.r i s w " r-. ::: nrr: :r: : $- - A i - iu J t , -. , WOOD WILL FIGHT G. 0. P. OLD GUARD First Two Phases of His Cam paign 'Failures, He Emulates Roosovoltof 1912 ORGANIZATION IS STIRRED ny CLINTON W. OIMIK11T mir CwreMNwdent .f tne Kwnlnr 1'ubllc Washington, Morel, 0. The Wood AUnev for (he Republican nomina lly or the presidency 1ms ataln clian. .J PrJetlcs. It has en(ere(r upon the Jm1 Vlneo. In the first staEe It was ondlr the fSiWmciit of John OTnj, .1 old Knrl member, n candidacy iu uuiiht the coodw 111 of the inn- chine, m SpM fn,1C,K ,T0,'n Kin was dismissed Tiii (.econd stac bejran. Aood b can didney beenme then nn appeal to tho Sinnle but not iieressurily unfriendly TO machine. The pencral would Ihow. the machiuo that ho had much more popular Mipport than his rivals nd trust to the machine to 'nnko him the Itenublicfln candldutc on that dem onstration. That plan was unsuccessful, or, at ny rate, it has been nbandoned for a much more aggressive program. The third stage has been reached and Gen eral Wood has become the nntl-ma-thine candidate. His campaign is no lonccr friendly to tho organization. His tlan is no longer to prove his strength lo the organization and leave It ron- (Monti)' to the organization to do the tct His purpose is to force tbo or canlzatlou to nominate. It Is express, rd ia the announcement of Colonel Wil liam Cooner Proctor, his manager, thnt Ocnrral Wood is going to make a fight upon the "standpatters" everywhere. Recalls Roosevelt's Revolt This announcement bns fluttered tho Republican Democrats as no announce ment ecr bus since the news of 1912 that the tcveu little governors had nsk ed Colonel Itooscvelt to b,o n candidate against President Taft and lead a fight upon the standpatters of the Republican machine. There Is at least as much bitterness todav in Republican circles over (Jeneral Wrod's latest change of tactics as there was over Colonel Roose velt's entrance Into tho rncc In 1012. The 1012 trouble went on and on until the party split at the convention, but in the beginning men perceived only that Colonel Roosevelt was making the kind of fight that Iind never been made before. The organisation thought at first It was u losing fight on his part and did not grow thoroughly angry till it aaw itself in danger. Now It knows the possibilities of anti-machine fights, resents tbc injection of the standpatter Issue into the present cumpaign mid is thoroughly angry at General Wood. How the issue will develop no one caa foretell, though no one expects to sec It go to the lengths of 1012. When any one tries to guess to whnt lcniths the fight will go, it would be veil for him to keep In mind just what kind of a fighter General Wood Is, for there is little reason to doubt that tho general is conducting his own cam paign. 'In the first stage the earn paign ti ns in the hands of John T. King. In the beroud it passed into the bands oi r-enmor mioses unit certain ito jrcsslvcs who were more used to ap pealing to the people than Mr. King Tfis. Now General Wood is running hi? on campaign. Doesn't Fear Politicians The enmity of the politicians seems ,to the general only a trilling ndditlon ttoa long score. By this It Is pot meant that the general has made enemies for the sake of making enemies, but merely that be has never been dctcricd from a course he felt to be right or wise or expedient by Its cohsccptu'ccs meas ured in enmities. He n the purest fighting tjpe that hns ever entered poli tics. Jloosevell was a lighter, who was at the same time a politician who was mindful, except In 1012, that when the battle was over there must remain no -bard feelings. Wood belongs. to a pro fession which buries those who nro left n the field after the battle Is done. It Is the sense of bow hard n lighter ood is and how rcgurdlcss of enmities he is, rather than fear of bia Micce-'S that has moved tho machine to bitterness against lilm. The machino is filled with auger at a fight conducted In the Wood manner, "on tho stand patters," all along tho line. The coun try may or not waut u niilitnry Presi dent, but the machine does not waut milltunt cundidatc. What has Wood gained by his chunge of tactics? In the Hrfct place, he has tost nothing. The King plan had failed. Tj y its BUCC,,sr. what may be callid tho progresshc plan of campaign, failing. The machine rejected Mr. ii li ,leurinK "lie brunch. Then it blocked tho way to n friendly demon onstration of popula'r strength by eosing all the big president-making Mates like Pennsylvania, New York, II tools and Ohio to the general. To iu. the general hud to overcome ma chine opposition. He has to light or face defeat. n,P.e.o11?!2 parallel is instructhc. Is iL .? ,!,n?n "l0 Htamlpattcrs all along the line" ns vital an issuo in J?- a l s in 101U? In 1012 thero Sni B rN'STsohc mowment in tltc 7 ii.anwpilrty whieh was dlsbatis SithrJaft,nml M ady. tl? ,f ..Co.lotU!l "oosevclt'H uses. Lit mni ,tl,,Ht Progressive movement re- ho L Ti y 'P, !".'- tl,e country took nouWno JI01 ticiuu m"ch ,noru ri0ly than it does today. UndMihf'r M?r,K "Down "! tho Sro?inp.! boum,s 'i1'0 a WB- Cth. er .Mnch trtn!nly depends JPOn thcgcnor.il who. for the moment hlrt iL i'a? Kal,v,aniz,,,'l campaigu oMlh V V'1 ty i,,t,0, PPr MnlUnuiii'h 1r!lP, Ih talent for ""WjjIIUo tlie saving of him. McADOO STANDS PAT AB"ln Forbids Use of Name In Prea Idential Primary 'N hit lltlm, ne:V'i00 UKIX " ,n,llle l''l" b mi,1"" ,Vnlt IiIh name tn bll Is shen ,1,U'Hl(ic,,tlu,i mMenllul "H P rut,,1'0 K,on,t " telegniin. today fatlc bt'al. . ,K' S1"11"""" 'f Hie Demo iue lug, , "'nmlttro of California, re- fo'l iVlmn.J U'l,t out ot t,,e CaU- fc'SrMntUV,mui'Pl,Pr".'Ml ONttncnt that I," f a."1". '"" W " U,;moerl,t "flit", lo 1,1 ' "."' K,0l"ug "f unin. tcnllin ,IcUbiUm ,0 the national ton- "New Kaiseriam" Stirs in Germany Continued From Tnto One weakling like Prince Max of HadenP President Kbcft and his chancellor Bauer aro mere flgurcheuds nud pup pets In the hands of men like Nosko nnd Landsbcrg, who douinato their party absolutely, Kalscrtsm tbo Dominant Nolo "But knlscrlsm Is unfortunately not only rife In the Reichstag ; It is equally dominant todny nmong the German people. Tho general cry In Berlin Is: 'Oh, If .weonly had a kaiser again I' The Junkers, tbo farmers and the great body of oOicfnls are, of course, as they always were, stanch monarchists. Thero Is nothing surprising In that. But tho professional nnd business classes, who for a time showed some comprehension at least of the revolu tion and sympathy for the new German republic, have llkcwlso relapsed Into monnrchlsm and nro once more sighing for tho 'good old days' under the Ho hcnzollerns. "The truth Is that tho majority So cialists, by -their administrative incom petence and corruption, have discredited democracy In Germany In the ejes of Its bourgeois supporters. And, In the nmc way, they have discredited social Ism In the eyes of the proletariat. For the bitter truth must be confessed thnt even among tho German workmen knlscrlsm Is today once more deeply rooted, more deeply probably than when the kaiser was there to rule over them. "The utter failure of the majority Socialist ministers to rcnlize socialistic legislation and to raise the political and economic level of tbo working classes has shaken their faith in socialism, and many disillusioned workers, who cannot help comparing tho misery nnd distress which Is their portion under n so-culled Socialist government, bended bv n sn- culled Socialist president, with the comparative plenty anil happiness of former times, naturally conclude thnt It Is better to have a kaiser after all. "We Spifrtaclsts know to our cost how widely spread this feeling Is nmong the German workmen. It Is safe to predict that If n plebiscite were organized today In Germany, nn over whelming mnjorlty of tho German people would vote In favor of the res t Jlion of kaiscrlsm." Spartaclsm a Tragic Foiluro These uro tho words -of a Spartacist, and a Spartacist would be the last per son In tho world to make such n con fession if It were not true, for It im plies that his party forms an Impotent minority thnt can never hope to govern Germany except by terrorism. The story of Spartaclsm Is one of tbc grent disappointments of the German revolu tion. The course of this revolution wns from tho first fatally warped by the ab sence of n party with genuine demo cratic ideals capable of establishing a icnublic on western lines. Tho Sparta cists might bnvo been this party, for they were the real authors of the revo lution n,nd the only Germans whoso hatred of kaiscrlsm was fanntlcnllv sincere and not merely opportunistic camouflage. But Llebknccht and his followers al lied themselves with the Russian Bol sheviks nnd espoused Lenluc's creed, nud by preachlug world -terrorism hope lessly outlawed themselves in Germany and forfeited tho sympathies they orlg Innlly enjoyed in the allied .countries because of their courageous attitude during the war. Many of the leaders of the Spuitucist movement nro sincere nnd amlublc idealists who really represent the best type of Merman ns Karl Llebknccht himself undoubtedly did and whoui one would be naturally inclined to prefer to the unprincipled opportunists now ruling Germany, but they arc hopelessly entangled in Lcnlue's corrupt and sin istcr Intrigues, and their ndveut to power in Germany would consequently involve n very real mennce of an alliance with Bolshevik Russlu against western civilization. Their violent, doctrinury policy hns immensely furthered tho re vival of kalserism by furnishing the Prussian militarists with plausible pre texts for instituting u reactionary rejgn of terror, and by frightening the Allies into supnortlng the present German Government In spite of its evident duplicity and militaristic character. Opposo Extradition of Kaiser So powerful has tho spirit of kui scrism grown in Gcrmnuy lately that even German revolutionists whose hatred of the Ilohenzollerns Is above husplciou seek to dlssundu the Allies from insisting on the extradition of the kaiser and his military accomplices, because they believe such action will Ereclpltato monarchist restoration and o the death-warrant of the Germun re public, Mich us It is. Edward Bernstein Is n revolutionary veterun who has spent his life in com bating kaiscrlsm. Ho has nothing iu common with socialistic agents of the Iloheuzollerns like Scheldemunn nnd Noske. And yet in reply to my re quest for an interview, ho sent me the following sigucd statement for publlcn tionn the IjVesino Public Ludofu: "The Kntentc's action in demanding the extradition of the cx-kniser fiom Holland and the delivery of the Gcrmuu Doiig Fairbanks Breaks Finger ! L0lr01!' '" March (l.-(By A Jestcrday Z""';" ,ot ' right hand Mle ronltiE fi LHi,,,,n'nMl l"lful nits ,h l'idutef Sh.or?e 0T a ,llm l'Iay 1" ortl! of heJe. "' twety-" miles Alnnd.FiVe:Fot 3" In Cellar flay I, ii'0?1 ma was found vester IOr',;'t of the Htoroyof F. rial. rJ' &?'" Ill Photoiminhle nrntkl tniM ."v Chestnut uir.l t. .". 'm oy eimilnr... Vr""" " X" P BPlamt on'Kl XI' H I "lied by einnlnr... it BiTc t was 10 "Plana ton f; HIr' Curry can Bvo I'Ptllf. BUon for t Presence of the MANY PEOPLE Tako n few steps off Chestnut Street on 12th Street simply to see tho BEAUTIFUL FLOWERS We shall bo glad to havo you como in. Please don't feel obliged to purchase. THE CENTURY FLOWER SHOP 12lh St. below Chestnut St. Peoples Trust Company ; of Philadelphia Northeast Corner Twelfth and Arch 'Streets 'Thrift Is Your Margin of Safety Against Adversity We pay 3.65 interest on Savins Fund accounts and accept any amount from $1.00 upward. Our Safe Deposit room is ex ceptionally large and attractive. It is 36 feet by 36 feet, exclusive of vaults and special rooms. We have boxes from $3.50 upward. war criminals hns dangerously stimu lated monarchist activity In Germany, it in regarded by a large Hcctlon of tho German nconlo an an nrbltrary and spiteful uct, nnd It will, If persisted In, no much to effneo tho rontempt many Uermans entertain for the fallen mon arch on account of hts desertion of the army nnd ignominious flight. It will probably provoke n monarchist coup nnd lend to the overthrow of the present government. . "Personally, I hold William guilty of Having been 'In the position to prevent tuo outbreak' of tho war and of not liavins used bis power to nvcrt tho world-conflagration. I am further con vinced that he Is guilty of hnvlng de clared war without having been driven jo It by n rrnlly Itnmlnent danger to Germany. Mitigating circumstances may exist, but they cannot to nny great degree lessen his responsibility. Allies Made Kaiser a Mnrtr "Nrvnrllinlnau T fnn,. If .t...l,1 l. disastrous mlstako to attempt to bring the ox-kaiser to trial. For some months after the outbrcnk of the revo lution thero existed In Gcrmnny no movement of any consequence for the' restoration of monnrchlsm. and at thnt time the disgraced war lord'B trial would havo been possible. But tho Allies have waited too long. The monarchist move ment, promoted by tho natural taction of the German people against the mad attempts of the Rpartneists to exploit uiu ii-tuiimon 10 institute n proletarian clictatorshln, has becomo so strorng now that its lrlllmntl iiuma ounriul If Wtl- hclm is metamorphosed from a disered- uu couaru into a persecuted martyr." When so Incorruptible a revolutionist as Edward Bernstein wnrnlngly calls "hands off the kaiser," the revival of kaiscrlsm must indeed bo far ndvnneed. As ii matter of fact, I bellevo that It l nlmo,st inevitable In nny case, and that It Is therefore of little consequence whether tho Allies heed bis warning or not. The Paris council should never have formulntcd its demands for the extradi tion of the knlscr and tho German war criminals if It was not prepared to com pel their acceptance. As tho demands have been made, they should bo en forced regardless of German protests and maneuvers, othcrwlso they will add but another victory to the scries of sue cesses which Berlin displomacy has lately scored against tho allied states men. By remaining firm, particularly ns regards tho trial of the German war criminals by allied courts-martial, the victors of the wnr will at any rate nt least forco "new" Germany to discard her mask, if sho is wearing one, and to reveal herself in her true colors. This knowledge Is well worth tho risk of precipitating a monarchist coup which probably cannot be long deferred any way. Bolshevism a Monarchist Specter As for the danger of bolshcvlsm In Germany n specter which is still in varlably called up by the Berlin rulers iu order to obtniu concessions from the Allies I think tho melancholy confes sions of mv Spartacist visitor nnd Hcrr Bernstein's declarations go a long way to tirovc that its only importance ns a political factor today resides in the in voluntary but valuablo assistance it renders the Prussian monarchists. Besides, the German statesmen still havo faithful agents among the Bol shevik (.ommissaricH whose business It is to protect Germany against the In roads of bolshcvlsm. City May Get Drydock to Hvld Large Craft Continued From Tate On should possess no adequate facilities for the docking nnd repair of vessels beyond a. privately owned grnvlng dock which is not available for vessels of the larger modern type. v. ,, Tho argument has been advanced thnt one such dock Is ample for the demands of the porf. If this is true, then it is because ship owners and ship masters understand that New York and other ports will accommodate them because Philadelphia cannot. If this port Is to be placed on a com petitive basis with other maritime eon tcrsV tliis country, It Js Imperative thnt this subject receive immediate attention. Wo must hnc;dr.;dock8, vuit, modern and capable of accommodating the largest vessels that come up the Dela ware. It Is one of tho insistent de mands thnt will be made upon Mayor Moore's ndmlnlstrntlou. Lack of dry. dock ndvantnges has been one of tho greatdst handicaps to the' port, and tho situation has become more acute as the fleets approaching our doors increase in number nnd In tiro size of thn vessels. Shortly nftcr our entrance Into tbo world wnr this matter of drydocks claimed tho attention of tho maritime and other commercial bodies of the city. The early construction by the United States shipping board of n scries of mn rlno railways rtnd drydocks was uiged. War's Effect Unforeseen The war as it was to effect this coun ry had not been visualized. In the petl-tlon-of these bodies to the shipping board four drydocks were specified ".'150 or more feet in length." It is now evident that drydocks under -150 feet minimum will only partly serve the present ocean trade. Tho demand Is for one or more of nt least 700 feet In Icngtlr. Philadelphia hns been driving shipping from lmr doors through failure to provide drjdocl: ac commodation. This it what one of the rentcst authorities on this subject iu the country says : "Charterers of vessels In tropical ports, nd particularly in tho Java dis tricts, testify how difficult It fcomctimes Is in normal times to get owners to con sent to their craft coming to Philadel phia except at Increase rates of freight. They nro Invariably required, upon the dlscliargo of their cargoes, to suffer do Iays in securing drjdoek facilities, or nro forced to go to other ports to be docked, scraped and painted," Alone tho water front tho curious seeker after information need not go lar aueiu ior instances or damaged vessels having to be convoyed to other ports to be drydocked and repaired. The irony of the situation applicable to Philadelphia is thnt tho greatest To Be Spotless Use Lapin'H Handy Pad will rcmoo shine, crease, road and food nlulns from clothln?. sloven, spata, etc. llus many other uses Costs Only 15c at Drug. Department. Stationery. Gro cery, llardwaro and Gsneral Stores. Invented by tho originator of Lupin's Straw - Hat Cleaner, ?si!pf$ 66 5jiP 0 it i'i(iiwiii,imniiii)liii'.!' i.'S.'swss,- ". That "A" on the milk bottle top is only one letter but it spells "Best." That "A" is the top of the alphabet the leader of the letters and it typifies and stands for Milk the top and the leader of all milks, rich milk that we label "A" because it deserves to be! Fhone us to deliver a bottle tomorrow. Baring 205 Abbotts Alderney Dairies, Inc. 31st and Chestnut. Both Phones rtrnnchn Atlnntlo City Ocean City Wllilwnod Have You 2'ried Abbott's Ice Cream? Acl clean, pure, in v?t LJsiit-wiariiecLucUhe- r Or iiikfi' Ati A-'aiupdaL-Hfi' h'eireoptv atf day any- Mb inierjfeifes y tih the TmtSBwaK: m many ways ifl1r6ame Walt 4ay ! , KJ W'4iW'V - ' ' -.1 -' I i i j , j i ) I j ' i . i i i i -You clorft Want' JhjmSatupi u ' i "j! I I ti I Amrites' - msxTici counc -IMorZl r r-V '- I Lii'mrJ-Tt'" r &! 1- I ' -I k .A A,. .J.I vgjitM'nr'r' " F'. " i" '"7 r i i imv IW : 'J'SS-2M&t-l-rrt-dMk .iJ shlpbulldinir center in tho world is utterly lacking in drydocks, In a recent discussion on tho sub ject It wns claimed that Philadelphia had drydocks ndcijuato to its immediate needs. The contention is by no means sustained. Modern ships engaged In tho transatlantic or South American trades must go elsewhere. It is only necessary to recall how maritime centers of Muropo nro pro vided in this way. New York has eighty-six murine railways and graving docks, tho largest of which can litt u ship of 703 feet between perpendiculars. Uoston has thirteen, Including n government-owned dock 750 feet in length, while tho largest primln dock is 405 feet iu length. Norfolk has ten, tho lnrgest 550 feet, and Newport News three, with the largest 800 feet. The subject of drj docks approaches the ridiculous when wo discover further that Spczln, Italy, has eight drydocks with n maximum of 702 fcot. Hull, England, has eighteen drydocks, where ships up to 800 fret in length can bo docked nnd repaired, while Itclfast Jias live, with a maximum for ships of 80. (r If tho propbscd new drydock is built 'hlladelpliln will have taken another great step forward. I suffragist Delegate Withdraw New Yorlt. March 0. SIrsj ,C JiilUKlll, VI iicw j-tirn, jnnb 1115111.- noii need she had withdrnwn ns at' dldate for delvzata to the Derr.o nntlounl convention nt Knn FrnMl on the ground that shn only entpref race 10 oppose nwss i-jiisnDeiu jibei nnd that she understood "on good thorlty thnt Miss Marbury will I voted for ut tho primaries." STRAWBRIDGE & CLOTHIERi I .Wm' MAKL.ttOJ.l-t S, Ii 7 " Opening Exposition of Spring Fashions This is the Store that gets the new things first and for weeks past, new fashions in apparel and fabrics and the lesser appurtenances of dress have been popping in and peeping out here and there throughout the Store. Those were but the occasional new beauties presented to view for customers eager to add a bit of novelty to the long winter's wardrobe like the first pink and golden flowers of Spring that shoot forth unexpectedly, almost before the snow disappears. N Dainty and pretty and welcome indeed were those first beauties of Spring, but they were only the pale and scattered forerunners of the GLORIOUS FLOWER-GARDEN OF FASHION YOU ARE NOW INVIT ED TO VISIT, and from which you are privileged to pluck the rarest blos soms for your very own ! On Monday begins our OPENTNG EXPOSITION, revealing every latest development of Fashion in Apwel and all that certains thereto. First of all in importance are the wondrously beautiful AFTER NOON and EVENING GOWNS, a display presenting such a wealth of new 00W and novel designing as you ha- seldom wn. The new SPRING SUITS disclose many entirely new features in fabrics, cut and trimming, and so do the new COATS and WRAPS for afternoon and evening wear, and the smartest sports models. xxr S the Second 01' are also attractive Opening Displays of lovely Waists. Spring Furs, new Skirts, and new apparel for Misses and smaller Girls. The Exposition of Spring Miliary also continues. On the Third Floor will be found all that is new in Negligees, and Lingerie, with some lovely Blouses fresh from Paris. t-vt,,?1, the First FIoor are the new SILKS and DRESS GOODS, the Laces. Robes nnd Trimmino-s Neckwear, Shoes, Gloves. Silk Hosiery, Hand Bags and the exquisite new Ribbons. EVERY WOMAN IS INVITED m flffi MARKET STREET EIGHTH STREET FILBERT STREET Strawbridge & Clothier MARKET STREET EIGHTH STREET FILBERT STREET Bills must be paid I OljR efforts to give you telephone service bring in bills for materials and for wages. We find that these bills are about double what they were live years ago. But Our rates are just what they were before the war. The service cannot be kept up unless the rates are made adequate. It's your service. 1-4 """'iiuuuujuminnnMii.. 'Sny time of day BAKER'S COCOA is 'welcome. Do not make the mistake of think ing that cocoa is only an occasional drink. ;It is so valuable a food beverage, so rich in the elements of nutrition, so deli cious in flavor, and so wholesome that it should be used regularly and often. Booklet of Choice Recipes sent free. WALTER BAKER & CO-lid x.smousnea.1780. UOKCHE5TE1WMASS bSi?l 1 joE net b'-; ' V ?lt J - 'AM " ;h V i M 1 1 1 i fr"S. .. M,ii"" " --IT T- "I... . II J MM llfTll MMBhAv) :b j4V " iWVTlW -: f if ',- "4 ' ' " f vv u ' rjf f ft t v tyrr r rrrrr bl''n . 1 'A if. . ...o il.tltLi WF a I'lOJi.' , 'yfc ...'1 tit