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. FEATURES Part 4—6 Pages ? . : . WABHINGTON, D. 0, SUNDAY MORNING, - AUGUST 28, 1921 Vital Work of Secret Service for Disarmament Conference ROGERS. wer v once send a code message to the ship ,maintain armed forces there a while Rt Dullaing Programe s tfetod thtonen in question which would change her |longer in order to “restore order.” THER thinge being squs B cunm et e o9 SaCTed thcnteh METHODS the United States Is Using to Obtain Necessary-Data on -Vital | |zeies S borfof asshation or tees the army with the best| Fhether any particlpant in iilisZoons rines 1ying in walt for that partic- | GECRETARY Hughes is 0 keenly intelligence system will foce . . Q i ular ship would be left holding the aware of the strong desire of the fatagasce i T b Questions—Getting at the Inside of the Facts Relative to the Far East ba Ind wondrin by h0" e | Supunese” sovernment o witharaw This statement has been attributed | Japan is known to be building three | . . : . ¢ e e, unwalen with Amet! |from Shantung and Siberia that it to Gen. John 3. Pershing. and he |Teiiadnsuenis; ot acwiedet| | Problems—How War Preparations of Other Nations Are Followed—Could Any | |issisd g, the gumyaics mith im0 o et it ne snoua t probably made, it, though it is also | the Japanese press. Hints have come | = gantlet safely. the conference table point out to the Mkely that Nepoleon Bomsparie, or | {818 MR ee ueratione soine | | Gountry Secretly Prepare for Warfare Other Than by the Well Known Methods of | |o.2ms 28570 St "5200: | Nivponsse delegaten & way wheredy even Jullus Caesar, made some Sim-|op jn that country in secluded ship- news was being sent out by the|it can be dome. To do this it will i . | ¥ 5 . o £ 2 e/ = adiy i id f Mexis 3 ki Nevertnaan Ion srve. o S| ok o or Mponsi o know: | | Attack?—How the Secret Intelligence Thwarted the German Agents in America in | |85 E Sttt “mere s 50 (2% Do, 0 2r, e o oo nothing. These hints have come record of the United States govern- To give a more modern twist to| from returning American visitors, | s - ment having complained regarding [rises in the morning, what he eats the same idea, it might be said that.|who, as Yankees sometimes do, poked the Late War_ L it. As a matter of fact, the station [for breakfast, what he does from day other things being equal, the dis- |around through districts other than was in many ways a distinct assetloq00" 0ng nighe to night—also who -dori or the Ishiwa - to the American authorities. The armament delegation with the best tv:‘fieras ea"l{n:el? regulated tourists ::; 5 5 > s 5 1 hat he|Military intelligence found a way to | Pays his bills. Secretary Hughes will intelligence system will be extreme- | supposed to go. The reports of these | vate von Papen papers were given to - “shadow” over. cll;lhe vhlowl o nir | B8t in close touch with the operators |know these ' things about Gen. 1y unifkely to come out at the little | tourists are vague as to details, but | the public. : ould Know Bim e Should e hm [at the station (all were Germans), |Semenoff, and pgrhaps a few concern- definite enough in the declaration that| ~The secret service agents who trail- ; again, laugh heartily at the Or . |and after ‘having won their confi- |ing Baron von Ungberg Sternberg. end of the horn. there is a deal of feverish activity in{ed von Papen so closely during his S . ] | Scpa Sctective, “fllflhfl on- ;‘lfl Joved | dence, a great deal of misinformation | Whence shall this information come? When Premier Lloyd George went |the matter of building ships in yards|operations say of him that to all ap- 7 1 |to jibe an hehr ldi e :dmf l"b'. was caréfully fed to them, which [From the secret service? Absurd! AT ce conference at Paris fe | Where visitors are not = welcomed. | pearances he had so little respect for | [ 4 : ; those whom e etected. -fo W h | hey triumphantly forwarded to. Ber- |Certainly not. The United States peu Some hazard the conjecture that these | the ability of American detectives . : bim: - To him T teat. Capt, | 4B, there to receive the grave con- |government has no secret service or took with him a corps of subordi- |ghips are a new UE of bombproof { that he made comparatively few ef- : o o played “' 80 -8 bo“ by u,,Clv'u sideration of the German ministry. |anything corresponding to one in nates, each of whom was a specialist | vessel, while others believe they are |forts to. cover up. his activities or : 2 e R w | . When thie disarmament conference |foreign countries. in his own particular line. They |the conventional type of battleship, { those of his ociates. He did, how- 5 S : % % i compelled (‘:ha%" e °|'.l| rely . NeW |convenes November 11. it will be| The delegates from each participant went to the Quai d'Orsay with large )and that the Japanese government |ever, warn.the more capable Boy-Ed . : G : G met od-‘ Gy lowing . vented, es- | I6Ce88ary for the American delegates | nation must be informed on the sub- portfolios, and when Lloyd George | merely is building three or four extralto have grester care. The latter, no . : 5 i . O O e e mioa- tme | t0 have at thelr finger tips the most | ject of future warfare. As this will be became a little hard pressed for |ones without notifying other countries|jouht amused that von Papen should . . pedT.l y m; toen"{l tflh; m"‘:m detailed information in regard to the |a conference on disarmament, or more facts, as he often did, they rushed |of the fact. speak to others of caution when he ‘ o - smv': ':fiflh“‘ n‘ "'I?.'!_ : ot ':';“d be | f8T eastern situation. Naturally it |properly stated, on limitation of ar- 10 his rescue. In this way the Brit-| Whatever is being done by the |y osiiged it so Mttle himself, must g b m i Al away . from | CoPROt be said that the United Stafesrl maments, the question will come up - - mu— ™' have chuckled to himself_when he B : : . PP K's" headquarters, and upon res Lk | mrote the following -reply: - Dear : . ceiving the signal that his quarry_had +4! Papen: A secret agent who returned ; Tott and was proceeding. in & certatn from Washington iy BaEthis ; i direction it wouldibe.his task to-keep Sosay- “The .Washington people are . . ahead of him. When Koenig: turned very- much- excited about von Papen o : @ corner the signal would be ‘flashed and are having a constant watch kept 7 : 4 - 4 |from. the rear to the front shadow., | on him. They have no evidence - . who. would' dart around. through side against Count B. (Bernstorff?) or : L : Atreets and. pop. out’ ahead) of him Captain:B. E. Boy-Ed was a bit ¥ i 3 again. If Koenig ‘bosrded .'a street too optimistic in his gentle rebuke - car the man ahead ‘of him would to vyon Papen. There was plenty of 4 / » board the same car, but would get on evidence, as he was to find out within ¥ . 3 : o it “several blocks -further on instead a very ort time, against both von 2 & : A of at the same stop, as Is customary in Bernstorff and himself. S F ordinary shadowing. One of the ambitious schemes of 4 2 e ¢ Paul Koenig trusted no man. De- von Papen was the military tnvasion 3 ot : teotives who trailed him for months of Canada by German reservists. To : 2 2 3 3 declare he never once sent a subor- accomplish this he caused a call to : e : ' : dinaté out on a mission that he did be sent out for reservists to meet at S : : e not send at least one man to trail New York city and other stated i : : | | nim and see in what manner the task points, where organizations would be - 7 i was pesformed. He insisted on know- perfected and preparations made for i & g i 3 ing every move of his agents and all the proposed invasion, the purpose of e g perapns they met while on assign- which was to keep the Canadians so ments. So extraordinarily shrewd busy with fighting within the domin- e was this super-spy that it was many fon that sending troops to France w , weeks before the federal and New would be out of the question. o York city agents, working togesher, * ok ok Ok & ‘were able to get the goods on him. His own brutality to those under THE response to his call for re- " s mr:‘; I'“ n&; lm:;\eg:ne u]ule ol“h‘l; servists elated von Papen. Hun- > undoing. o of tools receiy dreds of Germans gathered at the ap- “ ,‘;fli‘.‘tfi‘.‘;‘;‘,’,“'&.fi;‘,‘.’;‘.‘,’,‘.‘ D',:;’;‘.mfls pointed places. Among the most en- ‘ |28 he called Koenig, that he talked thusiastic were several United States s . {‘l;:'{;::r d‘};;“ht:"le'm"f""xfl“;';“":'d " » S e oenig secret service agents. From the most arrested ten minutes after the ap- promising applicants, those who p;-;nen:on of Wolf von ;‘wel, wkvho;e could furnish the most unimpeach- office he was bound when taken by able credentials, he selected a number :lp:;tflm GO T BT § & ‘whom he invited to meet with him at "_Frans -von Rintelen was another : conferences held at the German Club, 3 Elates by the Geoman government. where plans for the forthcoming in- Rintelen was charged with the duty vasion were discussed. ' Again the SECRETARY OF STATE HUGHES. of disrupting the intricate industrial secret service agents contrived to be | —________________ _______ |system of this country.by strikes, among those present. They were very Iexnlo-lonl. arson, sabotage, bribery, helpful to him in the formulation of | pass and other millions of German |one as well as for many others goes! murder, or by any other means what- his plans—most .excellent plans, but |dollars were wasted. to the Department of Justice.. - soever. ' He had-as willing assistants was not invaded by German| While von Papen was still a guest| Paul Koenig, known as “P. K.” by, many thousands of reservists and reservists. \ of the United States.and his country |his subordinates, was a sort of(sples, men who had, many of them, ‘There is no doubt, from Yacts gath-{ was at peace with ours, it has been | “master spy,” who took his orders{come to this country years before ered by.‘federal authorities, that the | shown that he supervised the pur-|from von Papen, and, aftef the de-:the time came for them to be used invaston actuall; planned, and|chase of plots of ground near the|parture of the latter from von Igel |and who had. e I d ‘s ‘purpose been | cities of Boston and New York, andHe had not the polish or education|in ay; ¢ "y 8 % 10! have | that ‘foundations--of -~ concreté - were| of * either 6f his two superiors,. but X . g 5 boon = ’ to in-| bullt theron for the mounting of ! was a remarkably capable man far{can ful be ¢ X S e i i Qe 73 with which to |the work assigned to him. He wasa| picion. P \ bombard those two cities and create |arrogant and dictatorial to those p ; & relgn of terror. But the secret|under him. Physically fearless, ilal = o service once more was on the job, and | drove them to their lawlessness by RINTELEN has BERTT pre s it is not recorded that either Boston [the most violently abusive language. “a mold of form, scarcely “n;"_ A. BRUCE BIELASKIL ey { or New York was bombarded. A tall, broad-shouldered man, he wes - e ey Wolf von Igel, von Papen's right-[Proud’ of his physical prowess and|eiSht years old, slim and upstanding| . .. ‘ice will play any part,for discussion, once the far east has v WILLIAM J. BURNS, NEW HEAD OF THE BUREAU OF INVESTIGATION Tock tg:lg-orrs“md various places h;.nd man, merits a bit more respect lax'tltxll:‘;asrol\(y’ocdael?'%“!;’l‘:gy;( nfi‘r‘{' il "("" "‘-'l""" shoulders, the bearing | yhatever in the collection of this in- | been disposed of: “In what measure 3 3 - than the common run of German an. ®|of an aristocrat, short stubborn hair, | formation, but when the time comes |shall we disarm? What weapons shall - OF THE DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE. > According to- the plan bf campalgn | plotters in this country. He was in |listening ear or a watchful eve—be-| "\ oo\ O B 00 & Independnet | it Wil be available. we discard’and what shall we retain? outlined by von Papen and his ad-|charge of the spy headquarters in|cause playing the eavesdropper was There have been many revolutions | Has the nation which this man on my ish premier often was able to emerge | Nipponese in that direction, it 'is|Visers a force of approgimately 150.- | New York city for four months fol- |his Job—he looked constantly for|twist, and greenish-gray eves that|. eastern Siberia, notably around |right represents anything up ité from what appeared to be a tight|fairly safe to.assume that President | 990 men were to have heen mobilized | lowing von Papen’s expulsion. When |SPies on himself. In this he differedigparkled defiance. He was the glass | Viadivostok. Each new revolution |sleeve? Has It a.new form of war- corner .and - walk away with the | Harding and Secretary Hughes are |and organized into six pectlons. Thelarrested by Joseph A. Baker, an|Somewhat from his more highly| "0l o000 ey oo or courtesy, |has occasioned a certain amount of |fare which will render it formidable hopors, while his opponents, less|not entirely uninformed in the mat- [first tWo Sections were to have 8s-|agent of the Department of Justice, |educated su . iors. He did not think : |disorder. - Japan has had troops in |even though it has no battleships and d tei 5 gembled at Silver Crek, Mich. The|and three other secret service men, he had the american secret servies|begulling with his gallant quips and |Siperia for about three years. They |no large armies? foresighted . than he, stood in a sort | ter. : CZ0-r | sembled at Sil e jAmerican secret ser * kX & 5 o slese the Welland canal|von Igel defled their revolvers and|completely hood-winked. . He KNOW|charming Mis hearers with his fas-{are not there with desi on| So it needs must be that agents of dedaseiacla syalanchialar facts and ne | 200 destroy it; the sbocnd would|engaged them-in hand-to-hand battle |that detectives were trailing him, c,n“,n:m,,,,, and comments, Be. |Siberia territors whatever. They are |the military and maval intelllgence ®hose Whe know Lloyd George|A FEW weeks ago, it is said, the|march on Wind Mill Point: the third |in an effort to get to the office safe|anxious to know what he and i there for the purpose of maintaining | sections apd of the secret ser e American naval attache at Toklo | was to have gatherdd at Wilson, N. Y. | and close its doors in order to save |underlings were doing, and he used|fore the war he was consldered one |;rier and for no other purpose in the | partments of every nation invited io jEeaesvRedicEshuifinel comenitoftne ! and from there advance an Port Hope, y imaginable tri . | his > ¢ |every imaginable trick to throw them | ¢ e : 2 2 - e v T e OO emer® ao hy | 28 approachied by & Japanese Naval|Cunada; the fourth would have Dro- |(lon. He sucoesdd i resehine the |Off the trail. He never went out into | o 19 atht o l:";n R e e I D P e s fall, he will be fortified, even as lleutenant who offered to sell certain | caeded from Watertown, N. safe and closing the doors, but before | the Street without three or four of|Was reputed to be worth adout 315,- |SUIECN, 85 Che facessiy for the'd) haps, thad i toat berios o O vern- RS Rt Pasf Already S chol Bx [Haly Kingston; the fifth, mobilizing at a his ow! n following at a distance ;000,000. He w. director of th J v i d the British |8ecret information concerning “the gston; mabilizin ho could turn the combination he|his own men following at a c ,000. as a ® | Tapanese government has said so. It |ment ying publicly that the Tecret Jertiee fra'at work gathering | naval plans af Japan for a million R e Dean e .m;?.::fl;g wasSverpowered: - though evcrpows | {0 ODSSTVe. Whethier he Was DEINE | Deutaches Bank and a member of the | b oabeta et e announcement | world had#fieceme 50 enlightened that . ; ! 5 ered he was not entirely dishonored, | “shadowed.” ot from Tokio that the withdrawal of |war would be impossible, and secret- e e hacver Chipune 'o Liovd |ddllars. The attache refused the of-|taking that city; the sixth spction,| 7o ‘he Siaq risked his 1o in doing his ok % dtréSlorates of other banks. Japanese tropps from Silleria isabout | 1y was preparing for it with frantic Tepresentastuss may be, if Briand, the | foF and reported it to the Japanese)more ~powerful 'than -others, was|gutyas he saw it. The papers taken FAVORITE trick of Koenigs{ 0 POWerful was this man and 50 i, hegin ehoild be so closely followed | haste. sending its agents throughout French premiier, or Premier Hara of | Sovernment. —The lieutondnt who|meant to leave Cornwall when the|from the safe told of every single 85| pighly was he regarded by his mas- |by a mew.revolution there which al- | the world # learn the secret plans of Jupan drived him too, hard in one |made it committed sulctle shorgy be: | signal was glven and launeh an at-|move made by the Germans in this was to turn a corner suddenly| . T T oo T T lhon he was|Wayé forées Japan against its will to | present frighds and potential enemies. of the thousand and one verbal | fore the. time came . for gfl‘“‘t‘Al“"'m" ‘;l;'h:n l;'om:;d:;: country prior to that date, April 19, and then stand still, so that when the | held prisoner by the English after lattles which are sure to punctuate what did this would-be traitor know|use of about the same number of re- l‘:},: ‘;g';”co“:‘;‘;g":‘s for the [fu:|detective trailing him also turned the |his downfall in the United States the deliberations of the conference. | of the navai plans of his country that|servists, was discussed for the in- S & the German government - offered to 5 2 5 they would meet face to Nor is the United States idly stand- 1 be worth 80 greata exico, value to|the United States'and to the | s8ms corner exchange for him any ten men the e xR ot et s S D itad Statos. and why was | yas ool Mexico, uoht APBarently | cause of the allles. Credit for this|face. Koenig then would look his al- tus ate paring_ the’ sfnews of peace. On the | his offer declined? It must have been|as was the Canadian enterprise. - - in German ‘prisons. third floor of the State, War and | declined (presumably after consulta-| A revolt of Hindus against the Brit- : s S ¥ master of spies, with the power of i , uite of | the American atta scheme which the busy von Papen e ¢ oldest fordf of bread by - offices has been set aside for the ex- | million dollars and knew that it would| was asked to work out, using. ine : : s which. permeated the United States, HE orlsinal Sotus featers Swara [ e Srean SoaL ook J‘;"! who. are preparing data for | be impossible to procure it for such al United States as a base for his op- e and who boasted that fifty or a hun- not lazy and luxurious persons. | gy1y mage: from crushed acorns and :e d:snn:ln_':nl conference. Those ; because - the United States|erations. According to detectives who : Bl | dred million dollars were at his dis- It is the habit of writers,| beechnuts, 8nd a writer who holds \ s fl;ger‘:!i!v.u T the most part, men |is too scrupulous to purchase informa- | kept . in touch Wwith deyelopments SR ; posal if he saw the need to expend speakers, and even plain con- | that the first bread was made out of » of éxperlence in the far east, | tion of Japanese. naval plans. which|along thie line, the Cermans had done : L such sums, this man was exposed and these nuts has said: “This form of and they xi{m.; to the assistance of | the Tokio governmerit does not wish it! some preliminary wokk among the ; . humillated by federal agents. work- | versationalists, to- refer to Certain | eaq js still made, and is held in no e :;':f'fi, 2 "{,‘.‘,:,' -: ::"e:lcltlx .lu mz?. ;': Jp‘l‘:fi"’ing n::fn'o‘::'e ;hle’ 'o;;:my glndul o'ven “:fi';" ntn‘e 'nr‘ began. oot a0 'Bnigl ."'!llg" the direction of A. Bruce |undesirable classes of mankind aslittle regard h¥ Indians on the Pa- TA ual co; - & /0 sooner wi fighting u WA, 23 e; ” oo " U tions in the orient. %" | fleq away in the State Department]than a flood, of Germen roney pewan . . 3 Ono_intelligence branch, -concern. | “lotus eaters” meaning that they |Giflc cosst of Tie, Unlted Buates, and . rll‘: Kuxhnllh‘o ’r:ny be expected to flrfl-lvelhg fi"?é“fl‘%:; vuiw }o pour into Hindu pockets. The-pre- | [ !':'xl‘ wnh:h‘ hlluuahl: :nnvn and prac- | are idle and lrlvalc;us. 'l;her: Were | the Pacific coast is the same as that - aliy d 3 rmy and le achievements of the, :se-1 limina: conversatia 18 said, | F . 3 cally nothing een written, and | in the ancient world real and true|employ: h 53 Navy for Lnee, b’o}:n_-tferor’, and | cret seryice -branches: of “the ‘United{ were n:,ld in Berlin. I't“;u- there that . < yet which was of very real value to |4, : “:e,, d they were as_indus- ;Euro;)e.od Al st during the gonference.” Both the mili- | States government. and of thef&mous| Shanghai and San Francisco were de. | | - the government during-tKe wat, was{ Or" an o Grinding ithe grains or seeds or tary and naval .jatelligence depart. | Domb squad” of New York:city d‘fl"'uld-d upon as headyuarters' for the ~ & : the radio intelligence divisfon of the trious and as hard working as peo- | oo NS LN Called “milling,” was, ments, which 80 unmistakably proved | Ing the war with:Germany would af-1Hindu-German conspirators: Three e Signal Corps.. ple who did not eat the lotus. in the earliest times of which there is their worth in combating the efforts | ford material’ for volumes of absorb-|years were to be Eiven over to prep- 6 . The United States Army.radio sta-| Among. the Egyptians the lotus, [a written record, & part of .bread- . of Boy-Ed, ven Papen and Rintelen | ing reading. : : arations, and in 19i: the “Diamond tion‘at Fort McIntosh (Laredo), Tex.| oyion important’ member of | Making. In Genesis it is written that during the world. war, are stili doing b areriag . ~|Jubilee of the Indian. mutiny,” which was wulpged with special apparatus,| Which 1s an importa Abraham bids his. wife Sarah “make business at the same old stand. none | ~OUNT JOHANN VON = BERN- |occurred in 1867, a general uprising, . | designed by the foremost' radio .en- | the ‘water lily family, was an article | 1.qy quickiy. three measures of fine the less efficiently because of numeri- C - ! was scheduled to take " o gineers in the country, and a group|of food with the common. people, and | meal, knel.g‘ it and@ makes cakes upon cal reductions. < STORFF, the . commander-in-. groups of. Hindus. sailed from- San| | y of carefully’ selected operator: it 80 extensively used that it|the hearth® and it has been inter- N That the Secretary of War is fully |chief of German military and naval Franctsco for the Philfppines,: taking e s 3 4 nounced. by their superiors to .be the | it W28 S o boen | preted that “make ready three meas 7 alive to the dutles which devolve upon operations on the American sector .na}qnnntmn of money and arms, think- best in the' Army, were detafled for |may properly be sald to have’'been; .. ",/ gne meal” meant that Sarah ® him is evidenced by his statement, ing it would be easy to.go from there | |- : that station. The. instructions for|a staple food. ‘was to mill the meal. made shortly #fter tire President sug- | °Nly incidentally ambassador tg. thelio India without having to .answer : this group of operators were to.copy| Herodotus of Halicdrnassus, in his| The Egyptians were not dependent gested the canference, that he had|United States government. and Dr.;embarrassing questions frem: customs . E ¢ every:single word.that possibly couid = upon lotus bread. They ground up a already, upom his own' initiative, be- | Theodore Constantin Dumba, who and port authorities. Twa:ships, the ’ be Copied in il measages emanating |record of . travels and ' researches | BROR (PVCD RS, oY Tt Mo mong gun the work of assembling data for schooner Annie Larsen and th -1 § : from & certain radio 5 g e Ly ¢ srain, among use in the conference. C {filled a like dual position for the de- | or ' Maverick, both of Amgfl&m- S - ico'which was nw@'e'&. s:’;‘.:,:f.‘,fi. et K e dwelt | biwed Joaves that Tooked Something | hart Germa: wrote of the Egyptians who dwe ed lo: x ¥ *x X lhlnet Austrian empire, successively:istry, though owned . a rman b s st : | ikea Toaves That Tooked someching URIOUSLY enough, the next day's)were investigated, by the American|Raval officer, were chartered by the 2 § . ‘For a period “of. fourteen months | in the morasses as being elvechllfi Proved that they ste hot rolls, and e : itar; | i, "Tnd "Annie Larsen. wan 1 there was an operatér on: duty day|fond of the lotus, and they. found|Broves tOe PREX V€, SO0 fros Cig y or contained imstruc- l-secret agencies. .Tho arrogant .and { g ;mg “THe Annie Larsen was slezéd & and night at ‘this station,’ with hig|it to be of great value as food. |that s sopy emace these Dot ol tions for no less than six military | contemptuous von' Papen, suave:aid by the United States govérnment and | g e, ot i wiign, with W0, e of, gment Yalue, o | wire Sprin i attaches at' vafious forelgn capitals |courtly Boy-Ed, unsorupulous Rinte-Was found to°be laden. with arms and L “tune” of the station under suspicion, | 8 full and has made the-plain like | *3% L0 50, ‘-fl‘ R e ar o b & . RO Pt unition. : The Mayeriok, ‘with a ; and - thousands' of mes, 8 a sea, great numbers of lilies, which{ . ° oL Q‘n‘h B I oieh to return immediately to Washington. {len, brutal Koenig, ‘reckléss vo Igel, similar cargo and a considerable num- . 5 copled. Nearly ug-mu““. i 2| the Egyptians call Jlotus,- springup | CF ,b: ian Stbresdmaking cedsed Discreet questioning at the War De- | gallant von der Golts.and adventur-|ber of. Hindus aboard to superintend i were in code, and ‘ths code was hardly | in the Rater.” These, accordmg. to T ES RS partment elicited the statement that, ‘cus du.Quensne—all were outwitted, | its disposition d use in, India, got 3 ? ver. the satie for tae, ey alin Ec' D Sittaredientiuried T hlhlmm" he public buker, s Quing to the scantinets of the latest|cutmaneuvered and ctecked in every)sway, but was seised by ‘the Dutch : . ’ : Cenilon. , Bach mebeage. o n SUe- n'the sun and “then, having pounded | Who was both miller and baker, cemc ment I Pprectically “briic! chat in | {avan o-geter to a5, Hdioqe Fapkeca: | Tormation Zaraiehed 5y e bniiza | | . as’ it was ‘copied: by, the- operatos et | the middle. of the iotus, which re- |0 be known Qrstin Home. On & RO, ment is practically broke; that in|loved to refer to as “idiotic Yankees.” | formation furnished by the United| | the “listening-in" statfon at Fort Mc- | Sembles a poppy, they make bread of | JU0H FIETD depicting one Eurysaces, a view of this fact the wisdom of bring-| Capt. Franz von Papen’s statement,, States secret intelligence. ¢ ; 5 Tntosh, wonld - 'be. rushed to. Wash. | it and bake it -The old chronicler ; bas-rellefs Fop Cing OVe TVVACTTCL O ing Army officers- home from forelgn | “I always say to these idiotic Yankees PFEFRC TR : 3 fniost, would " R Wit | e pR Y A o S e S PSS e ' capitals to Washington is perfectly | they had better hold their tongue: ity & % t busy on it and “preak” it. When |2lso it for food “and is tolerably tian era. The sculptor attempted. to lcince’ Whascier e Tt okt | lowed shovty Shtervagd whe watel m“rmnlm“l” o et Y & {deciphiered, these messagés were found | sWeet and is round and/is of the size | Lian efa, TLog SEmIRIOr B D nak- nificance whatever in the fact that! followed shortly afterward. The state: Q SrRiORE (RFeR ] NERINE faks thel idaciphiered tnese mediiads ws s srce sad I [ |l S — Sl had e el Y ernage O | B e wor iy capth £ 88 AmCrenn “1ts} . 3 pertaining to-the military premars.| - “There were also other lilies, like [ Ing as practiced by th's, mostor TO8 0 call had been stationed at perhaps the | by the worthy captain to an American, | fate of the~Hindu conspirators. " 1Its' | ; i nihe tothe ‘miiitar m‘hn' 4% s oo oy Men Jt 158 5B m:':,nm“ H most interesting capitals on the lisL!L‘apt. James F. J. Archtbald, -and wl!:nlrk was to_ furnish ‘money for the{ for. troop shipments, ship, sattings, the | BTOW: in_the river, ‘:’I:lulho trmlth:: " m‘mm- “n:'r--lntmt.h A el L In view of this explanation it would|intended oply for Teutonic eyes. Inj, . nise of some hundreds’of thou- | i state“of public sentimerit ahd a great .eonuine: l‘x:u: tlh.:ltoot mvodme ot | d horse-power: the operation of ’ De difficult to charge the War Depart-+due course it found its way. into the ; - enitin &3 . ment with wishing to leArn. from | hands of the United States secret|sands.of rifles and millicns of ‘rouhds - ] Sormin ho Speion. FAtNREOd by the | Very like s wasp's nest, and in.this | fahning the bran from the flour: the those military _attaches something | service: agents, and along -with . it{of cartridges and to deliver-them “to 3 ¢ taten, . which: was - B there are many berries it to be eaten, | kneading of the dough: the shaping cnncedr‘nin! n;e pe&be!pr‘ehpau‘notnu of o;:er‘awll'ln(-n_ln code. It v::dntood certain’ groups ol-vmndu'n, whick un-: Y 8! % & .,:.v.n. -m.sz:a‘ g:_l.v.% :1&!1‘!’.";:5 fng of th Joie i a Itho' . friendly nations, but the fact re-! code, devised .guar- oups of: is, Which 5 £y | they- are % om, sending. mains that the aforementioned mili- | anteed to ~be fool-proef. Yet :theidertéok: to-distribute them among the | 2 which. Hesdorus”aimo wrote' of snotier 4n- | them off 1 great ¢ baskets on the backs ttaches ought to be able ta talk | Yankees, in their usual “half-witted” “Rurtled-into the ether - 1 nt, of whlfi\:_tm“%mta: Tiver the o the Daler's ,j tary A r ‘'when: ¢ rather interestingly on_such subjects | manner, stumbled upon m:“qu to ‘it., S 2 g3 wireléss station’ in . Mexico. qrece ees d-.. v Cihat “when the|tomers. .If the mame of that baker ' n ington a | The messages were-read, given.to the - 2 T eoks honce, " Tvashington | O B pers and apread” broadeas In its inception it wes a.parfeetly | : * Eayptlins had pulled it:up in’ the(was Eurysaces, he was, no doudt. & f the close observer can detect}a public that mingled a little amude-1legitimate war move. . T.ie-manner of fens they cut off thetop ot it, ““which n:u n:: lmntmnee mu mm! 2 signs of the qulet gathering of secret | ment with its indignation. Voft Papen{ its . attempted execttion. was jinde- T they. put to other uses.” but the low- | Home. and the lnterence 's b o Sutelligence by the governments of | was ordered to leave the. country amd| fensible, for -the United States, which e or part; which was left “to thé length | lic bakerles were beto: Great Britain and the United States, | the public was -a bit more prepared{at -that. time was' neutral .and sin- E of .a_cubit, they-eat and: sell” . As}they we = the signs are no less unmigtakable | for the war, which many péople were | cerely desirous-of.remaining so, was ? thori o Mave i ; | Herodotus ‘puts it, “Those that were —_— that the governments of Italy, Japan, | beginning to desire, rather than fear. of operations, Tha plot > R s anxibus to eat the byvius,dress it in) 1 and even of China, are engaged in) With a feeling of contempt for the . of .the rveélduy .ef- & the most delicate manner, stew it in Steel-Head Trout. ihe -ssme eager search for that{British similar to that. already. ex-{ficiency of the Americar secret serv- r & _hot pan and -then ‘est it.” - Those HE steel-head trout is classed as a knowledge which will make for se-|Pressed for the Yankees, Capfain von|ice, which” von: Papen regarded so htfi early ians Who ate bread made T . gt % curity and power wken nation faces| Pepen carried with him o :olrd the | contemptously. ~/The leading :Hindu from dried’ lotus -flowers and: the salmon by fisherfolk an fish nation across the conference table in|steamer Noordam: & portfolio-. of cc.nsgrum ‘were brought to Sseds contained in them, and Wholyng trade, aud #t is said that it was ovember. - Papers which- told . of - many of -his|8an. One relished’ stewed byblus, fl‘:o Ge:to:mod given the name “steel-head” because .1t is absolutely essential to each of | criminal activiti Inst the Uni sun-dried flsh, and"thie cld-Greek re- | £7V=h e & thege governments that, before enter- 1 Ve mmr wrote that some o mmy .:dmu—‘_ hnons ".Fhlif ing into the conference, it shall know “live entirely = lnui hm'tnum men that ft.often requires several Yhe precise relationship of its own k PRAY: ; o . Clean mflmmn sthe sun-and oL T om & club. to kill this fish et bow T il atead el ed British, Hvered; the: rebeliion:did not.ceme te| 3 £ hE v £ £ 0 ‘Washington ‘would' at !’ Bread made ffom"10tus was not the’ wien captured and taken into a boat. sarmament, how it will stand with PP, S5 Aaerey