Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, July 30, 1919, Sports Extra, Page 8, Image 8

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EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 30,
1919
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GOMPERS
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Teuton Trado Union Delegates
v Relax Somewhat From Un
repentant Attitude
TO SELL ARMY MATERIAL IN FRANCE
FORM NEW INTERNATIONALE
ill inipiMiiiiiiini I nm ... ,?;;cv' v' ' C m&immm
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Ily Hie Associated Tress
AtiMicrdam, July 30. The work of
the International Trades 1'ntoti congress
yesterday was hindered by protracted
discussion in committee reRardlns the
German declaration of tl.c stand of Ger
man trades unionists during the war.
The Germans Renernlly maintained
an unrepentant attitude until Samuel
Gompcrs, president of the American
Federation of I.nbor, told them plainly
that if It were continued it would be
Impossible for workers of other coun
tries to retain relations with them in
the future. The German delegates
thereupon somen lint relaxed.
Thb lommlttce on its return reported
as follows:
That the statement of Herr Snsse
bach (German Socialist) be iniorporated
In full; that the regrets expressed there
in be registered; that the German dele
gatlon confirm frauklj nnd openij the
spirit of Sassenbach's declaration ; that
If the atonal be frank, open and satis
factory, the conference will proceed to
the order of the day ; that if unsatisfac
tory, freedom of action be resorted.
Against all expectations, the con
gress adopted the report without debate,
after Sassenbach in a few words con
, firmed the German docli ration. Sassen
bach, who wns a member of the com
mittee, refrained from toting. The
other members included AV. A. Apple
ton, of Kngland; Samuel Gompcrs, of Hare Discusses Purchase of Amer
America, and I.eon Jouhnux, of Trance. lean Goods With Paris Officials
The congress then proceeded to form Paris, Jult ,'!0 C W Hare, chair
a new Internationale. The position of lnftn of t10 American stocks liquidation
the tbHoiis nations in the voting places 0mlnlsvioni nrrnP,i j inrjs jestcrday
me Jiriiisii nnei .tmi'riruus in an uiuiur
situation. Tliet represent together
mnrt, Minn 9.000.000 unrl.crs nmnnir tho
17 000.000 ronresrntp.I nt tlm PoncrrPfis. ! Under Kccrctnr.t
but hnve onlv nine totes of the total ln,ion ot stocks, and other Ficnch e
of ttventt sit en whiih mat be enst perts in tins line. A discussion last
Ludendorff Places Responsibil
ity for 1917 Decision Upon
Former Ruler
REVELATIONS AT BERLIN
it) C'llnedln t
C. WILLING HAKE
Clialrmin of the American storks liquidation commission, ttlio nrrlted
in Taris to dispose of the surplus stnclt of ttar material held In France.
Mr. Hare was formerlj manager of the new business department of
the V. G. I. Ho Is a resident of K.idnor, Pa.
Ily tho Associated Press
Berlin, July !t0. Hesponsibillty for
the crown council's decision in 11117
that Helgian tcrrltor must be held
was placed upon the fnrmei German
emperor ht (Jeneral Ludendorff In n
communication published todnj b the
Deutsche 'Pages Zeitung.
General Luudcndorff's letter said that
great headquarters merely sketched
the mllltar) situation and stated what
measures thej belieted nccessnry to
protect Girman'n west frontier In an
economic wnt. The former kaiser,
General Ludendorff mid, decided the
question nnd his decision was binding
upon military headquarters.
Premier Hnuer and Dr. Hermann
Mueller, foreign minister, were con
demned In Gcneinl Ludenilnru for their
statements in the German N'ntionnl As-
scmbh at Wciimu on Montln) criticiz
ing the c rc.wn council's actions and
' ninklng public reports of Field Mnrshal
ton Hindi nl'iirrf anil General Luden
dorff, ndwsmg the retention nnd mill
tnrj 'occupation of the Llige district.
lOenernl Lnilendnrff inquired wliere Doc
tor Mueller obtained the nulitart in
formation concerning great head
quarters.
An outline of what milltnrv authori
ties were said to hate considered the
necessary "economic unity" with Bel
glum also was published today by the
National Zeitung.
This outline, according to the news
paper, contemplnted the extension of
the German customs sstem to llelghim,
the levying of Imperial taxes on mo
nopolies there, obligating Belgium to
accept German control of Belgium tax
ation, trade representation and the di
vision of the Income tax. It suggested
also an agreement for the cqunlit of
citizens of German nnd Belgium, nnd
tarious regulations regarding shipping,
legal and Industrial epiestlonn.
German shipping, nccordlng to the
published economic outline, would be
glten rights In the harbor of Antwerp;
Belgium would adopt the German mon
etnr.t ststem; all damage claims
against Germany would be nnnulled;
Germant would take otcr trie Belgian
railroads, nnd the German workmen's
protection Insurance law would be in
troduced in Belgium.
MOTHER SLAYS 7 CHILDREN
Burns Them and Herself to Death
Rather Than Be Separated
Nelsontllle, O.. July 30. Several
hours befoie the authorities were to re
move them to the Athens Countt Homo
jesterdny, seven children, from six weeks
to ten jenrs old, were found with their
motliir. -Mrs. Tonj Mtrntlscar. nurnecl
to death, or asphtxlated, in their home
nt Kimberh, a small mining town near
this place, The children were tied
to their beds nnd coal oil had been
sprinkled otcr the room.
It is supposed flint worry over the
separation caused the mother to destroy
herself nnd the ihiidien.
U, S. ACTION ON PACT
Chamber of Deputies Shows
Disposition to Mark Time
on German Treaty
"TIGER" BEARDS CRITICS
Bv the Associated Press
Taris, .Tub .10. A disposition to de-
lnt ilnnl action on ratification of the
German peace treatv, until the Fnlted
States Senate nets on the Franco-
mericnn milltnrv treat, was IndL
Senate's action on the Franco-American
treaty.
Premier Clemenceau, accompanied by
Captnln Andre Tardleu, attended .tes
terdat's meeting of the committee of
the Chamber of Deputies which Is con
sidering the pence treaty and brought
written replies to questions formulnted
by the committee regarding the left
bnnk' of the Bhlnc.
Captain Tnrdicu rend the replies,
after which thcie was a long discussion,
M. Clemenceau amplifying the replies.
He recalled that the government had
presented a memorandum to the I'enc
Conference, setting forth nt length the
reasons tthj France should hold the
Ithiiie bridgeheads. The document,
presented February 27, was discussed
until the middle of March. At that
date, the Trench Government, In agree
ment with the Allies, combined various
mllltar system! which fully assured the
safety of France and which, taken one
ttlth the other, were equivalent to oc
cupation of the bridgeheads. These
by the reace
tilSri t Ail fn.lnl Vl (tinsn t manL ..11. lL.
situation to represent the majority ""ensur e accepted by
. i... t it. -.i i . n .1 I Conference and Incorporated
tiew of the Chamber of Deputies' peace M ... .,.,, .'.,. .
treaty committee.
In the
Pcnc treaty. In addition to them enme later
i frrntlMi with Fncrlnncl nnd the United
Former Premier Rene Vlvlanl, chair- Htates, guaranteeing Immediate nnd un
man of the committee, expressed the ii,ii,i milltnrv ntd.
FRENCH DEAL NEAR CLOSE
went into conference with Louis Morel
of stnte for the liqui
on motions.
The main points of the resolution
presented bt M. Sassenbach follow
The German trades unions always
recognised that Germany acted wronglv
in Belgium, and alwats condemned
atrocities committed: German oerupn
tion of Belgium and the deportation of
Belgians was not done with the con
sent of the German workers; the atti
tude of the German workers at the out
break and during the war was dictated
by the position of Germany; it
their contiction that Germany was
fighting n defensive war.
The German workers always had been
opponents of war and armaments nnd
never gave assent to the government's
imperialism.
The German workers recognize that
the workers of other countiies cannot
appreciate or understand the
ing seteral hours, dealing with th
question of purchase by the French
got eminent of American arm supplies
in Europe, followed.
MURDERER'S DRAMATIC END
Man Who Killed His Mother Hangs
Himself From Railroad Bridge
Kellerton, Iowa, .Tulv 30. (Bv A.
P ) Boy Emerson, of Creston, Iown,
recently conticted of murdering his
mother, earl this morning escaped from
guards who were tnklng him to the
Hinigold county jail at Mount Atr, and
committed suicide by hanging himself
under n highway bridge two miles
northeast of here. He used his coat for
Drill Engine Slips, Man Killed
Bordentown, N. J.. .Tult .10 Bert
.Tarntt, a son of Mr. and Mrs. Hartley
.Tnirctt, of Bordentown, nnd emplojed
as n firemin on the Trenton ditlsinn of
the Pinnsthnnln Uniliond. was killed
last night bj slipping from a drill
engine nt Trenton He wns unman led
and nineteen jenrs old.
opinion that examination of the treaty
would be completed in time for it to be
discussed In the Chamber about August
11. Debate on It, It was said, probabh
would continue for three weeks in tho
Chamber and the Senate, so Hint n tote
might be taken bv the end of August
unless, ns suggested, action should be
delated pending the United Stntes
The premier and Captain Tardleu,
answering various objections raised ro
gardlng the rapidity of possible Ger
man concentration and the distance of
the military help of the Allies, pointed
out that It was Impossible to nelmlt that
an army, reduced to 100,000 men, could,
even in the face of the unlvcrsnl In
difference of the world In general and
France In particular, be raised to seve
ral million men, armed nnd equipped,
ready for war. The hearing of M.
Clemenceau lasted three hours.
U. S. AUTOS ALARM GERMANS
Alleged Smuggling Along Rhine Pro
tested In Press ,
Berlin. .Inly .10. The Deutsche Zel
tune says the Americans in the occu
pied territory are attempting to sell
their own nnd the remainder of the
nrmt's huge stork of automobiles bv
smuggling them into Germany through
tho occupied territory to avolel the Ger'
man law against the Importation of
manufactured products.
The newspaper says If the Americans
succeed in selling a quantity It wlh yula
the German automobile Industry, al
though in the same paragraph it belit
tles the quality of American cars nnd
warns Germans that they are liable to
prosecution If they buy them.
TO SAVE BARNEGAT LIGHT
Engineers Advise Construction
Concrete Sea Wall
Bainegat, N. .1., .Tulv HO Engineers
pre paring a report ns to the possibilit.t
was 0( thp got eminent sating the Barnegit
lighthouse from the encroachment of the
ocean, which threatens to wash it
nway, have reported the historic struc
ture can be saved by making n chnnge
in the proposed bulkheads and jetties.
Instend of two jetties, as was pro-
several posed as n temporary preventive, there
actions of the German workers during will be built n sen well ot concrete, and
from tills will extend three jetties of
n I ope.
Emerson, accused of beating his
mother to dentil with an iron brace and
throwing her body down nn eletntor
shaft in their undertaking establish
ment nt Crest last Mat. was con
of, vlcted of second degree murder nt Mount
Ayr on Jul 10.
The
Brunswick-Balke-Collender Co.
ANNOUNCES
The appointment of their solid tire distributor for Philadel
phia and vicinity.
A complete line of Brunswick solid tires will be stocked
In connection with an efficient service station at this
address.
Don't target that 73 years' exper
ttnee It embodied in Brunswick Tirte.
JTRIJCKTIRE SI
5 N. 21st Street, Philadelphia
There Will Be Plenty of Coal
This Year for All Buildings
Having
The CULM-BURN Equipment
The lT S Kuel Aclmlnltratlon itats
Conl Rhortnffo la romlne ' nnd the U.
K Se-cretnry of Labor InMMn that
' I fibor nhortape Impend " n very un
comfortable outlook for all except those
whoe henllni? avptpms are equipped with
Ihe Ctilm-ltiirn (Jrnte, on which screen
Ins. ooal dirt rlter eoal or culm can
be burnet with US 81 cmrlcncs
rnn He 1 Itteet to Vnur Present
Holler ttllliout dinner In System
hend fo Descriptive Matter anil
Testimonial
The Culm-Burn Grate Co.
nia lafntettr Hide, I'll! In., Pa.
Hell Hiine I rmbnrc! 2ISR
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FRUIT HEARTS
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the war. but thee actions were forced
on them by the set ere struggle waged by
the German nation.
UNION ELECTION IN COURT
Miners' Defeated Candidate Asks
Probe In Scranton District
Rcninton. Va., July TO (By A. P.)
Equity proceedings were started in
court here vesterdnj bj the defeated
candidates for offices in District Xo 1
of the Miners' Union to have the offi
cer who have been declared elected
prevented from assuming their duties
until the charges of fraud in the recent
election are probed.
Enoch Williams, of Taylor, candi
date for president on the anti-administration
slate, is lender in the court
proceedings.
stone nrmnged like spokes in n wheel.
It is the belief that bt this arrange
ment tho sea will wash up sand instend
of washing it away. The beach nt this
point will thus be extended out through
the turning of the current by the jetties.
Carry Mall Tube Fight to House
The executlte committee of the Cham
ber of Commerce will send a committee
to 'Washington on August ." to appear
before the House committee on post
offices nnd post roads and protest against
tho "wnnton destruction of property"
that would result from taking out the
pneumatic tubes from under the streets
of Iliilnelclphia. The pneumatic tube
service wns discontinued by Postmaster
Burleson several months ago.
The
Advance Motor
Sales Corporation
514-516 North Broad Street
Announce the Arrival of the
.us
01
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A diitlnctirely different type of car. Th Ultra-Convertible Sport
Oar, shown here, can be changed from a roadster to a real nve
Mtsenger touring car as easily as opening; a door. It is only one of
k flvo cmtom-bullt bodv tvnas unlaue snecimens of the handiwork
Jet.cn of the oldest and largest carriage builders in America.
(My high-class mechanical features; 120-inch w. b.; Red Ssal Con-
ttsental motor: Borg & Beck clutch; Zenith carburetor; westtngnonse
Kiartlng and lighting; Ilyatt bearings in wheels; specially fine uphol
atery and spiral seat springs, etc.
THE LINE INCLUDES:
T-Prntatmatr Touring, .i fl7S0 Convertible Roadattr 1S75
Ii-FmMiangtr Touring.., 1675 Convertible Sedan iSSO
(fir' ' i-Pattenger Spoft Touring H77S
f. O. B, factory
Immediate Deliveries
Bt'
M' A' Dwrfsinfy for Lav DmLt fn 600 Territory
U . '
,
HwHsssbsssssssbssw ilmlttlEiakmkWmkkkwkkmefiakwkWkm-hA liMiBri m
Simple Operations
Fitted Together
The business of Swift & Company is
the fitting together of many simple
operations.
No one thing in a packing business is
particularly difficult for men trained to
do it; but no one thing is enough.
Thousands of other operations, pro
perly performed, are necessary for the com
pleted processes. And some one must
fit together all these thousands of simple
operations.
The success with which a packing
business performs its function of supplying
the best possible meat products to the con
sumer with the greatest possible benefit
to both him and the producer depends upon
the energy, brains, experience and faith
ful effort of the men trained in the business.
Swift & Company turns the producer's
live stock into meat for the consumer at
a profit of only a fraction of a cent a pound,
because it fits these operations together
with the least waste, overlapping and
friction.
Do you beXsve government direction
could do it better?
Let us send you a "Swift Dollar".
It will interest you.
Address Swift and Company
Union Stock Yards, Chicago, 111.
Swift & Company, U. S. A.
Seven Wholesale Distributing Markets
Central Office, 9th St. and Girard Ave.
F. M. HALL, District Manager.
wjuuit inr (&nE3v
I2.96
1 apn$et
85
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o :
THIS SHOWS
rWHAT BECOMES OF
THE AVERAGE DOLLAR
RECEIVED BY
fSWIFT & COMPANY '
FROM ml 3AU ur mlai
AND Br PRODUCTS
ICtHTS IS PAID FOR THI
(JVC ANIMAL
II. 9s) CENTS FOR LA&O
t.xrcnK nv rKtiitni
1,94 CINI KC.MAIN9
SWIFT & COMPANY
ren
ImprpsJQd Air-C6o1ed
-La
Efalffl
Seven-Passenger Touring
Four-Passenger Roadster
$2900
Also built in enclosed models.
All Prices F. O. D. Canton
Holding the Road at High Speed
Lighter than any other car of equal size The Holmes Improved Air
Cooled Car holds to the road better at high speeds.
Flexible" construction, the absence of rigid cross members in the frame,
full-el)iptic springs and perfect balance of weight keep the wheels to
the road.
The Holmes swings along in boulevard comfort at from 30 to 35 miles
an hour over roads where most cars cannot be driven at speeds to
exceed 15 to 20 miles an hour.
The flexible front end construction, made possible by the elimination
of the rigid construction necessary when a radiator is carried, accomo
dates the wheels to the road. The car is not bounced into the air by
road shocks.
The full elliptic springs with a wide easy throw assimilate the blows
from the road.
In swingingcorners the wheels stay on the ground with a firm tractive grip,
And yet with all this flexibility, the Holmes is unusually steady to drive.
Without the slight feelings of fatigue greater mileage can be covered
in a day than with any other touring car.
A gasoline consumption of 18-20 miles to the gallon, in the air-cooled
motor with aeroplane type valves, eighteen valves all in the head, a
tire service of 10,009 miles to the set, are proof that high operating cost
is no longer necessary in a large, luxurious touring car and that the
price of economy is no longer restricted carrying capacity and cramped
discomfort.
HOLMES PHILADELPHIA COMPANY
441-451 N. Broad St., Philadelphia, Pa.
Factory Canton, Ohio
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