Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
C i TO-NIGHT'S WEATHER—Fair, Cooler. he _New Copyright, am) by The Press o Fabtiehlag « Che _| “Circulation Books Qpen to All.’ York Wi ye 1919. (“ctr (“Circulation Books “Open to an 40 PAGES PRESIDEN oR RNS v TO-MORROW'S WEATHER—Falr, PRES TN LBS V “PRICE SS 2Wwo CENTS. SS S——=> GARY NEARING SETTLEMENT AT LABOR COUNCIL CONCESSIONS BY EMPLOYERS ON COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AT THE LABOR CONFERENCE ete Agree to Principle, Without Limiting Rights of Workers to Keep. Out of Unions. LABOR NOT SATISFIED. Employer Group Seeks More Time for Discussion; Feel- ing is Generally rerally Hopeful. By David Lawrence. ASpe Gorrespenden vi of The Eve- ning WASHINGTON, Dee (Copy- righted, 1919.)—Anybody dropping casually’into the Industrial Peace Conference would imagine mysterious meeting of conspirators wag being rehearsed. Hore and there groups of men talking in low and wv some earnest tones to one another, joined by an individual or two who a mo- ment later move quickly to another group, exchange a few hurry back again—all of this for two hours before the session is scheduled to begin, But that’s the way the conference is trying to get harmony between capital and labor. The procedure seems to be open covenants, openly arrived at part of the time, and private discussion and a passing around of compromise plans galore over night and before and after the sessions in an effort to get agreement. Nothing more dra- matic has been witnessed in the Na- tional Capital in many years than the open discussion on the right of wage-earners to organize. RESPONSIBILITY OF A BREAK PUT UP TO EMPLOYER GROUP. The Public and Labor Groups hav ing united in support of a general resolution on that subject—with Judge Gary temporarily absent from the Public Group+-it sary for the employers to take the responsibility for a‘ break up in the conference itself or offer some sub- stitute resolution as a compromise. The trouble is that Group is not cohgsive. The farm representatives openly expressed their sympathy with Labor's position on collective bargaining. Some o* the spokesmen of the Employers’ Group, like Frederick Fish of Boston, | made extensive speeches, but some of | his colleagues didn't agree with muci the Employers of what he said, and the Employers’ Group finally managed to agree among themselves on a resolution that would show clearly that capital | wasn't opposed to representation » the workers in industry, but they deemed it vitally necessary to deline ate what the form of that representa tion should be, Outmanoeuyvred in session of Thursday came back fo the fray on Friday with the the e dramatic \ployer. a clearer statement of their rea for dissent and a proposal that least means 4 basis for compromise or further distussion and propels the the ference to step toward dgre ment instead of d (Continued on Fourth Pege,) 1 BEYOUE MEALS ood Dinesiion words and | | became neces-| + | terday NEW SPECIALIST ‘CALLED TO WILSON, STILL RESTS WELL aemeajeciast “Prostatic Condition Checking General Improvement,” Says His Doctors. WASHINGTON, Oct. President Wilson was feeling well to-dity, his physiclans said the pros- which he had been suffering for several days was tatic condition from checking the ‘general improvement of The following bulletin: White the two weeks, doctors past ssued the 12.2 P. M., 1919 House, Oct. 7, The President passed a comfort- lable | morning. night and is feeling well this His temperature, pulse and respiration rates are normal. The prostatic condition is not as sat- |isfactory as yesterday and is check- ing general improvement of the past | two weeks. “GRAYSON, “RUFFIN Dr, Grayson announced that he had called in Dr. Hugh Young, of Johns Hopkins Hospital, Baltimore, one of | the foremost specialists in the coun- try on prostatic troubles, and that lhe was expected at the White House | some time to-day. | During the morning, the President Was treated by Dr. Fowler, a Wash- ington spectalist, who was called in when the President first suffered this |complication several days ago Dr, Young will make a thorough ex- j amination of the swelling of the gland |to determine whether an operation is | necessary, Dr. Grayson said. Phe physician said the gwelling of the prostate gland, from which the | President had been free all day yes- and the night before, returned early hours this morning and cuused some irritation While the trouble might be only minor in character, Dr, Grayson said, there was no dowbt that it had re- | tardea somewhat the progress the }eresigent had been making toward reeavery Irritation accompanying the ng of the prostate gland, b | plained, was, calculated to affect ads |vergely the -nervous condition of the | patient. in the CLOSING TIME 7.30 P. M. Sharp © on Saturdays for SUNDAY WORLD W ANT ADS. Want Advert ements for The | 9] Sunday World must be in | The World's Main Office on or | }] before 7.30 Saturday evening. Positively no Advertisements will | be accepted after this ume. tend your Sunday Wore Want | U] Advertisment in to-day 0 make sure of Hl» publication, 17.—While | $100,000 THEFT + REVEALS DIVORCE AND NEW ROMANCE Mrs. Turner, Robbed of Jew- els, Accused Her Husband of Larceny in 1918, CASES DROPPED L ATELY. Court Told "Wife Had Ob- tained Decree and Was to Wed Again. If a thief had not stolen the jewels of Mrs. Syela Studebaker Brandeis Turner, No. 166 West 72nd Street— Jewels valued at $100,000—New York might stif be entirely ignorant of the newest romance in her life, And yet there are court records a week old ~]EX-CONGRESSMAN'S SISTER, |PUANT 7 WHO WILL BE BRIDE OF GORNELWS VANDERBILT JR. t Miss ' fereton \ +o &. about the new romance, | The records were dug out to-day| |by an Evening World reporter after detectives working on the jewel theft had rememberba that this was not the first appearance of Mrs. Turner as a victim in somewhat similar cir- cumstances, The detectives recalled that in June, 1918, Mrs. Turner caused the indict- ment of her husband, Charles Wesley Turner jr, son of a Wall Street | broker, on charges of grand larceny | and forgery. The indictments were! never brought to trial, and a searel oh | of the records of the Sourt of General | Sessions revealed the reason, Eight days ago Assistant District Attorney Edwin P. Kilroe appeared before Judge Wadhams and recom- mended the dismissal of the Turner indictments. In dong so he mid: “These charges grew out of matri- monial troubles between the com, plaining witness and the, defendant, her busband. Since then the financial disputes betwoen the two have been adjusted. The complaining witness has obtained a divorce from the de- fendant and, 1 am informed, is about to marry again, “For that purpose she has sailed for England, where she intends to make her home in the future. She does not intend to return to this country.” Attached to the’ recommendation was an affidavit dated June 30, 1919, *|.Cornelius Vanderbilt jr., MISS LITTLETON WILL BE BRIDE OF YOUNG VANDERBILT General’s Son, Now Newspa- per Worker, Declines to Dis- cuss Approaching Wedding. Miss Rachel Littleton, a sister of former Congressman Martin W. Lit- tleton, the lawyer who nominated Judge Alton B, Parker in 1904 for President, is to become the bride of only son of Brig, Gen. Cornelius Vanderbilt, No, 649 Fitth Avenue. Miss Littleton, who lives.with her brother at Plandome, L, I., could not be reached, and Mr, Vanderbilt fused to discuss the details of his engagement. He recently took up newspaper reporting and became a member of a New York paper's staff. Refusing to attend an officers’ re- signed “Lyela Brandeis Turner.” It said: ‘Since these indictments were ob- tained I have obtained an interlocu- tory decree of divorce and am about to sail for England for an indefinite period. I do not wish to press the charges against Charles Wesley Turner jr, and I ask that they be disnpissed,” If Mrs. Turner has married again or if she plans to do so, the name of the man has not yet appear Neither have the detalls of the di- yorce case been brought out, Mr, Kilroe said to-day that he knew nothing more than appeared in his court statement concerning either the divoree or the new marriage, Nor was he able to account for the pres- euce of Mrs, Turner in New York at this time, when she was supposed to be living in London. Mrs. Turner de- clined to see reporters to-day at her New York home ae GOMPERS AT CONFERENCE. ander Walks Very dd Appears Feeble. WASHINGT N, et, 47. Gomp nervous exhaustion, Slowly # who has been suffertn uttende Nati mn the meeting of trmining camp, young Vanderbilt en- listed as a private during the world war in the Headquarters Troop of the 27th Division. He had taken his father’s advice to start at the bot- tom. Young Cornelius went south with the 27th in August, 1917. and did any kind of odd jobs assigned to him with a cheerfulness that won the admira- tion of his comrades. Finally he was made a chauffeur for Lieut. Col, Kin- caid, Judge Advocate of the Divi- + | sion. He went overseas with the Head- quarters detachment in June, (918, but later was transferred to Camp Lewis, Washington, where his father, aa a Geueral, was training engineer re- le:vits, When the armistice was signed the young man was on the list for 4 leutenancy, The announcement of Mr; Vander- GIANT ZEP,BULT TOBOMB NEW YORK, MUTINY IN SOVIETS AS RUSSIAN ARMY WILL CROSS OCEAN, NEARS PETROGRAD — ooo Engineer Says Craft, Measur-| ing 600 Feet, Is Now in, Spandau. U. CREW TO MAN IT. Big Dirigible Was Ready at Armistice*for Mission of Destruction. A German Zeppelin, six hundred feet long, which was ready to start for America with a cargo of bambs to drop on New York when the armistice negotiations began, is now tn a shed at @pandau, Germany, and, if the Allied Governments’ will permit, will omcniginiae Some Doubt Cast on Reported Fall of Kronstadt and the Capital. ADVANCE IS KEPT UP. Bolshevist Forces Still Appar- ently Keep Their Hold Upan Tsarskoe Selo, LONDON, Oct. 11.—-The march of Gen, Yudenitch at the head of the Northwestern Russian Army on the City of Petrograd, was etill pra- greasing favorably at the latest ad- vices. Some reports of his advance have apparently outrun his actual Progress, econ start for Americn on @ DOACHU) rere gepeared some doubt to-day mission under control of American officers, according to Emil J, Simon of New York, a radio engineer who arrived to-day on the Adriatic. “This Zeppelin,” M the only one built for war purposes that was not destroyed by the Ger- mans. It is said to be the best and largest machine of jts kind that the Germans ever built, and could carry @ load of more than three tons of high r, Simon said, “is explosives, “In company with Col. Kingsley [ recently had a ride in a smaller passenger Zeppelin, the one which I was told was soon to begin a pass- enger service between Germany and Sweden under the direction of the Hamburg-American Line, Woe had a glimpse of the big Zeppelin, but were not permitted to examine it closely. "It was my understanding that should the Allied Commission decline to permit it to be used by Americans for the purpose of crossing the Atlan- tle It weuld be destroyed or disabled so that it S98 Bt bs not be used wt all!” TRANSFERS RS HANGED MAN’S GLANDS INTO LIVING MAN Operation Performed at San Quen- tin, Cal, Prison, Hoping to Aid Aged Convict. SAN QUENTIN, Calif., Oct. 17.—After Tom Belton, a murderer, was hanged here to-day, Dr. G David Kelker re- moved vitality-giving glands from the body, transfered them to the body of « sixty-year-old man. Dr, Kelker chose the old prisoner from several who desired to benefit from the operation. The operation has been porfofmed nine times before at the prison, but has been given little], publicity PPrisonera , who have received tho |* glands have gained weight and vitality and haye been helped mentally, ing to the doctors, ———— SENATE BILL TO AID IRELAND emt Cane accord- WASHI A resolu. tion asking that the United States pre t the case of Ireland to the of Nations at the first opportunity its Organization was introduced b. ague after He feeble, walked very slowly and appeared | —_— For Racing See Page i+ bilt’s eng: ent recalled a story he wrote some time ago for a Seattle newspaper, and reyrinted here, in| Which he compared the attractiveness of Seuttle and of New York girls, He wrote enthusiastically of the charms of the Seattle girls and declared they | were far superior to their New York} sisters—that is all except ONE New York girl, It seems clear now the particulay New York girl he had in mind | Martin W, Littleton, at his office, No, 149 Broadway, sent out word to inquirers to-day that he could not dis cus bie ator Walsh to-day — FIRE AT COUNTRY CLUB. New York « Euulpment Burned at Haworth, ¥. J. The club house of the White Beeches Country Club at Haworth, N. J, had a narrow ‘ape from destruction ear) thls mor when @& nearby caddy house burned golf equipment o ‘ity members was lost whether the Fortress of Kronstadt, outpost at the water approach ti Petrograd, had capitulated to British steamsh!P ! naval forces, as indicated in reports during the night. The British Adml- ralty had received no confirmatory advices and the accuracy of tha news was questioned in admiralty circles. There was no confirmation of the reported fall of Petrograd. Despatches from Scandinavia have announced the capture of Gatchina, twenty-five miles south of Petrograd, by the Yudenitch forces, and stated that he was advancing on Tsarskoe- selo, farmer summer residence of Emperor Nicholas, and Kras-Noye- Selo, nearby. Reports of the capture of these places by the Anti-Bolshevik Amry seemed of doubtful accuracy, A Bol- shevik wireless station | located at Tearskoe-Selo, and * announcement was made by the wireless press here this morning that the Bolyheviki were Apparently still in possession of It, as Soviet propaganda was yet being sent out from the station» during this forenoon Boviet troops are reported to be ving Petrograd, a mutiny among the men having broken out. In any event, advices indicate that the Yudeniteh forces are encountering feeble resistance. Bolshevik troops are said to have captured Kiev, but in this region the situation is obscure. It was reported last week that Kiev was in the handy of General Petlura’s Ukrainian army; which advanced against General Denikine’s left flunk following Pet- lura’s deciaration of war on the Cou- sack chieftain ‘There is so uncertainty as to the exact situation in Lithuania, where ftussian and Lithuanian forces are mobilized. Lithuanian troops have » ordered advance against vli, in the government of Kovno, If this movement should be carried out, the Lithuanians would be in the tear of the German-Russian forces which advanced against Riga last week and have since Inst Friday been fighting Lettish and Esthonian troops in that city Admiral Koichak, head of the All- Russian Omsk, and Commander of the anti-Bolshevik ele- Government at | ‘s. 10," Hub Clothiers, Bway, cor. Adve nts on the Kast Russian front in advancing rapidly In pursuit of the Soviet which have been or- deved to retire, armies, ~ - $25 Men's Suit or Overcoat, $14.95 The “HUB" Clothing Corner, way, corner Barclay Street (Opi worth Bujiding), will sell to-~ Saturday ¥,000 mena and young Suits and Overcoats in blues, ancy mixta form-ftin ay and men's rowns 9 silk line » for to al price mf & $17.95. Op. turday night ult Barclay. aia98 U.S PLANS NATION-WIDE. CRUSADE ON TO ARREST RADICALISM; ALL AGITATORS Fifteen More shine in New Raid at Gary—Evidence Found Said to Link Steel Strike Leaders with Agents of Russian Soviets. GARY, Ind., Oct. 17.—A natidn-wide investigation by Department - of Justice agents is actually in progress to round up radicals who are arousing the industrial centres of the country, it became known here ” Wholesale arrests of I. W. W. and Bolshevist agitators are to-day. planned. A carload of tear gas shells and special riot guns is en route to Gary, following the revelation by ‘the military authorities of the radical plot here, Col. W. S. Mapes announced to-day. } EX-SOLDIERS AND SAILORS RAID A BOLSHEVIK RALLY . AND BEAT UP-AN ORATOR Speaker Rushed From Grand Rapids in Auto and Ordered Never to Return. GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. Oct, 17. WEINTY-FIVE former nol- Sli diers, sailors and marines tn uniform late last night raided a west side hall where an alleged Bolshevik meeting was in progress. They removed Theodore Koro- linko, who was addressing the meeting, rushed him in an auto- mobite to a nearby village and after beating him ordered him to leave Kent County and never re- turn, Korolinko said his home was in Eleventh Street, New York. Korolenko was one of the ora- tors at @ convention of Ukrainan radicals held at the Manhattan Lycoum, this city, June 22 last, His home is in Rochester. W. Shopinaky presided at the con- vention, STEEL UNION HEADS TAKE “FREE SPEECH” INTO COURT Ask Injunction to Restrain Mayor and Others From’ Preventing Meetings, PITTSBURGH, Oct. 17.—Representa tives of the Steel amd Iron Workers’ Union filed @ bill in equity In the Al- legheny County Court this afternoon against Mayor F, V. Babcock, Director of Public Safety ©. B. Pritchard and Superintendent of Polloe R. J. Alder- dice and ot! officials to restrain them from interfering with meetings of the strikers in the Pittsburgh district —<.—__—. SINN FEINERS TO GO FREE. Will Be Liberated Resolt of Moumt Jay F Strike. DUBLAN, Oct. 17,.—The Lord Mayor has been. informed that the Irish ers in Mount ately ‘of cheb political priac Joy Fr will be Ihery This ix the strike, it was ison hunger Bala otal SIL Senate Orders Yew Cotton 5 Oct WASH TON, adopted p ent of Agricult Purvey of the prosp a THR WORLD TKAVET BUREAU, Agade. Pulltoer (World) Building, 08.68 Park Row, N.Y. Pity, ‘Tolectone Berkman 4000, Cheek room for and parcels open dag aed Uraveilen” fam Te These are the latest results of the military drive, continued during the night with new ratds on radicals here by six details of soldiers, that has furnished the Government with det- inite information linking leaders of the steel strike with representatives of the Russian Soviet Government. The army's raiding squads last night rounded up twenty men, fifteen of whom were later ordered held, and confiscated o large quantity of literature, including a lot of correr- pondence. It became known to-day thut every bit of Red literature seized in’ Gary was taken to Chicago to be translated, sorted and classified at the Federal Building there. ‘ This evidence is said to ‘com- prise pamphlets, handbills, radical newspapers, personal letters and lists of names in approximately forty ait- ferent languages. It is said to divulge. the various ramifications of a plot to overthrow the Government partici~ pated in by the lL W. W's, Sparta- cists, Communists and thé Federated Soviets of New York and various Anarchistio organizations. This evidence, together with namex of those involved, will be distributed 4s Goon ay translated to the Federal authorities in the particular districts involved, Five hundred more men of the 6th Division were entrained for Camp Grant at 11 o'clock last night, leaving only the 800 men originally de spatohed from Fort Sheridan om pa- trol in the strike zone. Some of the strike leaders against whom evidence has been obtained are declared to have possessed credentlaly 4s delegates to conclaves of Reds at which actual preparations were made to merge the Soviets of Russia and America. The strikers’ Executive Counei! have taken action to force the Gov- drnment to show its hand, A thousand American citizens tn the union's ranks were directed by Paul 8. Gla- ser, the strikers’ counsel, to prepare to march to military headquarters and demand of Col, Mapes, the command« ing officer, the facts on which he based hig statement Wednesday, that “if the loyal element could se@ the ? Government's evidence. the atyike would be over to-morrow." d Later, Col, Mapes said that‘he bad merely informed the att ey that the project would he yseléay that the: "| Government was not” prepared td res *| veal its evidence and thateits position” in the abandonmemt or ov: | of the strike was neutral, Secretary of War Baker wants to find out just what is the industrial ” jand revolutionary situation Ia Gary Major Thomas B, Crockett, head of woe «Chicago = Army = An talligage ee