The evening world. Newspaper, September 26, 1919, Page 2

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ton soi erly morning. It will go by) the train. way of Kansan City and St, Louia | <Althouch outwatdy the ‘President Remaining dates on the President's | had ap ved to be standing well the schedule were: Wichita and Okla. | ard ordeal of more than three weeks ¥ homa City, to-day; Littie Rock, Ark,,}0f travel and speech-making, it be- and Memphis, Tenn. Sept. 27, and| Came known to-day that for some Louisville, Ky., Sept, 26 and 29. Me | daye he had suffered from headache, STILL DRIFT BACK sp» Was on the oriignal schedule to arrive | He also hax been mich fatigued by cp ta Washington, Sept. 30, the confinement of his special train, Announcement of the canceilation wot remaining dates was made before & crowd of 15,000 which jammed the “Auditorium here. ‘The city was Petowded for the President's visit, |@Xettion 10 maxe his volve heard, . bn aft te atieie | It was declared by members of the x Crowds massed in all the streets ad- | president's purty that one of the or- 2 joining the Auditorium, hoping to/ desis which seamed to be most trying i fateh a glimpse of the executive in On his nerves hoe Jeen the automobile i parades through (be cities he has vis- ae ereee Weare ate vee cen ited. He has travelled many miles The President made forty tunding in his car and waving his interrupted only by brief stops whieh have been spont mostly in riding through crowds und speaking to au- diences 86 1a ax to require all his Allegheny Sheriff and Mc- Keesport Mayor Clash Over Permitting Strikers’ to Meet. has wpeeciies during the tour since leav- ten a reaponne to the cheers of wel- PITTSBURGH, Sept. 26.-—The Car- ine ergy! ip 3 wr nas WASHINGTON, Sept. 26.—Demo-| eRe Steel Company made alt do: nt cand Republican leade ne pent all bi nm nights On | cratic and Republican leaders in t to-day that it is augmenting its suid the return of the Presi Washington would not changy cramme of considering forces everyw 1, Clairton were Its big plants at Braddock and red to be operat- the Sen the Peace Treaty, ( News that be had started home 4 little surprise, as many Sen be J felt that sooner or tater the | ing and travelling strain would affect. Mr. Wilson's strength and force him to seek rest. pole Pi ‘GUMMINS ATTACKS WILSON, BUT OPPOSES SHANTUNG Homest Duquesne, as Ing with larger fore: William Z jstrikers’ lel Foster, secretary of the Committee, de- red the strikers are making prog- ress in many directions and that sev- eral small plants had been forced to National =e spend. He did not give their names. " The American Stect and Wire C P iy | AMENDMENT TO TREATY snd Wie ce ) The Edison Shop | Pany offices gave out word that the i | a aS . fitvation, so far as its plants Is_a Delightfal J) wasinxctox. sop. 2-0n. sno ten #0 far as Ita plants are con. Masi resumption of debate in the Senate; im the Pittaburgh district, ts to-day Senator Cum:nins made a) better to-day than ever, There was speech in which he raid that when Wilson ended his work at the Paris Peace Conference, “the United Staicn Att ddow had not a friend in Furope, Ania or hg Braddock plant of the Amer- Afrlos."" jean Steel and Wire Company an ef- Senator Cumming deplored the at- | fort to start up failed, it was reported tempt of some Senators to charge from that town. When the whistle other Senatora with opposing ‘he blew some laborers responded but not Treaty simply to discredit the Presi-/ in sufMclent numbers to begin opera- no change at the company's works at Cleveland and Chicago, it was anid. dent and to accomplish thelr poll | tions. cal designs | Senator Cummins contended that In Glavsport, near McKeesport, the when the war ended “our exit should Pittsburgh Steet Foundry “Company have beon ax speedy and complete is employing 800 men, ¢ bag peanihie.” This did not mean that tar and the Server- i] HH United tates should have abandoned *PC° Manufacturing Company with tw allies or made a separate pen workers closed down last night. } Ih Germany | Up the Allegheny River there were t ondemning disposition of Shan-|no materiat changes, aceordine te rer tang, Senator Cummins said he want- 4 ed to relieve the American republic |, The sheet mill of the West “trom the eternal odium of @ho Shi ennsylvania Stee] Co. remained tung crime, ‘and from the disgri jclosed to-day, but ail other depart- nassing over Thrace ta Butea"! ments wer said to be in operation. At the Allegheny Steel Co. works the sheet mill was working tn full, and practically all other departments were in operation in varying degrees. There would be many Shantunes, he said, and if the principal associated powers worked in harmony it would mean nothing less than complete and! arbitrary power of the world. As tewbe 5 cb Soiree the principles he had previously an-|'"* material for the Homestead works Be New York nounced and vote against the eom-|F the Carnegie Steel Co. was put » mittee amendment awarding the pros|in operation according to oMciuls at _ vince to China, the plant 1 4 \ |_ The American Sheet and Tin Plate b sie ee UN te When ‘he arose to make the princi- Hy Company said the company’s milla at) 1 pal address of the evenin iy FAD | Farrell would resume next week | (Continued From First Page.) i ketid t rest way to eres ais-! Gary told now the Fitzgerald d CIP A. The Shenango furnaces at sharps- keep them behind the barrier at | ay Re bear welithie: larow arent Py a | vile went into operation also to-day. | Constitution, has beon abridged mJ starting point Teyntaue, and’ he shen bald © a Thousands of men are being paid the Pittsburgh district Bei aie eile is ? minority | “you, as members of the general € Jof at plants, including those in oper-| EXPECT MOVE TO SUSPEND| fixe. (lees Fine radicals | public, must condemn or approve dinints tly, funtshed tH | ation and others that are closed THE STRIKE. the men who are oat because most eet i have talk helponsd upon to say.’ et “te ny | Strikers and non-strikers are "1 qe steel manufacturers say Fitz-| of them believe this is the curtain | Immediately the ph Pept pabey tilid able. 2 Fifth Avenue, 37th and 38th Streets fF ling in the pay tines: sre ming-| atrick welcomes the investixation as| Taiser of an industrial draraa | all over he Foom and shouts of “we Fon Ws 7 : es which will put the laboring man ot eciiiensenamien 4 Py Secretary Foster said the situation | | Way out of un embarrassing situa-| i, control of industr " ee ee ee ‘s c o t! y, the people | + El coatinped'entiurnctore to hv eirieen| car te tp yadentanta theecnalhas| In eerecai cre inaivercrnen ane, | came there was wtaulsarrsst 1 wae] . Olt Great extra Special for Friday and Saturday | ’ - Ff committer, More men were joining | filed to close down the steel indus] tagonvatic, | reminded of how. the Mexicans cat SET TT RT o/atriker >| tc nd this in the face of such con-| tered in remote borde? towns along MISS E S S | J i I S FP |the strikers, ie said, and some small | ‘ty in tHe Pittsburgh distr i Mateet | at tions fax fam about to deserine | the Rilo Grande tn 191¢ when a Texas [4] |piants had been compelied to shur| Ne cannot, the fight 1s lost. Stee Brad esterday, the site of + rode down the main. street 2 Milk Chocolate of OF PE CH BLOOM ri | down executives look for 4 move by Fitz- the Edgar Chomson Steel Works, the ly bound on no more sanguin. Our regular the guods, EXTRA ae A According to reports in Clairton, | attick to drop the strike pending scene of bloody and de tive strike | ary errand than the purchase of a ¥ 5 m1 "i a incidents in the past, the main street! package of smoking tobacco and a Braddock and Rankin many foreign. |(h® President's labor conference on | vi Crowded with ‘strikers. There! packet of brown cigarette papers é | ers ure endeavoring to leave the dis.| °C _& despite us SEASSRERE Vee lw a no evident attempt on the part| And in that connection there is HIGH GRADE GOTHAM — ANSORTED leelak Abd Felden te Boukone stopping the strike is beyon| S| of the authorities ty enforce the law, | xomething quite itumorous about A eau CHOCOLATES ge. Hon Borrow the beauty of nature trict andoreturn to Europe 4s a result Sower. tq. all fairness It must be [Droriaimed by the Sheri in hie fol | William Z Foster who. is leading the | r eo he Pitteburgh » that not more than three persona! strike in this district and who has | ‘The action of State ¢ ald the strikers in. ¢ assemble together in a » : , Leet to add to the charm of youth. other ofcore in forcing the reagan | STC are entitled to 6 ULL nO ae ee oceanic nntea| aay maa wit has ever tied to make mi lathe cae ee nes, Bi age iy pia prc than they have had. They should at| | Mounted State boliowinen Datrotied | the steel milla cloned shops, Copicetioner’s Sunur are Matiraetinely atts \ c ve erm | je, é b meet “with |the thoroughfares, but did not inter- § y, nd presented im seven range 0 beautiful, E EACHBLOOM j “orderly and lawful meetings” since ere bere ieee ee fore with the men on the sidewalks leak fiat an: exnactenearekien eeatt secant g Rifiea n= “SE the strike started, has caused the] ‘i Occasionally jocal policemen made | compelled him to practically strangle 64 ry fl; it f Ve S. Haddock, with the request that{ the city gives them the use of parks whe ere dews hfod, wrote a pamphiet advocating | For exact loration see telephone directory. eq y pa men do hen there is a sidewalk | county authorities afford them pro-| 4nd ube squares and even high | jam. syndicalism, which rises up. hourly The sovcified weight includes the container. er "sfancy. For the warp tection. ‘The troopers maintain that | Mhools. In this district they are de- |) “Why is thie?” I asked a Jnoor| 90, bain Hine 10 get Bg 7 arred from meeting in some bor-|teader, who was showing me through aha Y | = ————=— = |in breaking up the meetings, they|ougha in_their own halls, Drasuc | the borough }foresaw the day when a great union , te seemed to borrow the soft skin ase GaFFyiih GUE @ cecant: ceccinmes THIET On ALe RarECIMAE are DIRE ane eae theca kee: Cenc [ot workers oli” on a Nation-aie FUNERAL DIRECTORS. __ FUNERAL DIRECTORS. e ‘ rit forced here incite resentyient whic ed. “are jist wa stuke would §0 divide soldiers, po- | =o een SS of a ripening, peach, for the weft Hon hy Soe: eheritys th wale! (belay : : ; eritts . t hay break out at any Lime tnto open o Ruther, and ther Heemen and deputy sheriffs ‘that : | wathering of more than three personal “Sysit ' Id be but small i i 1 and club hell out there woul e bul ma units in the dim veil of a morning, mist, at any one point wiibin the strike he eommunity) hawever ts ee oclity ail, d h i 1 haven raat He le conviness the “Has that been done in this strike?*|, Well, in a small way Foster's wish | and wove the two into a fabric According to union representatives| StTik® although. backed by the [1 asiced. BAe Soria tae ST tian eine illi —Left bd Cent: ‘ F . F. of Ly 1# actually an attac a ne unit. of mounted police ionaire e ents w ich needed onl th FM f ithe sheriff has given them pormiasion} upon the Government, and it is eo havent given them a > urgh district. One of these 'y the glow o: to hold indoor meeting within the| doubtful if the pepular mind | \\’ vant a4 as mounted men can scatter an ordi- | We are law abiding. At any minute Al Autumnal col it county, and his promised protection| 0uld, be disabused of that im- [ot “may see those fellows charge |niry crowd, and three of them can By DR. BERTHOLD A. B. inal colors to translate to Jade eee am talking of the , ay va Taasa Arron [mais within five minutes, a gather- for “orderly gatherings” of strikers down th with clubs drawn | melt hy via majority sentiment. ind revolvers ready, trying to incite |inx of the eyes the softness it imparts \n halla, Attempts will be made im-| ‘The Pittsburgh district has gained | Vit Texolvers ready, trying to incite ine Of TOC She was a lady of culture and refinement. mediately to hold such meetings in|'t# prosperity from the working of a ny are letting the ere to the touch. Peachbloom has Communities where. they have here. |D4sle metal—iron ore. Industry: de- Sacer: tee NRE ee SrONae © &O. She had just arranged for the burial of her husband, “| veloped along the line of working in Ainnit helava min sane . CONKLIN.—On Sept, 25, CARRIE, been adapted to every smart tofore been banned or dispersed, the], basic product of nature turns ont |),.4200 i Baleve my Erlend the lamar | ener grom her late residence, No a former millionaire. To-day he had died, penniless, v union leaders announce, rough, straight thinking, one track ‘ ‘ | at 140th St, Baturday morning, | friendless. if re 7 7 : ‘ Ay her i dP Pers told me a litte later tha. te] Weat 1 : suit fashion, sometimes with a eanyor Hearne Male of MoKeewmor|hotween radicallom nnd conscrvatien | nur’ workimén. waiting to g0 Into: the | Charive Borromes ‘ANT possess in this world is fifteen cents,” she i eelat jay that he had as much, 2 Pi d 2 ' a . ry n the Pittsburgh distr : yf milts on t , sroday. Sept, 33, 1019 said; “will you take these and purchase one rose, just oucn of embroi ery, sometimes power as the sheriff of Allegheny} Outsiders, not interested financially | 5 gy came BYDE—On Th Be t 1 1 I I ket?” on . ‘ounty under the Third Class Cities|T otherwise jn the steel industry. | cjead. th at nee, E10 Sth sree one rose, to be placed upon his caske with fur that seems to caress Act find, Ould mot permit the trike | Hones tiene catameunlty, thecer any | Bagin th Mew York Oily: AUAUEEUR LOR: Rarely have { seen such eyes, full of sorrow and the kindred softness of the fabric. Ing tee Ws. M0r8 to old matings) not allowed {9 go tO a stage ut hie agtnmaeread As. Weber Joba inthe oh Year 9 hl \] tender devotion. vity, whethe in the ope he n " In BAG The business pa ete te Jotlce of funeral later within the city, whethe in the open| ueich them by due process of law.| ine, Dusit art of the tow ee “No one is 50 poor, no one so lonely but that he or ina hall The ans $ that in the Pittsour t has a friend in Frank E Your husband will Sizes 14 to 20 years 85.00 to 295,00 MISSES’ SUIT SHOP—Second Floor in the TO STEEL PLANTS known | Pearance, of added industry at aeveral | showing union claims of 100 per cent White'Tiose Deservedly The Largest Selling | ”3) Coylon Packed Tea THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBE ‘DRASTIC RULES ENFORCED TO PREVENT STRIKE VIOLENCE § ER 26, 1919. (MORE MEN WORK “IN HAGD ZONE: UNION CONFENT ‘Labor Leaders ders Cialdi tee Is Almost Wholl¥ Effective in District. x - | CHICAGO, Sept. 26—Despite ap-| {steel mills {n the Chicago district jstatements of directing heads that employers were returning to work in suMecient numbers to permit ope: ovens were in operation, and it wax stated a rail mill soon would be put STR RLWAYS TONIGHT; GONFERENGE FAL vernment to Send Mails by Ae LONI between the rallroad men's represen- tative j attempted on the wage question to-day resulted | “The An agreement to work. At the Illinois Steel Company's | Place to- plant in South Chicago it was stated] pho at 4,000 men were at work and six bias. furnaces, a slab mill and a plate mui | than 60 were running has arranged to have the KE ON BRITISH roplanes——Food by Moto or Trucks. ION, Sept, 26 and the Government for an adjustment of tions in some departments’ wete met] in failure, and a strike on the rail by denials of defections from the} road has been ordered to take effect strikers’ ranks by Iabor leaders. to-night at midnight. At the Gary, Ind, plant of the rh al t United States Steet Corporation a| THe Ollicial announcement on the slab mill and five batteries of coke | breakdown of the negotiations reads: onference failed to arrive at and a strike will take rike w 0,000 men, et pre The bably more government matls ear- OMicials of the latter company 4s-| ried by airplanes, and to have large | poratlo agreed to the arbitration Ste at ney re oeerat De wore | Motarcars from the government | board. | office in The American Legion or mem- jand a very few new men. |services made available for the con-| The statement was sent in writing bership on any of its standing committees nied reports negro strike breakers | veyance of supplies to the big towns; to Judge Gary who, with 100 other big w a byt 3 aad, ab leaders which will be seriously affected, € ne other hand, labor, leade! 4 are the usion men who went on| The locomotive engineers have an- strike were standing fast a nounced that they would join in the} others were coming into the unions.| strike, but it iy stated that the gov- John H. DeYoung, assistant secretary | srnmont has arranged to have many 0; the Chicago district, Issued a tpl? | men who drove engines during the of the men still out at Evanszon,| war make runs on the principal train | Waukegan, Sterling, DeKalb and Jo- | service routes. Het, IL, Bast Chicago, Ind, and Mil |” he strike will ‘ pails bbs | M he team or ele it At Hammond, Ind., according to De | Ways, whetl t Young's table, ‘the strike is 90 per|ig declared in an official statement by cent, effective, 95 per cent. at Indiana | the railroad men Harbor and Gary, Ind. and 9% per sib aoe Oh, Bt eee ee te Ranker Sentenced for $20,000 Theft, GARY, Ind. Sept. 26.—The last of eave es oh the strikers of the United States Stee! | W HAVE 1 wil Corporation here were paid off to- Travis, forme ash of the day. 1 National was sentenced rf wus said that strikers were re-|t vay und three months in the turning to work in small groups; al- sae sak kUhAGe OY though this was denied by union offi- |) 000" i besoin 4 clals. An unofficial estimate placed |704* the number of men at work to-day at ‘pleaded guilty to a « ge of embezzle- between 3,000 and 9,000. _ment_of_ $30,000. World tests against the order and ip one { STEEL STRIKE APPEARS DEADLOCKED, “ACH SIDE WATING OTHER'S MOVE ua that a bip } tor firearms In the héme "| LogT FOUND AND REWARDS I know the above to be true, for | was present when mi A, 1 one A - Kore | Mrs, S. called, L also know what “Camplell Service” changed sin the millg at 5 vowilay in mao, anne anita In Hd RL AE BAR, onal means; the demised is taken from the home, the hotel with women and children flocking to or the apartment to the Campbell Building, Broadway the avenues loading trom the gate at 66th Street, where a separate room is assigned to of he in en vennsylvanta y m mount police, most of them plainly him, there to lie in state with princely honors, There rvice men of the United States the family and friends may come at any hour, day or Mis 9 down ee mela Beraet night, to pay homage to the dear departed, Funeral bes asaabied on the| WANTED-—An experienced| a + will be held in the world-renowned Funeral si roa seurried into th ir nouses| awning cutter and practical Church on the sceond floor of the “Campbell Building and street corner groups dissolved A ar nd si There was no search for trearms] factory man; must be thoroughly | the Campbell Quartette and « master organist enhance und the procedure of changing shifts ‘ kd é Re 7 the beautiful servic in the m was no more tumultuous | efficient; wages, $2,000 a year to than the lunch hour in Unien Sauare-| arts married man preferred; Strange that New Yorkers know so little of this But we had ample opportunity to see ; greatest of all institutions whieh is visited day by out- why thin fu, one willing to move to another, i Jpucay sag sere pest ary leh } The polleemen, ‘and coat] aa a own handweitin of-town people © unique place and { : wore quite inactive: city. Apply Ks where death loses its sting and where nothing remains » mounted — constabuls rodel Ree a eat e pape through the streets warning every. | ©#re of this Paper, ‘ 412 bat b i ft body to get inside fence lines or in-| World side doors where there were no fence lines, We saw only two or three pro The conference differences ’ Wreckage Seen Not From Munxom/not that of the stenmer | Muniste, sixteen days overdue at. Hfayani MOBILE Wreckage|the opinion pf agents, of the Mu sighted _b; Miclero. was! Line, owner of the Missing atilp. A MORAL PRNGPLE, SAYS DBE GARY Would Mean Beginning of an “Upheaval,” Declares Steel Corporation Head. “100 per cent Americanism” The American Legion Is not a political party Is not a tool of a political party Serves no political candidate Declaring that the success of the steel strike probably would mean the beginning of an “upheaval” in this country, Judge B. H. Gary, Chairman of the Board of Directors of the United States Steel Corporation, has flatly rejected he himself Washington despatches had ‘how Strike Leader Fitspatrick formed the Senate Committee that | the steel workers would be willing to refer all their grievances to the arbi- tration of a board selected by Prest- dent Wilson, and would call off the | strike, he believed, if the Steel Cor-, The New York County Organization has , taken a determined stand to maintain the vital principles above indicated by passing the following resolution: arbitration as far as is concerned. told tn- “RESOLVED, that, pursuant to the repeat- _edly announced policy of The American ~ Legion, the New York County Organiza- tion hereby goes on record as being un- alterably opposed to the holding of any by any candidate for public office.’ Join the Legion and help to spread this principle, and to write it into the permanent constitution of. the Legion at Minneapolis, in November. | business men, was a guest last night at a dinner given Baron Kondo, Pres- ident of the Japan Mall Steamship | Company, at the Rite-Carlton. Judge Gary wrote out this answer for the newspaper men: “Tne Board of Directors of the | United States Steel Corporation are ‘the representatives of nearly 150,000 stockholders, including 60,000 to 10,000 Liployees y their servants an be eeigeaaits paella Ma el New York County Organization eae ee of the American Legion lieve Telephone: Murray Hill 9010-3547 our corporauvn Ws under great ] ovi.gauon to the general pave con- ceruing the iweues iWvolved iD We present strike, | ‘In these circumstances 1 would! | Not al present assume to answer the question propouiued to me. Huw- ~ | eve r, 1 will say for myself that ques- tions of mural principle cannot be Jarbitrated nor compromised, and iu hs jy opinion suca questiuns are Lae Paae tariaaeeo eteate vnvacttaae PENNY A POU D PROFIT struggle. 1 also think we cannut oe- ei aaa 3 A | goluate or confer with Mr. Fitevatrick and his assuciates, as union labor leaders, concerning our employees, whom these gentiemen have volun. teered to represent.” Campbell, be buried with ‘truc Campbell servic 1 wreath of roses upon his casket,” CAMPBELL and FUNERAL Goth ,’ and there will lie said Mr. Campbell. sroadwa A.M i}

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