K ".li 1 ... ?, V, .', ' ?,. j. ' "'jv K 'i " v; . i- r i. , r jt Av " 4 fv 4- "J ' - j i .- i t A ' , t ." IV PEKING, PtJBLlO 1 1EDGER-PHHiADELHrA; TOESDAY, JAOTARtf 13, 1920 ' 1 VJrB.nnW, ttwttv - . S r ' tf frS ." SrTrTnIF TKf&Unmr Aawtcs m-mrT-ir m called up by President l'otlura, and the Ukrainians now have, 300,000 men un flcr arms. , German Socialists have now taken up the cudgels agaiust tho trial of fori mer Kaiser WUhelni. It Is argued thnt to surrender lilm to tho Allies foe trial would be to make lilm n martyr and thiifi play luto the hnnds of the reaction aries. ItevlBioli of the treaty of Versailles Is under consideration by the Allies, ac cording to a high authority in London. Tho Entente governments realize, it lt snld, that Germany cannot recuperate If the economic terms of the treaty remain unchanged, nnd n policy of far reaching revision has been determined on, dependent on Germany's good be havior. der present circumstances it will be a less Important body than tho repara tions commission or the Interallied mission, headed by Marshal Foch. jdme, Lnndrn has confessed thnt she Impersonated two of "Bluebeard's" victims In order to permit him to get their savings. She ghes as her excuse lhat she "locd her husband too well.'' TIio anti-Socialist Bloc Xntioiml, which swept Franco In the elections of November 10 last, won again in the rimnUnlrtl AIAttiSa Sfl(tiHmr, " CWCCi1 iriJJsJYl&lX XJUJUO JtlJCfKUUMx Cable Briefs I null the Moderates v'ill control two IUIkiIii tf .tin ..Jkia. Cja..lf. f OFTffi UNEMPLOYED. BELGIANS Latest reports from Ukrninin are to the effect that Donlklne's forces have been cut in two by the Ukrainian ar mies on the edge of the nea of Azof. One portion h scurrjlns to safety in the Caucasus mountains, nnd the other is trying to reach tho eastern shores of the Black sen. This, It Is said, has been accomplished b the minute men Charles Cplborn, writer of "The Mn Who Broke the Bank at Monte Crlo," recently went broke at Monte Carlo himself. lie wns a member of a film company producing an Illustration of liis famous song, and tho London buck-4 er of the company failed to send cauli to pay hotel bills, so Colbohn waa held by the hotel as hostage. He is now suing the financier for damages. . ,Jfergy Demand a Place m the Vanguard of the Persecuted," Cardinal Writes "I i Accord TViw Request With Pride? He Tells Von Hissing in Paris view is that the league of nn tlons without the United States will bo a puny Infant. The league will be born next Fridav, when the executive coun cil will bold Its first meeting; but un ci ) 'i Additional frolcst Against Deportations kj y ; v Explanatory Comment Tl .tint4 ih ilnniM A J Hln itmJit j lt.. i . - . . . ,i HIS dcienso 01 iuibi v.vU....u vv D..vCly ,. Uio uorman empire, Cardinal Mercicr -was l ' : - 41iniiK.indn of natrlots whose spiritual armor wiir nn slrrinc no tl.n!. .ii . T Lcnionicr, the burgomaster of Brussels, successor to tho indomitable Max, who curly in the war had .. .:i,nr,ZA in Germany, refused to deliver to the invaders the" lists of m un.mnin oj m. rC" kablc handbill appeared" ono morning on the boardings of the capital: WE WILLi NOT GO! The people (f.of Brussels understand. They do not obey the demands of the Germans. They sro not going to allow themselves to be led as sheep to the slaughter. In a great number of Inmmunes rnany men have not presented themselves; thoy haye not been disturbed. Those who I vo surrendered themselves have been led away. Shameon thm who present themselves becauso of selfishness or because they have a certificate , compliance-or becauso they aro certain of being placed at liberty. All forycach onel Each one for all! A Belgian who works for Germany fights against his Fath'erland. Lot them .organizo their man-hunt, wo will hido ourselves. Long Hvo tho Fatherland! Long live the King! We will nofc go I rru.i mnnv eventually did go is proof of the magnitude and madness of tho German oonression. In t els however, iho' deportations wcro fewer than in certain of the smaller exclusively industrial centers. Boreas even if exhibited by the helpless, was always an embarrassment to the Prussian system. u Boldness, fcinal-M ercier s St ory Including hi correspondence with tho German thoritie Jn Beltfium during the war, 1914 to 1918 edited by Profeaaor Femand Mayence of Louvtin University and tran.lated by the Bene letine Monka o St. Augustine'o, RamBgate, Enlnd. fContinuation of Chapter XXX The Deportation cf the Unemployed. N A fresh letter to Baron von Bissing, tho Cardinal . ,QintAins that his arguments have been left unan swered' he protests once more against tho brutal way n which the recruiting of tho so-called unemployed wrywhere takes place November 29, 1916. To His Excellency Baron von Bissing, Governor Gen eral of Belgium. Vhp letter which your Excellency does mo the konor to write me, dated November 23, is dibappoint i.. .in cpvpml circles that I hud reason to believe weli-informcd it was asserted that your Excellency hdfelt it your duty to lay a protest before the high est Buthoritics of the empire against the regulations you were forced to apply to Belgium. I counted, therefore, on at least somo delay in the application of these measures, pending a fresh examination ana i piitigation in the method of executing them. But io and behold! without a word of answer to my one oi vne urguiuuuus v? wuitu put m i4. Alters of October 19 and November 10 the illegal ind anti-social nature of the condemnation of tho Belgian workingmen to forced labor and deportation, your Excellency confines yourself to repeating in your letter of November 23 the vciy text of your letter of October 26. These two letters arc, in fact, identical toft Jn matter and form. On the other hand tho rcciuiting of the so-called unemoloved is carried out most of the time without ny regard to the observations of the- local authori ties Many reports I hold in my hands bear witness that the clergy aro brutally kept at a distance, the mayors and local councilors silenced; the recruiting officers find themselves in tho presence of individuals 'unknown to them and arbitrarily make their choice from among their number. Instances of this abound. I will give you two recent examples from a crowd of others which I hold at your Excellency's service. On November 21 the recruiting of forced labor took place in the village of Kersbeek-Miscom. Of the 1325 inhabitants of the commune, the recruiting ofii terftook away ninety-four in a body without distinc tion of social status or profession; farmers sons, men who hae to support aged and infirm parents, fathers of families who left wife and children in vant; men who were as needful to their families as their daily bread. Two families, both of them, saw four sons carried off at the same time. Of the ninety-fpur thus deported, only tw o were really unemployed. In the region of Acrschot the recruiting took place on No ember 23. At Itillaer, Gelrode and Itot idaer joung men who supported their widowed moth ers, farmers, the heads of numerous families one of them more than fifty years of age with ten children cultivating the land and owning several head of cat tle, who had never received a penny from public charity, were taken-away by force in spite of all their protests. In the little village of Rillacr. as many as twenty.five young lads of seventeen were taken away. xour Excellency would have wished that the com munal authorities be accomplices in these odious rc- wumngs; neither their legal position nor their con science would allow them to do so. But they could hae enlightened the "recruiters" and are specially qualified for that Priests, who know the common People better than any one else, could render these wiciais valuable help. Why is their assistance re fused? At the end of vour letter vour Excellency reminds je that professional men are not molested. If only we unemployed wcro taken away I could understand wis exception. But if the able-bodied are enrolled in- criminately that exception is unfair. It would bo Wqmtous to throw the wholo burden of deportation mi the working classes. The middle classes ought 'iso to share in the sacrifice imposed on the nation DJ ule OCCUDvini TlnwAr VinranVft?" nnml fliia cnnrifinn j"y be, and justly so, because it is cruel. Numbers , my clergy have entreated me to demand for them DlatO In !, . j .i . I -w .1 i,i, "" i"Kuara oi inc persecuiea. i recoru Wig reaucst mJ c,,l,n :i . .. .. nu ..-:.i L ,' st''l sh to believe that the authorities of the 2fy not said their last word lhat thy wiH rl J! Unmindful of our undeserved sorrows, of the 'Probation of tho civilised world, of tho verdict of .""Wry and of the chastisement of God. Accent. rvf.iir,,. it.- i ir t Cltep -"vtiivui-j, mo uAjjreBBiuri iji my sincere , (Signed) d. J. CARDINA'L MERCIER, . ! . Archbishop of Malincs. .. J1!? Governor General commissioned tho chief of Cardin, !Ca) del)artme. to acknowledge receipt of the M'ensu r of Novembe 29t reserving the right 't, ., s "- iiimseu later on. i 'wd Department of the Government General of ' U Hi em' Iirus3cl. December 5, 101G. ir ,',"mc'lcc Cardinal Mercier, Archbishop of ; valines. GollVe ihc honcr to tnfnn Vour Eminence that wrlfej a"1 General ha notL w'ri interest the re lotfnwj "" "8tt'oii of the unemployed, which i "conaem '""; "le I" "i8'i nevermeiesa, '"Plu . ' a one' ao'ence, lie wiU be unable to PlYFrnit V"' To V oreat regret the pardon ItrtUt n ! of Moines, cannot be granted for tU ''Pr&nt n ! ' """', cannot be granted for tin IliE,. Cu when lie ha nemeA hnlf hi. r! V$fUrfi!!iintn! Vw to pretent a request in . , iwhr nlieemrlfHnriiiitfito four Eminence the expression of my sincere esteem, and I am yours devotedly, (Signed) LANCKEN. F. Franch, in religion P. Scrvaiiu"), Superior of tbc FranciscanR at Slallnen, had been sentenced to n j ear's Imprisonment on a charge of having had printed n poem ofTenelve to the Germans. In a letter dated November 11 the Cardinal interceded in his favor. Von Bissing, in spite of his promise, did not answer the letter of November 29. Ho confined himself to in forming the Cardinal, through Baron von der Lancken, that he could nofc accept the help offered by tho priests in tho work of enrolling the unemployed. Pleas for Two Lives Refused Political Department of the Government General of Belgium, Brussels. December 0, 1916. To Hin Eminence Cardinal Mercicr, Archbishop of Malincs. In reply to your esteemed letter of November 27 last, I have the honor to inform your Eminence that the Governor General, after investigating the case, has been unable to make use of his right of reprieve in favor of the Engineer Uytcbrock and tho Railtvay man Mcrtcna condemned to death for espionage. In regard to Wanly, no definite decision can be fatten until it has been ascertained by medical examination whether he is of sound mind and therefore responsible for his actions." The Governor General instructs me to inform your Eminence, in reply to your letter of November 20, that he j's unfortunately unable to grant to priests a kind of official co-operation in recruiting the unem ployed. But, talcing into account the reasons as signed by your Eminence, the Governor General leaves the prints free to attend the offices of the recruiting authorities and there imparl their information and express their wishes before the enrollment is begun. I present to your Eminence the expression of my sincere esteem. (Signed) LANCKEN. T1ip Cardinal interceded on behalf of the condemned men in a loiter addressed to Karon von der Lancken, dated November 27. Several days later the Cardinal sent the parish priests of liis diocese the following instructions: In spite of tho protests addressed to Germany by the Sovereign Pontiff and several neutral states, tho deportation of our ciyil population still continues. It is our duty to lessen to the best of our ability an evil we are powerless to prevent. The moment that notices to assemble arc placarded in your parish, please warn persons who do not depend on public assistance to provide them selves with a receipt for the payment of this year's taxes, duly certified by the communal authorities. The sick and delicpte must ask their doctor for a certificate of ill health; workmen who are employed, must ask their masters for a declaration, counter signed by the burgomaster, that they are in employ ment. Acting in concert with influential persons of your parisi, take specially to heart the interests of those parishioners who, according to the instructions of the German authorities, are exempt from deporta tion. Then take joint action with the communal authorities, the national committee for relief and food supplies and your well-to-do and devout parishioners, in order to provide for tho indigent, whoso departure is probable, clothes and other necessaries. On the eve of their departure, or the day before, invite those who are going off to come to confession. Provide an adequate number of confessors for them, celebrate mass for their intention, to which you will be careful to summon their children, grandchildren and interested adults, to the end that the communion made by them, together with their wholo family, may prove a comfort to them and a memory which they can carry away with them into exile. In a suitable instruction, exhort them to remain steadfast in their faith and their moral and religious practices during the period of their absence. At home prayers will be recited for them. Give those who are going away a rosary, a scapular and a New Testament. Help for Stricken Families The day following their departure make an appeal to the best of your charitable parishioners, both men and women, get into contact with the St. Vincent de Paul Society, with the Ladies of Mercy, the Third Order of St. Francis, the congregations and confraternities, the manifold societies affiliated with tho diocesan Federation of Catholic Women, of which tho Abbe Halfiants is the director, and form with their help and under thjc direction of the parish priest or his delegate a committee of moral assistance, who will undertako to visit stricken families, to com fortr advise and help them. Give them m6ral support and help them matcriallv, if need be. A Christian parish forms one famil). When in a fnmily one member suffers) all suffer; when it enjoys prosperity, every one shares therein. And so not ono singlo home in the parish should be left out, unknown or for gotten. If this were desirable in normal times, it should bo absolutely necessary in these distressing days. Those who have leisure ought to place them selves at the disposal of thoso who have none. The superfluity of some ought to minister to tho wants of others. Mutual help so understood and practiced is but tho fulfillment of tho lnw of Christ. "Bear ye one another's burdens," says tho Apostlo Paul, "and so you shall fulfill tho law of Christ." The parish priests who are in need tf somo help in their ministry of charity may come or send some ono to me for it, but I should like them to be good enough to fix approximately the amount of help they require. Wo muBt leavo no stone unturned to effect the repatriation of those who, according to tho Ger man Government's declarations, ought to bo immune from deportation. To that end, a committee has been organized in our Episcopal Curia to deal with cases calling for redress. (CONTINUED TOMORROW) Copurloht. lUf, hu PvWo lrnlgtr- Co, Copiiwjlr Canaan, ItlO. Vu I'ltbUn JLtifcr Co ntrHO(kno CVi-yrttyti JW t fuMcr totr Co. Store Opens at 9 Store Closes at 5:30 Gtmbd hnxtktrs Philadelphia Tuesday, January 13, 1920 The Conreid Phonograph at $69 ( & er o o m Conreid, $69 Sensational Price for this Excellent lr"Ki " IB 3 TR MT M A n fi i h rfv taiKiog iviacome m Proof of this is that this same-Conreid machine is sold for thirty-one dollars to fifty7six dollars more than our price Full-sized New Instruments And Equipped With Latest Appliances Some in oak cabinets, but mostly polished mahogany. i Convenient Terms 1 .of Payment The Conreid plays all disc records. R) YE m Victrola Columbia Vocalion Pathe Conreid Headquarters for Talking Machines and Records. A .: Mf C. L. 1-1.3-20. I && Gimbel Brothers, Philadelphia Without obligation on my part please gie full information regarding Talking Machines and easy terms of payment. 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