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l FICTION l Part 4—8 Pages " @h WASHINGTON, D. C, SUNDAY MORNING MAGAZINE SECT e Sundlyy Shar. , JULY ION 24, 1921. FEATURE | ¥ United States May Save Billion Dollars a Year by P ¥ : ST RPN T A. N Estimate by Military and Naval Experts, and Another by Enthusiasts Over President Harding’s Plan—Just What the Disarmament Plan Means to the Nation and the Taxpayer—A Little Story of the Skilled Laborer and His Salary:; How Great Powers of the World May Benefit if They Decids to Cut Down Their i Armies and Navies—Conference May Be Held in Washington on Armistice Day. | i HETres VISCOUNT BRYCE, FORMER BRITISH AMBASSADOR TO THE U STATES. WHO HAS BEEN MENTIONED AS A PROBABLE DELEGATE FROM ENGLAND TO THE DISARMAMENT CONFERENC — ——» Pan-American Union Building as Likely Scene—Probable Delggates. artial Dis armament . . o lived a cer-|in 1910, $7.30, and in 1919, $144.77! N (other -gava there lived, k. a5 1 the fiscal year endinz June 30, ! tain %Kkilled* laborer. much given ihe) Grnrosiatkons) for ithe ms to the use of stimulants. He earn- | tional government aggregated $5.686.- i ed. or at least was paid, a fair wage | 576,000 Of this sum there was ex- e Ta pended for the War and Navy de- s went in those days, and there | PORISE For She, AT ond e 0 per | DELEGS reely Saturday night thatjcent of the entire amount; $3,8 00.- his pay envelope contained less than | 000, or 67 per cent. went for previous i A It was the custom of this skilled 1a- | $1§1,000,000" was expended, or about | Kamehatin. Gieectiy. hiw Indioatorias the ehiet smillary oo bover to repair almost immediately | 3.2 per cent of the whole For public {showed a favorable wind. Franc USRI adsiser 10,8 neighboring Ein- iill. where he| Works of every description the Eov- Another Britich army offcer, Gen | Information reaching Washinzte ' would tarry far into the night. 2nd | reseaceh and educationai development | Swinton, talks of emploving heat ra i Indicates that delegates m v often enough the rising Sabbath sun, | this nation lavished the sum of $57.- { laht rags, ultra-violet rays or X.raya:chosen from among some of th peering through the dirty \\'Imlow!ngfisz&p‘:;d‘é?lm per cent of the whole ' Point out some way in which|achicved distinction during the w panes of the saloon’s “back room.” | S e E PAN-AMERICAN UNTON BUILDING, WHERE THE DISARMAMENT CONFERENCE MAY BE HELD. OTHER SUGGESTIONS AS SUITAB! fisen oTe Or e s ,""ifl.".d e b kantn i the would find him asleep on the ram-| o o B ents of re- | THE GATHERING ARD THE SENATE OFFICE BUILDING AND THI CAPITOL. AND PREfIDENT HARDING IS CONSIDERING THE THREE NAMED. hodics of Whole Armies of men agaiust|prominent = of the betters Kneks shackle billiard table | g = ! B IS R L R directed. | French figures are Louis Loucheu Even in the days of “ten-centj szarch, for the upbuilding of good 2 | {7 Such specu n as has been heard ! Briand's minister of devastated r. =y o Con. | citizenshipi’ for the Americanization|amonz other things, whether the | chmmrr e 3 5 | The second table. which gives the!regarding the plice for holding the | ions. and Gabriel Hanotaux. forme hootch” such entertainment was ex-f 00 Coldion elements and for sach | ANElo-Tapanese alliance should be | 3 Z | building program,” does ude | disirmament conference points to the Minister of foreign affairs. It is no pensive, and the man in question used | 218 renewe N four super-Hoods. which the British! Pan-American Union building-as the | believed her that Rene Viviani wil 1t £ t h ¢ . n to deem himself fortunate If enoueh |other educational work as the govern- | "Tiut (he renewal of this offensive | i parliament authorized last March, but broba te. Other suggestions o |be regarded by the Briand gover ;';\:‘;1‘“{3 m"“'d?";‘“lg ;é;‘:‘ 1;’;;‘] “h':a;d* pient finances in part or wholly, wefand defensive pact is near to the | for wi been let ' I'resident Hardini m‘r‘ludfi the Capitol {ment as especially qualified by ter \ viality to pay hi ¢ i ~{heart of the Japancse government is | and upon which construction will not #nd the Senate office building. crament for th. purposes of t Ou the Rveraxe :ilie bacienders [Kof ‘o:"’pl"“:; per cents of $5.300.000.- [ 10T kb uted "and there is reason to | begin until 1922 Intimations have The opposition raised. by Lord:Washington conference about $22°of the man’s weekly stipen . raised by various forms of tax-|helieve that Premier Lloyd George, | come from England .that these ships. Northeliffo-in'Great Britain to Pre-: Il is assumed that Marquis de Tc - . 3nd if they got less m;m”we:'e d’l‘w fon; for wars, past and looked- | too. would ha Tiked "to’ sée It exvi 1 Wil &0t be,bullt if the coming con-| mier Lloyd George's -contemplated . Téla, minister of foreign affairs appointed. The same Wi T ?l :” {forward-ta, 93 per ecent. tended ' for AeT Years. vrofi forenee reslts§in limitation of naval| visit to \Vashln:tm; as head of the'the new Ttalian cabinet, will head ti gettt $40 a week. and practically | e Aete vided it could be accomplished wit armaments” The taple does include | British delegation has brought the Italian delegation none of it is being spent for liquor.| WAy Afmerican - statesmen asse |the approval of lthe United States thres Japanese battleships now-build- | question of personnel particularly to #4°7d greal intsrest in Washin e wears better clothes, eats better | that If the coming conference shall|and the British dominions. particus ing and four authorized, upon which | the foreground. While these attackston as to the probable make-up « oot adey more mo NI e ure Sl rrioana e s e ecrereral Ak larly Ganada, Awstrallaiand New Tk mav have hagun o both Lloyd George and Foreign | the imperfel Japanese delegatios and has a tidy little bank-account. % e to expect. the pro-|jand With the preccdents established b While neither President H.xrdlng'g?lll'ln%ns for our future expénditures| Early in the negotlations at Lons ireat Britgin. 1._|‘...s” | e Suricalenle Sniauil T nor Secretary of State Hughes ever e reversed, that for our ordi- | don, however. it became plain to the Rartleships S o Toon 7 |crown prince, it is felt that Premier had even a speaking acquaintance nar[}; gnvern[menlal functions, for good | imperial conference tha#t the alliance | Destroyers ... 10 11 45 | Hara might turn over the affairs o ;w(zh the ahe\-uhmcr;;mned worl‘;e:, ll'ln_e L:':bzrs D‘ul?'::a”:luflvllnfs' l'HD-I]cluuS W most unrmmllarl" in : e Unitgd i 14ght cruiscrs ... 3NN 5 ¥ |gevernment to a subordinate and act remains that they are endeavor- . ir n projects, reclama- | States. and that the colonial pre- { Pattie crtsers P If represe a Y ing to do for the world exactly what |tion of swamp lands, pensioning the | miers were none too eager to ‘haye i Submarines ... 21970 40 l"’cntfigu' !;r'e‘:z: r;in‘i‘:r‘:—;" is :«’;;gr‘;::: prohibition did for the liquor-loving | aged, educational work, scientific re- | it renewed. It was recognized, neve A : as a ccrtainty, while Ambassador * mender of water pipes. search and the like, we shall expend | criheiess. that to denounce the pact | estroyeclondets X | Hayashi. who has conducted the re- P * % %W {93 per cent of the whole, and for the | wonld he a dlaprointment ° from Jdis w Im maras__ 10h | cent nefotiations in London in com HIE world, like thé skilled laborer, | ATISMENt of such a poiice force as | wiich the Japanese woald be slow.to } =——————————————————————————— [ nection with thc An;lo-Japanese al- 2 cAa may be defided upon. 7 per cent. It|recover. The Invitation of the United Ap analvainof the i ble will | Minister C e discounted in liance. will probably attend. Ambas is debauching itself. Of the bil-{is recognized that this objective can- | States fo participate in a confereme Aot e B e e | W atniakton, well acqusinted a5 It is sador Shidehara will naturally be i flons qf doliars raised each year by '?g;r,;hem:\l\{lelier“:r«:.‘-"?lh 2t Jfor manypwhien should take up AlLAS YATNe: lsave the buiiding of ca with the methods of political give | close touch with the discussion every conceivable sort of ‘taxation,pagh 3 Ahe wars o) €| questions of the far east with a view | Japanese building program is | and take, they have at least caused * ¥ ¥ ¥ a past must first be scitled for. to settling them, and thus paving the | e e nE DRk I d alke, jthey huve, el more than 90 per cent goes vither to! President Harding and Secretary of | way to an agreement on the reduc- | (s Ml L g S O i tieny A e teaPolt Oher | X pre-prohibition days it was 1 prepdre for future wa¥s or to pay the'State Hughes are inculsing in nof tion of armaments. came. therefore. | jln other morcs, thayias possible Beitlsh: deleguten, .\ I P Cnah expenses of wars that have been!lloPian dreams as to what may bejas a ellef to Llovd George. heir finances will permit, T most_cordially welcome a visit from ' 1o L SN D b ot e O her wore the world I¢ Accomplished, but are proceeding | It provided him an casy way of of | jCusicitinances wul nenmit | ost cordially welcome ® gsit from {laborer, to expend by far the greater e ing 92 cents out of every dollar |about their task in a thoroughy prac- ) the dilemma Into witleh he had feer, | conerete manner ‘their growing feeling in diplomatic circles ' Portion of his income upon those f Feverue raised, Just as the plumber UcAl &nd businessiiice way. They|thrust and allowed him a umesny of limit their naval armament b that the success or Tatlure of the things which wre ful to h ofabted $22 out of every §30 ho earned.| koW that complete disarmament is|graciously deferring thie questiort of that they have noi one capital ship un- | conference may depend upon the type | eapiadb iy ‘wasted $2 Diexe 3 fons— | not:possible in the present day and|renewing the Anglo-Japanese pact. H s P ahiy o _ PON e i self. Mo v, mentally and physical- In the vear 1920 five great mations. - / j der con: The four super-Hoods | of men the visiting powers select as |1y he bl ¢ 5 eat Britain, the United States, |35 but they believe that If the great pap matters were not so ! wirich it authorized recently | delegates. (oo ey D wauidsrd by veh € famn,, ated - | powers of the world get round a tabl, She had expecte ac- i pat] . ized: recently | ten. = - ; debaucheries; economical Ay A P isde over | come to Soma agreement which will | ing a rmament conference, but R o B e o s aboud o Bir e |Dawev reluctantly, the dry o $2.000,000.000 more than-all these na- | Make possible a matcrial reduction in}she had not cxpected that‘the scope ! Englislf say they do hot wish to build p;“hh be made up of men who|lum and having followed it with '.‘ opether expended for military | Armaments, thus enabling the various [of such a conference would be ex- ! in... suer-Hoods, that they will not bulld | were not at the Paris conference. The | Some, SUEIt 1apses, for a number of orposes in the fourteen years extend- sovernments to lift {rom the shoulders | tended to- igelude discyssions of the | iu‘pm ¥ we will renounce a part of our | dominant spirit of that gathering. }Cry o alting than e et tsstaes . P 5 the people the enormops burden of | problems of’ the Pacific. urther- el ARt thes Bane for * < H : § s ctter condition than he even dreamed ing from 1900 to 1914. It has been 0T the b \ fo program, and that they hope for action | with the possible exception of the i fo OF 3 more, Japan was undoubtedly some X t . Dx A he (be e ; ¢l could be possible. estimated that In order to pay for the | "R 50" yean made perfectly plain| what chagsined by the turn taken DytFcontarence, calleq lby Prement, American delegation, wes one fAE; | in e warsidonnsa oresent, 1o tremendous Brmamc S aximately $10 Who 18 responsible for the initiative by the negotiations for the remewal oAyt build them' in any case B With whieh & serles of compro- | the pre-disarmament era, it is the e have. to be levied upon every | in the present move for disarmament. [of the_ slliance, LT 1 ; Ty i mises was arranged of such a nature | fixed und mot easily alterable cus- i le: 5 Desplte reports from London. which | show some hesitation about ef [esl-‘ g at Fan ALK s !tom of our friend, the world. to ex- man; woman dnd ehild Iy e vorid: | would tend to give Fremier Thaeh ! ing an nnqualified acceptancesdt the | NOTHER angle of the disarma- | oor oo T o ieing n mew |Dend by far the greater portion of e elieve the time has cbme toGeorge crudit for the suggestion of a | Invitation was, therefore. ent rely to | A vhich 4. By "which should have been de-!its income upom things which are Hughes duca this enormous out-* World conference on disarmament, it |-have been expected, and it also wui ment problem. and one which does | 08 FREN (L UUC 4< many pos- |harmful. The women and children of attempt 1o Fod e men and women | IS known that the first definite moves| natural to suppose that she,might not concern the United States so closely, | Siaiea, O oMot “as "was foas.;Mmany nations have died of hunger % avery ecivilized nation iny the world | both for disarmament and for discus- | Seek to Know ' the cone anq, “""“"‘ is that of the military forces of the great { ible under the cirgumstances of | DY uncounted thousands hecause the I overy SatoR Tremendous | $ion of the problems of the Pacific|acter of the proposed discusslon of = the deliberations following the |Men Were too busy with the weapons are cager 10 He¢ olieved. and with | came from President Harding. far eastern problems. in which she{ powers. France and Italy are eacht be- 1 0 . j00 = {of war to bother with the implements burden of taxation rellered, &8 b ta| The first action instituted by, the | Was certainly justified In conaidering lieved to have about $00,000 men under | * tot peace. s e aof the allled and assocluted | President was to instruct Col. George | her intercsts to be of primary im- ; ; |arms at the present time. The Jupanese | 3 | Should the wirld sccept, however powers o be held in Washington this Haryeou 2mbasmador to, e coury) of | PORtASS W PREMIER BRIAND, WHO MAY HEAD THE FRENCH DELE rmy numbers in’ the nelghborhood of | ()FLNION amons sound internationsl | Resitaniy, thsgRlewestion of Prest B, S A o tor o e tton | ers” during the sessions of the su- . dget tary | TO WASHINGTON I HIS BRANCH 'OF THE GOVERNMENT 15 ST 1600,000 men; the British forces have been | observers in Washington as ex-| yj (ever ‘there is of good faith in of armaments. preme council to ascertain the atti-|[HI reply smade by Secrelary)powpg AT THE TIME OF DISARMAMENT CONFERENCE. reduced to 225,00 and the American |pressed here emphasized that the|human nature. ¥riend World may fing O ne reallze the cost of the | tude of the powcrs toward disarma Hughes to the partial acceptance ek e Fesvion Niw Ga) Army to about the same number, With | projecied Pacific conference . ap- |itself. like the skilled laborer. in much world war both in lives apd in money. ' ment These “feelers! having brought [ forwarded by Japan was perfectly In] ;h‘;‘;'d“’{,'{‘ Trduction 1o 130,000 contém- | yroaches the problem of in(crnn(lnnali:;g;ls'i"';/l:"c“msw"“‘ than now seems an earthquake should come upon us action. the State De- o oo pHct by g s e = L conilh a ; e " Ywallow up the Unitedspartment made informal approaches | Keeping with the policy IMIOWN'DY |y o ronoged conference would- have | movement for disarmament. “The domi-| g Ehe, Denct that would accrue to|misunderstanding from a radically| A Texasconpfessman. Marvin Jones Loday A ettroy o more wealth | to” the various powcrs through the | the administration with regard to thelno power to commit the government |nant interest of China in any discussion France and ltaly, for instance. if It is|gifferent viewpoint. The Pacific prob- asked in a récemt speech during the than was consumed in that wnrldlfi:;:rx&a:u :::r(;t\;h sz:;:u:-_-. to lasgpr(:_\in part th's government should play in ?,k ,},yna‘n.;m,m h’lvl}r]\z "l"efl char- | of the far east was too cbvious to per--::.‘;m g:n‘lvim(;‘\'- {;fi:-‘:s ulxn rlem‘\.lgo(u ‘m';,:‘lem is to be attacked, these observers ;?l“rsp so ‘f::‘l; :l:I.;.::;wl.‘,'r.,'.u:x‘::p,rml\-;:: conflagration. Thirty flm“mgr: gifsg:g;!"om ey bkt o l)l“r\l;‘l_*;r";"t‘; the forthcoming conference. This gov-lgg Eristioa.ctiv ‘;“:3;'5‘;;“ “‘-,"‘_":K z’\'ipt;‘ld:‘my :gdr‘cls!fin‘?n the part of those leach would be incalculable. There would | beliewe, while it Is yet in a state 10| principal subject of the historian and Elehx;‘;:rejmd}(h‘;(;n"lllo.ns ‘of maimed | in_a conference on far'eastern prob-|crnment has no idea of aitempting to) pecessary ynder the American ©onsti-| 18 Sl iny s on by 700,000 men i eken’ nadlen taken | worse than one of “unhappy conjec-|the theme of:the poet's song?” and o walk the streets in nearly jlems and the question of disarmu-|fix the agenda of the corfference, and:tution. Other nations would cnjoy the | p, t is known. however, that neither|from a non-producing occupation and [ WOUST AT (AR P FEEICL ) M T concluded, “T #ant to see the poet and e N mital of the world furnish "an | ment €0 be held n Washington. | e could ot anbwer the Jaga-|8ahe * priviieged, accdrding -to ‘the|Fresident Harding mor Secretary | placed in the ranks of producers and | ture ' 4 the historiaWelect u morning star ey D gument for disarmament. | I therefore could not answer the Japa- | JATG, RASIIRNS (FCGNEN, (8 oy | Hughes would be Acaf to' really | wageearners. Instead of being a load |points at issue o be discussed apd] o hone e with eyes fived, on L ins ook forward to the futured ! jne T L e e Migcussion of | SYStem of government, | serious intimations ‘from a majority |for the taxpayers to carry they would |, ¢ibly settled in gn atmosphere of | that star. let ¥he world walk inito the 4 Al o e When they are told | [¥ @lmost rccord time responses| 7" iliern” proplems. slon of | S hlle “th& “question of n dnte for |of the other powers that some other | themselves * become (axpayers. The |8innexs” ana _deliberation, rather |new sunlight of a lasting peac wit 2 o ax n_ problems. B R T i T | nation ‘should be allowed to par.|heavy load would be greatly lightened B bich offendad antional that because of uars‘nf‘zfi past pu:y i came from four of the five nations | purpose of the conference had been‘ge:n d”g‘ed deflnnnleyncfh:‘:osi?ae‘\ec\" icipate. Tven though other nations do|and there would be 700,000 more men to lhf; ane i B Stite Cotiar taake must pay a npational debt equal to!nyited, indicating their unqualified |dcfined by the Department of State's) 5 ¥ i not have re) ativel con! help carry it. pride and excl % = nat ) ] ; N ¢ i srestden 1larde | presentatives in the confer-| help carry i Jecisions impossible. The proj- Animal Tragedies. their national wealth; that if every. ... : { official announcement, previously com- son to belicve that Presiden Lo R R gl e The nations bordering upon Russia ; e ¥ is g % ty in the entire natio ngness to accept such an invita- i s. The Presi-:ing's original suggestion of Novem. ence, however, thcy are not itk > ] . conference, in other words, is - DIt of property In LD Cthe sum re-|tion. France was the first to for. | meut pelieving that-the wicle Prenl thek 11, Armixtice day, will prove ac-|kept in the dark s to the pu nnot so readlly reduce their armies | Fogarded here us concelved in a spirit|J"HAT _elflost unerring instinet ceived wouldino more than meel thelt; ward her cordial acceptance, and she | is vitally interested in, sceing agme- Ceptable toall fhie powers. - The et | e Tt emphes I ratiof | the saddle in thal ceuntry. its neigh-|of Practical eonstiuchive Rtilchmal. which carrigs animals through . t does not a 2 tht N ta » approprial S e is oh- | has Ie 2 ily; v AL oA . . based 2 r;l«’::fi—' :a"r::g::l?lml e oo bt 'wars| Was quickly followed by Italy, Great | hinE donc’ to lessen e TS . Vious, especially when it §s consider. | that the conference to be held in Wash- ! POrs Ry rematn AEMEAe .";ft'“.‘“[:x-ugh oo understanding in | Srave dangers has led in many in- o e xpected In the future they must i Britain and Chiga in the order named. increasing competition i armaments, |€d that all of the participants were Ington will not be a sccret conglave, it ‘9‘,’,";0“}’["‘1"3”‘?“':; (The only alterna- | the Pacific that will regularize and|stances in the Midway and Sunset continue to carry upon their shoulders There was a temporary hitch in the |had decided to suggest 10 the powers | associated in the world war, and that the influence of this government ls‘gu»’- “1“1“ international police force strong |Stabilize all interests in that quarter | oi] figJds of California to their unda- cpatingedi earry oo icase of Japan, however, though It |(hat a conference be held for the pur-|Armistice day, therefore, meant to all | ficlent to keep it open. * While such mat-{ 0f an intexna ane BO e SEEE B TOTR of the world and thus put limitation |0 "Topior among such viett 3 e @ermans _are in ‘tfe same | cannot be truthfully said that the|jose of endeavoring to reach some|of fhem the Cessation of hostilities. ! ters would naturally be decided by lhel;': B the Russian reds, and that|Of armaments within the realm of 3 3 ms are auandary. . Experts estimated their | administration ever cntertalned a se-agreement for (neirreduction. Thelf there is no serious objection, this|couference itsclf. it is helleved that there e hot be disarmament of any part | feasible achievement. | rabbits and water fowl. B onal srealth and their capacity to | rious doubt as 1o the action Japan |close relationship between the ‘prob-|date will be named in the formal invi- will be littie oppesition to a policy off 7, > | That being the case. the make-up| A fackrgbbit and a cottontau mna pay and fixed indemnities accord- Y onally ke, ine Sther |1om of 8 semeral redpSteiin military fationvwhich the Eresidont soon will} e = ¢} JIt has been suggested that the dele- | Of the confereice o felt to bé of con’!a nice round, sthooth hole. Tnere e ria confesses herself bank- : em, as in all the other 'strength and the many problems pend- | issue. . : nents cf disarmament point out] _* . W siderable importance. e name o . 4 S & ingly. Austria confesses herself barks | iy ernational tangics with ‘which he | ine 1o the bacific was obvious, and fos |- Suggéstions frofu countries outside | that the Iimitation of naval armaments| £ate3 10 the Washiagion conference | SIderable LD mer British *am- | many sucly in the ofl flelds where oil rupt. Hunga ! | wil be requested to consider the matter of bankruptey: France, Bel sium, Rus- | has been confronted in the four and i+ reason it was deémed advisable the group of “allied and associatsd | ¥ill be accomplished easily. if an agree- | of iCizing their respective countries|bassador to this country. has already | piping 878 nccessity for the trans- > Mteeco, in fact, every nation @ hal onths during which he has |to endeavor to arrive Btsome gencral | powers” that the invitation be extend-|ment can be arrived at. The German § P - | been suggested as one that would un-| portationief oil to the retainers, The sia, Greece, Beti Sechetaty GO & 1o refrain from ali attempts to de. - ® \which engaged in the world war save | hfl"b cretary of State, Mr. Hughes | policy toward the Pacific and the far|ed to include other nations intercsted | fleet, onice second.in power unly to Hiti ye1on the more horrible forms of war- | Questionalbly inspire confidence. Vis- | rabbits decide to set up housekeep- the Uniteq States and Japan, is in ! lnk r;l! aclmned by a desire to at-|ecast which would bé acceptable to|either in. disarmament or in the far,of Great Britain, has disappeared, ~80, | fare, which sciéntists claim could an-|count Bryce. although no longer in|ing there. - The cottontuil desires u the worst shape financially in all ita: tack the problem in the way which all, thus avoiding the frictions which feast, have thus far falled to changeto all intents and-purposes, have" the,,"fiiate whole armies and leave not a|the prime of life, is regarded as pos- | permanémf home and the Jackrabbit history. That the finances of !hls?““’"“ "“l”'_ll "{ to produce defi- | would inevitably aj to the detri- | the attitude of the administration that | fleets of Russia. and Austria-Hungity.| gingle man living. » | sessing the same sort of moral fervor | wants a réfuge safe from malevolent SOy, T In any too ood con- i Dite. practical results. Belleving there ment of the disarmament praject if fit would be unwlse to go beyond the | That eliminates three of . the-great-sea | '\ e, C. and {that characterizes Secretary Hughes. | man. country could be no lastin d di { Col. J. F. C. Fuller of Engl won | c Shtdon was Inilicated by the statement ; QU1 be no lasting understanding on | those problems wera left unsettled. - fgroup originally named by the Presi- powers of pre-war days.' The fleets bf | 4 gola medal offered last year by the | Viscount Grey of Falloden. ex-for-| Soon they discover their habitat is the_Secretary of the Treasury to .0 c‘:u“s st tm_nnurmumenl um‘l|l Stated in this way, it was regarded [dent. The Importance of the fnter-'| Italy and France-.are out of date, owinz| Royal United Service Institution for|eign minister of Great Britain, who | being moved. No doubt they are T - and that atetgment | on were removed. | s almost inevitable that Japan should {ests of Belgium and the Netherlands, lo the long interval which has clapsed e T e whrfass of the|was in Washington as temporary am- | frightened, but they instinctively sta ng; and perceiving that one of the most 9 3 the best essay y was ‘,,’,‘qf.,m‘.(‘ by President Harding | pn0) ROFCC VIR (978 2 el U! s eventually see the wisdom of thefjn the Pacific and the Tar east is fully | since replacement. by modern units. | fyture. In his essay Col. Fuller says, bassador in 1919, is also mentioned. "within their retreat. One end of the In persen on the floor of the Semate. | Projific sourees of future friction lay |course. The knowledge —that thelrecognized-by the President. but it|Those two nations will b glad of anconcerning the possibilities of gas: Other dominant ‘figures -regarded as hole is cloged.* Even then they do not Statisticians have discovered that, he far east, he |United States was-not attempting to|is belleved that any’extensjon of the | agreement which will render it unneces- Lite conceivable that many |possible candidates are Lord Robert|leave. f the other end of the hole g determined” that theré should be a | dictat hat shouls hould t is q o 8 althougli- the United :States 9“'"‘“’;.ememem of those qtestiens. before mc‘;‘? ‘é’ " should ;" should not be | conference beyond the original lmits, sary for fhem.to rebuiid .their naval!gases may be discovered which will| Cecil, Mr. Balfeur, Gen. Jan Christian js darkemed. Then it is darkness ThCWar llnte. our . expenses were | Sgttlement of those agestions beforo | discussed in the cenference. but was|would tend to combersomeness and In- | forces. The three. great naval powers | penctratg all known gas armor. As Smuts of South Africa, Lord Lee of feternaf for the (urry puir. . greater during the short period dur- |y 5500 b ishments should be taken x;crflt“ O e a'{’x'nmfl to the Famciency. of today are Great Britain, the United! there ho reason. why one man|Fareham, first lord of the British ad-| Bomé time later it is discovered ing which we were participants than: oFF got Il 2 e tion that (he | tone, also conld not but have been e ok R R X 7| States and Jepan. should not be able to release 100 cyl- | mirality, and Marshal Haig. {that a mewly laid .oil pipe line in in all the preceding 128 years of our | |35’ great problems be considered' at | assuring to the Tokl cen Te | SECRETARY HUGHES, with his| The following table indicates -the|inders simultaneously, there is no rea-| It is regarded as assured that, the:chokeff ~After greal Tusor the line i history as a nation. They iInform: ¢p.’ same conference. * ,“";“";““mmm tHa "hf"d goverhment. 2 8| present relative sea strength of those|son why he should not release several | prime ministers of the various British | disjointed and the remains of many us that i December, 1918, the month | “Nynile'® Secretary ~Hughes would | sumed otherwise than that the various usual eye to practicality, has de- three powers: In fact, these might be re-|dominions bordering on the Pacific!rabbits removed. Thousands of rab- following the signing of the armis-' yrobably be the last man in the | nations invited to participate ‘houid |¢ided that the number around the con-! T e i) sinc ARe ] bigy Aafbeen’ thusexterminated 15 tice. our expenditures were Breateri world to claim- such credit, there |freely express theit views both hefore | tersnce table must be kept to a minfmum ! et ol s POREr [ihe iR 4 . 2 {hat for all that period of seventy- | MOV 1% ‘G lan “oheervars of lator | o e e oy o hefore. H at the time of the conference, Pre-! The death rate among waterfowl Iwo years hefore the civil war. Dur- | national affairs who Insist. that he Fattoms e iene Dropecry . be 'Getiiaq | i any real work is to be accomplished, Rattleshiny mier Briand himsell will probablyis even greater. Agujn, us with the ing that single month we expended | has very neatly outmaneuvered both | therein, and it wWas emphasized that|The grouping of the “allled andasso-| Light criiac B e | e ey, Tittig take ol ) ;l:::. e.ltav,enm;re"m:fnen);" e s I‘hfo:Pr::;ml‘h:“gnmaeun{::‘r’n?:z“' rJ:l;l in accr‘zpungl eh-ch nation retained itsjciated powers” had already becen mlde':“""‘,:: f;g‘"" Iof (fle French forelzrf office, and|in té vicility of a gusher is a trap o . | pri “ . g The per capita expenditures of the | broposed dlsarmament conference to |state. asd thoyefere in no vlv':;dffignfl::; as a result of the developments of the | Afrcraft carrié: Briand's right-hand man, in close at-{for the unthinking birds At twi. United States in 1850 were $1.77; in | be held in Washington the British |itself to any particular line of actlon, |worid war, and It was therefore In- [ratrorer Ieaders . tendance. Marshal Foch is scheduled }light and dawn these tar-colored 1860, $2.01; in 1870, $7.61: in 1880, [ imperial conference met in. London| In this connection, it was pointed levitable that this' grouping should sug-| ™™ ° to arrive in Washington on Armistice |lakes appear as bodies gf water £ P $5.25; in 1890, $4.75; in 1900, §$6.39;! for the" purpose - of determining, out that the American delegation in’ gest itself to those who originated the ' day as the guest of the American the r!t_lu.tle.d fowl. ! . . s 3 3 - et