The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, March 29, 1919, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

FAMOUS ALL NORTH DAKOTA BAND! ROBINSON SEES OF THE FIGHTING FIRST HERE TO) BOLSHEVISM IN | PLAY FOR MATINEE AND EVENING . U.S. CONTROL Nonpartisan Jurist Declares| Federal Administration Should Leave States Alone One of the Most Popular Musical Organizations of American Ex- peditionary Forces Will Entertain ‘Bismurck People This! Afternoon and Tonight—Boys Make Splendid Showing in| Street Parade—House Almost Sold Out—Some Seats Left for Matinee. ; WILSON EXCEEDED POWER ‘Asserts Congress Never Con-; The famous all-North Dakota band of the Fighting First is ese here to entertain Bismarck folk with a matinee at the Auditorium! ferred Authority‘to Interfere at 3 this afternoon ,a concert at 8:30 this evening, and a dance at} With Intrastate Rates the state armory at 10 o’clock tonight. | cao, _ The boys arrived on No. 4 this morning as per schedule-and | asocinte Justice Tames EB, Robinson were greeted at the station by a crowd of several hundred enthusic {iy un informut opinion released to the | astic admirers, who stood about in the drizzle until No. 4 pulled | jress today through the medium. of out and the band’s special cars were shunted down to the station, |i, saturday evening Letter, holds where the men unloaded. Vihat Unele Sam is amduly interfering FINE LOOKING CREW with the poliee powers of the. state) A mighty fine looking lot of men NER in attempting to fix intrastate freight | they were, clean, alert, trained to the and passsenger rat that no inflitary minute, a splendid type of fighter and lemergency now exists making such in- musician, And when they struck out, terference necessary of — warrantable, with a ringius mareh in full blasi, jand sums up with the statement that} “It isa well known fact that the rail with the short, snappy step character | istic of our overseas forces, the crow | carriers have always charged excessive just. naturally, involuntarily moved EIGHT-HOUR DA ita they are fast, cing | with them. yealth of the country | The. boys marched down Vifth to | “By skill, prudence and economy Broadway and thence to tho stufe arn- | director general might well hi y, tHen counter-marehed = to ‘The a {duced the cost of operating the rail-| Tribune corner, where they played a Second Annual Labor Demon: | oor ie tina, indeed, when the federal! ere} slam-bang, camp favorite, and thence stration at Lignite City control bY was before congress, he was | to Main street, where they favored the i jealled as a witness and gave assurance crowd with another selection, Then Planned for April 1 i that the result of federal control would tees The to reduce the expenses—and such | snatch a couple of hours’ rest and en- | . q arch 29.—The {Was the insurance ander which the! : Wilton, 'N. D... March me bill was passed, — However that may | joy their noon-day chow. 3 £ r -elebration ; Joy ond annual eight-hour day celebration gow that the war has. ended, there ALIGHTE of the local Miners Union will be held | 2¢ Habs LUG ayy : Here] ba mas Tee Hania ic] Tuesday, April 1. ‘The committee in N90, longer any ete ea Bismarck’ ix, delighied. wins charge of the affair ‘consists of Adam neil sto generate ie has seen of the First regiment band) rare, Ehner Benedict, Ivor Sands and | daind defiance of the a yer oe ternoon and yet more| ZF: Rogers, ‘the programs will pe tas PTT hevoind the constitutional | the boys this afternoon, and yet more (i aa in Grand theatre, and AMONE tae Teen ee en eee and the national | of them tonight, at the Auditorium, and scheduled for. the occasion | Power a con ‘ sk int 1 he soul ton { it will undoubtedly pack the arm 1 wernor Lynn J. F vec gover nment. and so ma een eae int for their dance which follows the eve-| PTL. Atithollan, railroad comtfission- | t must lead fo anurehy, Holsheyikista nine CO a : 4 coig] et, other speakers of prominence are und eyunes tie! shtety a For tonight the house is almost S010 | algo expected to be present. A dance | He Mandanmus a Argel wien’ out, although there are still a few) A Ww hall will conclude the |, Audge Robinson's decision, in which, good seats. A full house is also ? {he sees the country lapsing into ana sured for the matinee, which ie yen chy and Polshevikism through — th especially for mothers and the little folk and: for out-of-town, guests who cannot remain over for the evening concert. Re isch mer Brezden store building whieh will Me iiel aarti i be fited up as a rest room for, those ic opinion is handed down in the « The hoys play with a finish aeqnired | who, come in from the count 1 or th eeth rae geniis: thie Se throngh almost two years of constant) Weather permitting, ente ainment ete ne eee Ais ee practice and association. Ane a re a) Seatnren Ae various kinds will be | aeeoOOe Bl fal cade of them, everyone a musician and an} scheduled. Pes fy Alregignior rae es M : oe They’re all young, typleal North Miners’ Union No. R803 United Mine | bet By at the ee iene: Dakota sighting men, recruited from | Workers of. America can boast of 4 s y | v The. orga-| torney General FP. M./Packard for the | all parts of the state, from the farm,! membership of over 300, The orga Atate Gailweny Soom they disbanded, to look over ¥ dially invited to all the exer of | the day. The Wilton orchestra will | furnish the music, i ‘The committee has secured the f sin contravention with opinions pressed by leaders of his aprty. mpartisan league, who are hei ‘in favor of public ownership, univer play and they. sing and they thorough-| dition and has been very active in all ly ‘enjoy. thelr; business, and they're; war time: and patriotic activities, Jiberal with ‘encores. well ax being vitally interested in-Tocal Anyone who's alive and) knows it} enterprises for the pbuilding of the lin infrastite yates insugrated 1a {without securing — proper’ perm * @, hose who daily for a] ‘The=present officers’ are: kh. Bare] Li vg 8 stiite, preety a HH tinked their lives over tholomew,’ president; Albert. Wading: | secret: by the laws of this state. jhere in the midst of hell and-made fun | ton, vice president: Irving Mathy: ne of it, and who ‘have come back-better| recording — secretary: ee eres Hampe'to initiate tnterstacel polis Shs pag veararder ty ieee ae Meee tates,” save Tudge Tobhison, “contrary owes x H HERE OVER SUNDAY and his famous son-in-law right to re- afternoon at 3:30 the entire band will | | mente ted W8 to. Ue y, Ww - | peal, impair or affect the lawful poli cet nil be aa erne icone, ‘The 2 5 | regulations of the several states bandsmen and members of the local} Well Known Bismarck Jurist Re-| The full opinion SOM OR n ei 0 vi . * 7 | State, ex rel. vy. Northern Pacific, committee who form their escort will ceives High Appointment ie 1 i peal and undo the rate luvs of any he. bandsieh Sal aaa no E HONOR | state, Nothing in the federal wee ca ot 0 tne entl ? | must be so consstrued as to amend, re- main at the prison for dinner as | : hie Sc te raat of the warden and his family. by Bar Aésociation Peerieinee nS ue ing ane ye Ten cars have been provided by Bi nis Thia.is gn action byt kat ot 1 marek citizens for the: transportation] \.) dington, March 27.—DPlans of the] riers and those who control and ope of he! Par war department for alterations inj ate the railwa ASKED TO COME FARLY Gourtsmartial procedure were rae ah continuing to roh the people by the os eon-| ject. of the first, conference held by) action of excessive passenger and | pera ana ite eer ees in| Secretary Baker ‘upon ‘his return foaliy freight rates, contrary i ie la rs of | f : Every hington. The secreta met} the State. ent of.action arises | basin se he Be iosd nese irae with §. S, Gregory of Chicago, and} ynder the constitution and laws of the] ee erat opportunity to take in| Mudge Andrew Bruce of the Uni-| state. and nnder. the laws ofthe Unit the oin aT rohan for any part| Versity of Minnesota, formerly of Bis-| od Stat Hence, the jurisdiction of ge the house tiiis eyenl i D., members of the Amer-| the Court is in no way questionah’ oe Poa ae bee paca "l ican Bar Association conimittee ap-| and it Is e3 v and fully eoneeded, | y . nointed to make an advisory study of! Ty the operation of the pubfie highways | ended, and. every seat ill pebresent Tre whole anestion of inilitary Tegal | heween points within the Stile ther | ocala eens Seihat:they: Hive tits Practice and procedure, i must he a compliance with the laws of | which are ha Se vale even to date.| Mr. Baker after the conference said} the State, or the! laws are not: laws.) ue beat ‘ he biaseat town they have | that he had placed all the personnel! and the courts must maintain-and up Bisuigted ad he ne first in 'which| and records of the judge advocate] pola the laws of the State and pronect jecbkoaris a havea two engagements, | Benerals office at, the dispos ;the pepale/from plunder and .robhery thes: w hence see te elving upon the| committee, the other members of {jy any form, or: else the Courts are) and the handselotiem cf the capital | Which are Judge W. P. Bynum of) mere envens and not Courts. well known pattiotietnie bit of 1 mar: | Greensboro, N.C. Martin Conboy of | The elatm is that the railroad city ‘to: mye. thetn atte Ps New York ‘and Colon’! John\ Hinkley | onerated under acts of Congre gin to the good. of Raltimore. Te said the committee) qireetion of the President, and his ap-| in addition to the formulation of ree-| pointed Director General, and it is con- BONDING CONCERNS ommendations had heen asked to call! ceded that. the operation is not in ae-| individual eases of in-| cordance with the laws of the State. justice that ‘might strike them in re-} 4s ft appears, on every railroad s' tial proceedings. | tem Of raflroads In the Uniter Sti MARGIN STATE LEFT! viewing court. | l extending over four hundred thousand | 1 mee TAGE eight | The suite debts act, une prea COUNTY AUDITORS | meee DES rivanesd a teonty: s whicl js puzzling so1 8 AE ee aeace|GET LINE ON. NEW : percent. ‘The advance ; the counties. perc cher, of Sheridan / county, in.. from TAXING SCHEDULE) war measure under the jlitary nece: . but now, in this fond of heir new county. teeasnrer Ren eR SOE peace, it is continued in de- pond of their new county treasurer.) County auditors from the southwest-| Fiance of the just laws and powers of Se eer tatate Hofting dct | cru cmarter of Noriht Dakota met here) mo soferal atntes Pe agnmed rail $90,000. Under, the state ponding a't| yesterday with the state tax commis-| roaq control and orders of the Presi not. more. thin $60,000 of this can be! sion to-discuss the duties of cunty tax] Gent are based on two acts of Con-j fide bonding euesoat ea Shor old) supervisors under the league's new) srogs: | In Aust, 1916, at the time line bonding companies have been ‘ask-| taxation program. The program proved | 5¢ some trouble. with Mexico, Gon- ed te axeume the’ $40,000 balance ant) to be 2 complicated one, and the £n-| wroas paged an act as follows: “Thy each its eta ie faa ad ater | THE day was devoted to sn effort to) President in timé of war Is empowered. Aang Fane Ge abet, Se 100 ar work out some uniform mode of pro-| through, Secretary of War, to take pos” a res the | fobiss | sess d_ control of any as a result of the attitude of the stock | The league tax bills will result in pen eatiod Dotty atl ponding companies: the county Nas | the creation of a new office in each ror the transportation of, trons. wi REFUSE TO TAKE UP attention to any protection for but half this amount. | county to he filled at an average of material and equipments.” This wa $1,500 per annum for each county or] 9 pice rider on the army appropriation VOCATIONAL TRAINING $80,000 for the state, The tax snper-| \(f' covering forty-elght pages of the ITS visor will assume some of the duties} ctatnte. (Vol. 29, p. 645). The rider EXPERT VIS! STATE how performed by the county auditor! j. short and simple. Its manifest and the county board of equalization. | purpose was to authorize the President Miss Adelaide Baylor, federal agent | in addition to new duties created by! in time of war :to use the military of the home department of vocational | the league tax bills. force to control and operate railroads training, provided for in the Smith-| The question of exemrtions, uniform | tor the reméval of troops and war sup. Hughes act, left yesterday for Sout! | classifications and other _ technical! jjjes—“onl” that. and nothing more.” Dakota after spending a day at the| problems were taken up and thorough-| Rut. in December, 1917, after, Congress capitol with Miss Minnie J. Nielson, |}y discussed, and it is probable that) naq declared war against Germany state superintendent of public instruc | as a result of this,conference and sim-| ang Austria, the President magnified" tion, preparing for the year’s work in| jjar meetings for the other, three} nis power! and issued a flat or procla- North Dakota. Miss Baylor, who has| quarters of the state in Minot. Gramd{ mation. assuming the possession and charge of 18 states, including this | Forks and Fargo, some general plan} control should be in his son-in-law. as northwestern ‘territory, formerly was! will be arrived at. Director General. By the same fint assistant Staté superintendent in In-| Tax supervisors are being appointed | the President attempted to legislate and diana, and. previous to that was! by a tax commissioner. and the posi-| he decreed that except with the writ- ARCK, NORTH DAKOTA SA SET’EM A NOT BACK, ’TIS THE LAST WORD: AVE “T'MAKE UP FOR THE HOUR HE LOST LAST OCT. lawful police regulation of the seyeral | | of the repuh, | * . TAKE NO CHA’ ne SARIN AN NOW wy medium’ of federal control of the raile! wa i "hey ‘i ” eon- mn, Which con-+ tlie city, the: shop and the oftlee “They | mieation’ is tna oie ed nt tended. the federal. administration had | as iN0 authority: to establish. the increase | 5 % | from the. railway’ hoard, after having simply can’tohelp rising to this bunch} community. | filed: its proposed increased tariffs as; R <8 did not conterplate that: Jos. Chalfin, | the president -or his: director general | of any state. Certain Tt) ra {to the law: there's every: indication that the boys J j was not within the power of the pur are going to get it. ' | pose of congress to give the Sea rel NiF YOU FOR” HE THIS MAY H: GET TO.SET to prevent them from | 4 turn forward, O time in your flight, Slip me an hour again Just for tonight.” And “FORWARD” ‘t is. ard” is the word. ‘At exactly 2 a.m. Sunday some mil- le lions of clocks in the United State. |” will drop one hour out of their calcu | In other words, when ‘tis ually 2a. m. “cwill really be 3 a. m. Most of us will ve sleeping at this thour and we will not notice the ja ‘as time shps a cog, but ic will hap ven, all the same. will turn their clocks hour before they ,. for many years snperintendent 4 city | ticn has been tentatively filled In abont/ ten’ consent of the. Director, General. schools at Wabash, Ind. © | half of the connties. (Continued on, Page, Six.) at AHEAD ~ i i 1 proposi About half the papers have been ad-; vising* their clocks forward tonight; hag adyised them to firn ‘em back-) re turn their another half i The Tribune, to be strictly neutral, retire We more than suspect that Mabel’: fond father will do that very tning thereby robving Mabel’s beau, Ches ter, of an hour which will never be regained—unless Chester chances to be still on the job at 2 a. m. October} 25, upon which to move the clocks back an hour. if Mabel’s really the girl we think she is, Chester will be safely hooked and landed by that time, and he won't be sitting up after midnight with any girl, let alone Mabel. The cause of all this fus: diddle' is the summer daylight saving plan inaugurated last year. failed to repeal tnisJaw: during its re- cent session, so we will Save another summer of daylight will mean that we willgo to 7 in the morning instead of 8 Und quit; First Presbyterian church of Bismarck at 4 or 5 in the aftefnoon, as the case may be, instead of at 5 or.6, and when we retire at 11, ‘twill feally be 12. Because we are 49. minutes anead of Chicago's suntime, anyway, it really ‘will mean that in sumpfertime day- light. will. dinger; .summer-time. .antil about 11 o'clock. will have But ¢ and fuma Congress which ork at FRANGE ASKS FOR BOUNDARIES ‘AS FIXED IN 1844 | Willing to Concede Autonomy of Rhine to’ Germany “Bars Fortifications NEW ARCHBISHOP FOUNDATIONS ARE READY Terms of Peace Treaty Soon! Pe council of four toy ARCHBISHOP AUSTIN DOWLING He succeeds to the rank of the late nd of St. Paul. ed by the treaty of } is stipulated Archbishop Tre hishop Dowling isitor; a Catholic Arche | The paper published in {on the Rhine, but not. be allowed to es- itablish fortitieations. Thus the Rhine tor of the eathedral at 1 |dence until his appointment as bishop | oft Des Moines in 1912. Pon | declaring this showed that the gov- ‘SENATOR MEES "CARRIES FIGHT of 1814 provided that relinquish her claims to Belgium and content. herself with} established in y reported from {last night (hat France had demanded 114 frontiers, whieh would have France should ‘the terirtor = The peace conference committee on a lague of nations probably will hold ion April 4 it was cated today, when the foundations of | MADE PUBLIC SOON. | | which (he British-delegates are mak-| League Leader in Upper House ing to procure (.e cleanest ssiale | of Last Assembly Tells Pertinent Trut y to be made public Westininster | He states on the} zetle reported. jauthority of a CHALLEN rights, and the fears on this point| He says the treaty! Lloyd George !are unfounded. | spirit of moderation, because being taken | program on’ eve GERMANY PROTESTS. Copenhagen, text of the German reply to the allie: 29.—The full} troops at Danzig shows Germany made }a point that it did not undertake to give free access to Polish troops to the west of Prussia in the armistice. “Since the conclusion of the armi- {stice, the situation in has entirely changed. sen, Koningsburg or Libau,” man government say: facilities tor’the: speedy 1: face | pS aE ast advice |UNEMPLOYED PROBLEM CRITICAL ie to them, damn it—lie like; Berlin, March 29.—/ ‘ figdamned_horsethiet in, March 29.—The support Of This admonition w West Prussia | “Through Es: “all necessar j they throw down the political boss | Poland will be provided.” “From the standpoint of railroad fa- from these cities leads more ily to the goal without the interrup- tion of the importation of food stuffs | jin the political spher thas become nece: To the Public: In the light of recent developments "HAVE FORCEOF COL. VIX RELEASED. ‘o definite in-/discussion, that they may 1 (Continued on SOLDIERS T0 | BE DISCHARGED IN 48 HO U R N) nant in Special Article in formation has been , ing the status of the allies represe es at Budapest. According to received regar Paris edition of! the Daily Mail, Col. Vix, the chiet of the French mission, has telegraph jthat he had been released and proceeding to Paris. DISORDERS AT DANZIG Paris, March 29.—A rumor was in| circulation here last night that the! allied mission at Danzig had been in- 'Yhis morning’s confirmation of this rumor has been! According to the Paris edition of the | Daily Mail, a telegram had reported | serious disorders at Danzig. ‘demonstrations are declared to have been directed at the inter-allied mis- sion. Although no hostile action was | ordered : taken against it, the mission has been|48 hours after arrival at demobi ported as being stopped from per-/tion camps unle: | forming its functions. All newspapers gree that if violence had been em-! mobilization total had pa } ployed against, the m | ler in the week, when} tremely critical situati in its heai-lines it said “*Backward’ and in the body of its story it said} ral} ad ! March announc ecial conditions | aid the de |The premier it impossible. Retention of the names of 14 nation-} army ‘guards in order to preserve} ltheir tradition was announced today For this purpose! SETTLE STRIKE Copenhagen, March 29.—The rail-'; German-Austria {been settled, a report from Vienna j way strike, in anized in the army the following designation 8 ie Tead, Md.; 30th Camp Jackson Michigan: | to substitute something for force or . th CamP|jntrigue: The principle of a league + Camp Sherman of nations has been accepted but the rlor, Ken.; 82nd,| ‘eague will prove fruitless if jt is to Camp Gordon, Ga.; 89th, Camp Funs | be no more than a new piece of inter- if 91st, Camp Lewis, V TION CRITIC! i h 29.—The situation for sa_is still critical, >. according to advices from that region. The Russian soviet of March 25th, de- 7 clare the vanguards of the Bolshe were close on the suburbs of the city. Wouldst Live Long? Move to Tichmarsh' |. Paris, Mare he allies at Od Camp Dodge, lIa.; 4th, Camp Kearn. ma, Canal oZne; London—Tichmarsh, in Northhamp- | tonshire, holds the record for longev | The combined age of eleven fter the other was S82] age of aver 80, woman of 99 who died just over the border of the who died one drawn from all state: Nebraska Fixes Stiff Fine For Industrial Violence| W1LL_USE FORCE TO BISMARCK PRESBYTERY EXCEEDS | ALLOTMENT In the new era movement, the Bis- marck Presbytery has exceeded its ap portionment more than 60 percent. Rev. | pastor of: the; March 29.—People —— >: polices, in Nebraska for use of vio Cairo, Egypt (Friday), March 23— lence in industrial disputes would be| General F. H. Allenby, the new com subject to a fine of $10,909 or. Snprig Beypt: ¢ onment for ten years under an antt-| ering of Egyptian nota today tha syndicalism bil! which has passed bots | he ~ be forced to ploy fires Postlethwaite, announced today. allotment was $2544, and $4,000 has} been raised. The Bismarck church exceeded its apportionment by $400. Indications are. thwaite, that the benevolent budget, set at $13,000,000. will exceed $16,000.- “OOO when all pledges are in. The presbyter: houses and which is now ready for| m the governor's signature. “Criminal syndicalism is defined a8] achieve the desired Tesults: 1 a doctrine which advocates destruction } duded a: i ren te ake of property, violence, arson, etc., te ; gain industrial ends. Rev. Postle- CHARGE AGAINST HUN LEADERS |Hugo Hasse Says Campaign | Against Spartacans Is Re- | turn to Old Order MILITARISMI | ISTRIKES ARE EXTENDING Reaches Million. Marks: a Day | 1 | Cost of Unemployed in Berlin | ] Weimar, March 29.—Hugo Hasse, jindependent socialist leader ‘in| the j National assembly, today made a vio- lent attack upon Gustav Noske, min- jister of the defense, for his methods lin suppressing the recent strike, the | shooting of Spartacans and other al- leged asuses of power, contending the | minister's course constituted a re- {turn to militarism. . Herr Hasse aiso |criticised Minister Schiedemann for j underestimating Sunday's demonstra- | tion in favor of General Ludendorff, jernment was standing firmly behiad General Ludendorff. ‘ Herr Hasse favored entering int: ;immediate communications wth Rub- j sia, declaring the Ukraine vould be immediately in a position to furnish | Germany with raw materials and later | with food. Noske in replying to Hasse accused the latter's wing of-being responsible Yor the recent *Spartacan machina- tions. Repulse Bolsheviki. Archangel, March 29.—Activity was noted today in the vicinity of Bolsha- zra. In the meantime, the al- ' s holding the road on both * sides of the town were engaged in 'OWNLEY | strengthening their positions. The ; Bolsheviki were repulsed at the Dviga 1 Ulin, a pioneer /on Wednesday schoolmaster of the Slope, one of the ae |first of the Morton county farmers to | j embrace, Nonpartisauizan, and 1 tow lthe treaty must be something accept-! of strength to the !eusu:im the rou jable and desirable. \ | “Certainly the peace ‘stern one. for Germany, -but the great- lest care is STRIKE EXTENDS, Copenhagen, March 29.—The strike has been extended on the Northern railway, and communications between (of the 15th assembly and the senate, ‘inna and the outside world is al- ‘of the 16th, replies to Townley’s i Je on treason and treachery in this! most at standstill, says a Vienna dis- atch, Formulate Demands. ‘ Copenhagen, March 29.—The sthikes for the league in the Ruhr industrial region are all during the; spreading. At a meeting of c a : strikel recent session, hut he opposed stren Fee tax commission, ; the Brinton newspaper graft bills, aad the ‘Macdonald educational spice meas-| affiliation with the Russian’ soviets e asked Townley how jand disarmament of — the. ‘police he could vote for a oneman tax com: | throughout Germany. ; mission and-then go home-and at Langendrer on Thursday, demands re formulated, including the fort tion of a workers’ revolutionary guard, jthe unemployed is costing Greater 8 too strong fot) Rerli 000,000 a Mees and for Simon J. Nagel, iayal test che of BkOn TEA Cac Cok sie leaguers as they are, and tis week | roll of 190,000 marks is required’ to auntlet to the | j, cr of North Dakota far keep, track (ot the hinemp lay eds beople: Senator Mees in part. say: H North Dakota, March 23,1919. y council has voted an appro- ipriation of 160,000,000 marks for pub- lic improvement for the purpose of {ameliorating the condition of the un- | employed -—-PBOPLE'S WILL jLloyd George Discusses Cove- English Press | ees apers declare no} General March Authorizes Re |ONLY HOPE AGAINST WAR tention of 14 National ! Army Guards | Manchester, England, March 29.— | In a special edition today the Guardian prints articles from many. statesmen, including Lord Haldane, former. see- retary of war; Viscount Bryce, former ithin | ambassador to the United States; Al- bert Thomas, the French . Socialist leader, and Premier Lloyd George. | “I am glad the Manchester Guar- dian is devoting a special humber to {the league of nations. _ Nothing is more important than public opinion should inform itself on this point. All our hopes of saving ‘the world d to be or |from a repetition of the cataclysm of 1914 centers on the working out of | practical means by which the powers amP | of the earth can work out the affairs +| of the world instead of jealous rivalry. ju “Greater strides have been made national organization. hat matters h.; 2nd|if the units of the league shall be in- d, Camp Lee, Va.; | spired by a real determination to. work Hif.; 5th, Pana }in close harmony together for the h divided between! betterment of mankind. Nations must Islands and Mexican bor-| not let themselves believe that in hav- ing drawn up a paper constitution, the 'y-second Rainbow division wil)| peace: of the world has been i in the new;secure. If they allow themsetves to iz be reorganizea!be misled by this policy they. will in the southern department and menjonly be reawakened by a. new. war. maintaining the| They have to see that the league of | all-American character of the origin-{nations is made an effective instru- |al organization. {ment for the solution of every. inter- national problem by their own teadi- ae to make sacrifices in its own be- half.” RESTORE ORDER mander-in-chief in Egypt, told a gath- is to restore. order... He: asked the Egyptians to devise measures fo con~

Other pages from this issue: