘bale, higher, as compared with 's close. Then came the ment’s report of 42.2 per cent, and the ma ‘ket burst wide open, selling off 160 to 195 points, $7.50 to $9.75 per fluctuation was in De | about his right to rearoh ¢ he said Fowler struck him vember cotton. —_— NUBODY OWES ANYTHING One Fellow Wax S11 to the Bad, but He Paid Up. Klan, James W. MeMillin of that town deelared to-day when he arrived from | Scotland on the Columbla of the | Cunard-Anchor Line, Mr. MoMillar who inanufactures brick and owns 5 eral pla in Geu is seventy- | and has lived tn Morgan and Baldwin Counttes for fifty-thrae | Newark Shoe Store Manager Policeman’s Wife Walks Dark Refuses to Open Vault— Street as “Bait” for Assail- ers’ Week in that city at 8 0’ Beck-Haszard shoe store at Spring- tacked in White Plains, their assall- field Avenue and Howard Street, ant evidently bent on robbery, Mrs. Newark, was gagged and bound by Henry O'Dell, wife of a policeman of |nentative business men fr obviously easy victim for any high- wayman, volunteered to walk unes bers took $200 from the cash register corted in the dark streets where the and escaped in a taxicab, other two had been waylald as “bait” Choate was standing in front of the for the miscreant. But Chief of Po store when the two men entered and lice Harmon, Lieut. Joyce and Mrs asked for 9 pair of shoes, One of the O’Dell's husband promised to skulk bandits had the size of his foot mea- in doorways and keep a closa eye turday night struck Choate on the head with a and a short time after Mrs, O'Deii blackjack. Tho pair then tled started out @ man sprang from some Choate's hands and feet with shoe bushes and grabbed her. Instantly laces they had taken from a box and the policemen were on him, Ho said ‘There was $2,100 In the safe, The! mitted having tried to hold up the y and boxes of shoes after emptying the Friday nights. The first attack wo cash register. on an aged woman in South Broad- » her name nd was Mis police found the fron end of the black. Villient Clock in Mamaroneck A the man was! went to the City Hospital, frightened off before he could rob his | IN YIELD OF COTTON LEADS TO HIS ARREST ‘Crop prose Biers 500,000 Bales Fowler fearchea Autos and Pottce-| the Bronx ed to Hook and Lad- was Issued to-day by the Department jeq No, 3, in 13th Street, was arrested | This rep- Southern Boulevard by Patrolman Aleck nts a reduction of 500,000 bales Schmidt of the Bronx Park Station on a 4 ; Schmidt made the charge against Fowler, saying the fireman hit tn the According to Schmidt, Fowler was above the average expectations, stopping autos and searching them for| which placed the condition report at jiquor, saying ho was authorized to do called Sehmidt. The patrolman asked Fowler “and then ‘Mayor Proposes | ANDLORDBARSHIM VICTIMPROTECTING BY WOMAN DECOY Aé@tinemptoued. TSO TENANTIS EMPLOVERSSAFE INWHITEPLANS Newark Committee Meets To-| Day to Stimulate Trade and PANPED ON PORCH Relieve the Idle. Mayor Alexander Archibald of New-| President of Realty Company ark will complete the plana for ¥w-! Said to Have Accepted De- the Robert Treat Hotel this afters | posit but Refuses Tenancy, noon when he calls together his Com- A summons was issued for to-day by | Magistrate Hatting in the Moerisanta of work. He wil! also advance his|Court for the officers of the Roemer plan for a “Paint-Up, Clean-Up and| Realty Company, landlonis of the Ropair Week” campaign as an im-| apartment house at No. 67 Bast 160th portant part of Newe plan to|Street, on the complaint of Henry trade and relieve the un-| MeCusker, a chauffeur, who unt!! Oct, employment situation 1 lived in Hancock Avenue, Yonkers, he Mayor is urging all citizens, | Because of the Jewish holidays a law- firms and corporations to make a/yer for the Roemer Realty Company special effort to open up all avenves|obtained & postponement — until} of employment for worthy men and | Wednesday. women, Here are some of the things| In the meantime McCusker, hie Suggested that may help the situa-|wife and two children are living on mittee of Sixty, comprised of repre- m all Hines stim tion |the temporarily sereened-in front Paint homes, other buildings and |porch of the home of their friend, fences. Mrs, Della McLaughlin, at No. 1519 Repair everything that needs It Inwood Avenue, with a vanioad of Take down and paint fly screens, |farniture piled on the sidewalk, Fix boilers and furnaces for winter, Pe CRA UI es told MS Ung that he made an agreement with Min cellars. Mrs. A. Sulzella, the janitress of the an vacant lots and premises, Rosner apartment, Sept. 18 to oe ding to Muyo chibald, big a flat there Oct. 1 and paid @ id Peace coh " sit of $10. His wife visited the ? oe place last week and scrubbed It. little thi that need atten- When he appeared Saturday morn- tion and he su s the slogan: | ing with his family and furniture he attention to Jittle things. He] Was confronted by a man who sald aaiae antes eis he Was ident of the realty com- requests property owners to 4K | pany and barred him from entering, themselves the following: on the ground that Mrs, Salzella had Do my windows need cleaning? no authority to rent the apartment. McCusker sald, denied statement and sald she | ed many of the other apai Are the holes in (lie driveway filled?| ments and that the owners had ac- aie thalnooe lenice opted MoCusker's deposit without nie , +] question, Any fenc | McCusker said he offered to pay @ Any grass seed or other vlanting igher rental but was unable to get to do? | the landlord to let him in or to give Do the | back the depostt. dion eee Do the cellings need repairin Do ithe Moors oF Moor ‘thos , WOOD ALCOHOL KILLS ane TWO MEN IN JERSEY. $2 BILL ALTERED TO $20, Auother Is Reported to Be in a Sertons Condition, RESTAURANT MAN IS HELD. | Two Whippany, N. J. men are dead and another is in a serlows condition Catlag, [88 @ Petult, the police say, of drinklag o Colmer) wood alcohol, Adolph Smith died at owner of a cotfee| his ho: rly to-day, a few hours Catharin » Unrew | after Burke died, ‘Tony cellar on Catharine | Andowsky ts reported to be In a critical Street as Pol Daniel Smith | condition: was taking him yak Sta-| ‘The three men bought a bottle of tion to-day after a fight in front of the | what they believed to be liquor in Mal- cal tsmunnige pardis, N. J. Saturday night, accord to the police. After drinking some Another pole n held the prisoner tthe men became il. Part of the while Smith searched the cellar and te of the bottle they drank trom rach. a dcliay bi cases n sent to New for chemical wind a $2 dollar bill which th 0 Tho police are holding Nicho- made to look lke a $20 mote. Denarlo, ovis of Mulapardis, the store: of the altered ombs Court | the per who is suspected of havin al author iden Mille at Whippany, was the father tule Are there any broken windows needing repair? needing re walls need papering? by Policeman After Pets= thing into who denied all knowled; money, Was taken to t to be turned over to the Fed iquor”” sinfthe a. fireman tn ‘the [ities on a charge of counterfolting of elght children, ) Try Lifebuoy See the improvement it will make in your Piden wed of hn nee tn Soar skin in that short time. years. H t abr to attend iden wedding of his sister in "We never have had a lyn and we never have had any trouble dn Mills dgeville “id Mr Last Hie move lAnts & to seo uch MOY was owe nd. ‘There was iy one debtor In the town, Thet fol- ne owed $11. Whi 6 debating vat to do shout Fin and i the mone the town per cent, hone kind of a vo hasn't any fu Heater Explonton Hated Old Ned, Mr. and Mrs, O'Brien red On and Mra, Thomas O'Tirlon 694 Bast 1 n San ranctsco dur and the fire th s not any excitement on asion ras ia ease | to-day when & gas heater | on of the heate famil mal but | " and | Hiren, who were asleep upstairs, An | juvalanche of chimney bri-ks hurlel by Xplosion into the wdjelning yard of 1M i} JOSEPH HART, \ VAUDEVILLE | HEADLINER, DIES SUDDENLY. | | rrie De Mav When He # ith Her Husband Ie » Apoplexy. Joseph Hart of Halen and Hart, eudiiners in vaudeville and of later a producer of sketches, died sud only this morning of @ stroke of apo- | Ma Yin hls nt, No, 200 Weat 54th Stree De Mir, waste when | wa lite » Pure, unbleached, palm oil gives Lifebuoy its red color. ee =< ues See