Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D. C, MAY 1, 1921_PART 2 3 HOURS NOW SHAPING |THE STORY THE WEEK HAS TOLDVENEZUELA AIMING OLD-WORLD HISTORY AT MORE U. S. TRADE BY HENRY W. BUNN. to mention disarmament. In the view of hM. decline to do so any longer. They have ffl: arms, Poincare, that issue is ne less important than but it is feared they may find means to arm . Copyright, A ton Star.) i L 5 ¥ Y ) Evcnts Of Next Da o TWO Ma Declcle (CopyrightA 10l ik The (Waskliglon: Star the issue of reparation; it sereams for incluctable themselves, in which case these hungry, desperate D G-l B . . . . I y y HE following is a brief summary of thé guarantees. Even should a satisfactory repara- men might make a great deal of trouble; attempt r. Gi1l-Dorges, Minister o oreign airs, Wh . 1 . news of the world for the seven days tion offer arrive before the knell of midnight, to seize Constantinople, perhaps, where there are ole Course—Germ n C 1 n ended April 30: April 30-May 1, if by then Germany does not sat- upward of a million civillan Russian refugess. D “ H- 1 f F ll . C a apltu atio / isfy and convince as to disarmament, will the There are also Wrangel soldier-refugees on the CVOtlng mmselt to Furt ering Gom-~ to lies Believed Ce 3 GERMANY: It is the noon of Friday, April 2. “sanctions” halt? Guarantees: There's the rub. Isle of Lemnos and at Gallipoli; all hungry and 3 ; ) Iu rtain. Presumably if before midnight Saturday the su- % o looking for trouble. mercxal In T f H N H ' preme council is in receipt of a reparation offer GREAT BRITAIN: The miners' strike con- * ok kK o terests o 18 ation ere. 3 e i oS s a cute phase, Con- UNITED STATES OF AMER! : Panama re- — . — < » from Germany which shall present a “proper basis tinues. It is how in another acute pl BY OLIVER OWEN KUH) Eiven to Germany and that no restric. for discussion” : and it before midnight Saturday ferences between miners' chiefs, mine owners and mains recalcitrant. Perhaps a little show of force BY BEN McKELWAY. fiaw Bonomp el Bn o dn s thia i TTHIN the mext thres or| & SUEh 45 GXDOTL taxes, b aved {he Germans pay down that sum of twelve billion members of government were continuous from will be necessary to persuade her to evacuate UR amicable relationship with| AMerican diplomatic group. 5 four days history molding | unacceptable to the allies. particular- gold marks, whose payment is an issue quite Monday to Thursday. It secms that in March the Cato district conformably to the White the Fepibtie 61 et *ox ok % the fature of tens of mil- |1y ance, .. tion that Ger- independent of the main reparation question, or there was a dead loss of over five million pounds awere I ; whith (has: continued ‘over]| Denr Boloin o ah Wle N 4 lions of meoples and the |, TOFS, {8, litle aucation hat, s cubmit a promise to pay adequately secured; and for the entire industry. Foregolng of profits by Italy has formally signifled entire agreement THE hes, coutinuenliover | e Bolivten omirtue doindan for destinies of old world nations will be | 000.600.000 mark ARTReR uDon: by, if before midnight Saturday the Germans pledge the owners and a cut in wages of 4 shillings per with Sccretary Hughes' Yap note. f ed the way for extensive trade de-| magorited States and will come to made. . | the supreme council in Paris, for the striet and immediate fulfillment of the disarma- Man per day would just about quash such a deficit. Debate on the Army appropriation bill opened ot et oo | Washington. Although the purpose The hours that are passing are por- | fhe ¢l nation will accepty nothing ment cluses of the Versailles treaty, and find The owners offered to forego all profits for three in the House on Friday. b Cpment ith that country, which | of his VIE here has not been “an- / _ tentous. . e e O P R plarka| means to make that pledge convincing; and if Months. The miners' chiefs consented to a cut of The naval appropriation bill (practically the 1% to evidence itselt within the nextt QAU (5, Mleryiond Be gnas, be F & erraany Wil Fadl fnto il eategory | {or he allics. for onc svatem ‘accepta- all such engagements are accompanied by sat 2 shillings. ¥ Hodges was emphatic that same bill which passed the last House), carrying o R’(';_:"‘ fl{""r-lms;' to Dr. ‘:swhran minister {o this country. “which has » of a servile nation, abandoning hope | »up i) of TenGh MIERt not meet the factory guarantees; why then perhaps there will they could concede no more. the item of ninety million dollars for continuation i Borgen ¥ O O iee o e T s Uie TR AL 4 i © British. and vice versa ; riaior the sares Here the government stepped in and offered a of the 1916 capital ship program, passed the House &0 affairs. who has been in | JHTS h e an- of glories of a great, advancing coun- | 1f Germany approaches the allies d not be a more extended operation of the sanc e ent s i ! 2 Wishington as frip i) through the Rolivian consul gen- Iy o whe will siip thromeh the | FECllY O IAdireetly with conerete | tons of the treaty - perhaps the Ruhr basin will Sudsidy to ease the situation during the next four on Thursday. There was a singular discussion on as a gucst of the Vene- 1 in: New York . Beror p fen. o = posals which form an adecuate work- any el S i months, on condition that the miners and mine disarmament in connection with debate on the bill. zuelan embassy since the unveiling | Was once consul zeneral in New York, noose France has prepared for her by !} " 3 not be occupied. But any new offer must be direct, el St ahce con T agreement t t icaily aln/er L, Duss and gives krdnce adeguate perfectly lucid, free of all vexatious and litigious \eree to a “permanent system of dividing 1t would seem that all members believe in dis- 10f the Bolivar statue in New York has served in Chile and Brazil, & 4 0-meak: Practicalby a |guarantees for the sum total of rep- £ ¢ 5 e anied by on wage schedules, “which should armament, but there is great variety of opinion last month. America already pos- i I the allied demands. iarations there is chance that in the conditions and qualifications, and uccompanied by Profits” and on wage 2 nbich Mhoald e e Ao CEIcai el RN et ek serma es {o capftulate |M€EOtAtions that ‘follow there stilll satisfactory, ineluctable guarantees. old good for at least a vear from the e as to 5 : 70 per cent of Venezuela's| While ombian trea If Germany refuses to capitulate|n,y " remain radical divergencies of oY August. and should then be terminated only on cannot be sure, of course, but apparently the trade, according to Dr. Gil-Borges, | 1o been ratified by the France will become one of the Strong- | viaw i ) ftisi * % % K ¢ vides for a payme est nations of the world, POliLICAlly |may coe Aincne ooinss f;"' the 'fl:;:‘ sh three months’ notic The owners agreed to a majority of the House believe it essential to the and there are prospects of a sub-|Colombia, nothing and_cconomically, through (ie ETib | cuspicions e T O N 4 Guarantees: There's the rub. Rightly or wrons- on of profits scheme, under which the stand- world's welfare that we have the biggest Navy stantial growth in the immediate fu- | 4one toward appropriating the money. :‘,m‘,’\':, ”;‘:m‘:s”":““r“l’h“. on her ancientithe whole of continental relationshins Iy, German faith has a worse name in the world ard wage would be “the first charge on the pro- in the world. When that day arrives it be ture. :!)'|'.'-‘r‘|u-'f'y}:¢"?|( Dosition is anticipated & These are the cardina | uEh ihgisiénce Gnuasienali of today than punic faith (Punica fides) had in ceeds of the industry.” A standard profit would praper to suggest partial disarmament; pro- In addition to his mission as of-| tion. The amendments (e the sremse, g Tl fon | ety and, potitical \greeds, he fts time, and the latest German mote has mot mext be deducted, and any surplus left would portionally, so that America shall always have | ficial representative of his govern-| A3 Agreed Upon. must yel be ratificd of the reparations quest which | These disagreements = will . only sweetencd it. Tt is not within my province to g0 be “divided between wages and profits in a fixed the biggest Navy. If only England had sufficient ment &t the Bollvar monument pry the Colombia congress, which today is holding the stage in istrengthen the hands of the French deeply into motives. The German note may or proportion.” But even with the government sub- altruism and regard for the welfare of the world {entation ceremoni s *ts in July, unless the president national politics. militarist v o il " Py _ on ceremonies in New York, Dr. | calls an extra session of congress for Twe Conelisntais i i e farity e, Wil pomt b may not be studiously obscure. It may or mot sidy, the cut in wages must be more than 2 she could solve the problem in a twinkling by -Borges will take advantage of his | that purpose. This is not expected, T GatAD T nment of the Tandamens|mand that Germans Be mans 1o ok have been forwarded through a devious channel, it shillings, if there is to be no deficit. To such at once disarming below our present strength. Visit to the United States to studs | 5 the Colombian house of rep ' 408, twor Conclasions “;m!"‘,‘"‘;‘l;“g; to the fullest, regardl of future may or may not have been composed in ambiguous greater cut, Hodges said, the men would never The immigration bill has passed the House. commersial conditions: Here, with m.l;‘.“’;"";"*‘s“fl yet to be elected After drawn. - Jeare. satence wants reparations language for sinister ends. At any rate. it is agree: at the same time (when owners and gov- nator Knox has offered an amendment to the GIEF BF Hasalioitas: Sann e S e Mupts the Janaments Xo germany will endeavor to meet. the ool "1 ‘Ui S counell. Trit 4s| obseure to fuliginosity. Henry James at his duk- nment thought that ghost luid for the present) ~ Young emergency farift bill, intended to protect |t O ‘WEIhCTE business A0t | jone "the'anal action in Rl i gums and <tpulations that have been | not Briand it will b Toincars of| cst, Browning at his most perverse, have nothing - remarked that no settlement which should not the dye-stuff industry. Hiare between the two countries. In | ing, will take piace. Congress prob: -2 § (Alited mna _ o {some other stanch advocate of firm- on the economic clauses of that note. Nobody_in include a national pool of profits would be satis- The Senate has passed the budget bill. The ct with the important fac-|ably will appropriate the $25.000,000 y in doing so can (¢ live at|pace’ so France's wh = 4 4 tors in American busin life, heiin the form of a rider on paal all. Tt must be a sporti ince for | IeSS, 50 Franee's whole future course | the world can figure out the sum of the German ° factors. Herc, too, the oWners have gone part of Most Interesting of bills is that offered by Rep- § 200 0 et of nie | appropriation bill e * Beflin, Germany may dic I she does | 38 1 TOPATAONS @ niseasy tol w . "Mne allies (and beyond cavil the British the way in concession. They have agreed to uni- resentative Volstead, which would forbid the pre- Will accord them the benefit of his{ Ag the passage by the Senate of ¢+ Dot capitulate and take a chance upon | —— N and Ttalians at least are eager for a satisfactory form wage rates in areas <(six in all), instead of scribing of beer for medicinal use and would kill counsel to the end of improving and | the treaty legally binds this country the future to m, 3 d obliga- fey Is Nationalistic. facilitat e i to the payment of o tions, or she may die if s is e Fre v offer) are agreed that the offer is fatally short in districts (twenty-six in all). It is obvious the famous ruling by Mr. Palmer. cilitating export traflic from this | !¢ iyment of the $25.000,000 pro- 3 ¥ die if she does. It is| The French of the moment, : country to Venezuels a Vided, failure of the appropriation believed c; ermany will [justffied in Ia ure, but never- of the Paris program. But admit that it might how such concessions by the owners point the way P untry to Venezuela. He also ex-|would be construed as a breach of fahethe ,‘Z"i"r‘;*h‘_“: Jixe._onesoay ue §:":‘1:i'-:: <o Strictly nationalistic as to conceivably be regarded as a proper basis for toward that reorganization of the industry on MISCELLANEOUS: There was some talk of pects to leave in the United States | international good faith. S Sken as & Lertalniv|nIes OF (other mEticas Bor EreY discussion, is (the allies are agreed) neu- broader and more economical lines which alone postponing the elections for the new southern Irish a special commercial agent who will * % % % the chance | throush politi expedien: they tralized and vitiated by the conditions, the de- can provide a genuine and lasting solution. Close parliament beyond May 3, the date set. It ap- be charged with the study of ruciprn-l The boundary pute between ng the rich Ruhr mine |must back. is the French spirit that mands which accompany it. As one French news- co-ordination of the industry by areas might be pears. however, that they will be held on May 3, cal business opportunities. Paraguay and Bolivia, a recurrence regions and Westphaliun industrialgutcropped {hroughout the Parls de- | paper puts it: The Germans offer with one hand. the ideal compromise arrangement, It would prob- and that the Sinn Fein will contest every seat. After leaving Washington Dr. Gil- | 7 Which has been reported recently F Iedefimite meron an the ol that|and President Wilson successtuli and with the other would take away more than ably make for cconomy in production as much as If they do they will probably win 'em all. Tt is, Borges will visit Kentucky, to lay | fow remaining boundary eacations np Germany has not lived up to her in- battered down for time. It is the they offer. would organization on a national basis, and would however, very doubtful whether any of those a wreath upon the tomb of Henry | many which existed in Sout - ath Amer Clay, at Lexington. He will then go [ica half a century ago. Most of th 3 ago. Mos m to " Boston, Philadelphia, Grand | have been cleas e ternational obligations in making just |Same snirit that brought forth one of “Germany only considers,” says the note, “these allow scope to the healthful principle of com- elected will take their seats. It sometimes seems up, although they . ‘ous sears created | President Wilson's cry - ¥ it : ry:n::gn“f:rr the hideous scars created [ bakes daeime tor hr-::'tx:)-xltqlnflv'lzg:';‘l(lt)rx:s proposals as capable of acceptance if the regime petition. 1 a pity the Tuatha de Gannan were ever distributed Rapids, Chicago and Detroit, to study | involved nearly every couhtry of th Through occupation of the Ruhr|in Paris. i of penalties ends immediately ; if the actual basis Let the owners and government ook to it. There in Ircland. > in each of those cities American |southern continent. The old dispute France will obtain fuel and industrial le Jreten. dbproached Dresident of German prndulclians is not tunhle; res‘;ricler:i will not be permanent industrial peace \fmu the D'Annunzio, having obtained a divorce under fanufacturing methods and to lay be-a¢ lo the boundary between Costa plants to fashion _into goo e son withoa 0 uments and if Germany is admitted to world trade an miners sce in an efficient organization of the in- a law of Fiume, enacted at his instan . : ss men facts concerning | Rica and Panama, inherited by Pana- world demands, the iron deposits of |48 to why they should have the left et vid oo Lproastive expenaenrt Austev s Euatantee o continuoss Wail Being, Saa e beau;i;]]aL = B - c:h "“‘ "“I"' Venczuela trade rescurces. In Chi- [ma from Colombia. is another ques- Alsace and Lorraine France can ad-|bank of the Rhine and territorial ad- u Y I 5 0 1 . uisa Baccara, the pianist, cago Dr. Gil-Borges will supervise |tion which has caused renewed trou- vance to unheard-of lengths through |justments such as would preclude The language is as ever obscure, but there The congress of miners’ delegates, which was in who shared his ardours and sufferings at Fiume. the establishment of an information | ble lately. ‘:_ne«-"::r:mn;:ll:rm;;a;inu;{;ne,c‘::‘,,:‘gx;:'r'rnamwlr{:om" becoming a_menace Sodis e mm:l:dng the demands wlhich l(v;om = fon in London and > whi;h the minel;s' execu- “Matrimony" is used in a fugitive and pickwick- burean, aimilar) to jone ‘already in H gubhe bresent dispute between Para- 3 3 & S aris | vent ¥ s through the murk. The sanctions must lapse, Ger- tive committee reported conference results, voted jan sense in referen i e rk, where trade ay and Bolivia arises from the re- speaks of levies to be made on Ger- | €ver prevent Berlin from paving the| O O O T must rojection of the government's subsidy offer. The cans Btice tbixallsypoetalands Amer] information will be available. ported action of the latter country great sums of money in in- s . Y 3 cans. As an. important division of the |in Setting up forts and garrisoning s man coal and how through the years France can. by struggling very hard, | 9emnities which France considered De relieved of all such expenses as those of mili- congress broke up on Friday, and the delegates Another effort is to be made to scale Mount ministry for foreign relatiéns in | troops near the territory known as also necessary to heal war's wound tary occupation, control commissions, etc. In returned home. The members of the executive Everest; one wishes the gallant climbers luck. Caracas, Dr. Gil-Borges has estab- | the Paraguayan Chaco. the boun- obtain in measure just r"rmrtalilnln. Pregident Wilson 1isteneq b “ notwithstanding any action of ‘a¢|and long He argued for the pocw other words, so runs the comment of the French committee also dispersed and went down amons That is something worth while. If cne might g ihe, Dinecion e B oltcs | O T oich, have Hoix besn A fact such levies would be a bagatelle ;:3' =2 N’c'mll cryptically enunciated and British press, the treaty of Versailles goes by the mincrs. The outlook seems dismal, but a care- lean briefly against the north and the couth nole, now gathering data and _statistics | republics. 5 compared with the advantages to be ('hil;'l"ét’xle:'xl)‘n V‘\J‘IO has served the the board, the substantial guarantees are ful examination of the developments somewhat sit on the summit of Mount Everesi, dine with regarding Venezuelan products and: Paraguay alleges a violation of the gained through systematic and Pains- | miscion. “You can't For il from’a abolished, Germany becomes a perfectly frgs “Though hopes be dupes, fears may the Grand Lama and comprehend the theory of compiling a directory of Venezuelan |status quo agreed upon pending a set- taking French exploitation of Gef[cow which vou have turned into beefs agent, the arsenals and the dye works will go relativity, one should be content. business men and manufactories. Its!tlement of the dispute and views the man coal and ind__‘ries lying v atenir Cmpe dgave t 4 5 s in Yo i, Biight o purpose will be to furnish American | assembling of troops as an unfricndly the territories to be embraced in the | {RIc The French grew petulant full blast again, Germany will soon be in plig] . o E R Kk i Nicaragua has resigned from the league of tradesmen with all available infor- |sign. Bolivia denies any threat is application of further penalties. the oy o wot b ”;".‘"fl;lng:fi;;i to repudiate her unsecured promIsex;, even " for RU : A:N_ erz :ml Haywood has joined the nations. It is .too expensive, Most of us can mation, rwg:nh’nlz mllrkn-:lx in Vene- | intended, and explains the presence French Will Strike. has marked France's elaims. a war revenge, which last may be unfair to Ger- general staff of the world revolution. He will sympathize with Nicaragua: having been com- zuela for American goods. together!of troops merely for police protec- \ _As a consequence. joday or tomor-| “Mr President, you have a heart of [ ~ man motives, which may be pure and benevolent, return to us riding on a temp pelled by the H. C. of L. to give up some of our | m pratemte o ran Ttemnet i Euelan | tion S row if Germany has not offered rep- jleely Premier Clemenceau bristling- but it is plausibly deducible from the note. The Another congress of the communist interna- clubs. of thig work is a commercial museum. : g . arations deemed fdeauate In Ch8 | chans~ replied the ¥ German ofter is dead, the headlines say. But tional will open in Moscow on June 1. The first The most recent dispatch from the Anatolian under the direction of Henri Pittier,| , A contract has been granted an French mind, Ma ! D! American ex- i : : ; a former Washihgtoni: a American firm by the Bolivian gov- Jrench ming fovescen eventa do mot| ecutive, “but I haven't the Meart 1o its corpse, innocent or not, is pestilent and must international congress of trade and industrial war zone I have scen is dated April 22, and shows | &, fOTMer Washingtonian and ence an | SNIR™ 0 Y construction of 135 occur, will move forward to accom- | steal Infect the atmosphere of future negotiations. Be- unions will open in Moscow on July 1. Evidently the Greeks, heavily reinforced, preparing for an culture, This museum will contain | Miles of railway to connect La plish (ke Evench purnoss. 1L 8 ex Little Sympathy for Grah. cause of it the Germans are more suspected than it is £oing to be a lively summer in Moscow. offensive with a view to recapture of Eskishehr, |Specimens of Venezuslan and Ameri- | QUiaca, on the Argentine border, with ey K Yy e romive of ade | jReEardiess of the pronunciamentos ever, and because of it the allies will insist more Anti-goviet risings in the Ukraine are growing. Moscow was much disgusted by the Franco- can products. It is planned to ‘ex- Atocha, Bolivia, and complete an all- - quate Germanic pavments for the{in T€FATd to French claims. which pertinaclously than before on the guarantees— Makhno extends his sw - Hrichh gereasient ohicertiy Cliidh. he s tend branches of this museum to the | Iall route, from La Faz Bolivia, t total sum of ra':;arann‘u: "';L'lz‘f‘.',"o‘rf known fact that in the chancellories real guarantees. The supreme council sits and ‘Tis reported that anti-British propaganda in trying to persuade Mustapha Kemal to dendance placed in Chicago and the other in | antee to complete the railroad by Au . ey e e Tars e vy 41,000 Soaloan | of Europe there is little sympathy waits for a new offer from Germany, a direct and Afghanistan and Central Asia continues. That it. Under such malign influence the Turks are New York. gust 1, 1925, and to secure the funds | STrela’into the hands of the Bankifor the ‘}’:;‘"i;*l'o;";'zfl:'v;;& grab ter- lucid offer, free from vexatious and litigatious ineffable rascal, Enver Pasha, is in Moscow upon ailing to carry out their part of the agreement. s AN A e American Business ! Lot “"}‘:"\’l‘l”; porhich will mean & of France and Germany's failure, 0| through cach new incursion of allles | Conditons. While walting, it will discuss the that business They have not surrendered the French prisorers. | the 'translation of Venezucian cus. | the new line progresscs. sections of p:o Mz"hgo"n&..u 0.:;&] o oM” el 2% | troons cast of the Rhine. The secret sanctions and guarantees, should no such offer There are said to be some 000 refugees of This may have important results. The French, toms and tariff regulations. which |ten kilometers each will be turned Ser' the lrea:\,'“aof Versailles. :}'tr‘u'::m“'h';’lvt matter rests not upon arrive. i Wrangel's Crimean army in and about Constanti- hitherto Turcophile, seem inclined to fall .n line sen to be sent to America. It is be- &\'er ml u:le 'l.xoli:'lan fl;:overnme:im ! 3 s = iSm. but on a whole-hearted observed that the German note fails nople. The French have been feeding th < eved that a knowledge of these | Work already has been done on this :;ydenmtrlofit g:}s‘lpr’atfrr:e‘;c?:‘:; l::‘ed-:. Jeatousy of the France to be 1r arced 1t is to be ed t he n note pl ceding them, but with the British near east policy. Taws will prove of grent benefit to | road. once by an Argentine firm and cate D= | ent_steps eontinue to be carried out. - Americans, whose shipments are|again by a French company. but both sometimes held up or perhaps re- |contracts were annulled because of turned because of an infringement of | non-fulfillment. 9 rules a knowledge of which would The construction of this railway have prevented the dela will give South_America its second O S Dr. Gil-Borges points with pride to | transandean railway, the other line his country’s development in recent | connecting Valparaiso and Santiago, i Chile, with Buenos Aires. The latter arations proposals will be considered | In London. Rome. g by the supreme council in London | i {27000 Kome, and cven Brussels during the next day or So. and €Ven | holq if future incursions are con- though the supreme council in London| tinyed. and it believed that even whole should hesitate about the ap- | the Ruhr and Westphalian occupation plication of otber penalties than| wij] phe but stepping stones to the those already imposed. there is little | sejzure of other advantages which to cause ome to believe that Pre-imay in the fature react to the dis- mier Briand will hesitate to strike |interest of other allics.—But. mever- Gut and, paraphrasing the French | tholess, it is realized France is justi- viewpoint, render unto Caesar things | ficq in demanding the full meed of that ezre Caesar's. If Briand hesi-| roparations, even though the meth- tates further, Briand, as premier of | ods be objectionable, and political France. soon will pass. Poincare of | alliances are such as to inspire the some other extreme militarist willl spirit of give and take, While the step into power and France may even | alljas may witness France waxing g0 further than the Ruhr. forever:fat upon Germanv, nevertheloss 1t hazarding comity on the Iuropean |js cypected that through barter the years. Two thousand miles of graded roadway connect the coastal cities |line, however, is not serviceable for with the interior, and plans now |several weeks in the year because of the serious smowstorms which occur . . ° . call for construction of railways S e a l I | l 1‘ :a I | S [' which will run parallel to the roads. |along its route. By means of the American engineers are aidipg the [ new railway planned, a new railway 7 government in improvement ‘of its{trip from New York to Buenos Airex harbors and port facilities. A little | can be made in cighteen or nineteen west of Puerto Caballo, a harbor, nat- | days. A i3y Ceheer il yigive bintessil A i i n \ ural in lt!dfnrmatlm\. is being i * ok ¥ BY THOMAS R. MARS . most cheerfully give b sse. and tongue on earth, each availing proud of its German-American |Proved. and when completed could to the principle of the self-deter- itself of the i i American made moving picture films the pi P! e e opportunities of bank, its Irish-American-club, its |contain the combined navies of the | _WECEAN Moo ioon competition in continent. Llovd George knows this | allies will receive conce: Former Vice President of the % ple I he S04 it is hut natural that he should | directions. The "d;“s‘:glf:;‘:f:n‘nog!?g; United States. mlln.a:)l;)n of n-‘sll’lons 2 rm:;,dtl',r‘x'x‘;'f fi‘r:u'n an lhle .m;_d appealing for Italic-American delicatessen. ~We |WOrld. Sixty per cent of the foreign are meeting Burepeet FeimReiHEl O Bich TAIRnt Crbascass| fomon s laske way: to/enforcs (he 4 lagy of Ohlo was cor- | side seat in American politics 1 | ing our institutions and sneering | We et ie b oY hemselves. | ofantly its gold remerve. $16,000,000 |Ably, according to reports Teaching the whole British continental policy | France's ever readiness o do so, aids vect when she said she did | Sce that principle forced into the | 4f our civilization when not men- | bring over and transplant in oursoil | "%y PIRSIn the treasury, in | the South American favors the Amer- and possibly bring in future years. a | the latter in her purpose. : Sot B ring to meet all comers. So far in ? ' the Babite. customa acd traditions r. Gil-Borges is mo stranger in |the South Americar tavors ths AOCl War approaching in character, not know much abou history, when self-cctermination So long as individuals of any Of thelr Toalon Washington, as one of the first dip- 5 e e Bt ove Sxceeding. the one which close WEAL IateresC ot Euiure: man nature, but that the little she | has had to put on gl Wwith | race continue to proclaim the land | Simosnhers ot the oia werta @ [lomatic posis he occupied was sec. | the European production of te SHEC v sh ths ago. The real interest of the future ‘i a self-preservation. self-determina- from which they came as the land 5 old world. But |retary of the legation here several |t¥yPe. American films devoted to othe T ke L rests ot much “in how %] 4id know convinced her It was tion has received a blow in the | of their hearts and to boast that | /e the war came on, particular- |years ago. subjects are not so popular. New Proposals Expecte: Germany will consent to pay, for that | mighty nasty thing. but my years | golup plexus, - they are merely financial citizens | 3 before we ourselves became ac- SR e A great deal of knowledge of Amer- It is to be believed that when the | is a foregone conclusion—it will be ciation in the United States . of the United States, it is perfect- tually involved, we found that the > ] ican methods, styles and mode of 1iv- supreme council gets into conference | what the allles ask—but it will be in| Of 258 had the rEaa Iy apparent that whether we join | CODtinUance of "the hyphenated | Semor Don Enrique Geenzler, whofing Is obtained through the moving ven newer German posal ! how far France will g0 in the meth.| Semate with men who ha There is perhaps no right-think- e ovhether we Join | American was liable to be a men. | fOF tWo years has been secretary of |picture film, and for this reason our e ey o the Table withr directly | oqx of collection and Gegmamws| reputation of being firebrands and | jno ranin America familiar with | ation of nations each administra. | 3¢€ to the peace of our own land. | fhe leEation of Panama here ‘hasrepresentatives in Sou'h America or through the instrumentality strenuous efforts fo pay. to that the ble-breeders taught me that 2 Hon il plons each dministe T was in’ Washington when ihe |Deen appointed undersecretary of have sought more than once to have O o Hiing. even hough the | Freneh etuteh on the Hahr and Wepy. | Lrouble-br ipar | the history of Ireland who does | {on, il be contronted with con | confagration In Barope started, | {Of¢iEn Telations of Pamama. and only the best and representative type i Jatter should decide not to transmit | phalian regions may be loosened. Tt| the old lady was Wrong. ! not sympathize with the aspira- | that the forerkn policy of thg | I Know something about the arti | fll Jeave this country May T sail-[of film introduced, " While some of + those of the past week. In these | is not believed that Germany will | nature is human nature, but after tions of the Irish race to govern Amerfcan government shall be fices that were used by the German ;.':f; ST & Tuteber of posts o his th%dp"i:“{:!sl':la:d Sthers can 8o an Germany lgreeld loms marrfif:)fib%g‘ }:r:’;n!‘t the allies to remain in' gccu- | {t effervesces and its passion has themselves under a republican f;rmulated and developed not in emibelssy to manufacture publle |government. serving as chief of thlgguai ataoniit of harm, p a 000, erritory ind ely, cre i ; . S B . LD o e fact hat | B daneare or pnenitely, for there | aisappeared in bubbles it is not & | form of government, but even the | hic Siest of the Ameriean peo- | OBLLOR If ATCciea, spainat the |consular buresu of Panams and a3 %ok shie wouldt mot count fn that wWhich | Rubs and Wesighstia ouce occupled, half-bad thing. Before ;’t" Be" most rampant Anglophobiac must | tions. but In the interest of its par. | Man enough to understand that | bresfienteDias and Porras He is| The South American Steamship already has been turned over to the rmany will srive as she has never{ the Senate 1 supposed thaf n realize that in the perturbed con- ticular kin across the seas. had I been of German origin and |a poet and the author of a number of | Company, a Chilean-owned concern, had T still been living under the |volumes which have won him recog- |is constructing three large vessels of. allies. Tnasmuch as Germany dr-&x!rl en before, and the reparations habits and customs and traditions |nition. In 1916 he was awarded a |the refrigerator tvpe which it in- will be paid, ~ And possibly quiewer| Tillman of South Carolina, univer- | 4ition of Europe the English view- * ok ok ok e e et e e s e A e e R e e o e e R G D S N P R I WL BN B S e e manded that certain penalties be re- will b n Ny known as “Pitchfork Till- moved and that Upper Silesia be ! than France and England now expect, | sally A e attacked | POINt Is the viewpoint of self- 1 am so optimistic fn my views | of the fatherland I might have | prize for the best poem submitted in | tends to place in its New York serv- man,” was a PhD attack Fresarvation: that the world now has had enough | been Dersuaded that the govern- |a national contest in Panama Dur- |ice for carrying fresh fruit and vege- PLY TO PANAMA Hartshorne Johnston. infantry, and| evervthing. forked end first. en In our country there are but few of war that, in my judgment, any ment of the country wherein I was | ing his two years of service here he | tables. MAKES RE « | Robert Alexander, infantry. T became intimately acquainted | T OUFSOMEEE TERTE SO0 ot e | e which . Toors ements a voter and in which I was finan- [yydm 2adition the nominations of Wil- | wich him T found that my uds- | G U0 T R TG G | dearning of wars possibilines showia | he Geman eonce. taat Tmieal 1o | «L1IYLER FOR MINISTER. |SEES NEED OF DISCIPLINE. >rice, 3r. of Chester, Pi = 3 - < v ¢ © s ossibilities shoul rman cause, that it was 3 Secretary Hughes Answers Note ;. a major general. 'and Avery Dela: me"; :f me':t w:;:“b;’l‘:e:;'”w‘:‘;fl‘; race, and up to a certain point we | be tried. T am hopeful that racial | helding an even scale in Pl et = g no Andrews of New York lar judgm! 3 $ i » i H J mining the right v N € on White Boundary Award. brigadier general In the Off Beneath a seemingly shagsy ex- | 2Fé Willing to consent to the deter- | irritations in America will die out. Contraeras hi‘w:::‘::o;fil::;:; President Harding has. nomi-|Gol. Forbes Favors Merging Work Pormial AGEWr {6 Pamama’s pros - transmitted D R ack of a harsh ana | mMination of our public affairs by a | Hopeful as we may be, however, and | the imperial German empire. nated Montgomery Schuyler of New b B B oe test against compliance with insist- e e was & heart as gen. | Malority vote, but the white race | willing as we may be to try experi- . P York to be minister to Salvador. i ervice Men. ence of Secretary Hughes that the| G s Co 5 e and loving as might be | Will have to forget what it be- ments which promise good, we must T was not bitter nor harsh in | The nomination of John R. Mitchell | Disciplinary powers over service White boundary award should be| ' UBECStS mpromise o hed. One misfortune of Ameri- | lleves to be its superiority before not fool ourselves into believing that | my judgment in the beginning, |Of St baul Minty to & teniyent (erm|men now undergoing hospital treat- made the basie of an adjustment ot/ Name for Famous Mountain | ‘o Ort M know all about | the White men and the white wom- | racial charactcristics can be disposed | but when I thought back to the | Bank was confirmed by the Senate. | ment of educational training is need- the dispute between Panama and| e : e bt (hat we fo not know | ©n of America will consent (0 col- | of by the wavo of a hand. The | WAr hetween the states and re- o By PIMCEraINE Ane beat. raiil pus Costa Rica has been made by Secre- | D" It the Amerlcan people | ored domination. even though the | severest jolt my personal view on | membered that T had relatives & i to be obtained, Col. C. H. Forbes, new- tary Hughes. | could just know their representa- negroes come into a majority. the doctrine of the brotherhood of shooting at each other in that American Escapes From |1y appointed director of war risk in- Danger of war between the two | tives In the Congtess many a view As much as I believe in the doc- | mankind ever recrived came in a | conflict. and particularly much Moscow Prison Camp | firanee testified Friday before a e e hiave dlsaporsced with | would be changed. What America | trine of self-determination and | speech made in the Semate by that | later. when the Queen of the Bel- 1 ¥ House committee. He appeared to ad- e et of the Amerions warsing needs Is not more wisdom, more the right of majorities to rule. I | most remarkable, very learned and | ®ians told me that although her s 2 vocate the principle involved in con- that hostilities must not be renewed | glatesmanship, more scholarship— | hold that a majority must rule ( altogether generous and Kind-hearted | brother faced her husband dur- solidating government agencies creat- . | i R n;\—:g;.: before consent to set aside | member from Mississippi, John Sharp | the entire war, never for a mo- Rd Mo dbal with/dILEDIRA VatEany. | the doctrine of self-preservation is | Williams. To ki i i si ! Tiuk: Ihvnrte, asistant Searstany’ , | _ - h ams. To know him is to recog- | ment did she not desire her hus- . PROPERTY SEIZED BY U. S. | During ::‘:e""&:"'“;'“:‘l‘: "::’r: given. 1 always am for law and | nize one of the keenest intellects and | band and her adopted e e Mso Sommeniied th e > the seventh heaven, | OTder: but I happen to know that fost Iogical tninds 1 Ainesioga pul win, I became insistent that the = advantage to the men and to the gov- ts to Enforce Pay- | SBUEh! UDIIRLO the only way in which law and or- s . _His whole life has been ernme: Bevenue Agen ¥ We did not know whether we were y or devoted to the cause of peace, to the | Man Who could not be whole- ; e sk bl & o hient of waxian Tntoxicants: 1 nok e ot the bedy, | 4T came to many towns was | submission of mooted questions to | heartedly loyal to his government B g Eolng 1o have:the cape ol . in the body or o Y- | through a determined minority | the decisions of the courts rather isabled servico menjas & duty of Gur Internal revenue agents Friday Every ideal which appealed to the A ed minority | the decislons of the cour T | in the hour of war should be de- government for many years in the fu- ' facd H, | cindl iments of the soul we | YIPIE out the self-determination | go*%t' kmow how far removed & el ol sametican “oitisenshin. il ; fture” he said. “Though the admission - seized the property of Henry L. kindly sentiments of & vicious majority at the end of | Lo kMo MOW far removed in | that his body should be sent in of new patients has reached its high- Simms, in the building at 913 4th advocated, and we willingly sacri- a rope Welch nn*nry“bm m""&!‘;l;“m;fl search of the spot where his heart S est point, it is likely that the amount street northwest, as a result of fail ficed for these ideals. We observed " i . y really was. \ of payments to partially and perma- ee! 3 It is not as easy to achieve generations have passed since his One of our pre-w: . 4 4 DErIA ure to pay the government tax on all humanity divided into just two A 2 people came to America. Provoked pre-war _curses nently disabled men will increase with intoxicants. The property is to be A asmenome composed of those | Self-determination as it is to give | by momething, I know not what, he | shenepard mleEmaiact, (At men the years, since as the men age their 4 . : 3 , allegiance to two gov- : isabilities wil s0ld May 13, according to H. H. Frid- who were speaking and thinking | 10 It uhaualified assent, e | opened e ot Wik, | gmments; that ‘they might" be ; ol ol gl i ; al. en we stan - > ley, deputy collector of internal reve- and suffering for freedom; the | UL 0T FROREC ERTR e et fect torrent of vitriolic abuse against | 1o wpiaton. s ennl Cheing pub: REPORT SOLDIER BILL nue for lhli!ddmlr:('l:" i diiipEo other, of those who sullenly were T e ° a “l s the Irish race, its hopes, its ambi- at the same time be full fl‘f,d:,ed . e astimateh aUhiN T willing to die for despotism. From | 5,57 ofltg eftects on our Inter- | smeceh. 1 wondered how mans gen; | -fubjects of the German govern- iy, CTeportsd Feldagy our mount of transfiguration we nal problems, whether we are in a :{‘:{‘fi“;s ir"’:o‘;‘l’f’ m‘}(‘: 3‘)"’"{.{:’: ment. :n:nl(e’ harm was done the by the Senate military committee in- saw the angels of God descending. | Situation (o render it the aid ‘we | Welchman think and act Ty entiro | 5y that doutie anagienare world clafen onaauthorisingithie War Dy WILL RAISE 12 COLONELS. bearing to mankind once again | S much dewre o render. To be | accord with an Irishman. His was I had hoped that the conclusion partment to provide free transpor- R the message of peace on earth. We | day discloses and accentuates the | Dat.temporary break in a long und | of the war was to mark the elimi- tation to the United States for desti- ¥ President Sends Army Nominations thought we had reached that far | irritation which arises from our | Gf good will and brotherhood, yot it | Giiged sllegionee o nd, that unz | fate dlscharged American soldiers 1o 2 off divine event toward which the complex population. It secems to shows the danger that comes from i art of : - vives and families. = r 'y citizen to the American gov- Another measure proposes t - to Senate. JUDGE JAMES A. CHASE Whole world since Eden's fall had | bg 81 8lmost super-human task to | having the body in America and the | crnment would accrue. T hesitate ¢ ment of 500000 damage to ewaers A list of Army nominations, includ- | Of Washington sta been tending. national veins. BgartiintEuxope. Dow to hold the view that harm ) w of vessels used by the government Ing the names of twelve colonels to| inkton to augmest to A It is not mine to say that the b & ® it e Ao by s ale * 53 transparts during the war. be brigadier generals, to fill vacancies “"_""';:l:"';_m‘:“;}“'-":’-;.'M." 4.| nour for that much-desired event Fhioddh (e Al nner dssivoun 58 1 do mot complain about present | welfare of their kin across the sen. 2 made by recent promotions, was sent | hanged to Mount LincoM. The name| 18 7ot nigh at hand—God speed | goinecur gull duty and more by | CORditionsi I only regret them. I | That is quite human, but it is the ‘WOULD PROBE EDUCATION. to the Senate Friday by President|of the benutiful peak of the Cascades| Its coming—but as tending toward ihalrcat or the world we must sobh contributed my small aid up to one 1;‘3‘:5}{;'{;‘:‘;";::;_‘?16 bfilr& CAPT. MERION C. COOPER A resolution authorizing President Harding. The twelve men selected for been for m wemeration or (wo al that goal Americans must do some | ooy o get upon the principles the commencement of the great | brotherhood. 1If we genuinely are |Of Jacksonville, Fla., a member of Harding to appoint a commission to- advancement were ~Cols. Willlam | disputed polnt between the citfes of| things calculated to produce a hich it war In their continuance. I dfd not | desirous of peace, we must become |the Koaclusko Squndrom, excaped from | investigate the status of education in Ruthven Smith, Coast Artillery Corps; | Seattle an: coma. Seattle has in-| common peace at home before they which-'we avow: If-we:are: toibg K " h not half way, but altogether Amer. |the prison camp near Moscow. He |, =~ o o Dwight Edward Aultman, field artil-| alsted that it be calied Mount Ratafer| cin be assured of a common world | more than mere mouthers of pre. | !rY to make out of those Who came | can. A beginning may be made |reached Riga afier many experiences nited States, with particular - lery; Johnson Hagood, coast artillery; | ans coma that it be xiven its m Peace. Do not mistake me; I take cepts. Nor can we long survive to us from Europe real Americans. | Ly teaching supreme allegiance to |He and two Polish companfons | reference to the question of whether !:enn‘; Edv“ad'd(-'\"'""' infantry; Wil-|clent Indian no backward steps. I am still peaceably unless we put to ou: There seemed to be & glamour about every child who enters the public |walked through miles of woods,|federal government aid could be ad- 4 liam ul;lzdr ilo‘:mm', ;nxinc"s, Fox willing and anxious to try the ex- selves for complete answer this the hyphenated Amerl Hy schools of America; I do not ask |jumped freigiut trains ates, '® {onner. fleld artillery; Preston Brown, periment of peace by arbitration, | Question: Bhall America be popu- e, hyphen: merican. He | ¢, Arqrica be first mnd fore- |ecasion hid for fuirty-six was introduced by Representatives: infantry: Malln Craig. cavalry; Henry but T am thinking now only of our | lated by Americans or shall the | made the game of politics and of | most, but I do ask that America Husted, republican, New York. The Davis fodd, jr. coast artillery! Albert Internal affairs. republic continue to be an hundred | business more Interesting. Every- | shall be populated by Amerlcans bribed pensants with thelr shoes and | commission would report by next awsse Bowle eld artillery; Willlam Who is there among us who does milllons of people of everv triba where in America a town was (Copyright, 1921, by Tiomas R. Marsiall.) [overcoats to help them. Fear. = % K ¢ /