: i 4 & V- i. J" & .(: ' V- '-, ,' 'v-iV . v ' 1. r , -a EVENI&6 PUBLIC LEDaiR--PHIIiADEL?OTX', gATUKttAX MA?" 22," 1920 r I . ,1 t V y: V r. i; , i disagree on recess plan Republican Senators, In Conference, Unable to Fix Program Washington, May 22. (Bv A. P.) No agreement on plans for adjournment or recess of Congress over the politi cal pnnrention wits reached todny at the conference of Republican senators. The only decision of the conference wns to press appropriation bills and conference reports. (Senator Kcnyon, ot Iowa, heading a group o; senators tuv oring prompt action on the packer regu lation bill, did not attend the confer ence. He announced later that he would Riipport the conference progrnm. but would attempt to call up the meas ure, ahead of nny other bill. Some leaders said that if the appro priation bills nnd other legislation now in conference could be oomnleted by SOVIETS FLING BACK POLES Moscow Claims Vlctorlcs After Fierce Fighting London, May 22. (By A. P.) The Bolshevik offensive, ngnlnst the Poles along the more northerly" part of the front in the region of the Beresinn Is continuing to make progress, according to Friday's official statement from Mos cow,', received by wireless today, Sev ern! villages were taken nter fierce, fighting. Official advices from Terslrf today state that the Bolshevik! who landed at Enroll, on the Caspian fcea, have, de spite their promises, cut the roads lead ing to Unslit. twenty -Ave, miles south east of HnzeH. The British force, which is a small one, wns -compelled to withdraw to Rnsht. ASSURES GOOD 'FUNERAL, Will of Former Lonsdale Man Cuts Out Absent Mourners Lansdalc, May 22. Joseph E. das sell, of Center Point, who formerly re sided at L-nnsdale nnd lived vlrtunlly all his life In the North Penn, through stipulations in his will made sure that his funeral would be attended at least by his relatives. He t!.cd the other dayTlT Is a claiise to the effect thii nieces and Jiephew, did not " funeral or show-sufficient . "$' they did not attend, the, VouW I JJm theses ho The, funeral is over and 1, attended. The nieces and nenW1 present. ' tw ' Wilson's Announcement Re ceived With Joy by Council of Ambassadors HUNGARY WILL SIGN JUNE 4 Democrats Loso Fight to Pro vent Early Consideration of Soldier Relief G. 0. P. TAKING HOUSE POLL ' . ') adjournment sine die might a fu be possible. ft ;.j ftl I S P U. S. TO ARBITRATE PAVE RIGHT OF WAY F ARMENIAN BORDER FOR BONUS BILL i5tf I: Mf fc. n.v the Associated Prw Paris, May -2.-- Anibnilor Wnl lore Informed tho rminril of amtnxa dnr today President VUnn lint) nn nnimroi the t'nitr-d Stnte. would ac cept the role of nrnltrntor In itvluc; tlic boundaries of Armenia. The nnnoiineenient .wo" reeehed with Brent atifni'tloit by the wiibaiidor. Tiie cniiui'il also di''used the con tention of the (JerniRni thnt war mn terini destroed b them remained their property. It ns decided tlml urinn ments. whether ilMtrojnl or delivered to the Alii". nrcordiuB to the terms of the treaty, must be considered allied property. ,. The peace treaty with llunsnry, it von arrnnsed. will he signed In the Grand Trianon Palnce at Versailles on June 4. , .. Hungarian delegate presented to the council three notes. The first ami ace ond announced, respectively, the resig nation of Count Apponvi as president of the delegation and the appointment of Ivan t'rnsnowki to succeed him nie third told of Hungnry"- decision to sign the treaty and intention of naming dole gates for thnt purpose The council decided Hint In the nil fence of Count Appoint it wn. htting that Hungary end n member of the government or n person conspiciiom in Hungary ' public life, who might b considered n repreentnthe of the country.. to sign the treaty. Washington. Ma 1!2 -;y A. P - Official here toi!n refused to mid nn thing to the brief announcement from Paris that Ambaailor Wallace had in formed the council of ambassadors that the t'nited States would accept the role of arbiter in fixing the boundaries of. Armenia. The supreme council also requested this country to accept a mandnte over Armenia, but ndtniuiMratiou officers would not say whether President yilson had reached a decision n to this in rltation. DR. EUOT ' rapsjjonus bill Hrvard's President Emeritus Con demns M.easure as "Immoral" Boston. May 21 -tHy A. V i Dr. Cliarles W. Eliot, president emeritus of Hurvard T'niversitv. speaking at the New England Red Cross conference to day, denounced the proposed soldiers bonus bill as "immoral." After condemning what he termed n tendencv to put membership in the JuDior Red Cross on n pecuniary bais as on a parallel with the practice "which seems to prevail in nn as tonishing degree in Americnn families to make pecuniary payment for serv ices that ought to be performed for love and duty." he added: "And now it is propoed to offer this same sort of premium to the national army in the form of a bonus. Could anything be more immoral or suggestive of a wrong attitude toward the dutv which every young man owes his country? It indicates n total nils conception of the individual service in a democracy those high principles with which we started -when we entered upon this continent, but seem to have forgotten." LABOR PLAINT UNFOUNDED Wadsworth Calls Gompers'a Protest on Army Bill "Misconstrued" Washington. .May 22.--(Bj A P i -American Tederation of Labor protests against the military liability clause of the Senate army reorganization bill on the ground that it might permit con scription of labor in peace times were based on a "misconception of ihe mean ing and purpose of the langtiagt' of the bill. Chairman Wadsworth today in formed President (iompers'in answering the latter'H letter. "Needless to say." Mr. Wadsworth wrote, "nothing of the sort is intended The term 'emergency' n emploved by the Senate committee ns descriptive of a state of war of the first iniigmtudi constituting a national emergens During a conference with House man- agers on the bill, the senator snid the Senate representatives had suggested and would continue to urge substitu tion of the word" "state of war con , stituting a nutional emergency ' for the language objected to. n.v the Associated Press Wellington. May 22. -On a strict party vote, the House rules commit tee today ordered n favorable report of .1 resolution giving soldier relief legls-lati-m the riseht of way. Chairman Campbell ald the rule would not he presented to the House before Tue dnj . Democrat on the rules committee vigorously opposed the Republican pro gram of bringing the hill before the House under the resolution preventing them from offering amendments, hut they lost their fight, as the Republicans, opposing the ensh bonus proposal, voted for the Republican program. t nder the rule, debate on the bill would be limited to five hours and a ma jority vote of the House would be re quired to send the bill back to the ways nnd means committee for amendment Republican lenders, who late venter day abandoned their plan to bring, the bill before the House today, were having a poll made of nil their members to get n definite foreenst of the vote when the rule is presented in the House. ' They nid it would not be called tip until they were assured of its adoption , Objection of th Democrats to the rule and of half a hundred Republicans , to the cosh bonus upset first plans for action by the Home todny. I Albany. May 22. (By A. P.I The, $lo, 000,000 soldier bonus bill, intro- i dueed in the Legislature by Miss Mar- I guerite L. Smith was signed by Gov- i ernor Smith today Th measure pro- , vides for a referendum to be submitted at the November election on the ques- ) tion whether or not the state shall issue Slf!. 000,000 in bonds, the proceeds to be I used for bonus purpor. ' CALLED IN ""BARREL" QUIZ I Hitchcock and Baruch Told to Bring. Accounts of Contributions Washington. May 22. (By A. P.) Frank H Hitchcock, former postmaster general, has been summoned by the' Senate presidential campaign expense investigating committee to appear at the j opening of the inquiry Mondnj as the. representative ot .Major iienerai Leon ard Wood. Republican, nnd Bernard M Baruch ns the representative of William U. McAdoo. Democrat. It was said thnt the committee had had considerable difficulty in ascertain ing who should be called to represent General Wood. Altogether some tweu-ty-five representatives of candidates have been summoned, but the commit tct! hopes to compiete tile inquiry be fore the Republican convention opens on June S. The men summoned were directed to bring "all accounts of contributions and expenditures in the campaign, from every source, nnd all correspondence connected therewith " sims praTses navy Tells War College Graduates It "Exceeded All Expectations" Newport. It. I.. Mny 22 -(By A. P ) -Rear Admiral William S. Sims, president of the Navnl War College, in his address at the graduation of this year's clnss today, said thnt barring n very few cases "our navy personnel not only responded to all requirements, but exceeded our most sanguine expectations in the endurince. real and loyal initi ative thev dinlaved" in the world war. "This "applies." he added, "not only to the forces in the war zone, but to the navy in general, and partlculaily to the very intelligent nnd sKHiitii nanuung oi the transport services in effective co operation with the forces nbroad." The rear ndmiriil said much of the civilian criticism, of the navy was based on "erroneous information" that should be corrected. Martial Law In Teschen Area I Prague. Mny 22. (By A P. Mar tial law was declared in the Teschen plebiscite nren Wednesdav by the in- l ternational commission. Bitter feeling I lias prevailed recentlv in the district j between the Czeeho-Slovak and Polish, workmen and some clashes lmve been1 reportrd : CHANDLER Typhoid Fever Increases In State Harrlsburg. Mav 22 -dU A P. i State Department of Health officials to day announced reports indicated "a i-rnHfvini? ilocrease iu fill rnnimnnlrflhlc ! Cnmnii, (n ver detail diseases with the exception of fvnhoid . i fever and measles- During Apni Lexington Motor Co. of Penna. there was n slEht increase in tphoid ... ,, ,,, .,, ... ' in both municipalities and ninil di I Lexington BIdj., 851-853 N. Broad St. I trict rnii.,ni:i.riii Stn psii"nEr Tourms I.i nw Six lie w " Mr"A. humpem nubbrs ipotllrht Qrrat btrcain etroit THROUGH SLEEPING CAR Service from Philadelphia Beginning Sunday next. May 23, through sleeping car service will be established be tween Philadelphia and Detroit via Pitts burgh and Toledo on the following Schedule: The Pennsylvania Limited Dall Leae Broad Street Stntion 1:16 P.M. Arrive Pittsburgh 9:45 P.M. Toledo (Summit Street) 6:00 A.M. Dftvoit (Inion Station) 7:00 A.M. Manhattan Limited nn Leave Detroit (Union Station) 1:00P.M. Toledo (Summit Street) 3:00 P.M. Pittsburgh 11:10P.M.' Arrive N'orth Philadelphia 7:29 A.M. This through service will be a convenience to the increasing travel between Philadelphia and Detroit in connection with the automobile and allied industries. A million Philadelphiani M arecelebratinf thisweek as Kolb's Bond Bread Birthday Week, w WMSrSmKmJCWi - &l ?i ip" 1 MmmS raSflvJ Jwn ft vfl WlMapttv 'Mi-l I e Mr' MwmmLiw w9 m A , M A Mil mil ) 1 BMTfMVw iMlrmjj 1 1 riwjMia j Z' Ik j iiIiIHLHi lit Him II s TKWFySElSSin Hn'fe tlllllhlnlll IliH 41 i m$& n hrns Mai R9 Wjjrmftf 711' "'Jl ? 'ii .i'T' pJ" rmiX7i T;lift'it"'B ftaAmack good the verdict of Philadelphia women Three years ago these prominent women selected the best loaves from thousands of home - made loaves of bread Mii Lucy Aiken, Department of Household Arts. Triends' Cen tral School. Miss Dorothea Allen. Mrs. E S. Allen. Philadelphia. Miss Anne Balderston, Instructor of Domestic Science, Friends' Select School. Miss Keltic E. Blgelow. Dietitian. Abington Memorial Hospital Miss Helen Bradshaw, Instructor of Cookery, Trenton Public Schools. Mrs Win, M Cameron, Presi dent Women'a Club, Narbertb, Pa Miss Ethel Campbell, Assistant to Mrs Scott. Mm Ella J. Dar, Instructor "f Cookery and Dietetics, Temple University. Miss Bertha B. Deakjne, Super visor of Domestic Art and Science, Chester Public Schools. Miss Nellie M. Delaney Mrs Nana Foster Dubbel, Sec retary Women's Civic Associa tion, Merion, Pa. Mrs Wharton Harrison Esher ick. Instructor of Home Econ omics, Malvern Club Mrs. D. R. Godsbill, Philadelphia. Mrs Wm. Hlndman, Oak Lane. Pa. Miss Alice Johnson, Supervisor Department of Home Econom ics, Board of Public Education Mist Kathenne Lawrence, Direct, or Household Science, Templo University. Mrs. L M Ludlura, Chief In. itructor, U. G. I. Miss Louise .Lysle, Domestic Science Instructor, Widener School. Mrs. C R. Munro, Philadelphia. Mist Elizabeth Naylor, Logan. Miss Claribel Nye, Bread Special, ist, Cornell University. Miss Inez Pope, Dietitian. North western General Hospital. Mitt Marcaret Potts. Domestic Science Instructor. Brown Pub lic School. Mrs Anna B Scott, Pure Food Economist, The North American. Miss Anna K. Seip. Instructor of Cookery, Philadelphia. Miss Gertrude H. Shearer. Chief Instructor, Philadelphia Electric Company Miss L. F Sldwell, Dietitian, Hahnemann Hospital, Philadel phia. Miss Emma Smedley, Director Dept. of School Luncheons, Board of Education. Mrs. Edith E Snovel. Dietitian, Pennsylvania Hospital, Philadel phia. Mist Margaret Tullidge, Domestic Science Instructor, Board of Public Education Miss Antoinette C Williams, Dietitian of Bryn Mawr Hospital THIS week is Kolb's Bond Bread Birthday Week. When, with the help of local house wives, wc perfected Bond Bread three years ago When those 2000 women baked loaves of bread in their own ovens and submitted them in our baking contest to show the kind of bread they and their households wanted There were some skeptics, some who believed that " this was just another loaf of bread." There were others who said "Oh! yes, Bond Bread may be all right for a week or two, but they won't keep the quality up all baker's bread is alike anyway." Today, just three years after the birth of Kolb's Bond Bread, Phila delphia has rendered its over whelming verdict "Bond Bread has made good!" How purity and flavor have been insured. Three years ago, the Kolb Bakery Company pledged its Bond that Bond Bread would duplicate the best qualities of those home-made loaves. Many people, especially experienced cooks, have marvelled that the quality of Bond Bread has continued so uniform, day in and day out. Here are some, of the reasonB : '.-.Purity of ingredients. You cannot buy flour," sugar, lard, milk or yeast for your own use one whit purer than the ingredients used in Kolb's Bond Bread. 2. Scientific control of the Bond Bread formula and process. From the time the ingredients first enter the mixing chamber every step in Bond Bread's process is scientifically controlled. If you have not yet learned how local housewives helped improve the quality of bread, join the Bond Bread army on this Third Bond Bread Anniversary. fizeeh rtd i r K w Pennsylvania System s IB lj -.tV! I i - ,Vu li'oittf liiya. i'i, .&&&& '-fl U t' V - ..aij -, ...trwA u '. . ..iLi"J;. c.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers