mQirK WWrVWfWW'' w if i- n f -1 EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, THUESDAY, JULY 3, 1919 yrF&KwQb 4-v 6' p;?- ft k i i.7 I? 4 I t t r It, LW !' " wr i rc. m im ,,J $' HmflH KQ H H fc,. r i;Mainrltv in National Assembly .Pledged to Approve Pact, Dispatch Says r Q? V DULLES TO REPRESENT U. S. By file Aswlnfeil Press Paris, July 3. The German National Assembly will dcnl with the treaty of pence between the Allies and Germany op Saturday and a majority for the ratification of the instrument has been secured, accortlius to a Weimar dis patch to the I'olitiken, relayed to Pari. The Council of Five appointed threo commissions yesterday for the purpose f continuing the work of the Peace Con ference The commission for the exe cution of the German treaty comiiff of John Foster Dulles, United States; Sir Ejrc Crowe, England : Captain Andre Tnrdieu, France, and Vitcrio Scialoia, Italy. The commission for' the organization of permanent repara tions consists of Louis Loucheur. ' France; Sydney Peel, England; Or SIvio Crespi, Italy, nnd M. Moni. Japan. The commission for the ro-or-illnation of Bulgarian frontiers will he 3ilr. Dulles, 51 Tardleu and 5Ir. Peel. Troops Ma Enter Hungary A report from the interallied food council on the tactics of Bela Kun, foreign minister of the Hungarian Soviet government, in obstructing relief work in Hungary, will be submitted to the Council of Five this afternoon. It is understood that representations will be made to Bela Kun that if he persists in his tactics a small force of allied troops probably will be thrown into Hungary to assist in relief work. The Council alo ai to consider the general question of Armenian relief. Paris advices received Wednesday night stated that food supplies des tined for Czecbo-Slovakia, had h?en held up by the refusal of Bela Kun to permit steamers carrying the sup plies to pass the Danube. Urge Bcssaranian Plebiscite m TPBT i I H mm w HiiPIB flii?la CITY OF TZARITZ1N Bolshevik Papers Demand That Petrograd Be Held Until Last Moment CAPITAL NEARLY ISOLATED LUNDGREN CASE AWAITS TRIAL JURY By the Associated Frcs London. July 3 The forces of Gen eral Denikine. the nnti Bolshevik lender in southern Russia, have occupied the city of TzariUin. on the Volga river, south of Saratov, according to a Itus sian wireless report todnv. The city previously had been abandoned by the Itolshevikl. Prosecuting Attorney Says Ac cused Woman Had Both Drugs That Caused Deaths Lawrence, Mass., July 3. (By A, P.) Court sat well into the evening to nilow Attorney General H. C. Attwill to complete his closing Argument yester day in the trial of 5Irs. Bessie X. (Skeels) Lundgren for the murder of 5Iit Florence W. Gay. 5Irs. Slieels will be given an opportunity to address the court this afternoon, after which the charge will be given. It is expected that the case will go to the jury early in tin1 afternoon. Attorney General Attwill said that there was a great deal of circumstantial evidence in the case, but" that it nil pointed to a single conclusion. The evidence showed, he said, that Miss Gay had died from arsenic poisoning nnd that 5tis. SUeels's brother, for whose death she is under indictment for mur der in New Jersey, had died from lead poisoning and that the defendant had had in her possession both arsenic and lead. "If the district attorney, knowing these facts." he exclaimed, "had not brought action ngainst have been Impeached." ATTEMPT FAREAuT RELIEF BY BARTER American Steamer Kickapoo Loavo3 France to Exchange Supplies for Russian Wheat the resale of tho goods through) the Dencklue government in such n wn as to prevent speculation and to assist tho forces which recently have been suc cessful In repelling the Bolslicviki, Tho Kickapoo also is carrying several hundred tons of medical supplies from the American lied Cross which will be given nwny in the Kuban territory. UNITY OF SOUTHERN CHINA ENDANGERED TO FEED THE ARMENIANS BARON KAlLEir.H The late Baron ltayleigli, onre chancellor of Cambridge, was one of England's greatest phsiilsts, fa mous throughout Europe for his mathematical and plijsiral papers written under the name of "John William Strutt." Ho wa-. known, too, as "Peter Shopkeeper," hav ing established a chain of mlllt shops in London, which were sup plied by l.i own farm By the Associated Press Paris, July 3. The American steamer Klcknpoo, carrjing .fiiOO.000 worth of cloth, shoes nnd various manufactured goods, left St. Nazalre yesterday for Novorossjsk, a non Bolshevik port on the enntern coast of the Black Sen, where it will trade its cargo for llussiau wheat, which will be shipped across the Black Sea to feed the starving Armenians. This experiment in bartering which Occupation of Tzaritzin by the Deni- pointed to a single conclusion. inc . ))pinK con(uctP(i i,y thc American re- kine forces is n blow to the Bolshevik evidence showed, lie sam, mm .wiss uj iipf administration and financed by the position on the lower Volga. Tzaritzin " AM from nrsrmc P'somn& nn" American committee for relict in tnu is in abend of the river .100 miles north- that 5Iis. SUeels's brother, for vvnose rur i.asr. is oe.ng wave. .. K ...t west of its mouth at Astrakhan and if death she is under imlictmeni uir inur- interest ny peace ..imw "i. there are any Bolshevik forces in that I ier in New Jersey, had died from lead who believe that a return to bartering region their communication with ecu- ' poisoning and tlint tne neienuaut .... will ne necessary in many parkin u.r tral Russia probably has been severed. nn" '" llor l''"" "ul ' " oecause ol .... .,.. w. .., ... In reaching the Volga tienernl Deni- len"; v tnwi,. -'"i- ...... "- ."- - - 'kino is the first of the niiti Bolshevik . ' Z. ir ' " '' " '",' nt cnanc .. leaders to bring bis forces to the great L"'?' ,,V . ..I;,., " n.VlnsV ber be should Novorossjsk is the chief port tor lie river which has been called tho "mother i " M , ! " government of t.cnerai ueneKine. wnici. of llnssia." North of Tzaritrin the hav" bP" ""Va! J.s its headquarters at Ekatennodnr. Kolchak forces early this JCar were -. . c Q, iMnTT PI AIM nPAil Tl,e DmeMnc government controls the striking for the Volga, but recently ' CALLS PLUNKETT PLAN UhAU , Kubnn wheat ,Htrlet, which has in large have been driven bark -MIO miles from. j surplus of grain and no pace to inar- the stream De Valera Declares Irish uemana kct it because ot tne ibck oi ranwaj c-- t 1 , ,i ,. r,K,n n qlrirtracked n'l steamship transportation. 5Ioncy Since June 14 this rear, when Gen- Cannot Be SltJetracKea j district has depreciated eral Denilune defeated the Bolsheviki Dublin, July .(. usy A i i .vrimu ,, j il0 merchants there are on the river Kuma in the northern Criffith. vire president of the Sinn rein j witnont R00,is for sale. , Caucasus, his forces had advanced I ,.nlM nnnilnced last night he had (0nel C. B. Smith, who is directing about ..00 miles to the olga by wa.v fniinwinc telegram from the Kickapoo experiment, purchased the ot tne Hiver Don .-v... ....,,, ... , ..nnrls on the steamer from tne L'nueti The recent defeat of the Kolchak I Edward de alcrn, who is m states army liquidation board and the forces at I fa and the leporled capture States : American Bed t.ross. inc cargo in of Perm by tlif Bolsheviui widens tlie distance between the fronts on which Clashing Ambitions of Two Leading Generals Complicate Tangled Situation MEXICO OPPOSES INVASION Will Seek Agreement to Prevent U. 8. Troops Crossing Border Mexico City, July3. Ygnaclo Bo r.lllag, Mexican ambassador to the Unit ed States, upou his return to Washing ton, will nsk for an agreement from the White House that no American troops bo sent across the border nnd nlso that the United States institute measures that will absolutely prevtnt the smuggling of arms and ammunition to rebels in northern Siexlco, it was learned unofficially yesterday. HUNGARIAN REDS CRINGE " Soviet Marshal Informs Allies Troop Will Quit Czech Soil rraguc, July 3. (By A. P.) Field 5Iarshal Eduard von Uoehm-Ermolli, Hungarian commander In chief, has in formed General M. C. J. Pclle, for merly Murshnl Joffrc's chief of staff and now In supremo command of tho Czccho-Slovak forces, that the troops of the Hungarian Soviet Government have been ordered to evacuate Czccho-Slovak territory. bassador at Constantinople; Brigadier General Edgar Denikine and Kolchak nre operating. xno council near., .. i.rauoDo , Frlln(.e thp Kif. Rumanian prime minister and Basilc '" ... ,, r . Maklakof. Russian ambassador to ', teenth Hallway Lngineers. the first en- France, speaking for Rumania and i ciurcr regiment to arrive in France, I Washington. July r, (Bv A. P.I Swedish press reports leceived today bv the State Department said the Bolslipviki were inobtliiuir more ener- Jadwin, AVest Point, I ..oticallv than ever and that all able to bear arms were being called out Officers are allowed to hold important posts on condition that they agree that their families shall bear all the conse- Russia respectively, concerning the aU(1 1Inmr H. Johnson of Clevolau,;. , cn of pos,ibiP treason Bessarabian frontier. M. Maklakof ,,ri,f,.sxn,- of constitutional law in est . A)1 (ivi1!in passenger traffi stoutly opposed the annexation of Bes- I (,nl t0servc Fiilvei-sity and a member . m 1)rtrnra(1 J,,,. bcen pi Not even of- M. Bratiano. prime mipistcr to Ru mania, left last night for Bucharest to submit to his government the text of the treaty regarding that country. "It is no secret." sajs the Petit Parisien, "that Rumanian cluims con cerning Transylvania. Bessarabia and Banat nre not satisfied by the treaty." without special permission of the soviet of defense. th.it Petrograd be held until the last moment. sarama to uumunia w.iuout .. I"""" of tne i.qum a.."u ., ..-- ... . , ' n(.rording to the reports cue, asserting mui me raujoinv ... i.n: i ne in-;' '" "' ''"" '- ", Itirnls arc permitted to enter the citv noDulation was Russian. M. Bratiano to the request ot the Polish government. '". nls nr p" .",.','... ,Z claimed that the Moldavian sections of i rremier Paderewskl asked that n mis Bessarabia, which aro essentially Ru-sion be sent to establish the truth of, maninn. should be given to Rumania. ,the various reports .onreimng Poland. Hugli S. unison, tun .ni.'rican min ister at Warsaw . suggested such a mission some time ago. Careful inquiry will be made into all matters affecting the relations be tween the .lev ish and non-Jewish ele ments in Poland. This will iuvolvc an investigation of the ami -Jew ish ex-' cesses, which are alleged to have oc curred, as well as the economic boycott and other discriminations which aie re- ' ported to have been employed against "I am sure there is no danger mac the Irish people will start into a trot after the new Pluukett carrot. The dodge is, perhaps, unknown to the American people, but will be explained to them." , , .... Mr. Griffith said be bad sent this cable to de Valera : .,.,. "The latest attempt to sidetrack the Irish national demand is dead in its cradle." A number of prominent Irishmen tn nnd hmrtod bv Sir Horace Plunkett issued rohibited. I last week iu the ludes garden tools, needles, thread, nails, blankets and an assortment oi clothing. An effort will be to regulate Washington, July .1. (By A. V.) Southern China, which heretofore has presented a united front in Its resistance of the northern clement now in control nt Pekin, Is reported to be In danger of disruption as the result of the clash ing ambitions of tho two great southern generals, General Mo, of Kwnng-Si, and Genernl Hoo, of the adjacent province of Kwnug-Tung. Meanwhile the northern elements at Pekin, though disconcerted by the fail ure of the Shanghai conference to com promise the factional fight which has prevailed for the last two years, is pre serving an attitude of neutrality toward the two southern generals nnd awaiting nn opportunity to renew the peace con ference in Shanghai. The financial conditions in China arc reported in latest official dispatches to be very bad. so much better. "I filt.nply will not have mother cooking in Oils heat," deel SuO Susan, become of tho sweet lie family If I ston?" ponded, looklne at t S .. .1 !. l.1 ,!-'& uruuuvi nit; itur ppenring npple plej dinner to-night . -v Wjatlonnl Bis W" nHingiT SnapsS Finally father .summed up tl .situation: er," ho said, "I'm going to s vur prltlo nnti nuti several yJL jo"'"' life. Von do no moro summer ; let busan pre pare the tie! Mother' wasWvOln little, but )rldc in her ilii vrt success and iMccame moro overcame that. rn the trick r' "Where dll father ask m ijnrra eirl replied. jtiuii'S to be nun S wamiot eat caki hose spicy little lnued, biting into nuwicu, "are tho sn't tho flavor d glnser- Fears Child Will Be Anarchist Trenton, .Inly 3. Charging that her husband is nn anarchist nnd ns such has no respect for organized govern ment. Mrs. Bernard Somcr has ob tained n writ of habeas corpus directing Somer to produce their partly blind daughter iu tbe Court of Chancery In Newark next Tuesday. If the girl continues to live with her father, Mrs. Somer declares, she will be brought up in a school of anarchy. m Boom ! Boom 1! What shall today's fine lunch eon be? Zll ZU Ginger Snaps and a cup o'tea. Boom ! I ! Boom ! ! ! ! at, mI3 tnese hont nds bve e re NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY ? its use of to pic- the tea ol opened ich boxes, to ess. fclad. She' saw that- S-g safl ck-d 'OVVPfl smiled Susan Zu Zu ml The iiiiTT II I mi "WJ- SMar.. things were not said about the oes sert was because tho family rani by .supplying cleanly baked Zu Zu - ' ..iinniim Imn.ir, of host materials, a saving of name of the Irish Dominion League u mauiiesuocuu.u.-j. proposals for a settlement of the Irish ' ...! it wns nronosed that Ireland ill J IV I illiaHJU Ul LI1U fUVH't I llll-iliuif - -- , . . Bolsheviki papers demand I should be a dominion in the tsriu.n i . !. . .. ..,1,1 Imitn l"nnl. empire, but otnerwise wuu.u "" - pletc freedom. if888888 '::::l Bratiano Declines to Act Public opinion in Rumania and Transylvania is such that M Bratiano the Jews in Poland. considers it impossible to take upou himself the responsibility for signing. without first referring the matter to the government, and gauging popular senti ment toward the convention. It is even possible he may resign, thus causing a ministerial crisis at Bucharest. P. S. DU PONT GIVES BIG SUM TO SCHOOLS Twenty-seven notes have been re- T....O r,mJ - nl, .,-,.. iAill kklvnl 4li a TJrt n rtrt - f AttAtidn i.irrt ' .rU uj inc i i mc ""'rU'r ii,.iu the Austrian delegation since May 22 Eight have related to the Klagenfurt section ; six to methods of procedure Srowlng chiefly out of the Austrians' desire for an oral discussion ; seven have related to boundaries, one to pris oners, one to diplomatic consular agents, one to the regulation of imports and exports and, three have been devoted to the status of private properties. Re- Net $2,000,000 in Four Years Wilmington, Del., July 3. Pierre S. du Pont, who piloted the du Pont Powder Company through the war period, as its president, and who is now plies have been made to only a few of i chairman of its hoard of directors, to these notes, many requiring no answer. ,, fPt api(p a trBt flm, for thp bpn(1. ?.' Captain Andre Tardieu presided at yes terday's meeting, instead of Stephen Pichon, French Foreign Minister, who was called upon to attend the meeting of the Chamber of Deputies. Chinese To Sign Other Pacts The Chinese delegation to the Peace Conference expect to sign the treaty with Austria, C. T. Wang, a member of the delegation, told tbe Associated Press correspondent. He said the Aus trian treaty contains nothing objec tionable to bis government. As it in cludes the league of nations covenant the Chinese would gain membership in the league in that manner. The Chinese nlso will sign the Jluu carian treaty, he said, B3 (. hina de dared war against Austria-Hungary, HATS TRIMMED FREE T Hi Efclt fi'l .J,. .rsrfrsrji mfjr tasgjj One Yellow Trading Stamp With Every 10c Purchase All Day MARKET EIGHTH FILBERT SEVENTH fit of the public school svslem of Dela ware, which will net W.OOO.OOO in the next four years. The purpose of the fund, he ex plained in a letter to the State Board of Education, is 'to provide for modem reconstruction of school buildings all over the state, outside of Wilmington, each district to bear nt least half the expense. Mr. du Pont is known as Delaware's best educational benefactor, having al ready given SI, ."00,000 for the enlarge ment of Delaware College and having helped in other ways. The last legis lature enacted a new school code for the state, to follow which buildings T"ist be modernized. Governor Townsend recently ap This Store Closed All Day Tomorrow, July 4th 3ftt Commemoration of noeDenoeme m&p Closed All Day Saturday Marking the First of Our Mid-Summer Holidays Which Will Include Every Saturday During July and August. See Sunday Papers for News of Big Mid Summer Clearances That Will Start Throughout the Store. 1 1 aBffWsMB'sniaaflffill Will K9lvysii0mlMp 4 Hill & SHj oil U i !wX'i 7rf vmE Hi I !3B aBUhHUJj 4LxmttHHBHv ' En RBBffrTQMMHMflBaHHSj but they probably would not sign either ,,ointe,j Mr. ,u pont to the State" Board M BV f tho Turkish or Bulgarian treutics, as war was not declared against those countries by China. Decision on Economic Council The following decision of the council of tbe principal allied and associated powers respecting the continuation of .t c...... M.n riuinnmi. f"nnn.il who mi- Hie Olll'iciu.; yv"..".. ...... ... .... xiounccd nt the twenty -fifth meeting of the Kconomic Council held on Monday "That jn some form international consultation in economic matters should be continued until the council of the league of nations has had an opportunity of considering the present acute position of, the economic situation, and that the Supreme Economic Council should bo requested to suggest for the considera tion of the several governments the methods of consultation which would K; be most serviceable for this purpose." SM,T; Would Lift Cable Ban Kf t - Tht council approved and forwarded tSlyV'Jj. 'k Council of Ten n resolution to the r ""..7... ., I ! 1 !.... effect that U was ne principal view ui -vftbe majority f its members that the iteTOSiai auu iu.r,,...,....v . ......,. ... of Kducation under the code. Having made a survey of educational facilities, Mr. du Pont has learned the needs ; hence his munificent gift. .,.-.. . . i ... .1 ..n.n . , n ,nA mr. XrwjiQ removea coiuv.i""ij ... ," ,,- 'tfl, ..! lt,l na trt tlirt nlltmt inn. cL' i. n..llr tnwnrd Russia. Discus - Ir-n'lnic of tho blockade. Instructions on the I Vjmbject were requested. f i-? lieports irora me tciiuiiB ui mr tuuu- &t- roillev toward Itus'ia. Discus , , 'j""- ... .. ,Iftin ,fnen wes o.. ...... - ----r. '. tfeft blockade acalnst (Scrmany and Hun-'f-. . t,,,Hv for nnvmenU for food F rtZLt to Hungary : the railroad problem E ' r . ir-- -r . - . A If ircp-w, t- TtitiiMiHn tne ubo oi excuciny iun- , Y&K. Including the problejh of repatrj. x h, ition of the Czechoslovaks at VladI- J, I " S I Vfi ei a .y Tf XJrT HBkjsvw r 'iJ.HK n P-1 rrT7VL h pf$ff-filM t ' --" ' IS aBmi tnj-itaiwj"' a - " iirtiGfdwiv. - iwiat:i uxv-.-ti-z-:-;" .ume&jta U- Wi:-WmmSmJMmBWSi r wiOTir' 1BK)HS39 R'rttWtok and the Italians in Macedonia; tKopeninR up oi wunu h.u.j-1. 'tt wd economic problems arising oitbe peace with Germany. i f ' MUsJon on Polish Issues "Apm-ial mlsion appointed by Tresi SV.Wilson to proceed to Poland for TZ-L cl investigating: the rcla. W VCrr--- . 4. T.u.i.t, n,l Tina. 14-K Solid $ Ladies'orMen'sWatchcs THIS MUX INTKHEHT YOU! An ov-, rural e. 11-K fiolld COLD dependublft time- keeper at ft pnte inai win convince tne mom &kt)tlful fhAt our- offer are unuDDroachaLla The above watch hcIUiik for $12 will cot you more thnn that amount If boacht of the average retailer. We buy br the hundredn where koine dealer order them br the dozen, and vie are alnd to 'make the same profit oil a hundred that eome make on a dosen. IxHk In our window for other remarkable ValutH. W1IITK rOB KREK CATAMMt. iSoN05'WATCHCS-JEWt X.W.CW.8TH& CHESTNUT STS. tl)7MMH(TST.c 9 MARKET ST, m This Scientific Boiler Was Built to Cut Fuel Costs The painstaking labor of scientists and skilled mechanics evolved finally the best boiler for steam or hot-water heating. The careful co-ordination of perfected parts produces the aim of heating excellence scientific combustion. ' B&C Beats Them All! The New "TEA-FOIL" PACKAGE YourNoseKnows It's soft and pliable decreases in size as the tobacco is used tobacco does not cake in the package no digging it out with, the finger. Keeps the tobacco in even better condition than tin. Now, don't you owe it to yourself to buy a package and give Tuxedo atrial? Not quite as much tobacco as in the tin. but 10c BOI LERS Scientific tests prove that this boiler renders real heating service because such features as would increase costs with out rendering a real service have been eliminated. Heat your home scientifically and save that extra load of coal. Writm today far new Scien tific Combustion DoohUt or ri9 boiler on display in our thawroomw. tnos.Ctx Heating & Plumbing Supplies DUplajr Room. 44 to R0 If. 5th St. ff06 Arch Street llt-141Piitml f, Cmmitn, H. 1. The Perfect Tobacco For Pipe and Cigarette Finest Burley Tobacco Mellow-aged till perfect Plus a dash of Chocolate Guaranteed by Tnt srHijbrte44o ctnsei&&noi INCORPORATED (-l-, ii $ i fa r vi '4 .tn n r i r M i j.1 i i n i i i -fcpi m I .? m I 1 if si' ii m ivl , V s 2J. 'f Si . . im wm wwa1-'"..""",,?.-: tflMMe;Mfl unirjr iai&&Afti frWTibeMm ?-, JfMk. -WS AaiWtKAH. ' '& mivmem mwmt jermmn ft- ,L rf!.? w vly mirmmiigrma .- rsv &r a .-.T "iic in. 7k(& ," 3 ! rC' fli'TS'SW -(J'-"T",''f " '- fiv W ' ,- ;; ''& i f-3 fx ? " ' r .1 -.rjr- rii -'.j, ji , a i. Ll- tmy. ' . ? "nr r a M J . ..i- T. T: --, .v
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