Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, February 26, 1919, Night Extra Closing Stock Prices, Page 9, Image 9

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'EVENING PUBLIC LEDGERr- PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1019
9
IRISH DELEGATE
URGESHEARING
British Mission Acknowl
edges His Request to Prc-
sent Erin's Claims
WENT TO GREET WILSON
But Had Credentials as Dele
gate From Irish Rcpuh
He in Valise
By the Associated Press
furls, Feb. 26. Tho British peace
nlsten has written an acknowledgment
of the letter from Sean O'CealllRh, nk-
. in the Peace Conference to set a date
lrto hear the claims of the "provisional
Bovernment of Ireland." Tne impreasiui.
prevails today that there vl 1 bo no
further odlclal action by tho British. (
n t .b!o m riAiot7UiHH iiv(.4iiiv ....
Cwlllrt'-y leu'er had not been received
by them. No meetinK oi ";";"
a. i in.. ,t ih Peace Conference
AiniS CUIIH1IIHVW AA ..." .V.A ntiV
h heen held as yet. nor Is there any
Immediate prospect of a meeting.
Sean (VCealllBh. whoso name In , plain
English Is J. T. O'Kelly. who Is seeking
recognition by the Teace Conference a,
the envoy of the Irish Government, ar
rived aulelly in Paris more than to
weeks ngo. halng. according to his own
rtatemenV obtained a British passpor
by subterfuge. Ostensibly he crosstfl
the Channel as the representative of the
Corporation of Dublin to pres ent the
freedom of the city of Dublin to Presi
dent Wilson and to prcBS an InMtation
SOUTH AFRICA SENDS ENVOYS
Delegates Sail on British Warship
to Propose n Rcpuhlic
Cope Town, Union of South Africa,
Feb "6 (By A. 1.) The Nationalist
party of the Union of South Africa Is
stndlng a deputation to Lngland and
to Paris, v. litre arguments In favor of
eslabllshlng a republlo In South Africa
will be advanced.
At a meeting of the Nationalist mem
bers of parliament, It was decided to
accept an offer made by tho Admiralty
of a warship to convey the Nationalist
deputation to Kngland.
BOLSHEVIKILOSE
PORTS ON BALTIC
Libau and Windau Wrested
From Reds Greeks
Sweep Up Dniester
TIRASPOL IS CAPTURED
CZECHS QUITTING
TESCHEN REGION
Evacuating Mining Dis
tricts to Line Fixed by
Paris Agreement
READY TO GO FURTHER
of-natlon's project nmong the roles, the
opposition holding It to be Impractica
ble. They declare a large army Is a
necessity for Poland to unify tho peo
ple and glo the remade nation a new
start by building on Its mllltnry tradi
tion ! to employ the Idlers, to assist In
restoring Llthunla and to repel Inva
sion. This Tollsh party points out that the
position of Poland, surrounded by ene
mies, appears to bo not well understood,
especially by Americans. The predic
tion Is made that Germany will surely
use the economic weapc-n to recover
ascendancy In Poland, and llkowlse In
Itussla, whero Poland herself hopes to
do much business.
Withdraw From Land Dis
puted hy Poland Under Al
lied Mission's Auspices
By the Associated Press
Copenhagen, Feb. 26. The ports of
L.lbau and Windau, In Courlaml, on the
Baltic Sen, which wcro taken by the
Bolshcvlkl, January 31, have been re
captured. Athens. Feb. 26. (By A. P.) Oreek
troops, operating with detachments of
French -and Rumanians, Ime advanced
north of Odessa, pursuing Bolshevik
forces along the Dniester IUer. After
a short tight they have occupied the
fffrt and town of Tiraspol, on the rlgljt
bank of the Dniester, Afty-three miles
from Odessa, according to a saionim
. .. i.i. i, n vioir in' i.i imii . t
upon tne. itcsiik.ii. " . 'uispaicn.
Tucked away In his baggage, howeier, Tho rctreatlng Bolshevlkl nave aban
O'Cealllgh carried credentials ns the doned many dead and wounded and
delegate of the provisional Irish govern- , hay0 )(,f. gung an(1 munitions In the
ment . . hand of the Allied forces.
O'Ccalllgh aajs that thus far he re-
celved no reply to letters and telegrams vlinUotol, Feb. 15. (Delayed)
to President Wilson asking the Pre.- I (Uy Ai p.) In an engagement between
dent to set a date for tho reception of jBpan-.0 ond Bolshevik forces twenty
the committee to present to him the ) meg ca8t Df Blagovleshtchensk. capital
freedom cf the city of Dublin. m" of the Amur province, mo jnpanB ij
his arrival here O'Ccalllgh also wrote to
President Wilson asking ho be received
as tho delegate of tho insn repuonc.
CAN'T LOCATE 3000 BRITONS
Official Believes Most of Them
Listed ns Prisoners Arc Bend
London Feb. 2C. (By "A. P.) Beply
lng to a question In the House of Com
mons lait night Captain Frederick 10.
Ouest, for the government, said that the
number of British offlcers nnd men of
flclnlly classed ns war prisoners who
had not yet been accounted for bv the
n-rmanp nnDroxlmated 3000. Including
comma troops and tne
two officers and elgnteen men
twenty men wounaea. ine ummivii
forco was estimated to number 3000.
Brigadier General Inagakl. of the
t., utaff tn Siberia. In a statement
regarding tho Japanese demand for the
return of the arms and equipment of
tho 1500 Cossack rcvolters of the force
r funeral Kalmlkoff who haB been
In charge of the American forces, says
ho Is not concerned about what becomes
of tho Cossacks, aunouga no ueinrura
that tho soldiers guilty of killing their
officers at tho time of the mutiny In
January should bo tried. The general a
statement ndds:
The men " do not belong to Japan.
Thir ,1 snoslt on s entirely a ramicr
fly the Associated Pres
Warnnw, Feb. 26. Under the aus
pices of the Inter-Alllcd mission to Po
land tho Czech troops began yesterday
evacuating tho Teschen mining districts
which are In dispute between Poland
nnd Ciecho-Slovakla, the Cicchs with
drawing to the line fixed by the Tarls
agreement of February 3.
Colonel Snedderek. commanding the
Cireh troops In Silesia, who was sent
by President Masaryk to represent him,
expressed the desire of the Prnguo gov
ernment to facilitate the execution of
the agreement, He offered to consent
that n further neutral zone be estab
lished to prevent possible clashes be
tween the troops of the two nations.
The Allied mission Is to hear n num
ber of Jewish delegations regarding the
reported Lemberg program of last No
vember. The Polish commission which
Investigated the disturbances found, ac
cording to the Jewlth council's books In
Lemberg, that from November 1 to
December 6 there were 131 deaths In
Lemberg, fifty of which resulted from
rifle bullet wounds.
Premier I'aderewskl Is said to bo
much disturbed by reports published In
England by Israel Cohen, representing
the Zionists, that the Jews have been
mistreated generally. It Is asserted that
M I'aderewskl considers the n-ports ex
aggerated, and It Is said he will soon Is
sue an official statement.
Informal discussions since the arrival
of the Inter-Allied mission here have re
vealed little sympathy for the league-
Ima.,1 anA vnlnntiiL trnnna
Hl.j.A-it.1 a. a.-.- -; -.;- --- --" A..A.. a..-. -
navv. but exciuaing mo jnuian iroops .between uenerai iiravcs iiio muci .
It was not believed many were alive, he commander) and the Busslans. Tho
said. arms and equipment of tho soldiers.
As a result of a recent search In Oer- r .. ,vr furnished bv the Jap-
. ... . . . - .. in, inc. a.. a - -
manv. i;apiaili vtuesL ii'iJufiA-u. BiAirm
ipk'nnd wounded prisoners were found
They remnlned because It was not ad
visable to move them. There also was
a small number of men desirous of re
maining In Germany for various rca-tons.
"Naughty"1 Rebels Lose Rank
Lisbon. Feb. 26. Thirty-five colonels
Onecn Give Affair ill " ne Portuguese army wno joinea me
yuecn Aint juiuia iui ionBrchimB In the recent revolt against
the government nave ueen rt-uueeu 10
the rank of second lieutenants, accord
ing to tno Uinciai journal.
PRINCESS PAT HAS A PARTY
Kinc and
St. James's for 1000 Guests
London. Feb. 26. (By A. P.) King
George and Queen Mary gave a party
In Et. James Palace last night In honor
or the appioachlng marriage of Princess
Patricia of Connaught and Commander
Alexander It. M. llanisay. It. N As
their Majesties were In mourning for
Prince John, they did not attend tho
party In person, but other royalties were
present and, by command of tho ICIng,
the court mourning wa waived. More
than 1000 Invited guests attended.
Tho members of the royal family as
sembled In the Queen Anne drawing
room and Princess Patricia and Com
mander Bamsay assisted In receiving tho
visitors. Refreshments were served In
tho banquet hall and picture gallery,
and tho whole rango of the rooms of
rtate was thrown open and brilliantly
lighted.
Many notable additions to the gifts
were exhibited. Including a magnificent
eight-pointed diamond star from tho of-
, fleers of the Guards' Brlgado and an
1 ostrich feather fun from General Louis
Botha.
. . ..a... ,.. ntv
nnaaft WHO flaVQ Uni MWlllls, ,...aa
will continue to assist, tho Cossacks In
an effort to build up the Russian army.
Therefore, we Insist that the arms and
equipment be returned to General Kalmlkoff."
i British Influenza Death List Crows
London. Feb. 26. Deaths from Influ
enza Increased at an alarming rate
last week, according to the ortlclal fig
ures Issued today. Tho total number of
deaths from this cause In ninety-six
great towns of F.ngland and Wales was
3046, as compared with 1363 in tho pre
ceding week. In Greater London the
number of deaths was 974 as compared
with 451 tho previous week.
EXPRESSIVE
ENGLISH
By James C. FtraalJ, L.H.D.
This intenicly intereitlng nd In
piling new book by mailer of
Sngliih ipecch, covers every upect
ol English expreiiion.
Ivlfti- IncfttN tw U of Itvtal v
Srwwrwn, Afww. cActtvt. 4.t
rr tM Hltl l Mwvrt-4 tpttl
nt4 mm thtm tm sw pi fcwtr,
IrMflD. -M iHaHiii m trwir !.
Aajoneof ortlntrilillUi UHtrtpteltr who
UlgtiiIlrpplltnLmicltto4MtiHofthl.lhc
Dut tad In msny rtipecu tlmtil, work of one
rf flu motl mlst phlloloiliw'of onr d-r
ua not fill toteoin. If not a nisiter of, it
Itlt proSclent Is toe oo of .tho Eoillilt
litai." Bivtllrn Tlw
474 pp., cloth-bouixl. 1 .60. srli portp-W, SI .72
ooai.onit o ruaiWHtai
ruNK & WAQNALL oompany
sis riti Avomo, ftw VoHi
Well-known Automobile
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One of the oldest and most reputable automo
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Address A 29, Ledger Office
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The Philadelphia and Reading
Coal and Iron Company
DICTATORSHIP IN BAVARIA '
Soviets Proclaim Downfall of
.Militarism to World
London, Feb. 2C. (Hy A I' ) The
Workmen's nnd Soldiers' Council of Mu
nich has sent a wlrelens tnednnite to nil
countries announcing that a dictatorship
by tho proletariat and pe.-wants has
been proclaimed In Bavaria, savs a Cen
tral Xews dispatch from Dasel filed on
Tuesday.
The message states that In conse
quence of tho murder of Premier Klsner
"by a representative of Oerman feudal
militarism the IJavarlan proletariat
has nrlsen to defeat the feudal revolu
tion, llnvarlan socialist unity has been
realized. It Is added. Socialists In all
lands are Informal that militarism has
been uprooted In Havarla.
Dispatches from Ilerlln IVbruary 22
ri-iiorted that the Central Soviet coun-
1 ell of Munich vvbb in control of the sit
uation trere nnd nnu prociainuu n pro
letariat dictatorship. More recent ad
vices have tfld of ministerial appoint
I ments bv the new Riivernment. but anlnr
to the disordered condition of ntT.ilrx In
i the Davarlan capital nnd the Interrup.
tlcn of communications no comprehensive
nccount of the developments hag et
been forthcoming.
NEW TEUTON RULE IN ALSACE
Bill Proposes Federal Civil Con
trol in "Lost Provinces"
lln.lr Feb. 20 lily A. P.) The fol-
I lowing bill, havlnc a provisional char-
' acter, will, according to advices from
Weimar, be submitted to tho Herman
National Anembly:
Article 1. Tho Imperlnl Bovernment
LONE ASSASSIN,
C0TTIN PROTESTS
Clcmcnccau's Assailant In
sists He Had No Con
spirators in Crime
ISLMPLY AN ANARCHIST
Premier, Expected to Be Up
Today, Will Give His
Deposition
) the Associated Press
Furls, Feb, 20 Captain Ilouchnrlon
1 ho explained, cam to borrow books.
The visit was not connected with his at
lock on M Clemenccnu.
A bulletin Issued last nlKht by the
four physicians In attendance on Pre-
I inler Clemencenu said- "The con-
Ivalescence of the Premier belnfc now
only a question of time and care, no
further bulletins w It! be Issued "
Premier Clemenceau probably will bo
i able to leave his residence today for
the first time since he was shot.
In the forenoon of yesterday the Pre
mier received Foreign Minister Plchon,
ftcncral Mordacq, Finance Minister
K!otz, M Simon. Minister of tho Colo-
i tiles, and M Mandel, his chief clerk
Is authorized, In order to remedy the
disadvantages resulting from tho occu.
patlon of Alnce-Irralne, to
gate decrees having tho foreo
These decrees must be approved by the
commlsMons of the states nnd also must
be submitted to tho Natlonnt Asembly
Article 2. The prerogatives conferred
upon tho lieutenant governor or other
authorities by the constitution of Alsace
Ijorralnw and by bylaws will be exer
cised for the present by tho Minuter of
the Interior
Article 3 This law will become effec
tive the day It Is promulgated nnd the
government will fix tho date for Its
abrogation.
GOMPERS O.JCS KENY0N BILL
iromu1-! Cables to President, Urging Fur
I "by the'l'"r 1',c,,cri' Unemployment Aid
PBrl, Fib 2B (Hy A P ) Samuel
(lomprrs, president of the American
Federation of Uitmr, In behalf of tho
American labor delegation her, hns
cabled to President Wilson, expressing
Approval of the Kcnvon bill to appro
pilatn Jlno.flnn.OOO for the co-operation
of the Federal government with tho
Matea In relieving unemployment.
lie urges that public building work
be resumed Immediately, that assistance)
be given to private construction work,
nnd that shipbuilding be continued.
REDS SPAREU. S. CITIZEN i
Death Sentence Commuted in,
Koloinatinno Case
Moekhnlm. Feb. 2fi (Hy A. V - '
American Minister Morris has been In
formed by the Danish lied Cross that nn
i American citizen named Koloinatinno
I upon whom the denth sentence had been
liaised by the Ilolshevlkl, now In detain
ed In the Kremlin In Moscow, the death
of the Pnrla military court, yestenlay ismtcnce having been commuted
beard the ev Idence of persons w ho were
ftltnesses of the attempted nssasslnntion
of Primier Clemenceau
He has asked Doctor Itouhanowltch,
a widely known alienist, to examine
Kmlle Cottln, M Clemenceau's nssallnnt
to determine his degrto of mental re
sponsibility Cnptaln Ilouchnrdon will
ca'l at M. Clemenceau's home today to
tnkc the Premier s deposition
Cottln asserted In his examination
that he hnd not netd under the Influ
ence of nnvbody Ho nccused Premier
Clemenceau of showing tnclt opposition
to nnnrchlsts
According to his own testlmons, Cot
tin met a Spaniard in I.vons who In- I
dueel him to rend anarchist works, nnd i
he hnd spent a considerable amount of
money In tho purchase of this kind of .
literature I
When Ctptaln Ilouchnrdon said tliat ,
Cottln's father wanted him examined I
to establish his inentnl condition Cottln
became Indignant nnd protested that ho
wns entirely responsible for his nt- I
tlons
Hep'ylng to ii question. Cottln saw '
be would have renewed his nttempt In
case of failure, but would havo been
guided by the opinions expressed by the
newspapers of his party. He cninpl.iln
ed that anarchist meetings were forbid
den nnd that the police had threatened '
nnnrchlhtn bitltally
"It was tho brutality of the police
that armed my hand," he said.
The jouth who recently visited him,
The former Ilolshevlkl financial repre
sentative In Norway, who Is In Petro
grad. has submitted tn Minister Morris
a proposal from the soviet government
that it will exchange Knlomntb.no ami
some other Americans now In prison
for soviet representatives detained by
tho American forces In Vladivostok
MEXICO GUARDS U. 5. MINES '
Government Troops Protect the
American Property From Villa ,
.liinret, Vlr.,., Fib 2t (IIV A P )
Mexican federal troops have been or
dered to gunrd American mining prop
erties In northern Mexlcu, It wag an
nounced today nnd 200 troopers have
bien stationed nt Santa Hulalla, Cusl
nulrl ichlc and Mndtrn
This was done to prevent Francisco
Villa from carrying out his threat to
destroy American properties and kill
vnnrlran employes unless $1,000,000
was paid him by .March 1
Additional supplies of ammunition
have been sent from the I'nlteil Stntes
to these points under n specl.l mrml'
f$ Cuticura Helps
X$f) Burning Smarting
Skin Troubles
m.
Bfil
VTfl
ill .!..!..
14 111 14I.H ISIS,
ma' it.h f r i
pout. IS, OinrnuM ti A W. Ttcom 25
,f r.ot'tBTi. dtI L -Bviton "
Chateau-Thierry
By Gen. Omar Bundy
The story of those forty days of desperate
fighting, in which the American troops stopped the
German drive on Paris and turned the tide of war,
has been written for Everybody's Magazine by
Maj.-Gen. Omar Bundy, who was in command of
the Americans. This historic narrative, together
with hitherto unpublished documents of extraor
dinary value, appears in the March Everybody's,
now on sale.
Also "Our Aliens," by George Creel, and state
ments by eight important members of Congress on
what the new Congress should do are two other
features (among many) of instant interest in the
March number.
Get your copy today, for tho news-stands won't
have it long.
verjrbodvs
VJ jKagazine &&
March issue now on sale at all News-stands.
AH Official World's Records Broken
by De Palma and His Packard Car
Packard Aviation Motor Drives Car 14972 Miles Per Hour
Daytona Beach, Fla., February 17th
When. Ralph De Palma left Daytona Beach
this evening he carried with him the distinc
tion of having broken every official world's
record on the straightaway with his new
racing car equipped with the Packard Avia
tion Motor.
In five day's racing, beginning February
12th, he has broken records for 1 mile, 2
miles, 3 miles, 4 miles, 5 miles, 10 miles, 15
miles and 20 miles hanging up the startling
figure of 24.02 seconds to the mile, at the
rate of 149.72 miles per hour.
The Packard Aviation Motor now holds
all records on straightaway and circular tracks
for all distances from lA mile to 616 miles.
World's Records made by
DE PALMA
with the
Packard Aviation Engine
1 mile 24.02 sec
2 miles 49.54 sec.
3 miles 1 min. 15.04 sec.
4 miles 1 mln. 39.77 sec.
5 miles 2 min. 04.58 sec.
10 miles 4 min. 09.30 sec.
15 miles 6 mln. 48.75 sec
20 miles 8 mln. 54.20 sec.
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RECORD JSREAKINCr PACKABXS TZAClNGr CAH EQUIPPED WITM
PACKAaD v900 C.U&IC INCH AIRCRAFT. ENWNE.-
MOLDCs. OP WOULD TZCCORDS MADE. AT5HEEPSHEAD SAV
tTUI-y 2.T. ANO StA . I9IT.
Tt7HAT gives even greater in
W terest to this achievement is
the fact that many of the earlier
records were, long held by the
German-made Blitzen-Benz car.
It seems peculiarly fitting that
this new De Palma-Packard'rec-,
ord, which breaks the last hold of
the Germans on transportation
records; should be achieved by
the Packard engineering principles
that made it possible.
No one knows better than the
Packard Company what can be
accomplished by intensive study
with any problem of transporta
tion whether of passengers or
freight, by motor carriage, by
truck, by airplane, on land or in
the air.
Compare the Cars and
their Mile Records
DE PALMA'S PACKARD
Nationality of Car American
Packard Aviation Engine
Piston Displacement 904.8 cu. in.
Horstpower 260
Speed 149.72 miles per hour
Time Measured Mile 24.02 sec.
Place of Record Daytona Beach, Florida
Date of Record-February 12, 1919
Condition Minc Start over Measured Mile
BURMAN'S BLITZEN-BENZ
Nationality of Car German
Denz Engine
Piston Displacement 1312.27 cu. In.
Horsepower 250
Speed 141.7 miles per hour
Time Measured Mile 25.4 sec.
Place of. Record Daytona Ueach, Florida
Date of Record-April 23, 1911
Conditions Flying Start over Measured Mile
T'Ui-i. c .u. -aa:... cn ,.--
the Packard Aviation Engine- . S1 ", j"!,1jV.j
the engine which was the fore. f QQ0 working lessons of De Palma's racing
runner of the Liberty Motor that fntensivelv on Jransnortation in a practical way to the Pack
broke the German supremacy in
the air.
The real significance of De
Palma's Packard achievement is
car
intensively on transportation m a practical way to tne Packard
problems! Passenger Jar and Motor irucK:
Think what is already being Lessons of engine design, of
done and what more can be car design, of truck design, of bal-
done in the future to apply the ance, of the applicatior of power,
"Ask the Man Who Owns One"
KALTH
-DE, FAVM .
Getting the work out of the
car!
This country needs must
get the fullest possible re
sults from every ounce of its
transportation power.
There, is no immediate
hope of railroad betterment.
Motor transportation
whether passenger or freight
is the one great resource.
The motor truck equipment of
America as it stands could deliver
30 per cent more transportation
than it is giving today.
The Packard Company says
this because it has developed 'the
method, and put it into effect
with nearly two thousand Pack
ard Trucks the country over.
It has seen the methods work
out. It has seen the cost figures
go down month by month. It
knows that the principles and
methods are right.
The methods apply to any
make of truck.
-Ta -a-a
3 V
The man who has a transportation
problem to solve cannot do better than
discuss it with the Freight Transporta
tion Department of his local Packard
Branch or Packard Dealer.
No Charge. It is not even necessary
that he be a Packard owner or driver.
The object is Service rather than
immediate sales.
PACKARD MOTOR CAR COMPANY, Detroit
PACKARD MOTOR CAR COMPANY OF PHILADELPHIA
319 North Broad Street
BRANCHES Bethlehem, Camden.
Harri8burg
Lancaatert Reading, Trenton, Williamsport, Wilmington
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