Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, April 15, 1919, Night Extra 2:45 Financial, Page 12, Image 12

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'Jrriolmation Issued by Covern-
$. went Declares Munich Soviet
VY ' MIX. U.,,,;li.rl
FIQHTINQ STILL OCCURS
Red Guard and Troops Battle
in Streets, Say Berlin
Reports
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evening; public ledger phii;adeijphia, Tuesday. TLPmti iK ioid
--. :
2:
PEACE QUESTIONS ARE NEARLY
SETTLED, PRESIDENT DECLARES
tarls, April 15. The text' of Presi
dent Wilson's statement on the progress
of the Peace Conference follows :
"In view of the fact that the ques
tions which must be settled in the peace
with Germany have been brought so
near a complete solution that they can
now quickly be put through the final
process of drafting, those who have
been most constantly in conference
about them hare decided to advise that
the German plenipotentiaries be invited
I to meet the representatives of the nsso-
, ciated belligerent nations at Versailles
'on April -j.
"This does not mean that the many
I other questions connected with the Gen
eral peace settlement will be interrupted
or that their tonsideiation, which has
rapid progress will now be made with
these questions, so thnt they may also
presently be expected to be ready for
final settlement.
"It is hoped that the questions
mot directly affecting ltalji especially
the Adriatic question, enn now be
brought to a speedy agreement. The
Adriatic questions will bo given for
the time precedent over other questions
and pressed by continual study to its
tinnl stage.
"The settlements that belong espe
cially to the treaty with Germany will,
in this way, be got out of the way at
the same time that all other settle
ments are being brought to u com
plete formulation. It is realized that,
though this process must be followed,
all the questions of the present great
By the Associated Pre
Paris, April 15. A proclamation is
sued by the Hararian government an
nounces that the garrison at Munich
, etront !hmv the So let foreM, that
fh. ,lra of Herr Hoffman has been 'long been under ay. will be retarded
re-established and the transportation ' On the lontrary, it is expected that , settlement arc parts of a single whole."
across Germanv for Poland wdl start A. F. L. WARNS STRIKERS
i . .
aT' Heads of Railroad Division Tell
Berlin, April 14 (dlacdi (Rv A., Machinists Their Action Is Illegal
P.)-The Inlet nes teTO Scranton. P... Ap.il 13. - Head, of , .'ui, Damns, , and
to the effect thnt the communis i jniuv Kmploos- Division of the Alexandria, and the fnited States
in Munich have not yet been mastered. Alncrkan i-edcnitiuu of Labor notified would get Armenia
and that heavy fighting is raging in the ca,ier, 0f the strihe of machlnits and
streets of Munich between the Keil . sj10p cmplojcs of the Delaware. I.aiku
Guards and troops loval to the govern- Iwannn and Western Itailroud Company
menf bv telegraph today thnt the strike is il-
The central railway station, the legal- The men urn told to return to
. .. . , ,. , nri apr. work or put their charter in jeopard?,
postoffice, the telegraph othce and sev ( 'entlUhc, of , lrikw, 1tP ,
eral other buildings Bgiiir, . nie .in the afternoon. -Meanwhile the
hands of the communists, who useu .
heavy mine throwers in their recap- I striltc is ou.
ture. , I, i
orAwoundbed.ot 1,cns b"e FOE MAY DEMAND SAAR
Earlier advices reported that the - - -
whole of Bavaria, with the exception of W)n Refuse to Consider Plebiscite,
Hof, had been regained by the Hoffman, . d.-ii-
Government, which provisionally re l Report From Berlin
mains at Uamberg. llerlin. April 15. The German Gov
advanced apportions between 80 and 00
per cent, perhaps 15 per cent, to satisfy
the demands of Ilelglum, Italy, Serbia,
Itumanln, Russia nnd others. This is
n smaller proportion that the secondary
powers expected nnd they arc almost
sure to be dissatisfied with it. It has
been suggested among tb,c experts on
the reparations commission that Ru
mania, Serbia nnd other nations have
received reparations through the nc
tied In the mnln, there are various de
tails to be worked out, Including a
scheme for German contributions of la
bor, raw materials and manufactured
articles for the restoration of devastated
districts.
Another financial question requiring
settlement between the Allies is thnt
of repayment of advances mado by Great
Hrltaln and America to the associated
powers, A subcommisslon was appoinc
qulsltion of territory, but this reasoning ' od to consider tthls question, but the
will scarcely appeal to Ilelglum
Russia to Get Share
A share of the reparations fund will,
according to the present understanding,
be assigned to Russia for damage to
invaded Ruffian territories, but prob
ably will be turned cucr to Great Britain
and Franco to apply on advances made
to the old Russian government during
Ilrltish nnd American representatives
have thus far not participated in Its
deliberations. This tins been appar
ently in anticipation of discussions
which might deal more with the nega
tive aspect of delaying or mitigating
payments than nctual consideration of
repayment.
Indemnity Is Fixed
One hundred billion gold marks
the war. nlHinufrh flip rnntrlhuttons nnv
able by Germany urc characterized as (5Si,MW,(MKMMMJ) " tne amount i.er-
reparations. many must pay the Allied nnd nsso-
A very considerable part of the first dated governments for losses ami I dam-
.f.l.OOO.OOO.OnO will not be available for W ""used ," the war, plus other bil-
reparation pui poses, since it hns born ''onV BC ""T . u ' V
Wilson to Leave
France April 28
DAMAGE QUESTION
HINGES ON DIVISION
bmuller Powers to Be Heard.
Portion for Russia
assigned to the payment 5C the ex
penf.es of the armies of occupation nnd
such food supplies ns must be furnished
Germany. Simp tho occupation of the
missions on which Germany is to be
represented.
This is the final and definite conclu
sion which hns been reduced to writing
left bank of the Rhine will continue dur- I n'ter weeks of negotiation which took
ing the entire two venrc ovp,-p,1 1,vi " rango nnd .involved frequent
tins nrst payment,
be divided into
-1 1 1!C.. llnnB rri.j. nnvmn..,
the exneni.es. nnr- !Kes '"' ""L" "' ,',"' ,' "i"" !
tlpiitm-ii. .i, t- v .. , ot me one nunarea diiiioii kuiu iimrK
tlcmnrly of the Trench occunationnl I . . ,.. .i:;j..i .,, i...n .u..n.
nnn-nnnnnn C"1 l0ply lnt ,l"" W- amounts as follows :
Vo n',1 ,. , , . First. Twenty billions f ($5,000,000.-
No announcement 1ms as jet I.oeii000) willlill t- ,.0nrs.
made regarding the precise definition of ( Second. Foity billions ($10,000,000.
the various "categories" of rcpnra-,000, duiing thirty jears beginning in
tlons. In other words, there is no 1021.
definition of the classes of damages for Thiid. forty billion when n commis
which Germany Is required to pny It s'on f'in" determine how it shall be
can be stated, however, that the fivc,done- ,.,
Itategories adopted comprise reparation "" 1-
! for actual damniro to life nml nrmmrtr' Wliile the commission will administer
pensions for cripples nnd the families ' ,,le details of the pnjments, sufficient is
nf l.-i!n s,l,llro. nmn.t . known to permit the determination
nnd fixes the ntandard of payment In
goiu. 'ilia gold marjt Is worth about
the Bama as the Kngllsh, shilling, nnd
before the war was quoted at 23.82
American cents.
The allotment of the 100,000,000.000
marks among the Allies nnd associated
powers has not yet been finally decided,
but a tentntiva nrrangement makes the I
allotment of France about 55 ner cent I
of the total, Great Britain's allotment
between 20 and 80 per cent nnd the '
nllotmcnt of the United States between
2 nnd u per cent.
The text of the opening clause of
the terms whereby Germany is held
generally responsible heads substantial
ly ns follows:
"The Allied and associated powers
affirm and Germany admits responsibil
ity for all Iosscr and damages of the
Allied and associated governments and
their nationals from the unjustifiable
warfare waged by the enemy power
against the Allied and associated governments."
Then follows "a provision for tho com-,
mission on payments and extended de
tails of the operations of the commis
sion. FOE GETS TERMS, REPORT
Paris Report Says Scheldemann Has
Signified His Acceptance
Paris, April 15. The Midi yesterday
expressed the belief that the Allies al
ready have indicated to the Germans
the final peace terms of the Entente
nnd have received from Philip Schelde
mann, tho German chancellor, nn as
surance thnt the conditions will be accepted.
European News
Told in Brief
to
ilrnve tli mil rh the streets
cheering for the Soviet They were
dragged out of their ears nnd roughly
handled. Railway stations nnd pos
tal, telegraph and other government
buildings leu into tne nami or me gov- proposal to tear the Saar tcr-
Levien i, said to have fled to Swi er-, Htory from the empire by means of a
land with 2,000,000 marks of state general plebiscite.
money. - ,
Paris, April 15. (By A. P. i The
problem of reparation settlements still
has troublous times before It in con
nection with the question of the dis
tribution of the indemnity to be paid
Smaller powers which
er liermnn invasion nnd
ture allegiance of the Saar territory, l devastation are still to be heard relative
according to a Berlin news agency, on to their shares of the reparation fund,
what it terms competent authority. I particularly Belgium, the clnims of
On Sundav, ncpording to dispati lies clnment j, firmly resolved to refuse to bv Germanv.
the liOkal An&iger armed so diers , d, ftt ,he 1ea(,e ConBres3 the fu- I suffered unde
ove throuch the streets of .Mtinieni ,, . . ... K ...:. . ..
The government will "resolutely re-
which are entitled to first consideration
under vnrious pre-conference pledges.
The tentative scheme of distribution
which Great Britain and France have
VENDORS SHOT DOWN
BY BERLIN TROOPS
that an initial pnyment will be required
of 20,000.000,000 gold marks, payable
uy prisoners of wnr nnd ' iiutl gold innrus snnll De payable m
German requisitions iu'honds extending over a period of thirty
tories. It is understood ' ?paT?: bojtlnlntt 30JJ1. with n sinking
;" has been allowed Gci- I f,,ml ",K'"1R " "20.
compensation for en
forced labor exacted of inhabitants of
occupirn regions, including work done ' j two years without interest. It has
Dy ueporteci Belgians, pay for illegal , aNo been determined thnt 40,000,000
exacted labor by prisoners of wnr nnd ' 000 gold marks shall be payable in
payments for
occupied tcrrit
that no offset
mnnr fr,r Hio nminf .. -:. o These 40.000.000.000 marks draw
of war in Germany during the war. the , "' i:pr cont lnt?"st frfom,,102ll5,ln20'
associated governments holding thn, the I -f ffi Ttt "foregofnfVay
priFoners were chiefly supported nt their mcnt8i (crrnnny will nlvi be required
own expense through food parcels by ' to deliver additional bonds for 40,000,
whidi alone the prisoners were nble to 1 000,000 marks, whci the commission
maintain existence during captiity and determines that this siinll he done,
that the surnlus has heen covered hv These three pa j ments of 2O.000.000.000.
work the prisoners perfolmell fo7L- 40.000 000 IK)0 and 40 0)000.000
ibring the total to 100,000,000,000 gold
" niarks.
Many Details Remain It is ;n the gold mark that all pay-
Although members of the commission I ments nre expressed in the final terms.
regard the reparations' question ns set- I This excludes depreciated paper marks
Contlnufd from Face One
In Hungary, where n soviet republic
has been in power for several weeks,
having been established virtually
without bloodshed, the execution of
Archduke Joseph of Austria ! Dr.
Alexander Wekerle, former premier,
nnd Baron Joseph Szteprcnyi, min
ister of commerce, is reported. Con
firmation is ns jet ladling.
Riotous disorders continue in Germany.
In Bavaria there arc Indications
thnt the government led by Prince
Hoffmnn, successor to Kurt Kisncr,
is gaining ground nnd that the soviet
regime, which threatened to take over
complete control, may bo ousted. In
Berlin there have been riots, and
troops have fired on street vendors
who nre alleged to have been dealing
in stolen goods. In the industrial
region of Westphalia fhe strike con
tinues, but no further fighting has
been reported.
A rather disquieting situation has
arisen in Indin. where fhere have
been disorders of a serious character.
Lahore and Amritsar, in the north
western "corner of tho peninsula, have
been the scenes of riots, while at
Ahmedabed, further south, mobs have
burned government buildings. The
situation in Kgjpt is reported to be
in control of the military forces com
manded by General Allenby.
y .
shortly;' nfter being carried Into the In
stitution. Rapine was on tne way nome
from the hospital where he had been
for several days following nn- opera
tion. Ho Insisted on going home and
only got outside the hospital grounds
when his heart gave out. He was
fifty-eight years om.
Insists on Leaving Hospital and Dies
Norristown, April 15. William Ra
pine, of Norristown, collapsed near
Ohnrity Hospital, Norristown, and died
A Great Help
to
A Growing Business
13 the intelligent Bank
ing Service of a Strong
Financial Institution
such as we arc.
Our Banking Facilities
second to none are
always pluced at the
disposition of Deposit
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Continental-Equitable b
TtTLE Thjj st Company
12th Street Above Chestnut
Philadelphia
' $1,000,000 Capital
$1,000,000 Surplus
Many Persons Killed During
Fusillade on Street
Berlin, April 14 (delayed). (By
A. P.) Many persons were killed or'
wounded in the center of Berlin nt noon
today during n collision between troops '
nnd street vendors. The troops fired u
fusillade against the vendors. i
This district wns strongly cordoned
bv the Alexander Regiment, with n
view to suppressing traffic in stolen
goods, and the vendors forcibly opposed
their removal. The district is still ,
strictly cordoned and tramenrs are de
flected. RAIN SPOILS FISHING
Few Trout Streams in Central Penn
sylvania In Fair Condition
Harrlsburg, Pa., April 15. Iiain and
high water caused disappointment
among the trout fishermen of icntral
Pennsylvania on the firt day of the
season. Many contemplated trips were
postponed.
' The largest delegation from Harris
burg went to Boiling Springs, near Car
lisle, where the water is not disturbed
easily by rains, nnd streams in the
Xewville and Pine Grove furnace re
gion arc said to be in fair conditiou.
To the north, however, the creeks nre
bank-full as the result of last week's
ruins and few are being fished.
Henrietta
Admirals
Eisenlohr's
Masterpiece
The result of 69years of
knowledge and experience
in the selection and
blending of tobacco.
Henrietta Admjzals
l3or2for25r
Perfecto sizelOstvaigta.'
OTTO EISENLOHR V BROS. INC.
ESTABLISHED 1850
AvRupSStBsHr
SMMh
Your
Easter
Suit?
Men and young men who have
not made their selection ought not
put off buying another day. Easter
is "just around the corner," so
, hurry in and choose from our
'remarkable assortment of SILK
LINED SUITS at
$25 and J(p2o
What Happens
to the food you eat?
- w,
fr j
- i
During digestion certain
kinds of food containing pro
teins, such as meat, egg
white, milk casein, wheat
gluten, etc., are split into
many different substances.
Some of these the body uses
to rebuild damaged or dead
tissues; some, however, arc
not only useless and harm
ful but in some cases actually
poisonous. Regular, thorough
bowel evacuation gets rid of
the latter.
Constipation permits stagna
tion and absorption ,of these
poisons into the blood, with
injury to the whole body.
Taking castor oil, pills, salts,
mineral waters, etc., in order
to force the bowels to move
does not cannot cure con
stipation -but makes it
worse.
On the other hand Nujol
overcomes constipation and
brings about the habit of
easy, thorough bowel evac
uation at regular intervals,
because Nujol is not a drug,
does not act like any dcug.
Nujol brings about a return
to Nature's methods of sup
plying necessary lubrication
of the bowel contents, by
facilitating intestinal muscu
lar action, by absorbing poi
sonous matter, and thus se
curing necessary cleansing
of the intestinal canal and
protection of the defensive
properties of the blood itself.
Nujol has no deleterious
after effects, produces no.
bad habits, makes the bowels
regular at clockwork.
N,ujol is efficient at any age
under any conditions is
satisfactory and safe.
How and Why Nujol over
comes constipation is de
scribed in an interesting
and authoritative booklet,
"Thirty Feet ofDanger"lrsc
on request. Send for it and
get a b.ottle of Nujol from
your druggist today.
Nujol Laboratories
STANDARD OIL CO. (NEW JERSEY)
( SO Btotdntr, New York
TfsiMI'Mtf Nujol ii told only In ittltd
rr UTinng, bottles beirin th Nujol
Trade Mark. All drug-flm in U. S. and Cinsd.
Insist on Nujo). You may stiftr from lubttitutei.
Not only will you save from
$5.00 to $12.00 but, man alive, you
never saw such beautiful garments.
"IVfANY models are con- ,
fined exclusively to
this store,.
The fabric is all-wool,
of course; the extensive
variety makes the choos
ing easy. There's a style,
a color, a pattern to meet
the taste of every man.
There's a something
about these silk - lined
Suits that is irresistible to ,
the young man who
wants "life and vim' in
his clothing.
' Many are lined with
beautiful silk in both the
body and the sleeves.
And fit? Well -just try'
one on!
William HL Wanamaker
1217-1219 Chestnut St.
X A
?
I -5
Chickering
Schomacker
Emerson
Lindeman
Knabe
Haines Bros.
Marshall and Wendell
.. C. Campbell
These eight pianos are to be found in the "vVanamaker Piano Store
only in Philadelphia. There are over fifty styles of pianos, player-pianos
and reproducing pianos here at prices ranging from $325 for a J. C. Camp
bell upright to $3250 for a superb Knabe Ampico grand. Any of them may
be bought on convenient terms. f
The Wanamaker Piano Store is this week celebrating its twentieth
anniversary. Concerts by a string quartet and pianist will be held each
afternoon at 2:15 and 3:30 in Egyptian Hall, and visitors are invited to
take seats in the gallery.
If you have any thought of getting a piano, why not make this a
rable week in your life also, as it is in the life of this Store? )
memorable
n - v v,-AV'1 y
5 5- ) ';
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Music and Easter Are
Inseparable
Easter without music would be like Christmas without gifts, Thanks
giving without turkey or Fourth of July without flags.
It is the season when Nature and mankind alike are joyous, and for
centuries man has expressed his joy through music.
When we think of the state of the world last Eastertime, even the
countless bickerings and misunderstandings of today seem the trifles they
are, for all the present turmoil is but the growing pains of a new and bet
ter universe. We have much to rejoice over and no means of doing it that
quite equals the piano. .
Everyone Should Have a Piano
for Easter
When we say piano we mean either the instrument that can be played
only by hand, or the player or reproducing piano. It is no longer necessary
to have a trained musician in the family to have music in the home.
Player-pianos and reproducing- pianos bring to your own house the
great artists of the time. People who have such instruments can have,
nightly, such concerts as would have been musical events a little while ago.
Twenty years ago, for example, when the Wanamaker Piano Store
started, the first practical player-piano had just about been built. Think of
the strides from this to the wonderful Ampico reproducing piano !
When musicians think of pianos they think of a comparatively small
group of instruments that are tried and true. Among these names are
(Kcyptian Hall, Second Floor)
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