The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, April 21, 1919, Page 1

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MONDAY, APR TL 21, 1919, PRICE FIVE CENTS ITH ALLIE a BIG DRIVE FOR 9 ARGUE CASES WILSON REFUSES ARE FOR JOHN BULL) Y MAY B “MEXICO NO LONGER POW VICTORY LOAN WILL BE MUCH . be MONTANA: WILL. SPEND MILLION ON HIGHWAYS | OVERSUBSCRIBED Big Percentage of Quotas! Volun- tarily Increased—None Shirk Duty GOING BIG OVER STATE Jamestown Hospital More Than Doubles Allotmer:t—Strong in Morton and Stark * the Yellowstone trail and the Billings, Mont., April 21—The exeu- tive committee of the Montana high- way commission, of which Frank Con- ley of Deer Lodge is chairman is in vonference here today with the com- | missioners of the counties of Wibaux, | Prairie, Custer, Rosebud, Treasure, + Yellowstone, Stillwater, Sweetgrass, Park and Gallatin. f The sudject is a series of road im- |provements , requiring ‘an outlay of | fone: million dollars; of which the! United States government is to con-| tribute one-half. é i The projected work is 350 miles of county {commissioners are asked to consider bond issues for their respective allot- | \, Daily Tribune, by On World. BY JACK NEVILLE, (AmericanNewspaperman and Investi- gator who has lived for years in Mexico and who has just spent four months there on special detail for \ GRAB-BAG; HER PEOPLE. FREE,” SAYS PRES, CARRANZA ‘Pitfalls Without, Progress Within, Frankly Summed for Special Correspondent of the| e Whose Policies, Puzzle “VICTORY LOANIS | ON IN AMERICA { | I { \Tens of Thousands of Workers | Set Out on Last Loan Cam- paign on Easter Sunday i \MANY UNIQUE FEATURES: ‘Uncle Sam Making Interesting Experiments in Publicity to Put Over Issue London, March 18,—(Correspon- dence of The Associated Press).—The | House of Lords having passed the see-| ‘ond reading of Lord Buckmaster’s bill letting down the bars of the legal pro- fession to women, the indications are | that the measure will become a law! during the present parliamentary ses- ; j sion. i One by one, as a veteran observer of | the struggle for women’s rights points | out, all the old sex barriers are tumb- | ling down. It was strange, he says, | ito,hear the government’s blessing of | | this bill pronounced by the Lord Chan- | ‘cellor who, as Sir F. E, Smith, was| jone of the chief opponents of woman jsuffrage when he was q member of ;the House of Commons. : The wor ling the war, the Lord Chancellor ex-| ~ performed by women dur-! TO YIELD T0 THEIR DEMANDS Absents Himself From Today’s ‘ Discussion of Adriatic, Problems ITALIANS DETERMINED zermany Realizes That De- mands of Entente Are in Nature of Ultimatum the Daily Tribune.) (Copyright, 191 Newspaper prise Assn.) .|_ Mexico City, April 21,—Along the 000 and the federal government the re-! Rio Grande extends one of the world’s mainder. ‘The work would be dor yn- | Oldest, ugliest and most dangerous der the superv'sion of the state high: | Spite fences. g way commission, {t isthought the Across it the United States and) plan will be approved and’ the pro- Mexico look askance; through it Viila| ject pu upder way, this year. came raging; beyond it Pershing took GREATEST. LAND MOVEMENT EVER OPEN UNTIL 9 Polls in each of the city wards will remain open until 9 this evening to receive sub- scriptions to the Victory loan. It is hoped that every Bis- marck citizen will report be- fore the close of the polls to- day, to obviate the necessity of a special committee’s call- ing upon him personally to- morrow. mary nt iplained, in vindicating his former op- | { Washington, April 21.—Throughout ' position, had profoyndly altered mat-; {the United States the Victory Liberty | “T may say,” he continued, “that | {Loan campaign, the. last, and prob- the changed circumstances of | tably. the m spectacular of the five|the time the government. w ,to have met Wednesday of this week, made by the government this proposal, and that it iv | will not convene until May |, aecord- pal means of ninancing | hope that they may be able to give it jing to advices from Rome. This post- 2 war, opened Sunday. co tsuch istance as will render its | ponement evidently has been caused as Several hundred thousand citizens | passing inte law highly probable.” |a result of the failure of the council enrolled as volunteer speake '} The bill confers upon women the /of four Paris to reach any solution of tors for this issue of Victory j right of qualifying either as solicitors the problem raised by Italy’s. claims and for many months the treas-| oy barristers.. It does not extend,!to Fiume and the Dalmatian. coast. through ine ENelte Hiberty Loan | however, to Scotland or Ireland, Dispatches from Paris indicate: that. zations has. b — Heeling selling plans. 1 funtion, ‘enused (bys ave at from public platform, theatre stage, | HE AR PHONE - atid fas wench pret Seti vie sereen, and street corner box, | ; nate i fective thé appeal'to buy | showed that Great Britain, orth Dakota Case iti a F t and Italy, the three nations, Teeniiy tarts ahreday pace cnatr tes See it, signatories to the treaty Railroads Up for Same Date | tual (signed in London in 1918, prior to | purpo taly’s entrance in the war at the side EXPEDITE ments. | The work would hegin at the east-! ern border of the state and proceed far as Bozeman. The counties would contribute $50! (BY ASSOCIATED PRESS) The Italian parliament, which’ was EE C7 iEnter- nde { \ ' i \ i | | | ithe | yieldin pha i international: oj] controversy hurdle it . Sunday jto disquiet Washington and the: pea conferees, 4 Mutual understanding only can level} this barrir of misunderstanding—and | ; America has no digger immediate for-, ‘eign problem. i {With that ¢ | : y stantly in mind, I have; * Sa spent four months beyond the border Bismarck Realtor Says Demand iO \rite tor the Daily ‘Tribune the un. for North Dakota Farms Has Never Been Better | | | | | | | | 1 | pent for v «NO CONFUSION. Washington, April 21.—Hardly a ripple. of excitement was appar- ent today in the treasury on the opening of the Victory loan. The nation wide machine for the mar- keting of $4,500,000,000 worth of bonds had been so well adjusted and oiled in advance that it went into operation almost automat- ically. gning of the ar ‘om door to door volunt jean will go in an effort to make , ‘the number of subscribers to this loan | jexceed even the 20,000,000 of the! i Fourth loan. ; { Spectacular Publicity Among the spectacular publicity 'features arranged by the treasury to! {call sharp attention of the American ! people to the loan, are aerial demon- } __. |Strations, war exhibit trains, posters, | exhibition of captured German sub- | jmarines, and military exhibitions. {TO ' Three special trains will tour the jcountry, carrying squadrons of air- Washington, April 21.—On the gov-!sengers” G | planes, manned: by: celebrated Americ gton, Af -—On the gov-|sengers” Germany has selected rather | as 's i a“ {unimportant persons to go to Ver- lean, French and British aces to make ;CTment’s motion the supreme court; unimp : n | Fourteen today agreed to hear arguments May ,Sailles, Berlin advices say these men 2 ‘ & [eircus flights over cities, a a Helen, \Mont..” April 21.—Clore captured German Fokker’ planes will 5 on cases appealed from South Da- thie: hans fe pewermerely, to receive street will probably be remodeled aud} be used in these demonstrations to-| kota and Alassachusetts involving the} : : ty converted into the city’s wholesale dis-| ge i ican | fot# and Massachusetts involving the | Berlin. The German cabinet will then jee Seed ae aches oleae) jee with the best type of American jignt or postmaster General Burle-|either accept or reject the terms, or Tio decades ago, Clore s To each community oversubscribing ,80n's rights to interfere with intr ubmit them to the people. t notorious. This narrow] jts quota a community honor flag will! state telepione and telegraph rates. | Di Reflect At tude fare was Helena’s Great Red/be awarded by. the treasury as an| The court also agreed to expedite |», epatehes from Paris, however: the é Old I] hundreds, of | official acknowledgment of the| hearing on an appeal fro. mthe su-| paar boaitive: att itude on ‘the With Hint revien Oreos s pybires ne tat’ achievement. “Similarly an’ industrial fpremevcotrt ‘of North. Drkote engoin-{ Part re nee cence enc H row t * ; _| rickety district where human life was! honor flag will be given to each busi-/ing the Northern Pacific. railroad ’ ine few hours | they suret abet i 4 more’ letters than ver before Se ie nee Masta cheap, cheap thing. The Bucket of|ness firm, church, lodge or other or-/from increasing _ intrastate trent the men she sends to yersaillss must quate, ¢ than:20 percent. Not | prospective buyers: in southern Min-; y 3 bd i j Blood: saloon aid to-have furnished| ganization with 12 or->more members, | rates sudject to an order from \Di-|2Aave power to sign the tteaty of |peace. It is said the visit to the con: only didsblbithe commercial: travelers nesota, northerh | lowa ‘and eastern! Notides o:ahaut;sa,camp--a, tall, grect, permet ner j Hed | 88 or more mem i u : : - { ‘A majority of these! auiet mani: .Aguin in, the s“Desert of the “inspirati lar drinking; whose members subscribe aceording to | rector General Hines, and fixed May anese land grants and echoes of the! jof the entente, were present, and that | President Wilson was not present. It y also indicated he would not be resent when conversations were re- .., lopened ioc Against ; ‘crashing, while today rumors of Jap-| i i t 1 {biased and uncensored truth about! ; mysterious Mexico today. H | have talked with Carranza and his} binet, With peon and don. With} governors, generals, oil operators and! IN skulking rebels; ranchers, business {men and wasaerwomen—gathering |facts, impressions and confidences! suppressed, colord or overlooked dur- jing the war, and now of greater im-! ;portance than ever before to every | American. | First of all: |aent, Stands Firm President Wilson has_ stood out ‘against recognition of the treaty of ‘London, upon which Italy’s maximum \territorial claims were based. | In spite of the warning sent to Ger- ;imany by the peace conference that ithe deelgates she sends to the peace jconfrence must not. be “mere mes- QUIRIES ROLLING Iowa, South Dakota and Minne- sota to Contribute Heavily to Immigration Any doubts as to the success’of the Victory loan were dispelled in Bi: marck before the forenoon was half over, In practically every ward in the city -it was reported: that a ma- jority of the quotas assigned by the/| committee had been voluntarily in-; ereased, and that not a single jallot- ia See oe ment ned beet. selected’. a ig regard-| ‘The heaviest movement in tarm/ THE cl & subscribe in the neighborhood of 5 | lands North: Dakota ever has known 48 | and’ ist) ely to do, It is necessary to percent, at ‘the ‘very'.least, jpredicted this year by F. E. Young,/ know, Ahe Old Man.” active head of ‘As' expected, Bismarck’s loyal grip | Blamarck realtor. In spite of unfavor-j Carrgyiga’and Company, representing| nationally knights," men who have never failed' able advertiaing which the state has: 80mg 16,000,000 people who are our} inoroug’ when patriotism. to. their. city, state| received .through the — legislation| Oldest though most aloof neighbors. || yw and country. was-an-isaue, set the mark | adopted by “the satetoenth~assertbly, |< Thrge.tiqner, Lhawe, seen. and: talkering for the.capital city: yesterday, when Mr. Young.states that he is receiving’ NOTORIOUS RE WAS OF HELENA JOBBING CENTER DECISIO Venustiano, the presi- REAL CARRANZA, un stand what Mexico is doing} reet was who, were vallotted quotas ‘promptly South Dakota. sign’ up, many increasing their allot-; possisle purchasers are farmers w ments, but a large number of. sales: men who had not been listed appeared ’jings at a handsome figure to ne’ ‘ho i recently have’ disposed:'of their hold: com: tons,” bheavily. guarded, at a private picnic to which f accompanied ais of:) ficial party. The. third time, a few! places in other LIGHT HORSES TO ja prescribed ‘proportion. 1 250,000 of these flags have been’ placed. in the hands of distributing agencie: Mote than’ 5-for hearing. Medals made from captured Ger-' While only two weeks more of a gument remain tor this term, the court will not adjourn for the summer un- ference called April 25 will be tdide+ ‘mand from the German delegates as- urance that they have such powers. On Back Track at the Commercial club-rooms to sub-{ers. from southern Iowa, Mlinois or days:ago, in the presidential cham scribe for their bits. ‘Indiana, who in turn have taken ad-| Where he talked to me freely apd) The capital. city campaign closed: vantage of high prices for farm lands; frankly about Mexico's reconstruction, with a rousing feed:and boostfest -at | in their state: acute questions affecting his countr, the Masonic temple Saturday evening.’ ‘Land values in these communities] and ours, -of disquieting internal af- The “chow” was all to the good, and,| have doubled in the last two or three) fairs. 4 instead’ of set speeches and formal) years,” said Mr. Young today. “Farm:: in the ante-room oil kings, govern- toasts, there was a varied program of|ers who ‘bought there a few years; O's, generals and workingmen, BE SOLD ABROAD il noon. It is thought because of thé} Bolshevism is again on the back importance of the Teoued involved, a/track on the Ukrainian frontier. The decision may be handed down’ this|Cities of Zhitomier and Proskurov, in ‘term. The Souti Dakota case result-|the Ukraine, hhve been retaken from a i ed from an order from the supreme|the Bolsheviki by forces commanded Home tiniae OT Rn Ortate nas [ie tote om, cach. medal dor the wame'of court rostrining four telsybong com.| DY CRIS Ur tty: qaucancnatiat Suropean dealers : ray 2 noni InGreaSiii ates as|Peasal ; , allibeen formed by South Dakota horse aerate motion picture qaliiea lubecten ne Postnd Tae Geneigl Bure /10,000 Bolsheviki soldiers have de- stunts which delighted everyone, and|Vadk and who have doubled and, Waiting for a word with Carranza, dealers. lis one entitled “The Price of Peace” |son, ‘Similar actions, have originated |Serted in a body and have joined the the enthusiastic loan boosters weve! trebled their money, are selling out; Were endeavoring to be “simpatic For many years light horses have with 5,000 feet of film, depicting |in 21 other states, in none of which| Ukrainians. loath to go’ when the session finally|to farmers from other states who/@ term compouniing | politene been of little value to South Dakotajwhere the great quantities of war decisions have been against the post-| In northern Russia Bolshevik forces adjowned. have disposed of even higher priced | 800d-fellowship that speaks volum ranchers. The plan is said to have! money went. A number of scenes pho- | master general, while eight have been are in retreat, closely pursued by ismarck high school students didj lands. Now these pioneers are look:| #N widerstanding of Mexico. been discussed at Washington as one! tographed at the front during fight. | in his favor, ‘and decisions in four: British, American and Russian troops. their bit this morning when a Victory | ing to North Dakota for an opportun- JAZZING UP MEXICO. means of providing the poorer classes | ing by American soldiers also will be ' states are still pending. | ienna is in the hands of Soviet: loan meeting was held in the assembly | ity to repeat this process. From the courtyard rose the strains! in continental Europe with meat.|chown. ‘Then films have been prepar- gists \It appears that the change of autho room and juvenile Four Minute men| “I predict that if we have a crop’’ 0 | Al i0 | tlie las SUBBeS:| Those behind the’ corporation say the eq showing noted deeds of heroism! REACH AGREEMENT. ‘ity was brought about without great and women made short talks on the’ this year—and all conditions are right! Ved) What Mexico's president is 40-) American market has shown little in-| reported to General Pershing. These | Boston, April 21—The agreement disorder. loan and the importance of putting it and we ‘Should havea cron that land he Aca tia nation: igzcing, ti ee terest in the horse meat industry. are in addition to twenty-seven special eached by ahs somimnittre of striking MAY DESERT ALLIES over. ‘I taiks were real s which! Values in western Nor jakota will) ‘TY + ~ —— -— . e i {phone operators with officials of the MA a He he inspire’ ‘all of the youte nea and | increase not less than $10 per acre,/Peons into scientific.tarmers and) TT] AREZ OASIS IN Do ee eye eer the loan |New England Telepione & Telegraph} Rome (Sunday), April 20.—The i with an ambition to give their) before next spring.’ skilled~ workmen; making merchants ae Baby Tanks "!Co., and the Phovident Phone Co. yes-;Populo Romano says that . Premier \ GREAT AMERICAN z able to, reach Rame LIQUOR DESERT man canner are to be given to each! member of a Victory loan committee. | AS FOOD ANIMALS The medal is about the sine of a half ‘ rears dollar and bears a design of the Unit. Here oe ee AMT 2h A comport led States Treasury building. Space ‘women Wii i 1 i , ““One of the most healthful signs 1s; Manufacturers and professional men i ehti terday was ratified at a mass meeting | Orlando will be very best efforts to the cause. THOT TAG. thawiour owe taraiers ess In-|of the sons of the idle rich Two hundred and four fighting baby | fated , date fixed for the The plan‘‘adopted in the fourth lib-! . ‘i iti ‘ereasing their holdings. During the; He talked to me about oil, Mexico's erty loan of inviting citizens to report last two.. weeks .1 Wace sold to. local! Point of sharpest conflict with the | nal jers Of Operators today, and. all members | before April 23, the f lean eating panier ne souls of the union were instructed to report; reopening of parliament, only in. case iy at their switchboards today. |Italian rights are not recognized: by at their polling places ‘to sign up for their subscriptions - is beautifully once more. The peopl generally like the idea, and it make: the work much pleasanter for the ,pa. triotic citizens who ure doing the!com. mittee work, is working out! farmers eighteen quarters in their own} vicinities at prices ranging from-‘$21) to $32 per acre, the sales aggregating $70,000. The fact that the people here} at home have faith in.our lands and are willing to pay good prices for; them-is the best possible encourage- e| 8 powers, of education, economics, revo- lution and politics. “Next year,” he said, “is my last in the presidentia] chair,” explaining that he would not splinter the first plank in his revolutionary platform by accepting an extension of tenure. El Paso, Texas, April 21.—Juarez, the, Mexican metropolis of border towns, has become the oasis in the great American prohibition. desert. On Calle Commercio, the number of saloons has increased since the opera- tion of the Texas ten-mile military country, visiting, rural as well as city | districts. i A feature, on which the Victory {Loan organization has spent much {time consists of twenty-four special trains loaded with exhibits from Eure- {pean battlefields, Each train will Under the agreement operators will | receive $19 instead of $16 after seven} | years’ service and the minimum will! ‘be $10 instead of $8. ISECRET SOCIETIES | the peace conference, and in which case it says the Italian delegates will not go to Versailles for the conclusion of peace with Germany, which, it says, cannot be ratified, without the acce: sion of Italy. “But Italy will not ratify a peace First Ward to ‘Mop Up. The™first ward Victory loan, com- mittee announced this afternoon that | it will “Mop Up” at the offices of Jim make four or five stops a day, mainly | / jin small towns, and will carry bat-| | teries of loan speakers. In the larger | | cities, special exhibits of German can- | jnon, machine guns, rifles and other; peking, Ap Jordnance will be shown throughout of The ated Pres ee eee: tured German subma-|S¢ctet_ sotieties whobe . fariouse and notoriods places here, _. five captured German sudma-| gregate millions of pe ground more money than it has ex at denne Shite nro Juarez. | tines sent to this country, loan man-| porting the independence mo Lely fi & 5 He: plan to run one up the Mis: i Corea: it. fh pended: Bars and fixtures from El Paso have | 28'S P up in Korea, it is understood. 1 “We must and intend to break oil) jeen get up in Juarez, slot machines d to exhibit the others! among them are the Progr -ichange the present order of marriage monopoly, in Mexico. l, except for the A f ity and the Heaver worshippers which) and family life, nor communize “If “congress amends or changes) idlers, a! i it campaigns. ate sub: ' together have a memvership of more; women. : the proposed oil law, I will not o ject | yi; y ul receive a spectal button OF \ than = 2,000,000 persons. Others are; * Sear sear ag 5 as long as it is, constitutioial and | par of former years yhich 40,000,000 have been made, and! the New Korean society and the light! FORMULATES ANSWER odes not conflict with the best, inter-| Hootleseing, The handsmitien of the: {listineti e badges for workers have | p, Sixty thousand | Berlin (Saturday), April 19.—The ests of all the people.” 1 bedey Saloon an becoming an-impor-| been provided. y all educational in-| cabinet devoted less than half an hour : FOREIGNERS SCRAMBLE EGGS. Mant industry: “American authorities | rT ce including government|to the formulation of its answer to Foreign interests, he told me, had have discovered that Mexican ser-} 7,000 Men _Arrive ated in the movement. | the erent invitation to Verasites va said and done things whic: migui} | . - It is stated that the insurrection was/Teceive the peace terms. eeling 0} | Home on Leviathan Washington, April 21.—About 7000 BACK OF REBELLION ‘which will signal her fall,” Says the OF THE KOREANS P#per. i i ! FULL RELIGIOUS FREEDOM Budapest, April 21——The commis- ioner of education has instructed. the 's ag-jclergy to declare from the publi¢ dur- sup-,ing the next three Sundays that the nt!soviet republié- guarantees full reli- ntable' gious freedom; that the soviet will not “While I am here, I will fight for Mex-|zone law until every other, door opens ae aren linto abarroom. Barrels of American- We only want what is’ rightfully made whiskey and wine are offered to ours,” he said, referring to the oil persons permitted to cross the border controversy now echoing round the! under prevailing passport regulations. world. “he oil belongs to Mexico. if ; |. Many of the old time EI Paso sa- Every foreign ofl interest in the coun. joonkeepers who were familiar figures | try has already taken out of the} ment to Iowa, South Dakota and Min-| nesota farmers who are looking for) sneaber land.” are ‘ | K 5 ere seems to be a general con-; Pre enor tees! building un- viction that “North Dakota is due for when residents of the first ward who|# Crop” this year. Old-timers who us: were unable to reach the polling place Wally dope it out right favor a late) today are asked to make their sub-| 8Pring, which we have, and they point seriptions. There {s only a small per:|t® the fact that ‘the soil is chock-full; centage of the first warders yet to! moisture. If seeding can be com-, come. in; and the committee hopes to! clean up by: 4 o'clock tomorrow, | |menced: within the next week or ten| | MANDAN HOPS TO IT i] 21.—(Correspondénce days, there ‘will be enough moisture | \{in the soil to carry the crop forward | until the middle of May, at least, and| Mandan, N. D., April 21.—Mandan|at that season more good rains may is eating the Victory loan alive. The, be anticipated eth Sen tore thes ite wintel mee(MANY FLICKERTAIL| YANKS RETURN ON time enthusiasm, and there is no ques- tion that its allotment will be over- or | shart aan subscribed. lead to serious consequences. “But.” |vants, wash women’ and street labor-| ‘ supported also by Christian and Budd-| gloom prevails in official terms to- he: continued, :“we «trust. the sound ¢TS Who cross to El Paso each morn-| ing catry contraband liquor in quanti-| hist bodies. inight, and the Associated Press is in- DICKINSON’ IN. LINE Dickinson, N. D., April 21.—Follow- ing rousing patriotic addresses by Attorney General William Langer‘and other prominent speakers, Stark coun- ty buckled down to the business of bversubscribing its' quota: of the Vic- tory loan this morning, and at noon} there was assurance that it will more than make good. JAMESTOWN DOING, FINE Jamestown, N. D., April 21.—The | Victory ,loan is going over in fine shape in Jamestown. Dr. Hotchkiss, superintendent of. the state hospital for the insane, which had ‘been allot- ted $7,500, reported at 10 o’clock this morning that the institution went over the top at 8:30 this morning, with 100 percent. of \its\ employes subscribing, and with an oversubscription of more an 100 percent, the aggregate being in excess of $16,000, SIXTEEN MILLION BY NOON. U.S. S. FORIDAN The Rocky Mountain club of New York advises of the return of the fol- lowing Flickertail Yanks, on the U.S. S! Foridan, arriving April 14 and a: j signed to Camp Mills: Olson, Joseph, Almont. ‘Carpenter, Frank R., Ashley. Schulte, Henry. Centerville. Wenner, Mathias, Dickey. Anderson, Oscar, Edmore. Dehn, Frank R., Fargo. Nayes, Loyal T., Glen Ullin. Schwartz, Peter G. Freed. Reigel, John, Goldén Valley. Sisco, Levi H.. Kintyre. Ness, Ralph H., Lehigh. Leischner, Otto T., Lehr. Roth, Miks, Mandan.) Kamrowski, Walter M., Minto. ‘Leacook, Hugh, New England. Romanovish, Emil, Nortonville. Toft, Chris, Robinson. Sandvig, Andrew, Sheldon. , Robertson, Louis, Sourie. ‘Wilkengeiser, Wendelin, Strasburg. - Saterlee, Arny L., Turtle Lake. ‘Satterlee, Arny L., Turtle Lake, Morin, Ovila, Wild Rice. Clark, Charles: E., Williston. \ Lareen, Alvin, Willow City." { judgment of the American people.” He declared rebels were today re-| ceiving aid from foreign sources, aid jwithout which scactering revolt would | immediately collapse, and which was! one big oostacle\toward better ftor-| | eign relations. i |. Speaking of a successor, Carranza | j assured me that he would throw his moral ‘support -to no one. candidave against any other in next year’s pres-| \idential election. | “You have studied us,” he said as I} was leaving. “You know something) about us. I hope you will write tne! truth—for ‘truth only is a firm basis for international understandipg and} amity.” | Carranza is today the real pilot of Mexico—let no one ‘mistake that. And! his “Company,”’ the people of 21 of the }28 states now under sivil government, {as wel as most of those in the other states, are trusting and following his demonstrated leadership. _I came to interview him only after months of ‘sizing him up by his ad-| ministative acts, through information gathered from heart to hide ‘of Mex- ico, trom friend and eriemy;°and what (Continued on Page Seven.) ities and are making far} more money| officers ‘and men of the 42nd (Rail through. its disposal ‘than they are/ pow) division, sailed from Brest. April from vheir labors. : 14 on the transport Leviathan, due at The prosperous Mexican saloon-| New York April 24. Among the. offi- keepers say that a return to normal cers on board are Major General Reed passport regulations will make Juarez/ and Brigadier General Douglas ‘Mac- the mecca of sporting men from the) arthur, commanding the 84th infantry United . States. Y brigade. EEE Baa a a ONE YEAR AGO TODAY | Hun troops, picked for their daring, penetrate American sector, driving as far as Siecheprey, one and one-fourth miles northwest of Toul, but are forced back by courageous counter attack of American boys who poured a Withering fire into. German ranks and then went over the top in truly veteran style. -Many gallant American boys fell under fire, and stars turned to gold upon American service flags in homes all over this land. £ ‘ *-_ British make progress in the neighborhood of Robeca, and stop the nemy’s advance northeast of Ypres. French artillery active on the Somme, the Avre, and in the Oise. ‘North of Rheims a German raid was repulsed. They won Victory; we must pay for 1 tie haps ete | DOth sides. The Buddhists in Korea number, “| about one million. They have 2,-009| jtemples and 100,000 priests. The Jap- | anese have attempted to use Buddhism ito strengthen their position in Korea, | sending many priests to Japan to be (educated. Nevertheless, many Budd-; !hists are believed to have been close-} tly connected with the insurrection. | | Christianity has made rapid pro-| gress in Korea for thirty years. Two large missionary bod are working there. The American Methodist Mis-) sion has 750 churches and 100,000 fol- lowers, while the American /Presby-! {terian Mission has 2,000 churches and | about’ 200,00 adherents. The Korean} | Christians are mostly men of charac-; {ter and have received higher educa: ‘tion. : BH The demonstration in favor of inde- jpendence which began in tearly all/ {towns and villages throughout Korea jon March 1, were at first orderly and limited to the delivery of speeches and distribution of copies of manifes- tos. Later the movemefit took a’ dis- tinetly revolutionary character and this resulted in clashes with the Jap anese’ authorities and in casualties ¢ f_ Copenhagen, April 21. the G formed that there are no illusions as to the dictatorial terms of peace to be received by Germany. : The action of the council of four is interpreted as final proof that ‘the — entente is disinclined forthwith to en- ter into negotiations based on “Presi- dent Wilson’s fourteen points.” CLASH WITH JAPAN Tokio (Saturday), April 19. cial dispatches from Korea state t, members of the Christian mission at Teigonari, near , clas with Japan during a riot there, the firing on the mob, killing). and wounding many of those engaged. STATE OF SEIGE DECLARED work: ers at Bremen have joi: strike there, and the mic have commenced a counter e intensified state of seige has the been declared. = : wertctpeeett

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