fiT? Tt-' uffB ip--.2-tJ MFr ' ffi,;'""'M',r -W $j F " ' ttjesj f; - w "" tTPSPW?"Vv-''' t"? J3 ,TfW P7 f tiwv- t i,J''t- V .r i -v. -' . PAAJI - 111! hall fijll ora rn . 11 to bed of finiBW bndlyj Angoi f f -!.. lanv WW k EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHlLADELlJklA, MONDAY, JANUARY 3, 1921 HARDING TO HEAR FACIS ON SENATE v Senator Curtis, Export on Up- per Houso Sentiment, to Explain Attitude KNOWS MINDS OF MEMBERS By CLINTON W GIMltiltT SUff Correspondent Evrnlnir r'tibllfl Isilccr Copvrioht, 19)1, by rublle rrtVrr Co. Marion, O., Jan. 3. I'rcRlilPtit-clect Hardin wilt understand cxnrtly where tho ScnalP stnndM with roforonro to the Knox plnn roKnrdlnp the I.piiruo nf Nil. tlona when lip finUlirs talking with Senator Chnrlos Curtis, of Knnn. to day. The Curtis visit here n properly sptjucr or Senator Kiio'i isit here last week and of Harry M DniiKhprtv, trip to 'Washington Mr. Curtl W the Kcpubllran whip of the Semite lie Knows tho Republican mnlntitt of the Senate as no other does. H. knows not only its avowed position, but Its secret tnoulit8. Not only whnt it cms it will do, but what it will do. He under "tnnds It Individually and i-nllerthelv He comprehend"? its motives. How firm thin senator will stand and Jut at what point thnt senator will iold is m. secret to Curtis. Curtis may not he as ijrcnt n senator ns well, who is toda ? He doe. not make many speeches and his tintne is not nssociateil with important acts of IeRislatlon. Hut he has an extraordi nary pift for cettinc inside the mind of every individual Kepubliran member of the Senate and knowing what i there Tho Senate's nest Prophet He Is the best prophet there Is about the courso of the Senate, and not only of the chamber itself, hut of each in dividual Republican member it well He has, moreover, the reporter's tnletit for not fooling himself into thinking that things will go the waj he wants them to go. In and out of the Senate as one of the elder statesmen, one of the ollgnrehv. he mnintnlns an tra ordlnnry detnehment. He luu the In formation of an Insider and thu cool judgment of an outsider. When Mr. Harding has talked to Mr. Curtis ho will know just whnt Mib " i !"lc Vloro h ,0 t,ie Senate movement which led to Senator Knox's coming here and announcing for the Senate Just whnt the Republican party pollcv with regard , to International organljatlon should be. while the President-elect was busy formulating the party pollcv him self. And Mr. Curtis Is hero presnmabh because Mr. Hnrdlng will find Informn' tion on that point useful. Many sena tors are with Mr. Knox and the ruling group now. who will nult them once the President-elect indicates n disa greement with them. Senator Curtis better than any oilier man can tell just who and how mnn sitih senators theie are. Harding Failed to Tell Public In his conflict of opinion with the Re publican majoritj of the Senate, the President-elect Is at a disadvantage compared to the senators. IIt. hns not taken the public into his confidence re garding the league plnn. Hp has said thnt he has such a plnn. hut has re trained trom telling what his plan N. 1 What lias been published with regard to i it hns been revealed more or less ncti- dentntl) by his visitors here. It is known that Mr. Hardini? is nut in agreement, now at least, with Senn tor Knot. When he hns found himself in agreement with his visitors he has not hesitated to snj so, and he has not said so with respect to Scs.itor Knox. On the contrary In- has lefused to sny u wonl about the Kno plan. If the President elei t had rernled his plan he would lime aligned con siderable public sentiment in its sup port iXdently this would have been so because of the authority and pres tige of Ins otliee and because of the nutionnl habit of looking to the presi dent for leadership. And equally, if ' he had taken Hie country into his 'con I fidence he could have counted upon an immediate public reaction against the Knox plan Harding's Silence Mds Knn As it is, in the at)ciice of accuinle public knowledge of tho President's purpose, the Knox statement produced confusion in the public mind Senator Knox came here and talked with the President-elect He emerged from the conference to ce the pros. He c. pressed confidence that Mr Harding would arrive at n decision agreeable to 1 the "hitter enders." Thnt was what it amounted to. It was not a statement of the fact that Mr. Harding was now in process of nrrlvlng nt a deci&lon ngreeable to the "bitter-enders." It was a prediction thnt he would do so, which Is n totally different thing. A country which in not authnritathcly Informed as to what Mr. Harding is doing Jumpt to the conclusion thnt Mr. Knox hns npprocd Mr. Harding's pro gram and that, therefore. It must be an irreconcilable one The Senate inn jorltv understands publicity better than does Mr. Harding. MARTENS SURRENDERED Soviet Agent Will Be Sent Out of Country Probably January 23 Washington. .Ian. X (lly A. P.) I.inlwig C A K Martens. "Russian Soviet representative in this country, whose deportntion has been ordered, was formnlly surrendered here today to Secretar) Wilson, nt the Department of Labor by his counsel. Immediate!) after Ills surrender Martins was released on his own recog nlntiM'. He nI;cd thnt arrangements for his deportation he expedited and that n snllitic be arranged bv .Tnninm L'O, to which Scrirtnr) of Labor Wil son nssenteii Ofhcinls nd effort would he made to deport Mm l ns iind his pnity on the stenmslnp Stockholm, sniling fiom New York. .liititmn 'J'-', for (iothenburg. Sweden. Prom there the puit would be tuinspoitccl to Lilriii, I'sthonln. Martens will be accompanied by his entne stuff of about fort) Russian citi zens ami his pm.ite secretin-). Oregorj YVcinsteiii, against whom a depnitntlon warrant hml been iued. The I "nit otl States (ioc foment will p.i onl the expenses ccf Mai tens. It is undi stood Martens plans to re tne to tirhnt" life and resume his oc cupation as an engineer on his icturn . to Russia. ' Martens, who was accompanied here l from New Yen k in his iittornm, Charles Kcc lit. tc turned to t lint cit) lmmediutel) after ln lelease Arrested With Stolen Watch Mm Millev. .".slS Hiown street, was helil in Ssimi 1 in i I for coin t h) Magis trate Me, lean in Central Station this I morning on a charge of leceivlng stolen i goods He wns arresteel in n pawn Uhop at ."il'iCl Mniket street attempting jto pledge a watch stolen from lTJffi Mt Vernon street Mailed snhl he won the I w.ite !i in a i rap game U.S.AIRMEN ON WAY HOI BY OOG SLED Ballobn Crow, Found In Ca nadian Wilds, Will Reach Railway in Few Days LOST FOUR DAYS IN WOODS lly flio Associated Press Rorliaway, N. Y .Inn. 3. Three missing nnvnl balloonlsts of the A-C503, who had been the objects of n frantic search through northern New York nnd Canada since they dropped from sight tin cc weeks ago, today are en route home from the snowj wilds of Ontario ia dog sleds. Tho trio landed near Moose V'nctory,, Out., a remote trading post of the Hud son Ray Co., on December 14, the day I nftor they started from Rocknway. After four days in tho woods, they found safety at the post. Word of their rescue reached here in a telegram from the tilers, sent by messenger to the nenresl telegraph office at Mattlce, and I rehned thence upon the nrrUal of the . messenger last night. The message read : I --Driien by storm Monday, 12-RI. west by north, nt Lower Hudson bav. Fenced to land 'J p. in. 12-14 about ten miles north by east of Moose Pnctorv, (hit. latitude fll HO. longitude SI 00. ! Lost in forest four dn. Crew safe at Hudson Co post. Will leave on first mailable means of trnnspoitation to railroad, which is by dog sled, nnd will take about nine days. Leaving 'lure Monday, December -7." I Itetttm Requires' Tlmo n tne nalloonists got away on the i.'7th, and if they make as good time as they evppcted, they should get back into touch with civilization nt a railroad station, probnblj Mattiee, tomorrow or ednesdny. Aviation officers here, lnweer. Incline to the opinion thnt It will be several days before thn bnl loonltct, unaccustomed to dog sled The turn irent exd Tungfct en Steel -v (gold plated) Only after years of search and experi ment was it discovered that tungsten was the perfect reproducing point for playing Victor Records. Its great advantages more than justify all the time the scientists and metallurgists of the Victor Company spent in achieving this triumph. The virtue of tungsten is in its peculiar fibrous nature. It gradually wears itself away and doesn't damage the record. Best for the music and best for the record. You get these distinct advantages only in the Victor Tungs-tone Stylus. The Victor Company has the exclusive right to the use of tungsten in any form of talking machine needle. tsrra Many timca magnified Actual 10 cents per package of four points enough to play at least 1000 records. Semi-permanent. Changeable. Sold by all Victor dealers. -HIS MASTERS VQICE" This trademark and the tradematked word" Victrola"identlfyallour products. Look under the lid! Look on the label! VICTOR TALKING MACHINE CO. Camden, N. J, ""Victor Talkifid Machine Co. Camden. J. travel, work their wny out of the frozen north country. Members of tho A-I5fif)8 crew were Lieutenant Walter Nlnton. of Ucllc Unrbor, N. Y . a pilot on the N0-4s transatlantic i!Wit: Lieutenant Hte phen A. Fnrrcll, of New York, nnd Lieutenant Louis A. Kloor, Jr., of N urienns. cw TO TRY MoGANNON AGAIN Cleveland Judge Accused of Murder Will Face Second Ordeal Cleveland. Jan. ,l.(Hy A. I'.) fudge William II. MeQnnnon will be brought to trial n second tlmo nn'ehurses of slnyinit Harold ('. KnR.v ns soon ns Count) Prosecutor Kdwnrd C. Stanton, who took office this inornlnjc, completes his Kttidy of the case, the new prose cutor announces. Htaliton will hnndle the trinl. lie will not seek thn aid of Itolnnd A. Jtaskln, his predecessor, who prosecuted both John IV. Joyce nnd Judge Mctinn non for the Kngy killing. Joyce wns acquitted nnd the Jury In the McOnti non case disngrecd late Krlduv nfter nenrly forty-eight hours' deliberation. CLAMOR FOR VENIZELOS Telegrams Urging Him to Return Mark Celebration of His Name Day Constantinople, Dec. 28. (By A. P.) (Delayed) Demonstrations were held today In honor of the nnmo day of for mer Premier Venlaolos, of (Irecce. They continued until n Into hour tonight. The city was decorated with the Greek colors nnd mnny buildings were Illumi nated. Portraits of Vcnizclos, framed In laurel wreaths, were prominently dls pla)cd. Thousnuds of telegrams were sent to M, Venlr.elos, who is in Nice, I-'rnnro, expressing the hope that he would re turn to Athens to "complete the work )ou have undertaken." Identify Palisades Qulclde Englewood, N. J., Jan. .1. fliy A. P.) The body of n woman found under tho Palisades near here Thursday has been identified ns Mrs. Gcorgo II. Ilrown, of this city. The woman's throat wns cut nnd her wrists slashed with ft rnzor. which wns clutched in her hnnd. Her husband snld that she hnd recently been under treatment for n nervous affection. IV s the'6 Oven" that Bakesi or Bars the Bread! You can trust to the Electric Oven exclusive with' Meenchun in Philadelphia to Bake and not Bar the Bread.. iiiu cicun, uvuii mini, iiuiL ib so yuiuiy ruuuuuu, permeates the expertly mixed dough, that is our pride and joy, and brines to supreme perfection the Bread. Rolls, Cakes unA Pastries for which we arc now so famous. Take home some lonignii MEENEHAN'S Electric Bakeries 1433 South St. 2G04 Germantown Ave. 18 South 52d Street 14 S. 60th St,j 4009 Market St.! s,Hiiiv,aKMblvwcijiMcA'y Never Has Such a Sight Been Witnessed in This City! Thousands Are Struggling to Get the Bargains Today Successors to Hirsch's Sacrificing Entire Stock JrirscKs 925-927 MARKET STREET Men?s, Women's & Children's Wearing Apparel J a ;s The Largest Store and the Best Organization in the City Could Never Hope to Cope With the Throngs Here Today and We Are Completely Overwhelmed But, If You Couldn't Get Waited On Today Come Back Tomorrow ! Remember, This Is Not a One Day Sale, or a One Week Sale But We Are Closing Out the Entire Store Full of Merchandise In a confusion and rush such as today, the best bargains are overlooked and those who come tomorrow will find some of the prize offerings waiting for them to pick up. It Is Impossible to List Items or Quote Prices! On Every Counter On Every Shelf On Every Rack Wherever You Will Turn You Will Find Bargains! Bargains! Bargains! 925-927 MARKET STREET uh&mMM) 925-927 MARKET STREET i f f WWB HfifWIII y. rl:iiL I i. -..,j ,..., -,,, wfA ,w3h.m. Jrt it,. iW., ,, &MtA'?s$ht&-'''"i- rrwasipS'irt SoCcTO&frtl "rm
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers