TW TOT .. Av , ?&' ' Ri J j,; rT n to Kk f PJ m & P fk 1" f... T ri in M" t r&tfa. B V,"li, i-. rv : Tt .. fl .. -? vt";? m s 1 4f4 '4' , ', EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHXTjADELPHIA, ' MONDAY, MARCH 24,V1910S- TTlV ' Jl.i , t - V !' u& t FORESEES A FALL ET IN PRICE OF FOOD p Industrial Board Chnirmun1 Says Hoover "Was Mis- f . understood 1 TS JS.i.flll WHKAI L K ' LT ENTENTE PLANS TO MEET HUNGARIAN CRISIS m zm mmm. m swm v .wi-tat iyLr'i. :vi- f HsL2rrri . llllMII . -aW i i ri . rt 3 HftLLEK'i POLISH TROOPS TO &E RUSHEDTO DMHZICT , pillion Dollar Grain Bill Pro i vidcs Purchase at "Reason ' able Cost'" it i, By fic Associated 'rci Washington, March 21 ( lieaper food ln the near future nas predicted toilnj $by Chairman Peek, of tlin Department of Commerce industrial board, as a it BUlt of a conference with food adnilnls Uratlon officials In Xen YorK f Mr. Peck said there had been genet a! , Jmlsunderstandlng of a recent otntement by Mr. Hooer that wheat mlRlit ko I to S3 60 a bushel, and added that the billion-dollar grain appropriation ias nado by Congress to enable the publli' to Bet wheat products at reasonable ' rrlcee, as well as to make good the Riiai antee to the producer Wheat the rood llaromrter With wheat prices reiontille All Peek said, reasonable jjrirci of olhu rroducts could be expected because Wheat was the barometer of tin. food trade Mr, Peck and William M Jtitter , member of the board returned from New York this morning-, where the weni to lrocure from oinclils of the food ad- jSmlnistratlon and Its griln corporation a statement on their polio on food prices. j, Mr. Peek made this statement "Food administration nlllclitls fell tint lit was unfortunate that there had lin .such general misunderstanding f Mr Hooer's statement that hc iiiIrIu si i wheat at 3 60 a bushel "What Mr Hooer 'nld wits t might see wheat at 3 CO a Iiushol as it m.is m Ltmbergo z&& .- 'V --! YV'.Wfc'? ..- -- Vienna &DAHZld i-fcfK &&&P TERRITORY HUNGARY REFUSES TCMalVE. UP Scale. oP Miles lZ- 200 l Russia nrniuii 'V I DUUtUWri - 7- ... iff' N? & K KMA N Y "" ""-TJT ":L .L'Jt' . ".l kJ ..-.VCV ouoroic r-"9: J .-Bres E Warsaw. i I s. I 9roiA IKi I RUSSIAN ARMY REPORTED ADVANCING tlons have begun between Ukraine and Russian Dolaheik delegates for the set tlement of differences liolsheMk leader Itndowsky has ar rled at Ukrainian headquarters, It is reported. REVOLT IS BACKED BY RUSSIAN RUBLES A TWO DIV. oFRENCH TR-OOFtf at BUDAPEST. bVenice K JTZXTkkw fct. SERBIAN U DIV- air BELGRADE flH iJSBlTifOH Hi " . .aiMffi,J mmtiMIL A. ISfifflfiBffiBtf8 . ' Lj , , (i S sBudapcstr Jl: : ALLIED JMIS s krs"- iriiP' v. i-i .' ,v.tr:ft" a. -sn vr6'A s- Berlin, March 24 (By A. P.) The Berlin press from the extremely'radlcal to the most decidedly consenalhe, sees In the cents which are occurring in Kungarj a terrible warning to tho Kn tente This Is the iew taken, for In stance, by the two extreme samples of Die Frelheit and the Tages Zeltung "Kntenle Imperialism." snvn h. i... I newspaper, 'assisted Bolshelsm Into the ..amue in itussu liv the frustration of Keienskj's peace plans it ow has raised Bolshe!sm In Hungary out of he depths of its impotence. If theso twb lessons should not be sufficient a third would can j crriblo consequences Into the Entente Irtnds That the seizure of power bv the iTnn """Ian communist is the result of Itus rlan Bolshevlkl re olutionary work i nd the financing of the increment will t mi". ."Ian rubles seems annarent VUL . ?I I VJ8!0" "' ,1,e moement, Bela Kun oi- Kuhn) the new foreign mlnlstnV , H I nrobnhlj was the man wl" formulated the communistic proclamation .2, nne time In Russia as a prisoner and there made the arnualntance of Nikolai T,en ne and Leon Trotzkv. He was o?g nallv chosen to organize the SpVr"acan: Bolshevik ijm.nt In German, but ' "t Instead to Hungary l : The Hun" -'" " -'"itotq Mnni.t i, .. nlhlno- tr, ,t o. .t.-..s" 50.u,u .'ie . ""-- "'."" ""rkuii, antl lie there PEACE MAKERS MA Y SUCCEED IN SPITE OF BOLSHEVIK REVOLTS lontlnurd from First I'olte and Bolshevism reigns in his place. In other words, a very limited :onccption of peace is now accepted by the distracted peacemakers here. President Wilson shows no better grasp of the problem of Bolshevism than do the rest of the delegates. It is, impossible to point to any definite, finished work of the Peace Confetence, except the military terms to be presented to Germany. On other parts of the peace with Germany, as distinguished from that with Austria, Bulgaria and Turkey, the Allies are approachung tho conclusion in a feverish way. Most delays are on questions of repaiation. Certainly all these guestions will be compromised in the near future, and the problem is whether any Germany with which the Allies can make peace will present itself. An optimistic view of the situation is that somehow the world will muddle through, that Germany will not go so bad as Russia, that the infection will jiot spread seriously in France and Italy, that England will emerge from the present labor troubles', and that the league of nations, with the development of an intelligent international public opinion, will preserve future peace. But any cheerful view of the present peace situa tion rests, not upon intelligence or capacity of the Peace Conference to meet underlying situations, but on the capacity of mankind, shown for centuries, somehow to muddle through. L'UNGHERIA PREPARA mrnDDA Aif'TlMTirCA uurauui AiiLi iiiiuui t U i 1 . . AM 11 Nuovo Govcrno'Uugty2s:ese3l si Proclama Solidale con la Russia Entente to Rush Forces to (Hungary Continued from First rare further niiestlons -which have arisen I becaube of developments in tho foimer Austro Hungarian empire. Thomas W. Gregoir. former Attorney General of the United States who is ndlslng the league of nations with ref erence to legal phases of amendments which have been proposed to the coe nant, takes the iew that it Is not neces sar to Introduce a specific amendment affirming the Monroe Doctrine Ho holds the doctrine is sufficiently protected by the Instrument as it stands, ,but as a matter Af expediency he sees no objec tion to Introducing a general proviso uhlr-h would safeguard the doctrtno MAY lf)lN WITH Wfc'nC i without speclficilly mentioning It, as a !n.-i i jvin n lltl linUS ,,eclflp mention would Introduce a con troversy over tno specino warns ui , ous states pn founded the communist parti Of the other leaders of the communis! Movement. Mnior CJeorgy w10 isnl i randson of the 1841 1 revo Stion-iry" had been In Husslan cnptivltv and there became Infected with Bolshevism Thev V1"? wrt clpanls In the plan to for. a I v-nmunlst army of 70 000 men In llun- ,GERMAi AUSTRIA leiiim Manb 24 (Bv A """ nai eirect Huniriibn uiu-i it Is dependent on the I'.tttptitn I'oviei s fot food At the Urst mn ting of the now I Hi l gatiatt government in HutWpps' Sun dd j dlsputi h ftoin Bet Hit sivtt .i boldieis and m lemon (otimll fot entire HtingTtv watt appoint il mcurd lug to plans puttied Into with tin agents of Ixnim The t ouih II imtui dlatelj started prepjititloti of a bill fot tin sot iallzation of .ill industrial evppclallv activities A LSolshevist (atttpaign is in pi og ress in Dmiiinia, at cording to u slite ment quoted bv the. Dallj "Mail s Her lln cot Khpondi'tit This oi ies)otulint says strong propagtuda is lit lug nr wn"jp(l out simultnnpouslv among both tho L'71'cli inil (Jpiinan vvorkmen the BolicnilaiiH being atsured that only with liolshevist nul can (ieimaity hc cure the right of sell deteiiniiiution and I escape "Ubserv iencj to Czech nilc the spring of 1T17 if there is .i fue market in wheat antl uncontrolled pruts So much for the 1018 crop Then- ran be no free market of 90 per tent of the world's exports As to the lilt trop it is of course too early to come to anj Jireclse conclusion "tl is clear that, as Mr Hoover sav--''there can be no free maiket at present In the first place because of the un settled conditions in business, in shipping and finance Fall In Irlr Tipetted .r "further, the phrasing of the gtain appropriation bill clearlj indUates tlutt the Jl, 000,00" 000 appropriation made by Congies, not ooly to make good the J2 2b guarantee to the ftrmers, but to enable the government to bell wheat and flour at the guaranteed pi ices 'm at such othr prices and on such terms or conditions as nny he necessary to carrv out tlm nrnn5P nf tl,p nnt ' unit to enable the people of tho Unlletl States Uorllii, Match 1M (Bv A I ) A to purchase -wheat products at re-ioon- special dispatch to tin- Iieihelt an able cost. Wheat Is tho basic food com- nouncts the disarmament of Kutento imodlty. WTidt Is a reasonable cost must , Hoops it Budapest It is unconllrmctl 'be determined by conditions however, and appeals questionable "In July tho new wheat crop, cstl. Reeentevpnts at Budapest vvc-ro not mated at more than n billion and .,' the result of the I.ntenU-notP niitlining tile new nounuar utLetii nuiinaiv Hud ippst ind teport on the tiillltaij .situ it ion it Is net psharv to maintain permanent vvitelpss lonununlcation Ite tUM'ii the two elties" Ht cmclntUd hv evtendltig ' cominutiist gteetlugs and a hand shake " Hela Kun his become llutigaiian 1 oiflgn t'oniniibsat v and loseph Pog .inv War Commissary It N mmnreil that Knit h is npplinl (o IaiiIho fur tirmeil .tssistanic. Attoidimc lo a tol-iiain which the 'If lln t orrespondotit of tho It Jddtiest 1'ibtiSaplo says lie has tectived fioni that lt, thrio Htibsmii envoja al leads in Budapest let larr that a gi iv e danger oi boliotiiln following the (ample of Hungarj T'.io situation Is attiibtititl bv the con espondtnt to tin ftllure of tin l'e ue f onrcreiup at 1'irls to rcuMil7e the seriousness of tin f It tiatlon md ucmpv Hudnppst with l.n- 1 tPtitt troops Ih sth tlin onlv vti to sie tin situation is to send AitiPilcan I or Hiitlsh forees there hut add" I 'Win re i battalion would have stif flied formerlj, a brlgide would be neces- l sai now I Tl t Hunk' n Kin tevolution mil the re pot ltd alii nice of the new Rovenitniiii with the Husslin soviet, whit h is mil I eldered here as a gtavp nipnace to l.ti rope has Mvon rise to ne irltlilstn Jit i n of deiivs In tin Peace onfereni , I picieedlngs Tin tllobe, referting to the situation in nungiry, sajH I"') would have on the nominal situation in r.ermnn Austria, Hen Deutsche seere tarv for mMllarv nffHlra C!iia i,i. 'if ,,,A i-.,, - . .' . . J dajs before a final decision is reached. President Wilson, It hi said, intends himself to propose ome amendments, one of which is supposed to relate to the Monroe Doctrine. It was said here to day that Senator Henry Cabot Lodge, of Massachusetts, had declined to submit on his own responsibility amendments on this or any other subject, l'rovUo litis reen Drawn Stteli a nrovlso has been drawn, but it is not set known whether its incor- rinnmrv f '""J" ? ' T'? ' .H n t, ,h, covenant will be urged will happen A peoplp driven to dismlr ' It affirms in substnnco that coercive loses self-control The i:ntnle hv i ineasuies of the united powets as pro- OPPOSES JAPAN'S DEMANDS Phelan Holds "Race Equality, Etc.," Are Domestic Questions Snn Frnnelsee. March 24 (By A. P.) Expressing emphatic objection to the demand of tho Japanese delegates to the Peace Conference at Paris for "race equality and Just treatment," United States Senator James D Phelan has cabled to the American delegates at Paris, nfilrmlng his view that questions of immigration, naturalization, land ownership and marriage are domestic questions and therefore not to bo treated witntn me league or nations constitution Published n Plulrlbutftl Under rKRMIT NO 841 , . . Authorised by the ct of October , 1017, on file at th TostoHIco of Phils althla, Pu, By order of the Prtilant ... A 8 BURLESON. Postmaster Oetftral. nl Iondra, 23 marzo Viene segnalato die il Governc dl Budapest ha firmato un proclama con 11 quale rlconosce uno stato dl guerra tra l'UnBherl e Tin- tesa Clo' secondo un dlspaccio giuntu . da Vienna alia nxclmnge Telegraph, II dlspaccio agglunge cbe 11 governo czeeo- slovacco- si prepara ad emettere un or- i dlno dl mobllltazlone. La proclamations dl una dtttaturm devoluta at proletariate ed alleanza ar mata con la Russia bolscevlca o' stata dlchlarata con il seguente decreto: "II proletarlato dellungheria ha ogglif preso nelle sue manl tutto 11 potere. lai segulto alia dec slone tlella Contercnza. dl Parlgl per la occupazlone dell'Unghe rla le prevlslonl dell'Ungheria rlvolu zlonarla. dlvengono CQmpletarnente 1m posslblll Sotto tall clrcostanze la sola " via apcrta al Governo ungherese e' una dlttatura del proletarlato. "L'autorita legtslatlva, esecutlva gludizlarla dovra' essere esercltata da una dlttatura dl unconclliodl lavoratorl contadtni e soldatla II Conclllo del governo rlvoluzlonaro dovra' Immedla tamente princtplare II lavoro pr, la rcallzzaziono del comunlsmo Boclallsta ,, "11 conclllo decrctera' la soclallzza zlone dt larghe proprleta', mine, grand! Industrie, banche e line dl trasporto, dlchlarando completa solldarleta" con 11 governo russo del bovlet ed ofTrlra" dl ' contrarro un alleanza armata con 11 proletarlato delln Russia " Ilerllno, 24 . marzo Un dlspaoco siieclale tlella Frelheit nnnunzla 11 dl Barmo delle truppe dell'Intesa a Budapest. II dlspaccio non e' stato contermato e pcrclo' deve essere accolto con le deblte rlservd I,.,, Kimehs iietision. might losp the bul- , vlded bj the covenant shill not operate vvnrl, agiinst Uolshevism which rierman ' against nations of tho Western Hemls- rr!rcCot,C;,ectol1ofca!.;an:i,I,!! ' pS unui. the United States and other iPiilK IU" i western (ountrics" shall approve. It is held this would give cite United btates nAUAnit Tn ntomu nMntnr.n and the weslern republics the lln.U word BAVARIA TO DISARM SOLDIERS ' "PPlylnf? collective force against na. . lions on that hemisphere, and this, in Will "Not Furnish Troops for th tfTect. itamrms the Monroe Doctrine UOlIlg neyonu una Kfiieiui uecrw .iiiuu, in the vliw of Mr Gregory and other Hiissi.in red nrmv is now on il Unci 'Tint Is tin natural onsequtme of frinii liriiilt in Minis! 111 mil Is nd. "it del iv of the I'etue t'otiftrciui in irom l.riiuv to Manisi.iii.imi is uti- niuKlllt ., ltp rt,ul )t the ifelay ctjiitiuues a lit ins on l-enilierg, appr.ilni.itel p 7i'iM,,, worst onseqiieiices still M'veiitv-lhe miles distaii! 'I his arinv . ; ,ll this discussion of the leagiu iove flte telegram continues, is eprtteil nant before even a preliminary peaie to nrrlve in Budapest -v illiiti it tint- ' has men re til eii himniv encoungis me nl-i.. .p'o ill of the Holshev Ik disease and gives uii;m. . liipf ,ti(iMV iiitinrtinilttpR for itt- oornidii limpire. urlih. March 24 (Bv A !' ) The Bavarian inlnisler of foreign affairs has Infntitied the ('erniin Government th it Bavaria will disarm her soldlirs and htneoforth will not turnlsh troops for the empire lecal experts, would introduce wide con troveisv in an interpretation of the meaning of the Monroe Doctrine It Is expected tonsideratlon of this anil othe amendments will bo continued several quarter bushels, will begin to come to market. "I believe, therefore, that theio Is yery reason to expect lower food prlies In the relatively near future This vitw ' I bellevo tfio men in charge, of tho af- 'Xairs of the food administration will share " DANGER OF BOHEMIA WINING REDS SEEN 1 ontloii, M irch J4 (H A V ) I ho ti volution in I lung try c lum.i1 grt it p- snd Kuniania, ,n cording to tlie Vos I itemmt in ienn i, but did not surpi isi Czechoslovak Army Marches on Hungary Continued from First race Slovak government in ptepaiing to issue a mobilization ordei T. G Mataryk, the president of Crecho-SIovakla, has resigned, accord ing to a report received heie from Berlin. The action by the new Hungarian Government followed a cabinet crisis In which Premier Count Karolyl re signed, turning tho government over sische .eitung, which buvs that the situation then, was hopeless btforr tho note was ilellVPteil ConiinuniMtb were unemiiloycd and tnvo been ig nored by the sociillst minibteis, ac cording to the iievvspapets Paris, Murih 4 (By A P) Count von Broi kdutff-Riintziiu tho German ruieign Minister, lias sent Call Kuut sky one of the lindi 1st i lotaries in the foteign ministry, to Moscow to bio the chiefs of the Soviet Government and to furnish an acturato repoit on the situation which will allow the for etgn minister lo study methods as to the bringing ifiout of closer political and economic lelations with the Bus si in Bolshevik government, bays a Zurich dispatch to the Matin Copenhagen, March 24 By A P ) Karl Radek, the leading Hussi m Bol thosu who wen aware of the true timdi tiun of affiirs, says the Vitnna corre spoiidint In tho 'leligripli He bivs the communists of llungnty havi long been the real tnastirs of the countrv mil have onlv betn waiting an oppurtunitv to get rid of Count Katolyl who Is i onsldered to hive been never more th in a figurehead The torrespondpnt di elates there are no elemenlN In llungarv tapauie of in ik ing a stand igainst thi extremists and thit even In Czecho-Movakla there are strong Bolshevik Influent es He point out that (perts agree thin is v, ry lour ihipf iiKttiy tpportumtles tor trlgui ' The iiroclaiiiitlon of Bolshevism In llutigiry mh the Pall Mall Haii'lte, has given a shock to the Peine t otifel encp whicli Is precisely what it hitindid lo clo "llie ilninite ill the goiernitient of ltutj.tiit t.1 wan efteifeil, not h tloleme but hv ((iIIuhIoii." tlie paper utldn. "It Is a rrlienrrtul of the tut Hcn bv whltli l.hert und Silipidemunn think or greet liiB the terniH nf peai e." The WVsttnlnstei (lii7ette h lys iviiics and militHri'-tH are blaming Prisldeut Wilson anil tlie league of nations for the unhappy statu of things UKRAINE DICKERS WITH BOLSHEVIK! Menus.. Martli 24 -(By A D It is le lined fiom the Ukraine that negotla rtiT 'n J i . mi ; Y. . uveilshevik agent in Germany, who wa retaU ThSoclBt and ai rested on Uebruary 13 in connection Oommunlsts then combined and pro- , , h fepartacan Uprising, his been SSTS mf. V- lfi?nfr.y ' released by tho Cerman govcrnmtnt, bal has assumed the presidency of the revolutionary government of workers, peasants and Soldiers' Councils Urge IteJs to Unite The proclamation of the new Hun garian Government invites the work men and peasants of Bohemia, Ru mania, Serbia and Croatia to form an armed alliance against the aristocracy, land owners nnd dynasties It requests also that the woikmen of Austria and Germany follow the lend of Hungary In breaking off relations with the Paris Peace Conference. They are requested to tally with the Moscow government and constl tute a Soviet republic and to resist, arms In hand, the "imperialist con querors " The proclamation says the govern ment will organize an army which will enforce the proletariat's dictates ' against Hungarian landowner and capitalists, the Rumanian aristocracy and the Czech bourgeois ! i Enlistments Are Urged The document ends by uiging each workman and peasant to work in oi der to produce or to enlist in the army The Austrian central workmen's council has derided not to join the I Hunrarian movement In introucing a soviet government in Austria, a dls according to a Berlin dispatch today This message reports fresli agitation by the German Pptrtacans coinciilt nt with tho Hungarian i evolution and re ports that in these ciicumstances tlie rt lease of Radek has created a bad impression Tho authorities the Berlin dispatch adds, say that Radek intend Germany I in a perfectly regulai mannci and that they have- no reabou foi keeping him undet arrest Some results, of the new l Spartacan agitation tepotted aie a serious strike in Lubeck, riots in btet tin antl the threat of a general stiiko in Breslau Reports of wireless exchanges be tvveen Nikolai Lcnine, the Bolshevik niPtniei- of Russia, and the foreign rep- lesentatlve of the new Hungarian communistic government are received in advices from Budapest ienine was told that tlie Hungarian proletariat ! had seized power and had introduced a i proletariat dictatorship Greetings nere ipnt to Leiiitip as 'leader of the international proletariat " In greeting the Russian proletariat the new Hun garian Government eprebsed soli darity with the i evolutionary move ment In his reply Lenine stated that he had submitted the Hungarian greeting to the Bolshevist uongress u.c .vslu, j Individual Salts and Peppers These useful and everlasting gifts arc shown in gie.it variety. 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