The evening world. Newspaper, November 14, 1921, Page 8

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60,000 WALK OUT OF 2,000 SHOPS IN DAY, NOVEMBER 14, pens, TN D fenen a crowd of hysterical women sheets, blankets, an old coat nere] EARLY MORNING SNOW lf IN BLAZE pushe@ him ef4£ He fell one floor and there, or an overcoat, were given 7 and caught the evoape balcony be- FIRST IN THE City temporary refuge on the second floor of the Post OMce building. The New - low and hung on until rescued, de-| york Hospital sent over a load o kes Fall an Hour Refore They = é . spite the tearing of the Mesh on his/ blankets and food was supplied by | ‘Tarn Into Rain. | hands and many. bruises. the police. New York's first snowfall of the sea- ae - the fol- THE EVENING WORLD, MON turers’ Anoclation, | lowing mtatement) “The atrike of garment workers was! isaned | fully 60 per cent. of the workera re- tuned to go out, pledging thetr loyalty to thelr employers. These workers Policeman Galvin of the Weat 20th] wan aque muent (hay tere taken {| gon arrived shortly after midnight : will not go out on strike unless In. Street Station in several attempts to| Keilsy, and given temporary. quar. | for abot half an hour changed the au- timldated. ‘The workers remaining on get into the haliway during the fire| ters uatil the problem of what to do|tumn brown foliage of the parks to . [the Job express complete satisfaction was scérched and suffered from with them te solved. They have no| white | ® | 19 West 34th Street—New York ae | wiih tHe. ebinteOduatlon of plese Work, iaancaleaming amoue, jome, mo money, and everything else; The fakes fell until 1 lock this . 5 ; footy % " they had was burned. They were too| morning and then gave was to rain, ‘ 3 (Contiuned From First Page) | fealising that 1 moans tncreased) — (Contiuned From First Page.) When “Smoky Joe” Martin arrived,| hysterical to ald the police In listing | mormne and ten wave was to ran, Sale Also at Our Brooklyn &9 Newark Stores earnings for them. The strike will be on the second larm, the fire was! the mii short-llved,” The last hope of averting the strike vanished Iast right when Louis Lus- tig, President of the Cloak, Sult and ing. make one hurry home and shovel more Sergt. Joseph Unger of the Wost| coal Into the furnace or send that order 20th Street Station purchased hot cof. | to the coal m fee and sandwiches for those reacuvd | = from the fire, with money contrib-{ uted by policemen. When the police- | men learned that the families had not | a nickel among them with which to| buy thelr next meal, the hat was| raging throughout the whole hou: And firemen could not enter. He sent them Into the toft buildings on either side and they poured water down through the roof until they had it under control. When able to get inside, firemen |off from both stairs and the fire escapes, which were in the rear. On | the coping just above the ground ‘was neither truculent nor disturbing, rathér the expression of their faith in what they were doing and In the spacers wh) tiae omtered 1% the | Skint Manufacturers’ Protective An- For the workers ve NA ORION sociation, announced the employers oe tell dade fe were firm in thelr determination to floor stores were fifteen women and children. The three clerks carried PE are Hate natia Hie <5 eaaiate passed again and more relief money | _/tagt dl aN debt abled Gi \ Jes-| estore the plecework system “for the | °F aAsisted all to the street. found the stairs had been burned! raised. ignated for the mec Meet vimme:| vood of thé industry and the benefit Fireman Hannon, in Acting Bat-|away from top to bottom, and they| “Smoky Joe” Martin found in the In this| street several life insurance policies, | $25 in money and a gold watch that} apparently had been thrown from! windows early in the fire by excited | tenants, eo ' diately followed ; district are single factori« ploy thousands, In the ( tre Capitol at No, 498 Seventh of the public.” “| The union leaders ordered the strike _|committces to distribute, early to-day, | posters headed “General ike De- talion Chief McGuire's automobile, was firet of the firemen to arrive. Four women were in third floor win- had to use ladders to reach the var- fous apartments. ‘ Two hours after the fire was dis- — nue, for instance, there are about| Posters Headed “General dows, Hannon went up the Post SHOdONE Hoohe | Die Siglitee (abe eG j 106 Madison Avenue, and in the strus-|Yember, at 10 o'clock, not one minute them down to others, who carried Whine areenes rata tes rallee AS BUSY BURGLAR} Genuine Victrola | ' ture at No. 99 Madison Avenue, Thi Pulls Ue your Calecune rid them, suffering from bieteatd scratches Chiet phil dent the React | wa | in Period Consolg | ' workers here, as elsewheer, marched | & ols, | and contusions, into the Post Office. ri 5 | . | Jeut. | Another Yo } } out without hurry and, forming them-|orEanized cloakmakers'fashlon march They were four alaters, Mra. Theresa | S@¥*4 ee Nudgee ie Seater other Youth and Man Arrested | Terms as { selves automatically In jine on the|t the various halls designated by | van Mosgebelde, elghteen, a bride of |e house, and a as Leader of Long Island | Low as sidewalwk, marched southward | your union three days, whose husband works at| "00m on the fourth Moor were four | Robber Band Both at 23d Street and in Union| Benjarain Schlesinger, President of /night, and Carmine, Lora ana| ther bodies of adults. The body of| hhh Square there might have been con-|the International Ladies! Garment| Georgette Rodriguen’ thirty-three, | tte DOY was in the room where the| ne need for vigilantes tn free | $ gestion and confusion had the work-| Workers’ Union, said they had $3,000,-| twenty-two and nineteen years old) YOman was rescued. A baby's Cay | port, Rockville Center and Baldwin, | | ers not seemed determined to carry |000 in their treasury and were pre-| respectively. Nedlctie the others reached/y, 7, appears to be over. The po- out the orders of the leaders to pro-| pared to hold out twenty weeks !f| when Truck No. 12 arrived Bernado e, uy |v have arrested Jacob M. Post, Down | ceed without disturbance or demon-| necessary. The employers predicted| ping, nude except for trousers, was naires Spee an esegay= 4) fourteen, of No. 404 South Main pee stration to {heir destinations. Great|most of the workers would stick to| oinging by his fingere to a third-|™ a ae oe i a thes na | treet Albert Kruger,'a few years OPEN EVENINGS | crowds came together at both these/thelr Jobs, because they ean make|gtory window ledge. The firemen| Drench Pos! Oiice was turne’ tate SA older, and are looking for Leonard It unable to all, mail this places, put they mingled s much | more money under the piecework #Y8-| spouted to him to hold on and raised | me eTeCney Hospital aud surgeons from! post, seventeen, a dousin of Jacob. Coupon to-day. ee as thelr crossing paths necessitated and went on quietly to the halls. | Matthews, thirty, married and living | | a life net. But just before they had a vi ¢ i 0 | There were deputy sheriff and |day on a week work system. Manufac-|tinighed preparaitons to avo him hial gory ,camiles living to the rear of] in South Bayview Avenue, Freeport. | Kindly, eid me further ine uniformed police at the halls, but] turers declare the plece work system the burning building were sent to the) The post boy, the police say, hus | AEG Viekole coi there was no need for them, The sizikors wstered and: took thelr eents tem. la thirty-five-foot ladder and spread Workers now are paid so much a strength gave way and he craghed to the street. He was taken to Betle- vue with « fractured skull and other 1s more profitable for the industrious worker and more productive for the three ambulances ministered to the! injured and those overcome by smoke, | street by the police. Chief Medical Examiner Norris be- They have also arested Andrew R. confessed to a score of housebreak- ings and burglaries of stores. He W-11-16 Wurlitzer, 120 W. 424 St. Console Victroia Offer, 10) assigned te pm a c ‘ar. an investigation immediately " Addrem ... ‘ i Hntened’ tothe apeccties of Uielr| characterize the plesewerk aystew we | Muries. Ho ded two hours iatex. after the bullding had been aearched.| ray the places and ald for doing to ° # leaders which told them all about | unjust. By this time all kinds of ladders! apparently the fire started in the|y Matthews. The police say they Handsome Coats With a the reasoas for the strike, what it were being placed in position and|pasement and burned away most of| recovered loot from a store In the| * : Oe advan’ Just what effect the strike willhave/iite nets wero ready, but no onelthe stairs before the tenants were Boal banana fio nt | cs ee eat upon the consumer is problematical.| would jump. Several were taken rei Pee vec ine Heme Semmes © Every precaution was taken by the shop chairmen to see that no one not a worker entered the halls. This was part of the organization of the strike, because each of the chairnien had a card with the number of his workers written on it and these were checked off as they entered. When the meetings were ended the strikers were told that they must re- port to-morrow morning and they would then receive individual cards. After that they must report at their respective halls every morning, when the cards would be punched to indi- cate attendance ang loyalty. The shop Chairmen had meetings Disinterested observers jn touch with the situation said it would have little effect upon the price of clothing, al- though, if the strike is prolonged it undoubtedly will affect the supply for next year. ¥ The Amalgamated Clothing Work- ers and other unions have promised to ald the International by contribu- down an elghty-five-foot ladder by firemen. Fireman Patrick J. Foley, Engine No. 1%, heard scteams from the top floor rear, and fighting his way up a fire escape he found a woman just as sho fell unconscious on the floor beside her window. He carried her down the fons from their members. fire-escape while comrades kept a hose playing on them, and she was taken to Bellevue in a dying condition from burns anil smoke. She is believed to be the mother of the boy whose body was found, Indilean Mullano, HAD HIM IN JAIL TWICE; POLICE SEEK HIM AGAIN Federal Aut . Want Escaped 01 Prisoner.» | A request to keep a sharp outlook | twenty-five, who lived alone on the top floor, was on awakened. When the cellar was explored, a cat was found floating around in the water on a box. It made a bee line for the street and disappeared. ‘The rescued men, women and chil- dren, hysterical and garbed only In of Matthews. Kruger, the police say, has named a burglary in which the Post boy was interested and their deduction is he, too, was hired by Matthew They wil] have an examination Nov. 22. Pianos — Musical Instruments 120 West 42d St. Between Biway @ Gth Av OPPENHEIM, CLLINS & G 34th Street—New York Large Collars of Fur Only at the Bedell Shop could one expect to find coats at this price withsuchreal distinction Suede Cloth. Most of them tothem. The styles in this have collars of genuine fur, group have dash and originali- but some are plain. The ty—are made of fine warmth- coats are silk lined and in- i v peur rWelettceatinet a1 terlined and are offered inthe finished and fur trimmed as wanted colors for Winter. good coats should be. $ 2 WA) $ 39: 75 ‘Tomorrow brings many inter- esting new models developed from Velour, Bolivia and 4 this afternoon to arrange for the|f! Milton Solomon, thirty, of 75th the fire escape trying to get down . « picketing which starts to-morrow at| Street and Amierdam Avenue, repre: O fferin Smart Froc ry To'clock. This will"be continued dally ‘ - E. . Ss g SU ec csst nos in the Harelen wall ate at one ck OLIVETTE Two Exceptional Sales— Tuesday . \ o'clock at night. It is estimated that| Mann act, was received to-day by the At E. tra al 7, t « about 16,000 pickets will be necessary |New York police from Newark, O. Cold Cream Face Xi or tary ices ' to man all the 3,000 shops in the city. The car of Louls Edgar of Bretton POWD ER Although the heads of the organi- zation of workers stated their confi- @ence in the unantmity+with which they would to the strike Hall, 86th Street and Broadway, which was driven by Georgo Duffy, his chauf- feur, disappeared on July 25 from Bliz- abethtown, N. J., and later Solomon waa arrested near Columbus, O., while (It Btays On) Tt possesses just enough cold cream 500 Fur-trimmed Coats 4 Wraps nd it Oh ° | fe ; ie cuision he strike | Griving the car it was sid. 'I6 ihe car te make it cling For Women and Misses Dresses at $19.75 are not to be ' order, e employers, on the of was a New York girl. Duffy was nac- giving @ o scotfed at when such pleasing 4 hand, were equally confident that | cused of complicity inthe theft of the natural look, —pro- rete ana ae ; there would be disaffection in the | {utomoblle. | Bolomon broke jail before teeting your skin f gs as these are possible. elther the Federal or statg authorities ry They are in good styles— ranks of the workers. After recely- | could bring him to trial from dust, wind J gi styles jater fing reports from 300 factories in Madison, Fifth and Seventh Avenues and the side streets between, A. E. Lefcourt, representing the Manufac- Arrested charged with stealin; was extradited by to Newark, O., but. from the jail on the Mann a in Philadelphia, another car, he ‘ederal authorities managed to flee in before facing trial charge. and cold. In all popular shade —S0e and $1 bores. Sold by all Drug. Dept. Stores vertu Shops. id Taken from Regular Stock Actual Conservative Values to 85.00 68.00 quite different from the flashy type customary to the price— and are made of very nice Tricotine, Serge and also in desirable Silks. Their first time at— om | 9g: 75 Blouse-back Wraps, Capes and Coats in semi-fitted, straight-line and belted styles, of rich Panvelaine, Pollyanna and Normandie; richly Fur trimmed. ‘These dresses we are very proud of! In fact, they set a new standard entirely—for they are as attractive and original as the haughtiest offerings on Fifth Avenue at twice the price. In stunning cloth and silk materials. a Women’s Dept.—2nd Floor Misses’ Dept.—3rd Floor Linens for Thanksgiving at Prices of Special Interest { i grace your Thanksgiving table we have a lerge variety of Cloths—of Pure Linen, of course—that are a little longer than usual. Some of these are at extremely low prices—all are most moderate. Go to See The World’s Exhibit At the National Health Exposition, in - the Grand Central Palace, every afternoon and evening this week. Cloths ‘ds. $10.00, 10.75, 13.00 each, up. 234x3 yds. $13.75, 15.50, 19.00 each, up. 2x3 yds. $12.75, 14.00, 16.75 each, up. 244x3}4yds.$21.00,25.50,27.00 eachup. yds. $15.00, 18.00, 22.00 each up. Dinner Napkins $9.75 doz., and up. A Special Purchase s bd 350 Misses’ Dresses We carry also in stock a variety of Cloths and Napkins already hemmed and laundered—ready for immediate use. Sizes 14,16 and 18 Years. Also Suttable for Small Women to 36 Bust Fancy Linens Exquisitely embroidered on superior grades of Pure Linen, these Tea and Luncheon Cloths, Scarfs, Napkins and complete Sets will at once commend themselves to the Housewife making her Thanksgiving selections. Wonderful action pictures (60x40 inches) of the School Athletics that THE SUN- DAY WORLD founded in 1906 and now maintains in 175 New York,Schools. Actual Values to 29.75 13.75 Luncheon and Tea Cloths, Scarfs, etc., Italian Cutwork and Embroidery 5 of Italian Linen with two rows of Square Luncheon Sets of 13 pieces 4 Fancy Stitching. A few popular sizes: $13.75 set. i 2 Tea Cloths 36x36 in. $5.00 each. 13x13 in. Napkins to match, $17.50 | Of Cant Cc Rosh Colored prools showing how THE SUN- e: Scarfs 18x54 in. 5.50 each, dozen. IE OE SEEDS Seeners! DAY WORLD Comics are printed. Booth 251 in the Mezzanine—ask for a Puzzle Card : Napkins 14x14 in. 16.50 doz. Luncheon Set, 13 pieces, $25.00 set. Crepe de Chine, Tricotine and Poiret Twill — representative of the season’s smartest styles Mosaic Tea Napkins, on fine Irish Linen, $7.50 dozen, ’ Fifth Avenue, 34th and 33d Streets Misses’ Dress Dept.—3rd Floor mia eww

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