vvy "i (V Xjr . ,H H l' &: iji V t I&PI :w l Si- EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, VrJTJAY, 'APRIL r4, 'lDlflf 41 r iu , i -A FRENCH BELITTLE LODGE PACT VIEW MHcnry Scattergood, Now uJSp Europe, Says League j Must Win Out TOO RADICAL llr EW' f r. PlIilYaiVIX tI ,. !V v XT,UlV notice H taken In 1 rancc or IIS Senator Lodce's hght against the league of nations, writes J. Henry Scattergood, yV fhlladelDhla buslncsi nwn and ptomi- ' Jicnt member of the Society of l'rlcnds, -tm L .llrrrllric- a department of the iS1 isuhi).' rernnstructlon work In l'rance Mr. Scattergood. who has been nbrosd ' since last December purchasing supplies 'from the nrmy for teconstiuctlon work ' and directing home rebuilding in the Verdun area, lias written n letter full J. HKNllY PC TTERGOOI) wcie prWoners (n Germain brought bv of obseratlons of I.uropean conditions tno rrcnili and Amerliiius to work here fo Mrs. Scalleigood, at Vilt l'ovvclton ' for their keep, I suppose Trench sol ave'nuc It was written In the rillroad idler told me they uro Ftlll icnllj the avenue, u vvh- """ i salll0 a, prisoners I cunt Just jilico station at Toul. while hundreds of Annus (helr , , sl ltu,f ,)U, ., M)nm 01. is Tsero passing and repRsslngnrouml l.lm lhn 1P, ,irohlbiv ..r- willing Ho warns that the wnluttoii In ocr- . tiiu , ,.,, or ,.,, many s Just beginning, rges at all uneei mimics in lhoo possible speed bo uod In getting the . liomcslck Yanks back to the states ujumric- tells of the unwillingness to work of What tt mg hIIuUIoiis Urn war lua lnimnAimi nml Ha8 ' the war lias m nle made T ho Indhlduil work luibll Ins rnpft nrnbleniB than It solved " bun lost li hiindnds of thousands of w,r. He Klves a hint tint more pntnl men '1 hoj h.io Iwen fid for ho long changes jnaj be looked for in lairol'c In . now In miri i isei om two or three "soma nations that lime thus fai "l"i- vears 0f (ompiiNnrv mm he In foro tlio stood any new developments In the '"pv.ir and then fom snd i lnlf vt uh of teinatlonal and socl il orders when thnnlr ust If tlt,t llie li io ium to de tinderstandlng of (liiatielil lu i ilent WUi upon stale miplnv input mil hue caused by the war becomes genersl , 1()Sf ,,, lmlllt llf ll(j lu il work chaos and tho break-up of the state and clvllliatlon are threatened. Soldiers form committees and get food tnern HChcs because of quasi-governmental powers and don't enro If otners euuei. It Is a case of eerv one for hlmecir, and a scramble with no real general co- heienco or state authorltj "This god that the central empires hae worshiped thf slate has crum bled to pieces and the feel lost Ilrsprrule ttrIU lln.leii llolMirtlmn I he desperate straits of starvation ...i .in. mr.it nnd demoralization have, of cour-e. hasten, d the process or proletariat unrest which breeds Bolshc- 1st phllosoph! nnd those rewnw m... the Heme confeienre state that the Jlod erates from Ocrman. whom they caw . ...,r.... a tin. lew that tho rco- liiiioi. In r.ermnin nnd Austria Is Just 1 beginning, not ending The Allied powers h.-ne been late In (realizing tho facts to which they hne ' been blind because of feelings nrlslng from the war Kngland awoko first 1 through its members of the Inter-Alllcd food commission und gave the warning three weeks ago Its leading member even resigned because of lack of support for his lew at the time Vow even tho Trench nppear to bee the danger ot ue- 'lav. Mr Lansing two nights ago In a speech In Tarls repeated the warning r the Instant need or reeuing uenimnv, w there would be no Germany to feed. "Hut none of the l nlted States $100. 000,000 for tho Hoover Tood Commission can be used because of restrictions passed b our enlightened' Congress, prohibiting help being given to the cen tral powers And et thtv wonder at tlm gtowth of ltolshevlbtn ' Hut not no with tlioso who see on tills side tho strnln and stress of conditions ciuscd by tho In Trance that Senator IXHlgc'ei views tiro generally given very little spacs In the Trench newsnunern now . and that enlightened Turopean opinion sees the new opportunity more nnd more Jtlio great struggle Is still ahead, however, to make tho teaguo ot nations a real league and not merely a camou flage alliance of one group assuming counter-Interests against another group This last conception would, of i ourse. have In It the seeds of another struggle of the future Yet people 'taking counsel of their feirs, ' both In the United Slates and In Europe, seem prone to seek Immediate safety In the latter kind of a league, or lather alliance, and havo difficulty In seeing through Into a greater conception of trust In tho deeper moral forces un derlying ull humanltv In which rests the real security for all " TAFT WILL SPEAR AT AYER BANQUET ONE RILLED, 2 HURT IN RAID BY BANDITS Former President to Attend Policeman Shot Dead When LESS TYPHOID HERE Cil. V itli KcniaiiKicr of Country, Shows Dccicascd Mortality tlileiigo. prll 4 A gratlfvlng reduc tion In mortality from uphold fever Is shown In the seventn annual survey ot the Journal ot tho American Medical Association, i.iado public 'iere v ester da v. '1 lie nine largo cities of tho country, comprising about 15 per cent of the population bhow agnln a very notable Inipiovemcnt In their Uphold record," avs the survey. "Chicago, Boston, Philadelphia. New York, Cleveland, De. trolt and Daltlmoro In fact, show the low cm riles et reached In their sanl tarv lilstnrj." The following table gives the rate of deaths from tv phold per 100,000 of population for tho periods indicated. AVmtAOL, Golden Jnhilcc of Advertis ing Firm Here Tonight nil 8 Host on Philadelphia New orl C levrlnml SI I,onl" Piltnbursli n. trolt Ballimorr T-& . fc k" It.., InmrMit.ltl e I (PCII1S It juncture for Senator Lodge and others to bo 'throwing monktv wrenches inl the gears"" he writes 'It Is taken in Europe as meaning tint merU.i Is much divided But It Is encouraging to find that the league-ot-natlons idea has mado such headwav In Trance, tint senator Lodge's views nre generillj given very little M'ato In the 1 rejich newspapers now and that enlightened European opinion sees tho new oppor tunity moro and more Two Tralnlond. 1 ed In 15 Minutes ' His letter, which is dated March It Is as follows "I started A lettci two divs ago fron Paris, but was interrupted bj interviews, and then suddcnlv found I I d to leive that evening for cutchateau in the ea"t of France, to seo some I n ted States army ofllcors about materials which wb need In tho Verdun area So esterda was spent on trains and at Neutchatcau ad today again on trains on my wnj lo Clermont (our new headquarters In tho Verdun area). I have an hour befote the connecting train leaves for Bsr le Due Hundreds of -Yanks' nre all around us typical scene There is a constant string Jn one door to tho canteen and out an other, each fellow getting his can full of hot coffee and a sandwich He pavs a trifle If he has the money, otherwise it Is given. ... , , j .n.HtaA r.ni1 virnpri beef and hard Se " oread It Is all they often get on a Jour- :. -.. .ilnnn in nnnther ney crum emo i.a ." - "Last evening at Neufchatesu, while Iwas getting supper at the A It C sta tion canteen, I watched a girl I felt suro I knew hand out cortee and sandwiches "She proved to be Ruth Gibbons, of Hav erford Meeting, and sho had Just fed 1700 bos In fortj-nvo minutes two tralnloads. One feels for these fellows and all of them sick and tired ot the .army and all anxious to get homo and back to their UBual work "Many towns like this one, and most of those In northeast i ranee, arc run ot Americans This applies to the hec tors taken over by tho United States from tho French. In every little 'vlllsge -titty are stationed; with too little to do now, and tired of the Trench jnd the French of them. "Today I have seen Russians, who Tills Is isiiclilh trin of (.ermjnv and Austri i In the foniu i the present government has hid to in iKo i genelal ipililll to the CltUnllS to VVOlk, "HVlllg that on work depends tlio whole welfare of the stnte Think of what it me ins to have tho work-loving Germ in nation of the jmst reduced to this Thovj un emploved, I tinilerbtanil are hi Ing pild for tho moment bv the stito Ight minks dav T hev would lather tal e tills and not hunt work than find work and get moie III Vtlsltin rpnnrts from Sw llprlnli1 siv, the conditions arc even worse, and of-natlons idea has made such headwav The Phil cdelplila figures show a I ho mom one witihes tne ireti.'ieo. struggle with the present problems of national Interests of Internal finances and limlgits of demobilization and tlio re-startlng of tndusli) et . tho more one re illzes that tin wtr has made more problems than it settled I am having .in e to tlin national budgets now In, the making mil 1 look for Interesting ur'esV blneo ioil. tl lUZStlOtlH IO OICWll Illl'iuuuiii ui'uil mo consclotism ss of some nf the nations tint I have withstood tints far nnv new devel opments in the International and social i orde rs Ileal Mruittlf 1 Still Ahead How lamentable It seems at this Juutuic for henttor Idgo and otherH lo bo 'tlirowlng monkej wenches Into tho gears It is taken in Turope as mean inir that America is much divided r.ut It Is enccninglng to find that the league NHS 1 4 J r. s o T 7 a 7 7 1 s in n 12 .' 1017 17 1 II II J t n 7 1 li 17 S T, - 1011 IB t. J 8 n II - 8 0 III 0 1.' 1 11 1) IS 1 23 7 large Former President Taft will be one of tho guests at a banquet given In tho Betlevue-Strntford tonight by the ad vertising firm of N W. Aycr & Son, In celebration of Its fiftieth anniversary. In addition to Mr. Taft, who Is ex pected to make an address, thero will be present many of the nation's biggest publishers, business executives and ad vertising men. Among others who will bo present nre tho following publishers: Former Tnlted States Senator Lafavetto Young, publisher Des Moines Capital ; Hdward W. Bok, editor Ladles' Home Journal; Felix Agnus, Baltimore American; Wil liam Paul Ahnelt, Pictorial Review ; El bert H. Baker. Cleveland Plain Dealer; Thomas Barret, Farm and Home, Spring field, Mass ; Paul Block, newspaper owner and representative: H. L Brldg mnn. Brookljn Standard Union; J. Cot er. Jr, Sprague Publishing Company; Arthur Capper, Topeka Capital ; H. S Houston, Worlds Work; Karl V. S Howland, the Independent; M. J Law rence. Ohio Tarmer, Cleveland; Herbert C Mjrick, Tarm and Home, Springfield, Mass : C A Rook, Pittsburgh Dispatch ; Trman J. Rldgwaj, Trunk A. Munsev Companv : Jason Rogers, New York fllobe . John A blelchor. Leslie's Week h, Charles H. Taylor, Jr., Boston (iiobe nnd Oeorge W. Wilder, Butterick Publishing Companj. The Ayer firm was founded In 1869 bv X W Ayer and his son, V Wayland Aser The former died a few ears aftet the establishment of the business I he firm now consUts of V WiivImh Aver, who Is a warm personal friend of former President Taft, and Wilfred W Frj. Albert G Bradford, JarviR A. Wood nnd Wllllim M Armstead. The Ayer headquarters is at Third and Chcstput Btreets Pursuing Hold-Up Men in Pittsburgh TWO FIRES IN LUMBER YARD llhcr-Front Property Gives En gine Companies Encore Call Two fires within less than two hours partly destroyed an old stable nnd shed In the abandoned lumber yard of John A. Slonnker & Co , Beach and Poplar F-treets this morning. The cause of the fires Is not known. Firemen responded in each raso and extinguished tho flames M. W. Watklns, nn emplovo of the U V Henson Lumber Companv. which Ms located across lite street from tha. 'i Kionaker yard, noticed smoke coinings, from a section of the shed which had . been used as a- stable. He called the , flfAtnA. nml ft, ft nav,An 4, a,A nAn a tlngulshed. rtj An hour nnd ic hnlf Intpi nnA nf Hi ?1 truck drivers for the same company saw smoke coming from another section of the Ehed and turned In the second alarm. A part of the root and front of the structure was destroved In tha two fires. The jard was abandoned som time ugo.cnd Is now city property. PltUliurgh, April 4. Policeman Rob ert M. Hamilton, a discharged soldier, la dead; Peter Sampus, a waiter. Is dying, and an unidentified bandit Is suffering from wounds Inflicted by tho policeman before his death, tho result of a daring hold up In tho Mirror Res taurant at Turtlo Creek, a suburb, early today. Hamilton was killed In a running gun battlo with the bandits, his Jugular vein being severed by a shot. The hold up occurred shortly before 5 o'clock this morning, threo masked men entering tho restaurant and de manding from Sampus the contents of tl e cash register. Sampuo grappled with a bandit, who was holding a re volver to his head and wrested the re olvcr from the desperado. He then turn ed It upon tho man. Another bandit, com ing In from the rear where he had held up the cook and then kicked him down a flight of steps, fired upon Sampus, a bullet passing entirely through his body. Patrolman Hamilton chased tho ban dits, engaging In a duel with them after they had taken refuge In a dooTWay. When they made a daeh for their auto mobile Hamilton was killed. "Pcnnoy' Special Agent Retires Thomas 11 Relllv, special ngent ot tho transportation department of the Penn sylvania Railroad, has been retired under ihc pension sjstem of the cor poration nt the age of seventy. One month's additional service would have completed fltty-flvo ears' connection Wth the railroad. Satisfaction HERE is probably nothing that impercep tibly varies more in its contents than Nature's drinkinE water. Every drop has the tendency to absorb something either gaseous or solid. Distillation is a natural process. It is the with drawal of foreign matter for which the water has had an affinity. We drink water to cleanse our bodies, to absorb and carry away the impurities. If this drinking water is already loaded with more or less foreign matter, how can it do its work properly? As a solution, science has given Us PUROCK, a pleasant drinking water -J- the means to health. Purock Water is delivered to offices and homes in sterilized, nniNK" bottles or a five-gallon demijohn, 50 cents. Ordr el. eat Vattla. If th wtr in to f.l rtmow it eis pKui, w wui. at your rnunt, ia eui na max bo chirr. THE CHARLES E. HIRES CO., 210 S. 24th St., Philadelphia BOTH PHONES WATER Don't Let Easter Catch You Without It Ccrtainlcvciy woman who pretends at all to clicss correctly should have a new straw bonnet by I-aster Day! Tvvould be a sartorial catastrophe indeed if there were notliinjr but the shabby winter chancau to Brace for would it be dis grace) that glorious spring festival day. In Spite of High Prices Though tho bent quality materials from which we create our millinery have soired In price, wo have endeavored to consider tho purses of our patrons (many of them friends of vcars' standing) as well as our own profits. That is whv we can offer jou fo reasonably hats such as those pictured Jvotnbl smart 1 tho purple llsero turban trimmed slmplv with a mil row grosgraln rib bon bund and a lovely bunch of velvet grapes Priced at $9 CO And then there in the pretty naw Users straw chapeau with a eoft eilln finish It, too Is trimmed with narrow grosgraln and Is oddly bowed Us crowning glorv is a gorgeous pheasant feather. Priced at $11 00. George Allen, Inc. 1214 Chestnut St. 1214 NEXT WINTER MAY SEE A COAL SHORTAGE IT has been the custom in past years for coal-operators, to accumulate a surplus of mined coal during the Summer when the demand was at a minimum. Until Fall-weather quickened the demand it was neces sary to store the coal at the mines, which added to the cost of production. Owing to the high cost of labor and other items in mining it is said that the operators will accumulate no sur plus this Summer. In this case, unless householders buy their Winter's supply this Spring and Summer, thus creat ing a steady demand for the normal output of the mines, there is certain to be a shortage of coal next Winter. The United States Fuel Administrator has already said that the best storage place for coal is in the homes of the people. Coupled with the fact that coal prices will advance be ginning May first, we consider this an incentive for coal buyers to order their Winter's supply this month. -V" Ess $10.30 a ton Nut $10,65 a ton Stove 10.55 a ton Pea 9.05 a ton GEO. B. NEWTON COAL CO. Tcltphonet: Bell, Spruce 1400; Kcyitnne, Kice,3300. 'OR real enjoyment and delight, one box of Murads is worth a dozen packages of ordinary cigarettes that "merely smoke. " Murads are Pure Turkish! 100 Buy a package of Murads. If you are not more than satisfied, return half the package to us and get all your money back. Wsi IT.. p&SmSSSi fin '$r :m&Jr -wife oiHDiBHRBSmSHHKn) ffif H Wi?M Judge for rSmmSSSr iSmmUk H yourself! JlW? wSBH tH We are not afraid to make this orrer MURADS ARE TURKISH the world's most famous tobacco for cigarettes. f I '4 '! x v M il ,?H