"jtSSTill '35- Tf EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1019 13 T ' ? F I l- l 1 ;. UK REPORT YUD EN RESIGNSCOMIVIAND Anti-Soviet Army Breaking Up Rapidly May Bo Interned In Esthonia "REDS" SEE PEACE NEAR PRESIDENTS RECOVERY NOW IN THE FOUNTAINPEN STAGE Stage of Absolute Rest Over, He Is Allowed a Varied Program ! of Heading and a Wheelchair By CLINTON V. OlMIKItT MnfT rotrrnpnnilmt of tjio limine 1'iitillr l-rdtfr By the Asiociatod rren London, Nor. 17. According to n special dispatch to the Dally Mali, Gen eral Laldoncr, commander-in-chief of the EXhontan nrmy, has succeeded iiencrni luaenltcn, wio resigned ns commander of the northwestern Russian nrmy. The capture of Omsk by Russian soviet forces, unofficially denied lu ad Trices through Scandinavia yesterday, Is reasserted in a Bolshevik wireless com mtiniquo from Moscow today. Severe street flRhtinK preceded tho capturo and more than 1000 prisoners were taken by thn Bolshcviki, It is declared. The Kolchak forces retreated east ward In disorder, says the statement, which also claims the capture of Yanovsky. In diplomatic circles here it Is be lieved tho Bolshcviki nre entering tho ngcotiatlons 'at Dorpat regarding the rxehnngc of prisoners with every Inten tion of endeavoring to open peace pour parlers with Orcat Britain. The make-up of tho delegation ac companying M. Litvanoff, former Miviot minister to Great Britain, who heads the mission, is considered significant, and also is the fact that numerous tele grams have been received from tho Bolshevik government expressing the deepest appreciation of the arrange ments made for tho conference, the mes sages being couched in the most concili atory terms. James O'Grady, labor member of the House of Commons, who Is representing Great Britain, has definite Instructions not to enter into any pourparlers ex cept with relation to prisoners. Ilelslngfors, Nov. 17. General Tudenltch's troops nre retreating hur riedly from Ynmburg In the direction nf Nnrvn. on the liulf of Finland, ac cording to latest advices. Some of his troops already have entered the Ks thonian lines. Beval, Nov. 17. (By A. P.) The position of Yudcnltch's northwestern nrmy, it has been known for many days, has become more serious. His statements about future operations have been made to hide the real situa tion from the public, according to in formation renchlng Itevnl. The disor ganization of his army is daily more evident. The Yudcnltch forces arc crowded in a small space near Jam burg. A week ngo General Yuilcnitch in quired as to what Esthonia would do if he were obliged to cross the Esthonian frontier. The answer was that lie could take over the hospitals and 'supplies, but that his troops must disarm. Bolshevist pressure has been too great In allow Yuilcnitch to reorganize his forces, and since the loss of Ynmburg the situation has become aggravated. Washington, Nov. 17. "The Ode on n Grecian Urn," "Tim Middle Temple Murder," "Intelligence In-a Golf Ball," "Intimations of Immortality" what is it all but n cure for slnglc-trackedncss in n mind, prescribed In part by Doc tor Grayson, in part dictated by cir cumstances and the taste of the pa tient, the liquid mental diet of recov ery, two hours a day of It. No single trnrkeduess there, n nrloty of trnckagq rather, a detective storv, two poets ns far npnrt ns the polei, one lavish with emotions finding new poetry in them nnd that poets hail ror all time been exhausting. The other, severo and intellectual, finding poetry In the slmplo prosaic things nnd words, where no one else had jet found it, n bit of fooling about the plnythlng whose clusiveness defies the single track of tho fairway nnd lends into the bunker nnd roughs of real life tho very 'embodiment of opposition nnd n penny dreadful or what might linvo been one before tho world decided Hint it nns cheaper to pay $1.G0 for n thriller than to stoop to it in its ten-cent disreputn bility. T hnvc snid prescribed by Doctor Grnyson, but the President's physician rather tells what his patient hhall not read, or rather have read to him by his wife, for Mrs. Wilson is the render, thnn whnt he shall. A physician, when n mnn has gone so fnr on the single trnck thnt lie comes to stnasii, line n stntute book or like the decalogue, specializes In "thou s-hnlt nots." The Reading of a. President "Whnt doca ho read?" sou ask. "Well," begins the admiral, "noth ing to worry him. Nothing to make him think about his work or his re sponsibilities. Nothing that will tnkc too much mentnl effort. "Well, but whnt?" "Detective stories." the admiral snvs it with n rising inflection nnd slightly hesitating note. The past of this lit erary parvenu is too well remembered. "Let me sec, 'The Middle Temple Murder,' It Is by J. S. Fletcher, and o rmirtnhlo boards nre wrapped in n ghostly paper cover, reminiscent of humbler origin. l '""w1' "i ti. r troth. f)h! 'The Tigers Teeth.' And, cr I've seen alongside l,l hod 'The Lady in Black. There were others, but that's nil I can remember." It is plnin Doctor Grayson never wrote "Recipe One Tiger's Tooth. Misce in one Grecian urn. Syrupus Simplex q. s. Two hours dnily." "And, oh, poetry. The President calls for his own poetry. Wordsworth." The ndmiral gives this nnmo with con fidenco. Evidently Wordsworth is the President's favorite, most frequently read poet. Golf Mixed With Personalities "Kents. Shelley. Bjron?" the ndmiral is nsked to help his memory. "Yes. Kents. the 'Ode on it Grecian T'rn.' " One might have guessed Wordsworth with certainty, hut Kents is u surprise. The Pi evident has his old favorites rend to him, the poems that ha knows almost hy henrt. .n body thought of Browning, but prob ably it is safe to ndd Browning to CONSUMERS ON STRIKE Abstain From Milk Three Days a Week In Many Parts of N. Y. New York, Nov. 17. (By A. P.I Milk drivers, whose recent threat of a strike won them an Increase of pay and sent milk prices up, touna a "con sumers strike" In progress in many parts of New York today, when they mnde their deliveries. Hanging on doors of many homes nnd npartments were signs reading: '.Milk strike no milk wanted here until Thursday." The strike was called by the com ""tnunity Councils of National Defense, nnd "strikers" who observe the rccorn mendntions of the council will abstain from the use of milk on Mondays, Tues days nnd Wednesdays of every week until the price of that commodity is lowered. Beidler & Bookmyer General INSURANCE BROKERS 424 Walnut Street Lomlari 2347 ifafit 452 New York Office 95 William Street rJJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIU I INSURANCE I AOAINBT Riot & Civil Commotion, i 5 Commercial Union Assurance j E Co. and E Queen Insuranea Co, of j America WILLIAMS & WALTON 416-420 Walnut St., Phils. niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiifr 1817 Fire 1919 Association OF PHILADELPHIA N. W. Cor. 4th & Walnui has given its policy holders solid Indemnity for more than one hundred years and has never been so Btronjr financially as now. Have you a policy In this fold and rellabln Company? CHARTER PERPETUAL Compensation Expert, We require underwriter and special agent Compensation and Casualty lines; one well qualified, who has made good and is work ing for future. Replies giving experience, business and, social connections, age and present .salary considered absolutely con fidential. Vs PHILADELPHIA AGENCY ' : t " A;M4Lsr o& (lie slim list that the admiral ou1d recall. "Intelligence in n (iolf Hall" is in u olmnt' of essnys by A. (5. (Inrdiner, the former editor of the London Ncwh, one of the rndienl editors of Knghindi with whom the President Iins had nuiii points of I'onlnrt. The book deuls with nen-otinlitlcK with ('lomcncjeuu Mr. Wilson must enjoy the memory of, the moment in the lVnre Conference when tlie piemler of Vrnncc ".aid to him: "You lime n henrt of steel" with Lloyd (ieorge, with golf. This pnitinilnr intelligent golf bnll was ilium from tho tee 1f0 jnrdx strnlglit down the eoursp, a stntesmiius drive. like (' . n gentleinnn's mark in college, n perfectly proper dric. You knew ou could wnlk directly to the bnll. Hut when the driver readied the pot the bnll was nowhere in night. A long senith failed to rctrnl it With that craft for which golf bulls nre fnmilinr it had hidden itself. The plnjer dropped another ball nnd plnjed along. .- lien the game wns oxer he icturned home, passing the spot where hip nan wns lost, not to look tor It, but because thnt was the shortest wnv back. He wns saying to himself, "fli! nnd with a lost bnll nnd thnt bnd iticit in tlie bunl.cr at No, 7 not bnd." "There was a time when meadow, grove and stream The enith, nnd every common sight, To me did seem Apparelled in eeleMinl light " AVhen, light in the spot where he nnd his opponent nnd their two caddies had sought it, there laj the lost golf ball. You sec it was caught napping. It lindn't figured on his r turning thnt way and had come nut of hiillnir. There aie limits to tlie intelligence of a golf bnll even If it docs not seem so. Thus the President plays his golf, in momory. Thus he goc3 with Kents "In Temple or the Vnlcs of Arcady" and when tlie doctor stops his reading he plenus, "nut l am hot on the trnil of n follow who hns doue n terrible crime. I'll catch him in the next chapter, lou must not stop me now. Far From (lie Singlo Track Tar from the single trnck is all this; far from tlie one big engrossing idea (in which you spend voiirsclf utterlv. among the simple things, in safe variety, among the more primitive emotions, getting back, ns In the dietnry of tlie sick, to first principle. "The world is too much with us: Lnte or soon, getting nnd spending wci jny waste our powers . fircat CJod ! I'd rather be a pagan Suckled in n creed outworn; So might I standing on some pleasant lea, Have glimpses that would leave me less forlorn ; Have sight of Protcns rising from the sen; Or henr old Triton wind his wrnthed horn." It Is tho rest cure. Admirnl GrnTsnn snjs so, It wns invented nnd made fnmruis by n Philndelphlnti, Dr. S Weir Mitchell, a neurologist and writer of fiction. At first you nte not per mittcd to stir a hand. President Wilson protested nt first. "You poke fopd nt me like n mother bird feeding her young, nnd food I don't like, too." And there were not even detective stories in those dnjs, cither. Today the President li far beyond the first stages of the rest riirc. One advantage of stopping ever thing is that the patient is grateful fnr tlie llrst little pcrmtticn exercises of the mind mid body. After n peine conference "The Middle Temple .Murder might seem poor ntisiiirss. After nothing II seems mighty good business. There is the boj's npiictlte. Now the President sits up. rood is no longer "poked nt" him. It Is n great thing, that moving food toward our own mouth for the hrst time, it shows jou how real are the little satis factions ou nan lorgouen niiii now nil lent mo thcble things for whlili ou almost threw nvvnj Hour' life. And the President is now quite insistent at meal time. H, 1 nnd 7 nre important hours. It Is a good sign on which medical opinion dwells, There is another good sign. Tlie President jokes with his incdlenl ad visers'. When the doctor asked to examine Ills pupils, reaching toward his eyelids, he Mild "You'll huvc n hnrd time. I've had many " Doesn't quite put him in tin1 elas with Charles Lamb with his pun on the bare, but then for sick room humor And the President Is still a very sick mnn. lie will be so fnr a long time. Doctor ,(!rason savs thnt. He goes about in a wheel ehnlr, hns been out In the sun on the White House poirh. Resides books he hns the newspnpers lead to him. or nt least their headline"". And of public business, Doctor (tin.von or Mr. Tumulty present to him papers that must receive his attention, Tlie messages that have come out with his name have been drawn up by others. He studies them, lias tlie changes mnde in them that he wishes nnd then signs them, hitherto In bed, with an Indelible pencil, but now lie has reached the founlnin pen stage of recovery. In the HupretiH Court, won Its fight to hnve I'niueled patents for 00(1(1 acres of Cnlifornin oil iiiud vnlued at $10, (KH).(KM), alleged to have been nbtnliinl through fraud li the Southern Pacific Co. In disposing of the iae the Supreme Court reversed federal court decrees dis missing proceedings instituted liv the government to have the mini, which is located within nnval oil reserve No 1,' leturiied to the government. HI NT Ml lll.soills XIIWNTK t m HINTFfl UKS0UTS HINTI It RKSOHT1 I'LKI-5MJllL,iN'- Laurel in the Pines LAKEWOOD, N. J. . dlntlncttvs hold In n delightful winter resort where amonir northern, fragrant plnk equable climate Is conducive to health, vlt'ir and teat. Golf, nidlne nnd Sheltered Walka. Dally Conci rts and Dancing FRANK F. RI1TJTK. Met. rr?srrrHr nu,i;tq .I3r I El 111 Mil I1 fciSSL E. I'r ' - Jl Or thu Occaiv Frorvt levvrv storwsof Cbiwort ,1 i nUii opeciai inn iprin.v hvard n.urovtcup.7?tvyiv AriWTif I'irv. s. .1. e?m& wi.vrhii ni.soiiTS ATI.NTH' t ITV, N. J, Weilmniter K Av- n"r Br.' Eler, VYCsuninsier(0 , pr.vll,e bathi m water. 114 up wkly, 5ft up dally. C liulirc. ATLANTIC CITY.N. J. I i Arv-AiRGrican. PlaaHotel 1 of DisihvdionwuiRcalComlort I HOTEL B0SC0BELKn.tKayr!Avil8,l,f;J weekly! phoneHT. year: Its o A. K. MARIOS'. IIP.RMUIIA rlRBPROOP C1ARAOK. ! IIS557? IHoXoxoK) JIB E R M U D A eRunrryraEDE Turk IMatr ovrrlooklnc Ocmr, nml City T'tv-W m1wh open J tTlwln hump I o n '(CharlMpI nrtr Botmlwttk Hemodtled. Runnlnc otter Pritat ruths Lr 500 lftpt,'m'l M Orihttn.formfirlf pfThe I'rinc J 1IIK lllF.tl, WINTF.R RESOKT IPurnraa l.lnc. Whitehall 8t . N T ) PRINCESS HOTEL HOWB t TWOROOnK. Jlanajert llnrna Per. ID HOTEL FRASCATI FltANK J cmAT. Manager Onena Her. H rOCONfl MOUNTAINS Ml, I'oeono. Til. The OntWOod MoJn elegant location I Open all enr. SpectaJ tall winter rates Uklt U b Ai: V Artman. WASHINOTON. P. C. Burlington Hotel American and Eutopean Plans 4.11 Rooms. 222 Haths, $2.50 to $5 U T. MIM.UIl. llcr , Wnahlnnton. D. C Five mlnutea from everything VlRntM U. S. WINS OIL LAND SUIT Supreme Court Decides Against Southern Pacific's Claim Washington, Nov. 17. (H A. P.) The government, by an opinion tocln.v OLD POINT COMFORT HOTEL CHAMBERLIN FINE AUTUMN OOLF wlmralni Pool, Scifood X m Culilne Everf Europttn 610 r. AB1MS, Muifir rirlrflll Mttirtt. 1ft.. on kt Ak Mr. Foster, lilll ami Lhralnnl 'Ccok'a Toura." 225 h. llrnad St. fl liwiii i iiiiiiiiiaiiBBiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimn Rheumatism, Neuritis and Gout M Why Suffer Longer) Drink Mountain Valley Water The famous curative water from Hot Springs. Doctors Endorse and Recommend It. Mountain Valley Water Co., 718 Chestnut St. Fhone VFnlnot 3107 Served at leading Clubs. Hoteli. Cafes and P 7t R dining cars Sold by nrat'Class grocers, druggists, etc , or direct by us. Efll WH 2MDIS0K(1 fflONOGIWI STOP nomob O..Kjdjboru. In the Wanamaker Store PERFECT PENCILS American Lead Pencil Co..clclO Fifth Avenue, N.Y. Blauner's Great Annual November Fur Sale This Great Sale represents careful forethought in purchasing many months ago, when prices were low. Reap the benefit of these savings of 25 to 45. Now is the time to buy your Christmas Gifts of Furs at the lowest prices yet this season tL Second Floor Fur Salon 27 Choker Scarfs Smart Choker Scarfs of mink, Jap marten, skunk, beaver, seal and mol 39 .50 p Mink Uoat O'JS.OO Seal Muff Large melon Muff of Hudson Seal of per fectly matched skins .... 12 .95 K Coney Coat H-length taupe Kit Jf f) Seal Coat Chic belted model of Australian Seal. Cape collar and cuffs. 139 lolr oiiii .Sqiifnel t.'J.Od Coney model Coat in flared 79 Bargain Fur Booth Main Floor Wolf Scarfs 5.95-7.95-9.95 Taupe Manchurian Wolf Scarfs in open animal effects. Special values. Coney Scarfs O Q5 Taupe Kit Coney Animal Scarfs. Coney Muffs 5Q5 Cross Fox Sets . Jap Cross Fox Sets. Tox Scarfs Q ZC) Poiret"Bro wn Fox Scat fs. " w 59.50 Muskrat Coat Natural Mudkrat Sports Coat in full ripple belted model . . 149 .50 Seal Coat Handsome Hudson Seal Coat, has large Squirrel collar bell cuffs Seal Coat Hudson Seal - . . Sports Coat has large U I Cape collar and turn- ji back cuffs Nutria Coat Taupe Nutria m i Sports Coat has cape ' collar and bell cuffs.. i.50 vjiii'M ca ,t iMA. Thanksgiving Music The very music itself will be cause for thanksgiving, if it is the Re-Created music that comes from the New Edison "the phonograph with a soul." This is the Re-Created music that Edison spe-it $3,000,000 to per fect the Re-Created music which 800,000 music lovers have listened to in tone-tests between the liv ing voices and the Re-Created music. Newspapers sent their music critics to judge these startling tests. They went to the tests cool, critical, impartial in judgment. Over 500 of them have publicly declared in the columns of their newspapers that it was impossible to dis tinguish between the real and the Re-Created. Not a single news paper critic has claimed to be able to detect a difference. They have hailed Music's Re-Creation as a "new art." Every New Edison is in a Period Cabinet They begin with the graceful Heppelwhite at $155. Then fol lows a Shdraton (sans inlay) at $195; a Jacobean in Oak at $250; a Chippendale at $285 ; a William and Mary at $285 ; an inlaid Sheraton at $300; a Louis XIV at $300 (all these are uprights). An English XVIII Century at $450; an Italian at $450; and other designs at greater prices running up to $6000. Come let us show you this good Thanksgiving music The New Edison Shop, Second Floor, Central i John Wanamaker Special Yalues in Kiddies' Furs 10.50 Coney Sets 395 Smart set of Ermine Coney. Special value. Coney Sets. 14.50 Ermine Coney Scarf and ball-shape muff. Coney Sets 595 Taupe Kit Coney Set has animal scarf and ball muff. -h Fourth Floor Dyed Squirrel Sets Taupe dyed Squirrel, cape collar and ball muff. Polo Caps ROc; Smart little Polo Caps haye ear laps. Coney Coat 49.50 r White Ermine Coney Coat in flared model. 833-35 Market Street BLAUNER'S 833-35 Market Street s Lliiiii-iiHsjmi mmami-mmmivimtimii naaBi nsftisnaTOaa. XO BE SOLO BYTHE ALIEN PROPERTY C U S T O O I AN Voting Trust Certificates Representing 34,644 Shares of the Capital Stock The American Metal Company, Ltd. A New York Corporation . Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, Francis P. Garvan, Alien Property Custodian, will offer for sale at public sale, to the highest bidder, at the office of The American Metal Company, Ltd., 61 Broadway, Borough of Manhattan, New York City, New York, on the 26th clay of November, 1919, at 10 o'clock in the forenoon, the fol lowing property, to wit: Voting Trust certificates representing 34,644 shares of the par value of $100 each, of the capital stock of The American Metal Company, Ltd., a New York Corporation, issued under a Voting Trust agreement dated December 5, 1918, between the owners of the stock, in The American Metal Company, Ltd., of the first part, and Joseph F. Guffey, Henry Morgenthau and Berthold Hochschild, as Voting Trustees", of the second part. Tho American Metal Company, Ltd., has an authorized capitalization of $25,000, 000, of which $7,000,000, divided into 70,000 shares of the par value of $100 each, are issued and outstanding, and of the stock so issued, 53,064 shares have been deposited under said Voting Trust agreement. I Full description and information concerning the property to be sold, the terms and conditions of inspection and sale, and the order thereof, may be obtained by application to JOSEPH F. GUFFEY, Director, Bureau of Sales, 110 West 42nd Street, New York City. n FRANCIS P. GARVAN, Alien Prepprtf Custodim I i V. 1 Wfl m M ul N " '14 -. . k - ' ft SIA f -fc 1 .'( .,....... " ..!- -5 rf- "3 " ;, jwa-.... 1 'ir'a .rt . ", .v.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers