The evening world. Newspaper, October 13, 1919, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

ee er ee ate. eee + Harbor this afternoon > these was towing coal, 7 After the Port and Terminal Work- rv meeting at Jersey City, Joseph StaAton, business manager of the lo+ Al, Made thie statement “The men voted unanimously to continiie the strike and they an- sWered offectively the charge made Dy A. J. Stone that they were strik- fh¢ In violation of ah agréeinént. Mr. Btohe has among his records the Writteh protest of this local against and none of Secretary of Labur Wilson that he feels certain the strike end to-mortow, The tipon by the cotimiasion. votes of the delegates the long#loremeh—with the taken up again on Dec coat Of living by that date the March agreement to which he tes! ‘The longshbreinen have virtually ferred. | been promised that they will obtain “There were 3,000 at the meeting, |another ad¥ance as the result of the Dut our whole striking force is 4,000.| Hecember conference, In the me ‘The demands are for a % per cent | time the Wa Wage increase, thy eight the six-day week, seven days’ vacns/and accotints and statements of tion per year with pay, and the fe-| steamship companies, which assert inatatement of all strikers without |that they are unable to meet the prejudice “in the course of the meeting seV-| ship workers eral men gave itemized budgets of g@MpPERS FIRM FOR CARRYING their living costs and showed that OUT WORKERS’ ARGEEMENTS. after payitie for the bate necessities i + Vv. O'Cohfor received the fél- hey had not a dime left for a morieliowing etter to-day from Bamuel show. jompers, Pre tof the American STONE SAYS MEN MUST RETURN ee enn att et 12 TO WORK. ration of Labor, date: j mn: Stanton and President Abel of the iw get eg ge NEE union called on A. J. Stone Chair- bb i state members of yout otmatilai- ferenee of the Hallroad Administra-| [On ar OO tl nal Adjuiat- tion with a written statement out-| 2Wahd of the Fh lining the action of the Jersey City! ment Commission Feceives Md utive Council in session in meeting and presenting certain de | | Washington considered this tele mands. Mr. Stone refused to # ; them and they Hurtiea to No. 26 Pate, &*im ahd decided: Place tc tepoft. Btone sald, “Phat it is not in province of the Bkectitive Cotunell to Inject later: “The meb must return to work bes fore their wage demanda will be con- | sidered. We have promised to give immediate consideration to their de- mands if they do return to work, but we canhot give axsurance that their demands will be granted, They struck i violation of thelr agreeinent.” Clearing of the outlook tn the fong- whoretnen's strike followed n storin Sunday and Binday night in the vars itwelf {Hto a athietly trate strugelt between factions in a national or The dispute who its intérnational unton. jd be golved by the power to ruled ahd decisions “But on the question herence to contracts the Americ Fetleration of Labor hag taken strong grotind, In 1904 the con- Velition deelared unafitously the enforce fous locals of tiie union. T. V. O'Con- “We wish If the strongest nor, thY International President, who| /@neuace possible to express our has deen against the strike from the] Teeret that any organization of start ‘betilise it was in violation of | Workingmen should fail to rigidly {he Agreement of the union to ablde| Athere to a contract entered into by the decision of the Unitea| With employers of its members Stated Wage Adjustment Gommis.| Afd we believe it essential to gion, fought his way against radical) Ue upon trade unionists the @bavlute neeéssity of hviding con- tracts between them and their eniployers inviolate,’ “If the Loigehoremen agreed to abide by the award they have by ALFIKIAK Vidlated Ofte of the fun- damental principles of the Amer- jean Federation of Labor, The agreement to abide by the award Was a sacfed contract io actept t. We, therefore, hope _ that Opposition hour a! hour at meét- ings and in individual arguments and to-day he appoafé to have his uflon well in hand, although the I. W. W. element, with headquartets at No. 166 Sackett Street, Brooklyn, will probably try to continu® the strike, ‘This vutfit appears to number abqut 1,000 men, all Italians, few of whom aré citizens of the United States, ‘OR years have been bidding these writers. . writer and said: latest. to have them. News the best fiction publish it firs of these Super-Stories. They a8 fast as we can run —an installment every day. Wage Adjustment Commission, wired to-day will | pnditions will | be that the men will accept the wage | OT FA 0 Ck navance dF ave cente an nour agress| NOT EAGER TO FLY BACK against the —_-_- representing hder standing that the question is to be it thete hae been no appreciable decréase in the ¢ Adjustinert Commis jour day, | ston Will go carefully into the books j wage demands of the dock and steam. . Polles Captain ¢ the magazines fainst each other for the stories of Then The Newe went to each “We want your best—and ‘They came bigh,, but we had or we ‘were determined to publish in The being published in America—and to |/ Now we have on hand thirty | will appear, for the first time in any magazine or newspaper, em— ofie or two complete each ar THE EVENING WORLD, MONDAY OCTOBER 13, 1919. sin vn] FIRST WESTERN ARMAN TO LAND AT GOAL HERE meeAn Stat ete through the laws of your Inter- national union you will sdeves#- fully induce the strikers to réturn to. work r their own honor and best Interests but in the interests of the > univn rhovement,”* New Jersey commuters, by justing their travelling route etter Une between thelk hom their places of business to-day. Columbus Day to New York, New Jersey were not only tre * and working as usual, the Old Slip Station detailed four mef tinder command of Sergt, Aex- ander Anderson for traffic duty at the Hudson Terminal Building this morning, and their efforts prevented the coffusion which marked the opening of the ferry strike Saturday. Although the tubes were eruwded to ecupucity there was little congestion. With the sption of the Lacka- Wahha oats none of the lower -Man- the North Kiver, The Lackawanna maintained a fifeen minute schedule trom the foot ot Barclay Street shroughout the night and this morn. ig put thelr Boats under a sevens minute headway. At the Pennsyl- vania Ferry House a large sign an- nounced that the sale of tickets had been discontinued because of the The Fall River line's steamer Pris- cll atrived this morning at Pler 14 and docked and univaded without trouble, about 800 longshorermen and clerks being yn duty at thig pier be- cause of the fact that the Fall River lhe Is elassed as Bound rather than voastwise shipping and the met ate not affiliated with the ‘Terntinal Workers’ Union, LAUREL ENTRIES, strike, tle “ner Three yrarohia lle sit at Be a whet T Ms year. 1 the Oe fartond 4 Tell your favorite newsdealer ria ote: we Hc NAM ‘ that you don’t want to miss a|} ‘wtis fy rRiytese Genin) VF ry ey single issue—tell him to deliver Wit goin 14a thd rm ih ewe-deshr de The i" at your door every Hisscapidl, coer) wrnbae. morning. gi int al: Pa LATONIA ENTRIES. Read LUDENDORFF and VON TRIPITZ IN THE WORLD To-Morrow Morning Gen. Ludendorff to-morrow tells of the serious plight fin which he found the Austrians and how he determined that an attack was necessary to fetrieve the situation for the Central Empires. He also tells of the beginning of the combined German-Austrian advance on both sides of the Vistula. es 4 & Admiral von Tirpitz concludes his memoirs of the war in the next instalment of his book to-morrow. In this final chapter he declares that he never thought that a full victory overt Britain was a possibility and that Germany's power was the fesult of the work of individual men of strong minds. He asserts that the Allies were at all times inspired with a determination to wjn Ludendorff's revelations will continue. HE Gag'NEWS : FIRST Teac Uitve. svar Hi aS yen 'k pg a} WO; Lively, 410, uty eg ! ‘ ora tel ahh anor lip. ROL, Chuan inn “tod Polly tor, 1 *8r9 Heo allowance claimed Ay iF n Mubbawell"Tiat aint [ROOTS BY STRIKERS FOLLOW ATTEMPT Many Workers Arrested for Stoning Sttikebreakers | at Youngstown, | COMES TO-DAY. TEST rend. | made fhe holiday applies only and all industries in r Hitnihell of hattah ferries was running across LAUREL Ma. The ehtres for te. econ he WAC br -yOariida: mix fue. ieee Pra eat 13 i Yh in wc Ath 10 Sbynnth, Wy urea Oe ang Va herd * i fork wa: “Ten pounds el THIRD RACE ike ial male % AQyen OT: Lead Brighton, 311; Carvel eet va Jere’ Leader Predicts General Tie- Up Over U. 8. if j Walkout Fails, | TOWN, O., Oct. 13.—Con- turbulene’ 18 = Feported the valley this morning as the mills are resuming operations in greater vdluthe. CroWue of strikers about euch plait stined atrike-lteih- YOUNG aldbrable throughout ers and thahy. arfésts lave beeh made. ‘ At East Youngstown an engine strick & handodr filed With ment on thelr way to work, killing ohe afd | serlOubly injuFing two others. A crowd vf atrikt pickets atofed the | automobile océipled by Sheriff Ben | Mofria and a fhuniber of Deputies late last night in Poland Avenue, mis- taking the Shefiff's autofiebilé for a car Convéying attikebreaktts into the Haselton plant of the Republic Iron and Steel Company. A call was is- | sued by the Sheriff thit, morning for | 100 men to go to East Youngstown, Where pickets Were surging about the Youngstown Sheet and Tiibe Cotn- | pany gatés threatening men returp- ing to work. Sporadic operations were reported At all the mills this Morning. Strike leadéfs, however, said that the move- ment had failéd, As the strikers had | stood firm and only # few had re- ported for work. CLEVELAND, Oct. 18.—Three hun- dred steel workers, sald to be former | employees of thé Lakeside plant of | the Otis Steel Cothpany, returned to | work this moFhing, according to ¢om- pany ofMficidis. There were hoe indica- tious of any other loeal steel plants resuming Operations to-day, CHICAGO, Oct. 1%—Three steel plants, Gloséd sinée the stfike of steel workers thred Weeks amo, Hopelivd tovday with @pproximately 50 per cent. of @ normal working force, aé- cording t@ reports from the police ‘The plants to reopen were the Wis- consin Steel Company, Interstate Steel Company, and the Federal Fur- nace Company, Police in large num | bers were stationed at the gates of the plants in anticipation of trouble. There were no disorders, CANTON, O,, Oct. 13.—Striking iron Aid steel workers began to return to work im the mills here this morning by the hundreds. About 2,000 in all went to work, company officials suid. ©. A. Irwin, president of the Canton Sheet Steal Company, announced that lila plant was running 100 per cent, while the American Sheet & Tinplate Company was reported running about 80 por cent by W. A. Harris, manager. PITTBBURGH, Oct. 18,—Steel eom- panies with general offices In this city to-day reported there wete in- creased Numbers of men in the mills, The entire Pittsburgh strike district was quiet, Strike leaders gald thelt ranks show an unbroken front he Ameficatt Steel & Tinplate Co, a subsiliary of | the United States Steel Corporation, with many plants scattered over the tern half of the vountry, give out the following report: "We are running #bout 86 per cent. | of our sheet mills ahd about 86 per cont, of out tin tills, We are Mak: ing steady @aine right along.” NO CENSORSHIP AT GARY, Yells War Dearie | Report Was |B Due to a Misunder- standing. WASHINGTON, Oct, 18.—Deniai that « militaty eénsorship had been OF MLS TO OPEN exclattiation, atid she was straight~ way taken inside the ropes and pro- vided with a chair, hands, vilers, ele; work, and 6,000 engineers idle for the same fea: The expressmen's strike affects 11,009 directly and 1,000 who will be unable to fork becau CALLS HYLAN ‘LOR! the Academy of Music, |further the plans of Major Mic Kelly, who is the Liberty Party candi- date for it yeident of the Board of Al- dermen, DECLARES GEN. WOOD * members of the American Legion, established at Gary, eral troops af On duty because of |” the steel strike, was made in a tele gram foveived at the War Depart- ment to-day from Major Gen. Woed, cominanding the Central Department ‘hero Neate M14 Water @loar with headquarters at Chicago. “No press vensorship has been ed abilahed at Gary,” said the message, ‘Your advice, probably due to mis+ understanding of @ requést made to fepredentatives of the press not to publish certain iiformation which would tend to complicate the military situation at Gary.” <1 LAUREL RESULT ts Sole 110) Code catia; Pes ’, Len WOT: Gemoret icon, XTH RACK ats 1.800) three Fi Lea Ve ° ete 1 or ray Laie HE TAibroeay 3 Bia ne Rosivey 4 (bande), NTH RACH ¢ ON s fra, u wrid sate ti nies ir iw ¥ ¥ f unin ime, 1 pet Wehew, Nie Horner, Me Biathem, ran. Sk RACH—For Nee, and wy oF alx Parton, ty + ie Gtumiitony, Hah won Bally Costne}t $4.60, secon fianded 48.76" th ii tims Musket, Qe Rowen. i} Ind., where Fed- rete yesterday Nancy Ann, Red Domino, Gullagher also Flying Parson’ 8 Wife and Kiddies “Ceht’nly Glad”’ of His Victor, Mirg, BELYIN W. MAYNARD, (rife of Lint Maunated) ters ;ROS' EVELYN i} andes BaP RELD Rr NEWS of the FLIGHT nae teat Imimediately became a centre of \ { Inceroat, Her appearance on the Held, t stralwhtway developed, was to gel irs. Maynard Wanted Hus- the latest news abopt her husband. anted him to write to me every she said, “but he told me I band to Write Every Day a few minutes after reeeiving news| of the Lieutenant's arrival. ‘Then, as quietly as she had appeared, she Tho wife of the man who, although | lett for the litttle three-room house BY STRIKES NOW UNDER WAY Additional Workers Called Out To-day, and Other Walkouts Are Threatened. The longshoremen’s strike is estimated to affect 120,000 men, including 60,000 ouside thrown out of work by the walk-out. The harbor workers’ strike affects About 11,400, including 2400 deck- 4,000 Captains and pilots automatically on, » of the strike. ‘The ‘lauhdrymeh's sitike affects 80,000 in Manhattan 18,000 were ordered out to-day If Brooklyn. The printing trades strike affects about 5,000 pressmen and feeders and several thousand vompositors are One thousand five hufidred moving picture theatre employees on the cant side threaten to strike this week. ‘LORD MAYOR,’ |?!xcing on board a steamship a cargo of “on vacation” to aid them jrilles comsigned to the Russian Gov ment at Vladivostok, ‘The ex-servi e t At a Mass me eting held Hold last Hight in) i wera'not sasoubly hurt Brooklyn, to 1 A. |longshoremah's union had ajor Kell; 8 his address, @t-|move the rifles on the ground that they ‘ked saver Hyia saying were to be used by Admiral “T see that the il AS rs of Oct. 9/against the Bolshevift, 4 ihe Lotd Mayor of New York as had placed a candidate in the Meld to| work. prevented b generat defeat Robert L. Moran, wonder if! hight, Mform soldiers be- Bala, fence frets, Mints Untent of ae: | conte A y ihe party and were nomins nstead o| » e) e lor 0 e \naulling, innuendos? Why doos beaten by the longehorenten not hit wtraight. from ake shoulder ‘a inant Bethan Ho vty. sulterihg | Juge-siay Warship tn Reported from at att nerves, due to disap- | sean, Mi nt ied is end the Prince} BP Wate pas hot Honured him with a] ROME, Oct, 18-—The Austrian bat: leship Frana Joseph, which had been 090 attended the \ ono pitkers were former Resist |allotted to the Jugo Slav navy, sank O'Loughlin and. Mrs. during a burricane, a despatch received here from Zara, lupeDS” BEAT EX-SOLDIERS, |P#'matia, She was carrying am- *|munition for the Ju 18,—Two ex-soldiers, were By Bolshevist sym. ey cite to assist It Slave, GRATTLE, Oct Available recdras do not lets when ot Franz Joseph. Make Breakfast A Banq uet — says Easy enough when you get wise to throwh out of and Bronx, and ‘The American Legion undertook 10 re- cfult a crew lo handle the cargo after a refused to Kolchak to Hundreds of longshoremen were at the eine that the transportation strikers | pier when sixty former soldiers came to b acvording to a mention ah Austrian battleship of the name = WESTERNE BATS , MAYNARD'S TIME ¢ (Continued From Fist Page.) | | | ons oi to Gol, Millets quarters to be warmed up, it became clear that Capt. Smith felt that unfair discrimination by control offctrs at t Lake City, Rawlins, Wyo. and Rock Island had robbed hint of the eredit of being here @arlier Saturday than Lieut, May-"4 nard reached Ban Francisco. If each of those places, Lieut. Smith said, he way held back because of “douyt- ful weather condition,” until Spaté and Lieut. Kiel (Who arrived at Mineola Sattirday evening) catitht up with him—though the conditions on which all three were allowed to start off each time were, in his opinion, no better for flying than when he arrived at these places fat th the lead, These delays did not affeet his “actual flying tine” but deprived him of beige the first to laid at thé transcontinental goal, Lieut, Siilth’s most trying delay was at Cleveland, where he was un- ble to find the landing fleld and el d thé ely for halt an houf, tahditig inally of @ field several miles trom ‘the control station and breaking a propeller: Thirty-five flyers are still in race, moving toward either coast. Now orders received from Wash- | asta fare that the Face is to be med by thode reachihe each st, not sooner than 48 hours after landing (Sunday not counting), and | not longer than 96 Hours aftefwards, ‘Phe former ordér was for a résump= | the | Ma | ‘ tried 8 He - | tio Monday Frisco. would get the news from thé news- ) Von next on Plight to $c. papers and the officials quicker than! A deapateh from San Francisco — he could send it.) 1 havent heard | vuotes Lieut. B, W. Maynard of the 7 ped, date om hint since he flhw away A Iittle, biaek-haired, dark-eyed |from him since he Abw aways | | Stincoin Field saying fe Would Woman stood hesitatingly Saturday | Maynard received the news she was!start back to-morrow. He arrived at afternoon at the rope at Roosevelt | Wilting for. The bulletins of progress | san Francises Saturday after 1éss ri Mi vhieh held the wal came in at intervals—Reno, Bacra han % hours in the aif. inéola, whieh held ne crow! mento and the departure from Sacra a Alesse Llobet. ddd back from the landing field of th@/::ento on the last geventy-five-mile| An interesting question has afisen transcontinental flyets. A couple of|hop. It was after 8 o'clock before n connection with the first two fly- [little girls played around, never far | Mint wan received of the Timutenant’s | ory to reach Mineola, Major Carl from her akirts, She had stood there | colt nly in glad to meat that,* | Spats and Lieut. BE) C. Kiel, Aps 8 few ininutes with an evident air of | xclainved) Ars, Moynatd, all siniles| patently their flying tline from San waiting for somBbody or something |und slurring every “r” in true Norti| Francisco is only @1 seconds apart, " y ; ‘ird!” was the | Carolina sty Hote Wor us Mis, MAyAGrd Mrs, Maynard remained at the fleta| 8ut the winner of this first leg of the 6,400-mile trip thay depend on a | report expected to-day by officials of Roosevelt Field from Binghamton. . at Mitchel Field in the tow of “mor-|FULL AND IMMEDIATE REPORT the news of his arrival at San Fran-|iin4 oteers’ quarters,” where the! 1S ORDERED. cisco had hot been received, was con |Family Is making its home for the] x. omcrig pone cedediy the winner of the great con- ! present. he officials at, the Binghamton ontro! station have been ortered ie Ta to maké a full and ifnitediate IN ITY IDLE report on a story that Spatz, on Sat- ’ urday afternoon, asked Kiel to give him ten minutes’ start. ‘The report declared that Kiel refused to him so large a lead, give him did give him eight. An official ac- count of the inejdent will be sent to Gen. William Mitchell for his con- sideration. Rpats's time, according te the eom- putations, was 26 hours, 18 minutes and 44 seconds. Kiel's was 26 hours, 14 minutes and 15 seconas, Kiel lett San Frantisco three minutes ahead of Spatz, ahi landed at Roosevelt Field onds ahead The Spatz-Kiel race is not likely to be duplicated over so long @ colire within the present generation, — Kiel took off at San Francisco at 6.51.69 o'clock last Wednesday morning. Spat followed at 6.54.55. almost neck and neck across the con- tinent. y of Nancy, President_ Poin- FARIS, care yesterday decorated the City of Nancy with the Croix de Guerre and Qct. 13. - the Legion of Honor, ‘The populace Nancy accorded the President an receptio For Monday, Oct. 13 QB Fas AntTeee Fk rr exnet ipeatl sveeitied tion of materials Call “Columbus 8200,”" FRANK E. Broadway at 66° St. the fir sion CX0SS slon Major) but agreed to) five minutes and actually | They had it! ‘ wea fiom the wonvalact, A FUNERAL ARRANGEMENT once placed in our hands, means attention to every detail, no ter how seemingly aatnoetant ‘The Superior “CAMPBELL SERVICB” is the result of years of experience combined with the proper selec- THE FUNERAL © Artistic Funeria! 1 ‘SEARCH IN VAIN FOR KIDNAPPED “PERFECT BABY" — + (Continued From First Page.) | Wednesday afternoon she heard th® voices of two men and a child coming from the kwathp Beck of Her house. Leter, a tian in gray coat and dame treusers stole out of the woods and tried het back Woof in a stealthy man het, then peeped through the keys hole. She went around the cbtnef of the house and @emandpd what he wanited. e turned without & word atid rah back Into the Wooda whith {4 a cotitinuation of the Woods where the boy disappeared, and intd whieh ff's bloodhounds followed the 's scent, only lose it in a The strange man was nearly six feet tall. The path along Which he ron away from Mrs, Koft's hotise i@ade to a desertéd Fed Houss in the woods, the roof of Which js falling tm, Mrs. Koft thought the rian with & child whom she heard thikiiig Wedtts- day were hiding in this forlorn re- treat. In the old house were found thé Férhaing of bread that sditie os had bebn eating no longer ogo than Wedh@eday, the village baker sald when shown the bread. Tracks led to a cfoss road through the desdlaté pines, leading to the ham- Jét of Da Costa and the countfy read té Hainthotitot and Philadelphia, st was alotig this ebulity road, it Was learned to-day, that a man Was seeh last Wedtesday, almost drageitig boy of two or three years by the hand A clite was found to-day to show that thé lost boy Was th thé ¥ieifity of the lonely red house by thé fhd- ing of a toy tin railroad car beside the road. The toy was Identified as belonging to thé baby son of BE. W. White, a heighbor of the Danseys, HOME ROBBED THIRD TIME, Barglirs Get 82,500 Worth af Goods In Latest Vintt. The apattinent of Mra. Wiliam @, Harrigan, No. 44 West 46th Street, we entered by buréiars Frifay afternoon and cléthing and jewelry valued ut $2,500 were taken, The World le last hight. The robbery was dixcov- ered by Mra: Harrigan when she ree turned to her home about 7 o'clock in the evening. f Bhe told the police of the East Sist Btreet Station that her apartment had been robbed twice within a short time, On Frday the burgiars gained emtranes by jimmying a door. Like Floating on Ait No bumips, to lumps, no ageing anywhere — just enough élasticity for health and comfort See the entire mattfoss he in our modern showreoms. OSTERMOOR Osterttwor & Co. 114 Elizabeth St. cleo . MOSHER.—Dr, JOSEPH. Lying in state at the CAMPBELL fu. NERAL CHURCH, Broadway and 66th. LOST, FOUND AND REWARDS. “Age roune, ave-newanoe. Ll the with 3. dlamonds ‘ite, at faces ‘hi pst ot Hoel & tare, Hee rs f nigh Ws firetinde Driver Fe iv meek, Oe ry iu i ins mat- at the right price, Any Hour, Day or Night. CAMPBELL 23” Bireet at 6” Ave

Other pages from this issue: