' THE BEE: OMAHA, SATURDAY, OCTOBER ' 18, 1919. . S' LABOR MEETING IS DEADLOCKED ON BARGAINING New Start Will Be Made Mon .j day. With Collective Bar gaining Issue in the - s Background. Washington, Oct. 17. Without reaching a decision on recognition of the right of workers to bargain collectively an issue which has been the subiecf of two days' de hate the national industrial con ference closed the second week of its deliberations. Adjournment was taken until Monday, when there is every indication that the conference will make a new start, a definU program for procedure to that end being in process of formulation. Withdrawing their motion made yesterday to recommit the labor- Grand Ball flushing's Hall TONIGHT 4426 S. 24th St. Carl Lamp's Big Brass Band With Organ Chimes Everybody Welcome PHOTO PLAYS. A TODAY AND SATURDAY THE NAVAL JAZZ REVUE 11 ARTISTS 11 In as Song and Mutic Number You Will Never Forget. WM.FARNUM , IN. THE LONE STAR RANGER ENID BENNETT "STEPPING OUT" One, of the Most Appealing Pictures Ever Made. LOTHROP 24tb and Lethrop TOM MIX ia "ROUGH RIDING ROMANCE" Alio Comedy. public declaration on collective bar gaining, the employers took the in itiative by offering a substitute reso lution which would protect their right "to deal or not to deal with men or groups of men who are not their employes." The withdrawal came ai a surprise to representa tives of the public, who were pre pared to support it and had ex pressed their willingness to agree to amending of iV Adjourn Until Monday. The motion to adjourn until Mon day, offered by Thomas L. Chad bourne, a public representative and chairman of the conference central committee of IS, carried with it re commiting both declarations as to collective bargaining to the central committee. This committee will reconcile the two declarations if pos sible and also consider the new pro gram which it was understood pro vides that the issue of collective bargaining remain in the background until agreement can be reached on the less disputed questions. After several hours of debate, Samuel Gompers, president of the American Federation of Labor, who returned to his seat in the, confer ence at the afternoon session after a three days' illness, brought the discussion to a climax, with a heated and eloquent reply to L. F. Loree, president of the Delaware & Hud son railroad and a representative of capital. Gompers Defends Labor. Denjing the assertion of Mr. Loree that labpr had taken advan tage ot the war to force important concessions from the government, Mr. Gompers declared that labor had been actuated by the most intense patriotism durin gthe war and that labor had made good its pledge of co-operation tendered President Wilson even ( before the nation en tered the world conflict. But, em- PHOTO PIATS. Today's Your LAST CHANCE to See LOMBARD! LIMITED The Picture That Pleases Them AH. phatically declared Mr. Gompers, noticeably weakened by his recent illness, "the masses of labor of the United States have at !ast found their ability to articulate through or-. ganization and the time lias come when in America labor is determined to gain a fair share of the rewards of its toil." , Shaking with emotion and his voice quivering, Mr. Gompers bit terly assailed Mr. Loree for his as sertion that there were elements in American labor that planned over throw of the government. -Labor Urges Vote. Mr. Loree in his 'address de manded that the government be given the same access to the records and correspondence of labor unions that it now has to those of corpora tions and that generally the same regulations that now surround cap ital be extended to the labor unions Adjournment without a vote on the collective bargaining issue was opposed vigorously by the labor men. Mr. Gompers demanded that the gathering remain in session "un til the resolution is disposed of, and Daniel J. Tobin and W. G. Lee, the latter chief of the railway trainmen, held up the specter of numerous strikes and pending strikes now in abeyance pending the outcome of the conference to induce the dele gates to take immediate action. Four members of the labor group L. E. Sheppard. John H. Donlin, T. A. Rickert and J. F. Valentine voted with a majority of the em ployers and public groups for ad journment. Lansing to Be Honored Albany, N. Y., Oct. 17. The hon orary degree of doctor of laws will be conferred upon Robert Lansing, secretary of state, by the University of the State of New York at to night's session of the annual con vocation. Only four men who have received this decree are alive now. They stre Cardinal Mercier of Bel gium, lhomas A. (Edison, Ehhu Root and lules Jusserand, French ambassador to the United States. CHICAGO-PHYSICIAN SAVES LIVES OF POISONED LUIKHART CHILDREN. Galling repeatedly for "mamma," little Shirley Luik hart, 8 years old, and her sister, Edna, 6, are in a critical condition as the result of mercuric poison given them, it is said, by their mother, Mrs. Roy Luikhart, of Oak Hill, Detroit, Mich. .Jy JUUicfc) 3wv'Jcart AMUSEMENTS. "True Heart Susie" A Paramount-Artcraft Picture. A warm, wholesome story of love won, and love denied. ADLAINE TRAVERSE -in- The Splendid Sin A Drama of High Life. PHONE 00UQ.4M fin mu LUflrmnuiKi Wr VIC lV4aAeVl.lt THtBtST IN VAUDEVILLE LAST TWO TIMES Madame MARGUERITA SYLVA "Skeet" Gallagher and Irens Martin; La Bemicia and Co., and Current Bill MATINEE TODAY 2:15 EARLY CURTAIN Tonight at 8 Next Week "PUTTING IT OVER"; Dollay Kay; Long Tack Sam and Co, and Excellent Bill. . :evr i tonight, last XJM Uaf TIME STUART WALKER Presents "SEVENTEEN" With GREGORY KELLY and N. Y. Original Cast. Nights: SOc to $2.00. Sat. Mat SOc to $1.50. ITODAY Mat. 2:30 Lvenint. S:20 I LAST TWO TIMES OSCAR F. HODGE PRESENTS LNEIL O'BRIEN w&ST" New Songs, Dances, Jokes and Acts. Nights 25c, $1.50. Matinee 25c, $1. Sun "Bringing Up Father in Society." Wed., Ort. 22 Lyman Howe Travelogue LAST TIMES TODAY. Sig. Franz Troupe, Bennington at Scott, Perrons 4 Oliver, Dorothy Vaughsn. Photoplay Attraction, Fannie Ward in "THE CRY OF THE WEAK-." Mack Sennett Comedy. Lord Grey's Task "Omaha's Fun Center" Dally Mat, 15-25-50c PEvngs., 25-50-75c. $1 JOE HURTIG'S NEW EDITION OF CArMAI UAIfiC Muiiul w J W I mm I VI M I mw 9 Burlesque With Ina Hayward and Funny Little Bluch Landolf. Cast Par Excellence. High Step ping Beauy Chorum. Extra 1 Lulu Coatee nd Her 3 Crackerjacks. LADIES' DIME MATINEE WEEK DAYS a ssssae ',.. J3&U. IT IIOAKUNG i m As mild and inoffensive a million aire as vou'd find in a day's walk and yet to win the heart of a romance- jSSa ffflllllllll s, his money, his very name, ' 1 and thus start npon a journey around the world, unaided and alone ! Ask your favorite theatre when they will show Geortfe D. Seiti in ana . with MARGUERITE COURTGT 4 mmmmm mm mm amm3i 1 h't JHfmnt sort of a notion picture trial fferent in theme and in treatment, many thrills yet much comedy, tilled witn romance and adventure. " JL FRANK I SMITH tWfta' am prodoetd try GEORGE & SEITZ r illliiiillllllliii in S X : f By A. T. C. There lias been no more momen tous journey across the Atlantic in this or any other time than when Viscount Grey crossed to America. It is hardly too much to say that upon its success or failure hung the destinies o! two hemispheres. In saying this, it is not suggested that Lord Grey is a miracle worker, or that it is in his power, by the magic of his personality, to resolve the discords of this distracted earth. But if anyone can redeem the catastro phe of Paris it is he. There is much that is open to crit icism in his past. No man who filled the position of foreign secretary in the nine years that preceded the war could hope to present a blameless record. He made mistakes. They were net the mistakes of the strange caricature conceived by Mr. Bernard Shaw who, with all his incisive genius, is the worst judge of men, and who pictures Lord Grey as a sort of Prussian junker and jingo im perialist, ihey were the mistakes of t noble spirit caught in the tangle of circumstances, and struggling un availing to unravel the knots and set the loom of the world working on a more hopeful plan. He failed, and some of the failure-belongs to him. But the claim that can be made on his behalf is that if his high and dis interested spirit had prevailed the calamity would have been averted and that the hope of world restora tion depends on that sptnt govern ing the future. The nations are per ishing from lack of ideals, from the leadership of charlatans and adven turers, from the dearth of character in public life, from the absence of great motives working through the tumult of things. In Lord Grey we are sending to America the best mind of the nation not a cunning mind, nor a clever mind, but a mind noble in thought, disinterested m purpose, spacious ot vision, moved as only great souls can be moved by the agony of these years and inspired by the single idea of rescuing the world frm the pit into which it has fallen. The American Peace. And it is to America that we need most to send such a messenger, such a witness of our good will, such an assurance of our good faith In the general chaos of affairs there is still one hope of world recon struction. It is in the British peo ple and the American people work ing together loyally for a common policy of appeasement. p When the war ended that hope was high, fhe chivalrous states manship of America, expressed through its great president, seemed in the ascendant Backed by the millions of men who had. raced across the Atlantic to the rescue, it had brought kaiserism clattering to the ground. Its disinterestedness and detachment from the squalor of European politics gave it a special claim to be heard. America had no private end to serve. It sought nei ther territory nor indemnity nor re venge nor power. It wanted simply to securevthe peace of the world by the abolition of competitive armaments and the establishment of a new community of nations. It seemed an attainable deal, for it was shared by the com mon people in every country. And it would have been attained if there had been statesmanship on this side of the Atlantic that could have risen to the height of the great argument and of the priceless opportunity. An Indelible Crime. But the golden moment was lost Europe needed food and work and peace to heal its wounds. But it was denied these things. Its wounds were kept open and inflamed Six precious weeks were wasted on the "hang-the-kaiser" election in this country, an election in which the mind of the nation, instead of being moved to grand issues, was satu rated with the basest appeals to re venge and ignorance, and we emerged from that saturnalia to the discussion of peace with the atmo sphere poisoned by false issues and shameful commitments. We have never recovered from that indelible crime. It involved us in the French peace of healing and its fruits are scattered over Europe in famine, disease, revolution, war and all the miseries of a great con tinent collapsing deeper and deeper into barbarism. President Wilson got his league of nations, but, he got it at a prie that threatens to make it lttle more than the pious aspirations of the Holy Alliance. Hying Parson" to , Attempt One-Stop Flight to San Diego Cleveland, Oct. 17. Lieut. B. W. Maynard has receive orders from the War department to make a one stop flight from Mineola, N. V., to ban Diego, Cal., immediately upon completion of his present flight, he announced Friday night. The route will be by way of Dallas, which will be the only scheduled stop. A De Haviland four, equipped with a Liberty motor of the same type he is using on the present flight, will be used by Maynard. The flight will be made by himself alone, he sa'd, the observers place having been removed to increase the ca pacity of gasoline to 300 gallons. Woodmen Camp Entertained With Boxing and Wrestling Beech Camp No. 1434, Modern Woodmen of -America, held a mem bership rally and smoker in its hall at the Labor temple last evening and served refreshments after the enter tainment Two boxing exhibitions, one between the Black boys and tha other between Jack Gates and Young Gotch, featured the program. The star wrestling match was be tween the Johnson brothers, 9-year-old champions. Jack Toliver defeat ed Buck Olsen in 29 minutes jn the other mat bout. Music, recitations and short talks by prominent mem bers of the order held the attention of the audience of 200 members and friends. For interurban railways a stand ard. size passenger car has been de signed that is steam driven, using petroleum for fuel under a water tube boiler. . Woman Is Knocked Out" in Neighborhood Fight When Mrs. Johann Bergan, 5311 North Thirty-third avenue, and her landlady, Mrs. Ferdinand Voight, Thirty-first and Ames avenue, dif fered yesterday afternoon, Mrs. Voight struck Mrs. Bergan and knocked her down, according to Mrs. Bergan's story to the police. When the police arrived, Mrs. Ber gan was unconscious. Police sur geons pronounced it a case, of solar plexus knockout. Mrs. Bergan was revived and latir taken to her home by her husband. No arrests were made. The fight occurred at Thirty first and Ames avenue. Republic of Austria ' Soon Will Be Created Basle, Switzerland, Oct. 17 The Austrian government, says a Vienna dispatch, has introduced in the na tional assembly a bill stipulating that the territory assigned Austria by the treaty of St. Germain shall be a democratic republic under the name of "The Republic of Austria." Another provision in the bill abro gates the law of November, 1918, declaring Austria to be an organic part of the German empire. Salvation Army's Only Spare Truck Tire Stolen The only spare tire on the 'auto mobile truck belonging to t,he in dustrial department of the Sana tion Army was stolen early Friday while Adjutant Granthan and his wife, 2011 Sherman avenue, both of the Sanation army, were listributing doughnut and coffee to troops, ac cording to a report to police. The t:re was taken from the truck stand ing in the yard of the Granthans, the adjutant said. j a The First Church of Christ, Scientist, Announce Free Lecture ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Bv VIRGIL O. STRICKLER, C. 8. of New York. At the Church Edifice, St. Mary's Avenue and 24th St. Saturday. Oct. 18. at 8 o. m. Sunday, Oct. 19, at 3 p. m. The Public Is Cordially ' Invited. m i a . Ill II v W 'LI The Joy Of A Perfect Skin Know the joy and happiness that come to one thru possessing a skin of purity and beauty. The toft, dis tinguished appearance it enders brings out your natural beauty to It full est. In use over 70 years. IIIII1IIIII1IIIIUI IIIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIlllllllllIllllllllIllllIlllIlHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllllllllin"lllll,llli:rlr OUR LEADER I THE TALK OF THE TOWN I UIT Try to Arrest Hungarian Premier During Coup d'Etat Vienna, Oct 17. (By Associated Press.) The motive for the at tempted arrest of Premier Stephan Friedrich of Hungary by Rouma nians on Monday was the discovery, it is said, that he was planning coup d'etat with the object of olac- mg tormer timperor Charles of Aus tria on the Hungarian throne. This information is (riven in a Budapest dispatch to the Abendblatt. Advices to Associated Press from Budapest say the arrest of the premier was prevented only by American and British guards, which fixed bayonets and prepared for bat tle. British officers in command of the guard forces ordered the Rou manians to continue their withdraw al from the city. With the Bowlers. Gen. Harries Camp of War Veterans Organized Tne General Harries camp of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, an or ganization 40 years old, was organ ized last night in the office of Ray J. Abbott, 656 First National bank building, with officers as follows: Commander, W. D. Middaugh of the 126th machine gun battalion in France: adjutant. C. R. Tames, late corporal of the machine gun com pany of the 30th infantry, and Ray J. Abbott, veteran of the Spanish American war, quartermaster. The camp will meet each Thursday night in Mr. Abbott's office, pending the restoration of the court house, when the meetings will be held in Memo rial hall. This is the second camp of the organization to be formed in the state. Operate on Detective Wounded During Riot Surgeoni operated on .William Turner, Sotith Side detective, Thurs day morning at the Wise Memorial hospital for the removal of a bul let in the abdomen. Turner was shot in the not of September 28. Hospital authorities last night stated he is doing fairly well. Morgenthau Is Back Vcw York. Oct 17. Atnonf the passengers who arrived here today on tne sieamsnip .nariauc was Henry Morgenthau, formerly am hicarinr tn Turkey, who as chair man of a committee appointed by i nr'i i i : fresioenr wnson nas oeen invcsn gatingreports of pogroms in Po land. H will proceed to Washing ton to make his report Ta 8. Nat'!. Bk. Club. Briggl 442 Clark 484 Goldbsrf 492! Peterson ...... 4S3 KltiserakJ ..... 620 Total 2,3(1 Btock Xafds Bank. King 448 Gehrman S86 Nelson 357 Dyko 434 Hull 427 K. P. Co. Clnb. Hancock 44 Grimm 528 G. Baker 436 Bachman 484 W. Baker 587 Total 3.529 Parkers Bank. Cain 621 Knolln 435 Regan 426 Pederson 468 Steffen 398 Rfbee MADE TO YOUR MEASURE 3 3 With Extra 1 rousers I fa? mi U i u WW a a 3. 3 3 3 3 i A Saving of from $10 to $15 on Prices Charged by Other Tailors. UNION MADE Your choice of silk alpaca, silk Ven etian or wool serge linings. No extra charge. Total 2.0531 Total 3,154 Team Standing. Won. Lost. Pet. Fairmont Creamery 10 2 .833 Nebraska Power Co t .750 City Hall S 4 .667 Nebraska Clothing Co.... 7 t .583 Kopao Bros 8 .500 M. E. Smith S .500 Orchard Wllhelm Co... 6 .500 Prexel Shoe Co 6 7 .417 Universal Motor Co 2 10 .167 Paxton & Gallagher 1 11 .083 7fih single game, Lair, 236. High three games. Lair. (19. Team high single game, Fairmont, 930. ' Team high three games, Fairmont, 2625. JTERCANTW. Orchard WUhelm.l Doherty ........ 643 Bowers ........ 499 C. Smith 436 Munzinger 453 Atkinson 625 1 Total 5455; Titn Gallagher. Colberg 4S3 Vouni 4901 O'Netl 6011 Crane sol Callahan 465 Tnt.t 3440 Universal Motor Co.) Foster 473 Rosa 396 Meyer 513 Connelly 410Pennlngton 373 Ecklfi '401 Handicap ...... 45 Total 2338' Neb. Clothing lo. Tomau 604 Voder 457, Johnson 459 Vetter 36 Harrison 632 Handicap 138 Total 2475 E LEAGUE Nebraska Power Co. Snyder 467 Ruff 404 Sandstedt 442 J. Maylan 463 F. Maylan 373 Handicap ....... 36 Total 2184 City Hall. Thomas . ...r. .. 484 Smith 402 Black 430 Schroeder 440 Frimeau 453 Handicap 63 Total 2301 Hops Bros. Reese Free . Cunningham 'Copenharve 619 Total 8293 Fairmont Creamery. Maurer 630 Gileaen 603 Fits 61 Jedllcka (61 McCoy 637 Total 2737 Old-Time Omahan Dies on Return From Alaska Word was received in Omaha yes terday of the death at Seattle -of Hans N. Paulsen, who left here 18 years ago to go to Alaska. He had returned to this country but a few days before his death, which result ed from appendicitis. The body will reach Omaha Sunday and the fu neral will take place from the resi dence of Walter Peterson, a brother-in-law, 4102 Izard street. Mr. ; Paulsen leaves a mother, Mrs. Anna Paulsen; a brother, George, of Omaha, and six sisters. The funeral will be to Springwell cemetery Sunday. Every, Piece of Goods Marked in Plain Figures Be Your Own Salesman We Sell from Weaver to Wearer We Eliminate the Middleman's Profit We Operate Our Own Stores We Do a. Strictly Cash Business We Have Tremendous Buying Power We Guarantee Fit and Workmanship We Are Tailors Not Agents You will find a choice selection of all the latest weaves, patterns and colors, consisting of grays, pencil stripes, black and blue serges, tweeds, cheviots, cassi meres and fancy Worsteds. Mr. Reader Having an extra pair of trousers with your suit is the only true clothes economy. It -means TRIPLE wear to your suit, and to Dundee a better pleased customer. Your inspection cordially invited. Come in tomor row. 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