Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, April 04, 1919, Final, Page 8, Image 8

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EVENING BUBLI0 LEDK-rjJJLLAlJiLlHlA',
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FUENCH L(X)R ON
AS;'REDS' REVOLT
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Balls and Riotous
bjLiving in Turbulent
Frankfort
".flight:
IDAPEST IS ORDERLY
fe n - . . . ...i n
kih nv i;ie .mociairu nr"
IC.bl.n,. April 4 -The ? "?!
3&ftn government troop, W been .or
IJHrJ. occurred Mrtunn "" "v "ho
WV .oldlerit of the Tenth French Arm J . no
KTweupir western suburbs. l.ui vier- ,.u
KtiKaSJCTlIre So far as Unon hero
Ktfi.0 French troop, d'e tht
lfes,fr. although requests were mane inn
. , . . -au officers
ftracr2a:
B for the purpose of bin mis """-"'""
ESvh rlfv since the ninilstKe
feuhfr M' " ;
P .people who became - ' "
ijVTod-buV'tTe prTcei i.re ...h
KyViiJ hotels and restaurant' Hie Ameri
BHSnHS they heard a different .top
PPmiirdlnK food from districts nere u.e
Many all-night balls hie been the
'feature of life In Frankfort, and ne
inners have fleoted much pace to
descriptions of vtat th .ailed riotous
tlina-'' Ministers too lwe pleached
sermons In an endeavor to stem the
Tide of aet which beRmi last o
Veinber and Increased among- the wealth
as time went on.
3 ii- Anrll 4 B A V ) The
ft r,virnment of 'WueittembeiK has an
W Jounced that the strike In that section
. "SH??..,,, has suddenly collapsed, ac-
rdlnK to a telegram from StuttRirt,
ili nnd has tnereiore, icqunwu uuuiS;uia
hi B ..- -t-t.i.ra in resume work Pnpm-
?a Joined In the counter-strike and
Stuttgart was In consequence .ilmost
'without milk
Eight thousand striking workmen at
Dulsburpr, nWnlsh Prunsla, have re
fused to resumo their labors until nn
adequate food supply has been pro
vided. The opening gun In a new attack on
the government and the Majorlts party
was fired by (he Independents In an
appeal addressed bv the central, com
mittee, of Hugo Haase's party to Its
t memberH throughout the country urging
i them Imtneillnteb to organlre meetings
' for publicly protesting ngalnst 4he antl-
labot pollcj of the present government.
The Independents charge the ftchelde
Tmann mlnlstr with supporting an nu
I lllar military rule and with organlrlng
I strlke-bretikers The appeal declares
that "nevet before en under tne le
nctlonai leglme of the Knlserdonj, have
workers been treated so contemptu
ously "
I 1'nrl. Vptll 4 (Br A 1' ) The
Peace iTinfeience tlelegatet at Budapest
have received definite assurance that the
new Ilungatlan Oovernment does not
Intend to applv to Americans the order
foi the tequestratlon of the propel t of
foielgneii"
Reports from the delegates Indicate
that the new government H consolidating
Its position and thnt order prevails The
authorities are endeavothig to Impress
upon the foreign representative lhat1
the government will not adopt the meth
ods of terrorism of the Uolshevlki
Budapest, April 1, ilelaved R T )
Owing to action bv the Hungarian
government the prices of foot! have
dropped conslderabl Food Commls
slonet Krdelvl Is warring on fooil sp-cu
lators and seizing hidden stocks The
vvlno shops remain Uosed
I Denial Is made of the statement that:
II Is purposed to use churches as music
I hills Nevertheless there no longer will I
I be a state supported religion Priests!
will be compelled to work for their llv-
ln It Is declared again that foreign
propei tv will be piotected and foielgu
ilndustiles encouraged
' The new inblnet Imludcs Herr
Klunfi and Mexander Clorhal. wlio Is
now president and also Herr ttoehni,
'who Is commissioner of sot inllzatlon
Itoehm Is n former war minister These
men me reg-vrded as Conservatives
'1 hcv wish to f the limit of Individual
I foitunes nt 520,000 and would deal
with the Kntentc rather than with the
Russian l.enlne The are undecided
, about the public debt However, there
is an Inclination to repudiate It accord
ing to Dr lcls Bolgar who once lived
In the 1'nlted Stites and now is the J
I Hungarian representative In Vienna I
'HOGGING' TICKETS
DENIEDBYPEPPER
"Misunderstanding," Kc
I plies Lawyer to Senator's
Debate Charges
PROTEST IS WIRED HERE
Feais of Senator filbert M Hitch
cock that the League for the Prcserva
tlmi of Ameilcan Independent Is ' hog
ging all the tickets to the joint debate
of the league of nations to be held at
the Jletiopolltan Opera House April 10,
arose from ti misunderstanding, It was
aserted In Washington todav 1 George
Wharton Pepper, of Philadelphia, In
chaige ol the arrangements for the de
hale Pemloi Hitchcock vestcrdov wired
M- Pepper a prole-t igalnst the reputed
action of the lnttei In giabblng" all
the tickets for the debate and not stick
ing to the agreement to divide them
equally between the tlnce niganh-atlons
Interested
When Mr, Pepper who N In Washing
ton before "the Pistil, t Fourt In the
sun between the Federal league and
organised baseball w a asked about the
mattei he said he Ind not rcielvcd or
heard Jf the telegrsm but gnvo an ev
planatlon of what ho believed to he the
situation.
"When the agreement whs made with
enatoi Hitchcock fot the joint debate
over the league of mlions It was ar
ranged that the tickets should be divided
In three pait. ild Mr Pepper 'The
League to Enforce Peace the Oontem
poratv' Flub of Philadelphia and the
League for the Fresuvatlon of Amer
ican Independence weio each to receive
one-third of the total capicltv of the
Metropolitan Opera House
Onlj Slinrx Obtained
' T feel certain that our organization,
the League for the Preservation of
merlcarf Independence, has made no
effort to obtain more than Its onc-thlrd
We do not want any more than we re
entitled to, T am sure. When I made
the arranger.cnts with Senator Hitch
cock for the Joint debate on the league
ot nations I told him 1 would let him
have nil the tickets he wanted first and
we would take what was left, and woutd
let him talk first and ve talk last I
assmed him we would have the audlenc.
with us at the e!oe "
When asked about the matter Sen
ator Hitchcock, who Is also In Wash
ington, said
' I read In a Philadelphia paper that
the League for the Preservation of
American Independence was distribut
ing nil the tickets, so wired Sir. Pepper
that I presumed and hoped the original
aiiangement about the tickets Would be
carried out. 1 received H leply from
Isanc A Pennypacker, saving thai his
I organl7atlon was distributing nil the
tickets 1 do not quite understand It,
and shall wire him atfaln, Insisting that
the tickets be distilbuted equallj Le-
I tween the three organizations"
I Cohlrinpornri ( lub Ktplnnntlnn
I Statements fioni I he two bodies co
opeiatlng with the organization repre
sented bv Vlr Pepper -in the deb-ito
1 vvere Issued to explain further the plan
I foi dlstiibullug the 2000 tickets
A statement Issued bv ! Rums VVes-
i ton, Feiretaiv of tht I'ontemporarv
1 Flub, Is is follows
I 'The I ontcmpoiarv Flub took the
I Initiative In airanglng for n debate on
the league of nations In Philadelphia
and tlm ballroom of the Kellevue-Stiat-foid
wis ptovlslonallv engaged for II
1 'The secretarv of the cljh asked
fiecrge Wlnrlon Pepper who Is a mem
ber of the Fontetnporaiv Flub, whether
he would debate with some prominent
advocate of the league of nations under
th uuspkes of the Fontempornrv lub
Ml Peppi said he would be g.ad to do
so Senator Hllchcnck wan asked to de
bate with Mi Pepper and accep id
"A few houis after his. acceptance ot
tho Invlcitlnu Senator Hitchcock i-cnt
a telcgiam to the secietar.v saving thiti
. It had been pioposed that the ildntj'j
I should take place In one of the largo'
i auditoriums of Philadelphia under the
joint auspices of the Contemporary Flub, i
I the League to i-.niorce Feac. nnd lh)
League foi the Preservation of Inde.
Ipendence, eich organisation to Imp
' one-third of the tickets
'Ills anangenient was entlrelv satis
factory to the Fonlemiiorni v chili Ilia
club has considered ltbelf as one of the
sponsors of the meeting from the first
and agiceil to Its proportion of financial
responsibilltv lontiatv to the statement
attributed to Mr Isaac W Pennvpaikei
In yesterday's Kvenino PuRLtc Lseoen
and Kvenlng Bvillelln. Contetnporar
Club tickets for the Pepper-Hitchcock
debate can he obtained from the sec
retary, H Hums Weston, 1321 Spruce i
street '
Invited at l.leventli Hour
Thomas lUeburn White, chairman of
the atato executive committee of the
League to Knfoice Pcce, Issued this
statement:
''Although It was announced In the
pi ess that the League to Knforce Peaie
was expected to be one of the sponsors
of the Pepper-Hitchcock debate at the
Metropolitan Opera House on April 10,
no Invitation to co-operate In that ca
pacity sb received by the League to
Knforce Peace at either Its Philadelphia
or New York otTlce Within vthe last
dav, however, the officers of the league
have been Informed that It would be
considered deklrable for the league to
aft bh one of the sponsors of the meet
lug and to share In the ispenses, which
the league Is vci) glad to do
It Is understood that one-third of the
tlckits wll be placed at the disposal
of the league for distribution to Its
members and friends T hese ma hi) ob
tained upon application to the office of
X It White, "00 West Knd Trust Build-
Arrangement (or the debate provide
for an hours time cull, with Senatoi
Hitchcock speiklng ffytj-rhe minutes
In opening and fifteen minutes in clos
ing' the debate
I'ull Old Bridge Span Into Hiver
The old iron bridge over the Schujlklll
river connecting West Manaunk with
Green Lane Is being dismantled One
span, meisuring 125 feet, was pulled Into
the ilver bv two cnglneH today and will
he silvaged later Other spans will fol
low 'I he new loncrete bridge was thrown
open sevctal divs ago The bridges were
constructed by the Pennsylvania Hall-roid
ALLIES IN RUSSIA
IN GRAVE DANGER
London Newspapers Report
'British Army .Imperiled'
on Archangel Front
fcUNS STILL ROARING
By the Associated Pri
lxmdoii, Apt II 4 The curtain was
raised foi the British public on the
position of the Allied armies in noith
Russia foi the flist'tlme csterda.
The serious situation In the Mm
mnnsk legion and the attempt liy the
Bolshevism to dilvo the Allied tioops
on the Aichangel front Into the sea
are the cause of much anxletj. The
London afternoon papers circulated
Hostel s thtough the streets with start
Hup phiases of which 'The Biltlsh
armv Impel lied ' was tjplcal.
Sir Truest Shackleton, director of
equipment and transport of the northern
Russian expeditionary forces, lias Just
returned from Murmansk and Arch
angel He declares In an Interview that
both fronts aie In danger pud that the
Bolshevist peril, is a Very real one be
cause the Entente forces am outnum
bered bv disciplined nnd well-armed and
well-equipped troops In close touch with
the Allies' extended, but by no means
stiong, fiont.
"We must avoid lln possibility ot
another Khartum," savs Sli Lrnest. He
urges the need of sending re-enforcements
immediate!) These, he asserts,
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French Clocks
V
Handsome mahogany, cases of
many designs fitted with lrctjch
movements, guaranteed to give
good service.
One mahogany . clock of the
popular Tambour design fitted
with eight-day French move
ment, .striking the hour and
half-hour on Cathedral gongs
$52.
S. Kind & Sons, UIO Chestnut Si.
DIAMOND MERCHANTS JEWHLHRS SILVERSMITHS
111 Ez i
ran reach Murmansk from England hi
less than a eek. '
Sir L'rnesl Is credited "-with stirring
British ofllclals Into a keener realization
of the seriousness of the position In Rus
sia, ahd announcement was made yes
terday that British re enforcements
will follow immediately the American
tropps now on tho way to north Rus
sia. Archangel, April 2 (Delaed), By A.
Y ) At Allied headquarters this after
noon It wns reported lhat the situation
was unchanged on all fronts. The
enemy has made no new attacks Blnce
being severely repulsed jesteiday, but
the artillery on both sides continues
active In the Odor7erskaia sector.
After the Bolshevlkl had held a posl.
Hon for several hours astride the road
jetween Bolshola Ozera anil Odorzer
rkala. on Sunday afternoon, they vvere
driven out and It Is reported by prison
jrs that their losses were extremely
heavj One, shell from a Russian bat
ten exploded In the mldsf. of a party
of Bolshevlkl, killing fifteen men. The
Allied machine gun fire( also caused
manj casualties.
It was during the period when the
enemv held this road and were, raiding
the Allied lines to the rear over a little
i s T
need IVali through the woodii that Bfyatttl ;
a Jljal, of Bloomfleld, K, J., a f, Ji.'LX
C. A. secfetary. and several loldler&fH
including two Americans, were taken , vfi
prisoner, ccoruing to a uoiineviK ij.i
prisoner brought Into Archangel today, jjr
L.- 1 .J..- ImJ Tl.l. ..! . At. ..'U
ine iiieiit-mi nuu oiiiion prieuiicia an ;
... i.. .1.1. ...4n. -..A.l ...... - j l r1
ell 111 IIIIC OCI..W nDIG ICIllUtCU lu H Ul
IIIiSctb ortlltll nf T4n1al.nla Ovawb hm
.. .... aII fAalA.l rrh. Aw.akIahh ...... -1
ualtles during the last two weeks of f
A.at.11... nl.nt.f t)nlol. In ft..., ImitKi. jl 1
llallllllt. nwwuv uviDinia Ul IIUIUVH iff
one omcer ana nve men it i ilea anu seven,
wounded Nine others are unoindally
reported missing.
OFFERS FREEDOM FOR REDS
Northern Russia Chief Calls Bluff
of Bolshcviki
Arrhungel. April 3 (delajed). (By A,
P.) Oeneral MRrushevsky, cpmmander
of the Russian antl-BolBhevllc forces In
northern Russia, startled Aichangel
today with an unusual proclamation In
tended to call the bluff of Bolshevik-8 m
pathlzers In this territory. '
The general offered them a choice of
safe conduct to the Bolshevik lines Up
to April 10 on written application, with
the alternative of trial by military court
If found within the mllitarj zone after
April 10, I
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The G. H. P. Cigar Co., makers,
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'
How Twenty-One Million
Citizens Would Vote On
A League of Nations
A Poll of Forty-Eight States
V
What is undoubtedly the most complete reflection of public opinion on the League of
Nations which it is possible to make is shown in THE LITERARY DIGEST for April 5th.
Assuming that newspaper editors all over the country watch the drift of public
opinion in their districts, "The Digest" wrote to the editor- of every daily newspaper in
the United States asking his attitude toward "joining the proposed League of Nations."
He was also asked to tell, if possible, the attitude of his community toward it. The response
to this letter"brokc all records, 1,377 editors having replied, losing no time about it even tele
graphing. Many topk the trouble to hunt up th:ir editorials on the subject, clip them out and
send them along. The leading article in "The Digest" thisweek analyzes the result of the
poll from different angles, by geographical divisions, tby the number of people represented by
the circulations of the newspapers (more than 21,000,000), etc. Many of the replies are pic
turesque, running the gamut of human emotion frbm'"I don't think Mr. Wilson the last word
in wisdom or the only American to be 'trusted" to the other extreme, "We arc with old Wood
row all the time no deserters in this section." '
Don't miss reading and studying this highly interesting feature of "The Digest" this
week. ' Other important subjects covered are: v
I
..tjt
JSl
.l
4
4
Si
How Hungary Went Bolshevik '
A Summary of the Events Leading Up to the Overthrow of the Karolyi Government How It
Happened and the 'Probable Outcome, as Reported in the Press 'pi Europe and America
The Rivalry for Fiume
Germany's Duty to Her Conquerors
Japan Alarms .Our Pacific Coast
Jugo-Slavia's Land Problem v
Wilson VS. Clemenceau
How Do Volcanoes Kill?
The Wonderful "Valley of 10,000
Smokes" .,
Bolshevistic School Teachers
Honoring Foch in Scholarships
A Breeder of Slums
Best of the Current Poetry, r
Personal Glimpses of Men and Events
How Religious London Views the
League of Nations
Germany Courting France v
Another Creditable War Chapter
Gas Defense t"
Candy in the Army , ' '
The Art of Kenyon Cojc
English Appreciation of Lowell
How "Uncle Tom's Cabin'' Circulates,
The Texas Mammon of Righteousness
'The First Labor Union Chaplain f
Bohemians in the U. S. . ,
(Especially Prepared for The Literary Digest)
Live News of Business and Finance
I
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35
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Many Interesting Illustrations, Including Cartoons
v April 5th Number on Sale To-day All News-dealers 10 Cents ,
V
Y The Literary B . J f
V Digest J f1-' W V m
rmmn-ai-mww-
FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publishers of the Famous N$W Standard Dictionary), NEW YORK
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