Evening Star Newspaper, December 6, 1921, Page 3

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THE - EVENING STAR; WASHINGTON, D. C. TUESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1921. WOULD GIVE NAVAL [T isSIONS TO CHARGE JAPAN IDRPSES), . LAY [cer oo cowenenc | ' IS SEEKING RIGHTS IN SIBERIA FAVOREDIN EUROPE <z e o > ~ P FIGHRESPUBE[:"Y Priyate Represe’ntativn of Chita and [mwN BH'NA RU‘-ES French Press Likes Proposal, | "iw Yori. December ¢.—reace|Suggestion Made That Faots| ~ Vladivostok to Lay Developments at |American Familiar With Situ- . .Dairen Before Conference Here. . | ation Declares Path Must | ~ APOWERALLIANCE **Seawraiveo v ronce Lord Riddell Declares Policy of Publicity Here Has Exceeded ‘Others in'Liberality. NEW YORK, December 6.—The * sotiation of nations,” mentioned by President Harding several times since his inauguration, and post-war eco- nomic issues, will form no part of But Awaits Further |uai*%hc“minassr never endure.ene| and Arguments Be Placed into common accord peace will not be i definitel 4" John Bassett T Details. R O L R LR Before Public. - : Be Pointed Out. the Washington conference on limita- g permanent court of international BY JUNIUS B. WOOD. 10. Acknowledgment of responsi- & tion of armament, Lord ' Riddell, | Cuba, Panama,Peru, Chili. Acrossthe Justice, declared last night in an ad- BY G. GOULD LINCOLN, . That Japan has made recent de- 3}"?;1,%'; .-‘yh’. fl”fi;’:‘:&"{(fi?”mm English newspaper proprietor at- Andu,Arganina.UnlElle Brasdl WANT UNION FOR. PEACE itess=t2 Ran-Amertoan Society din- ggestion emanating from Jap-|termined and expensive efforts to| Most of these are agreements which |PEACE IN HUGHES’ HANDS |tached to the British delegation, &s- | 64 days; from NEW YORK Feb. 11¢h ¢ carve out a new sphere of special |Would not necessarily appear in any clared yesterday at a reception ten- fifi{figflg%flfifi_—mh) anese sources today 1s that the figures Tlies liundred members of they 50 treaty of “friendship, commerce and _— dered him by the Association of For- clety and their guests, among whom {°f the naval experts of both Japan|privileges in Siberia will be told to - 4 1 navigation” submitted to other pow- L eign Press Correspondents. Write for One London Paper Sees in Plan|ere Henry W, Tatt. Beltran Mathlou ;rln: ;::h‘i:lt:d States be 1tia before | the conterence by two misslons which |ers. *Fowever. they would ba of para- |Declare Some Method in Arms| Describing _the Washington delib- AMERICAN EXPRESS 53 i ana Federicwr Reast. Chileanand nce committes on limita- [are here, one .from Viadivostok and|mount importance to the two coun-|"T . erations as “the greatest thing the { Solution of Anglo-Jap- States. respectively, and Felix M.|tion of naval armament for considera- | the other fiom Chita Both come as | tries affected. Limitation Must Be Followed |World has ever known," Lord Riddel Siates . % Rl The Ussuri rallroad connects Viadi- declared its policy of publicity bad Travel De arburg were presen & explanations made by | private citizens, as none of the nine | yostok with Khab : . ’, arofsk and with the Fi East. been more liberal than that governing anese’ Treaty. gReterring to the proposals for naval [each nation, and that they then be|powers in the conference has recog- | Chinese Eastern rallroad, a link in i ¥ar. East. any previous meeting of world-wide| 1328 F St. N.W. Washington % By the Associated Press. e I e ratary of Staje|made public by the conference with|nized either the far castern republlc | the Transsiberian. With a well defns BY WILLIAM T. ELLIS. political and ceonomio importance. . o he pral e manper in which | ———— ~|ed plan in the conference to continue or the troubled Merkuloft govern- |y Pl oo Bastern, In which France | Certain nations here seem to think | American newspapermen had handled ment in the area of the Japanese eX-iand Belgium as well as Russfa are |that they are in an oriental bazaar, for [the news emanating from it. a three or four power agreement to|Deace among the nations of the| Kotaro Mochizukl, leader of the op-|pedition around Vladivostok. Japan, |financially interested. under interna- i .| In an informal discussion of the earth,” Mr. Moore said that the per- * & : 4 2 purposes of dickering and bargaining; he A lo-Japanese alliance ' osition pai .| however, occupies a less clear-cut tional management, the Ussuri, in the conference, Lord Riddell was asked Teplace e Aneio manent court of international justice | » Tty in the Japanese parlia- | RoWever, oceupies o, CCues In the|hands of & single foreign power, would | Whereas they are really in a church—}if there was any possibility of the js received favorably by the news- ‘lso representgd the desire and the|ment, believes that by such a course 8 . % i D ferance Her troops in Viadivostok | give the desired economic control over [and an. old-fashioned' church, with a|suggested association of nations be- papers, although the details of the|will for peace, but in a special and|it would be possible to clear up the|made possible the revolution Which | the last remaining open door into Si-mourners’ bench. This conference is a |ing Injected into the agenda. He re; PARIS, December 6.—The SUSES-|Ifuches.as: “the greatest promise in |Such comments as the conference com- tion at the Washington conference of |all time toward establishing real |mittee desires'to make. caited before any extended | ld¢al sense. situation which has develaped In con-|put Merkuloft into power, and her | beria and Manchuria and the vast re- plied that that had been disposed of plan are l_“‘l“dfl oo In regard to his election to the|nection with the ratio of naval|diplomats have been in Dairen since|gion beyond. place to hear the gospel of interna-|g %" ougipility at a meeting of dele- comment is indulged in. judgeship, Mr. Moore sald that the|strength, b-5-3 as suggested by the|Ausust, negotiating with representa- | “Though a number of persons know | tional righteousness preached; to profess | gates, who decided the subject should The Temps says: “So far l!' we [ council and %he assembly of the league | United States and accepted by the|tives of Chita in an effort to put|the proposals which have been made |penitence for past sins; to promise right be kept in the background as one not Froneh ace voncerned, anything which | of nations were aware of their great|British, and 10-10-7 as suggested by | Siberia in the role of “accomplished | by Japan at the Dairen conference, I|living in the future, and to win fellow- |aPpropriately to be dealt with. Comsolidates peace is acceptable, and | obligations to Elihu Root, but that{the Japanese. facts” before it reaches the con bl a Pbacific alliance will be welcome | Mr. Root was understood to have e Must Convince Public. ence, are n:t;ic?xn‘ylon‘l?:t‘f “';:xfimhfif-léhg ship with the brotherhood of natlons. e S heren timated that, as one of the framers of | . 3 Chit Skv t “the mission from| Such is the idea that ran through the > . i ghtly or wrongly, Mr. Mochizuki Proposals to Chita. one of misslon fro . , M. Saint-Brice, foreign editor of Le|the fundamental statute, he felt he|qaiq oday the meaale of Japan have| Though the long-drawn-out mego: . “progress at the conference |conversation of “an old China hand,” Journal, expresses the sa s been led to belleve that both from |tiations at Dairen have been a closed [ has been slow. It would sit for & yho ig far from churchly, whom T came y sand remarks that it would not be an the most im- |day, when the delegates would ad- the stanpoint of national security |diplomatic conferenc across today. Years ago 1 knew him journ to ask Instructions from their alliance for offense or defense, but A stanpolnt o sacus! O enTapas g “for _the neutralization of rivalries’ 14,000 CLOTHES WORKERS | 525ar" chouid " have ot 70 per “cent D & ‘are reported in documents | Eovernments, wait for two weeks and [as a militant American in Shanghai. x -*ax‘r:",;B;:;‘: f:‘:::::nz':"';;‘;de“; naval strength when compzred to the | which reached here several days ago. | hold another day's session. drastically cleaning up the American liotably the Russo-Japanese and Fran- RESUME NEW YORK JOBS Daval strength of the United States|It has been iprongssd, tiiat Chitafass Responsibility Is Disclaimed. name out there. His talk in Washing- co-Japanese understandings, which _ O et o e e he e | et L e Papamese subjects the| . “Two differences on which there{ton wis Interlarded'With expletives that Tad the same basis, as well as the i Baller maat be el frow | thell fret o bovaintty to purchase aiy suw:| sesned 1o be 1o liops of sxreciug wers|were never dessned in Sunday school Mediterranean agreement :s;m the|Shops Reported to Have Settled | minds of the Japanese, or else it will | materials exported from Siberla in the :f:f“ff)‘,'“;‘;‘:’}?.‘;fig’;""':,";'l‘“‘h““‘;;’a&‘;,; Yot ihel wassinglslentizpon ihe eonten panish accord on Morocco. be impossible to bring about Japan: 5 > J oops. » sion_ that right, and only right, is the s : “America accepts the Pa- With Unions in Dispute ratification of an sereement. made | s Enacting a tariff by which goods | Wiling to have responsibility for Niko- |single basls upon which this conference Leader of British Delegates THE AVENUE AT NINTH “ific pact because such a pact is as- here by the Japanese delegation pro- | of Japaness manufacture will have n) laievsk fixed by an impartial commis- |can succeed. surance against an Asiatic war.” Over Piecework. viding for only a 60 per cent naval | preferential rate lower than on those sion investigation, but we do not col = . 5 Both the Temps and Le Journal strength. D har Gountries imported into Si- |¥der ourselves responsible for that un- Peace in Mr. Hughes' Hands. Praises U. S. for Lead in ‘ticles were written before it was | BY the Ausociated Press. In other quarters, however, it was|peria. fortunate affair. Whenever the evacua-| Let me summarize the views of this 9 ficertained positively that France| NEW YORK, December 6.—Fourteen | pointed out todey that the question| 3. Leasing of the Ussuri railroad totion of Japancse troops twny'gf,’;,‘g‘“;;{ vigorous middlee-western American, who Conference Call Was included in the plan, but the|thousand of the nearly 60,000 clothing |Of flgures of the naval experts has|japan for 20,000,000 yen, of which| e were " = % v v i 4 be " | iating ‘to the Japanese army was a|knows the whole far east intimately writers were unanimous in insisting | workers who went on strike November | beon settled in the meetings of the|?2000,000 has been offered to the Mer-| AUNE 110 FIC olfl_”amn T at evac |having represented the American gov- | By the Assoclated Press. A e B iy o naval experts, and the Americans|uloff government. | dom X A NE R eomeit: » e T D e iy, obS il | have maintained clearly that the 60 kuloft government. ensive timber-cut.| uation could not be put in the light of |ernment In more than one spot: | NEW YORK, Detember 6.—Amer- to Benfamins Schlesinger. president of | DeF. cent suggested for the Japanese | ting rikhts in the maritime province | pu ‘ment for a trade treaty or agree-] Secretary fughes has the Do nd |ica’s action in calling and successfully a y SOLUTION TO TREATY. the International . Ladies' ~Garment [ Raval strength is more than fair| 5. Sale of the . government-owned | Moy him the undivided support of a nation {directing the armament conference in “I¢s delicious” Z t i ] D00~ | TWo ‘separate Japanese expeditions Workers' Union, The 14,000 workers, { When it comes to figuring the ratio of | Suchan mines with deposits of 13,00 oo £ S bent only on doing what is right; a | Washington will stand out in history Vs thé navies on existing strength. 000 tons of coal to a Japanese cor-|are now in Siberia. One is as Viadi- he:says.arelemployed in 870 shots, while £ 03 Vostok, @ survivor of the allied assist- | hation which, for reasons often pointed | ymong gimilar international efforts Cinderelia Bldg. 14th at G St. London Papers See Way to Happier i i Pres oration. £ ¥ e o S e ey B oo Erevemt S o poratlon. fon of the Russian laws|ance to Kolchak. The other is in the |OUL today possesses the unquestioned |, oo oong Order of Society. The Clothing. workers walked out in | oo Jor a8 reaching any decision bY [ egulating the Saghalien and Amur|Saghalien district, the district \ncluding | leadership of the world. Ho and |toward world peace as the greatest NDON. —o protest againet resumption of the plece-| 15Ures when the question of national | river fisheries which the Jipanese|a conslerable portion of the mainiand {America can do anything anywhere on | that has ever been made. Arthur J. HOUSES LONDON. December 6.—Only one | TS B804 0r compensation, which the | sosarbiy oo aoaseas )ity Homld be 1t | nayy, has seized. fround th mouth of the Amur as well | earth for peace and justice, and get | Baltour, head of the British delega- Furnisked Unfurnished Jondon newspaper comments today | sk o o e bevormg ar- | DoSSIble to accomplish any result, it| "% Razing of the Russian forts at|as the northern half of the island of jdway with I When ho came oul ot tion, declared in an address before the P on the suggestion of a “quadruple |féctive November 14 in place of the so- | ™ am S%d i Vladivostok and an agreement not to)that namec. Evacuation of the Vladi- |the opening session of the conference, . ot 1 e s b % ententer ae spoken of in Washing- |called “week work” method, under| gy’ United States, with its tremen- | fortify any of the Siberian coast op- | vostok expedition, which has been suc- | With a definite pronouncement and pro- | ENglish-speaking Unlon here. ; From $185 Per Mooth Up ; D ; e orkors were. paid 5 sested sap, | dous coast line on both Atlantic ana | pocite Japan. o D atifted ‘a8 aiding “Kolchak, | Eram for the reduction of armament,| The British delegate complimented JOHN W. THOMPSON & CO. ton dispatches. The Daily Chronicle,|ary regardless of the amount of work | Lacific coasts, and with its many . Establishment of a thirty-five- | evacuating the Czechs and safeguarding |he at once reccived an indorsement | President Harding and Secretary of "INC o ports, might well place a very much | mije zone in Siberia along the Korean |]ife and property, has been promised by | that amounted to a mandate from hu- | State Hughes on their foresight and 821 15th St. Main 1477 slliance,” says: they were not getting adequate returns | 1ar5or, Percentage to its credit when | porder from which Russian troops are | Tokio for ot than a year, . Tae last | MaRity. 5 the spirit of national sacrifice mani- o S S ___{from this system. mn“‘}‘ by m" ’l‘l ;Ml ';‘"“ffl)' S | to be prohibited, taking Possiet bay,|cables said that a new division was ‘America, through Secretary Hughes, | fested by the American nation in of- | == —— e — This would be a way of scrapping gonsidered than it has when fEur-|a natural harbor‘equal to Viadivostok. | sent from Japan to replace it a_few | MUt repeat® the same method in con- | fering to make huge reduction in its thie Japanese treaty very much to our | T Hughes. PTh"a nme“émfi ‘C;fy l;z out of Russian control. days ago. As to the Saghalien expedi- | nection with the far eastern question,|own Navy s “Washington—The Most Livable liking, for it would substitute for dt| = = - oo 4 Lulely in terms-of | Great Britain, with her many R aics Granted by Seminoff. tion, Japan has consistently said that |If thls mnfcfen;: Is not to be dickered | “America.” he said, “has approach- City in America” something bigger and better, and 1f | oo e menta between cor- | &nd long lines of communication. The | 9. Recognition of the cqncessions it Wl 0o be SEECHeiss, on 1 Chig e (and bnrgained dnd whidica way into | o4 the aeston of) 1miting neval || e a8 14 : ¢ i United States, it was mphat- | to Japanese subjects which have been i 2 Sl a i 2, \greed to support it, one great cause ;fl;b‘e‘:&?::e;i“o‘:\al::)‘“kxu-clll:z: tmm.- ically, did not take h\l:l:zendsiser?u.on gm‘&d by Seminofr, Merkuloft and | laievsk. open session, with the whole earth]approached. I believe success is now HE Great Possi- ddpete 3 t S lcoking and listeni within its grasp.” for anxiety would be rgmove Bolven to protect their common views. | the question of “national security” as | other transient leaders. (Copyright, 1921.) s et ‘h;"““;::;‘fih,“’wroggg‘a;; :fl_: e | bilities of which refers to the proposal as “an |turned out. The manufacturers claimed Discussing whether &merica would X . i T |It thinks such a voluntary free asso- | Such in making its proposal for limi- a r i Traartional "k‘;]a(‘;‘t‘lao:cemmal‘l'i‘:nwc&‘ et | ciation might well be a condition of | tation of naval armament, but mere- China and Siberia must end. and sim-| He said that through the proposals = ixae traditional objection to alllances, In2| {5l ding of a new and Tappler or- | 1y the aquestion of existing naval | ble right must be done. He has what |made public by Mr. Hughes at the Washington for o A iy B 1- der of international society. strength. It is maintained by the | : L called ‘the imponderables’— | firgt gession of the conference Amer- S : eat_difference between the old 2 e | United States that that is tne only | jrieht, justice, the spirit of the times | ica had set an_example which ' the Investment interest eas i con- | p corld— > . 3 5 : SPECIAL NOTICES. SPECIAL NOTICES. | Sasi0e oo iet ot Smaval baniaing. }la:r;mm.:‘s e, Civilization Wil sup gther nations would be ashamed notffl capita] all over Amer- e COODS TN STORAGE AT || WILL NOT BE RESPONSIBLE FOR| Furthermore, the three naval pow- . in calling a hait upon e The following telegram from Pre- = 2 FERONS TERVING GOUDY TN STORAEY o |debts locurred by parties other than myself. [ers are making plans for peace, and PeltifogEing and chaffering, now under | mier Lioyd Gearge was read by Jonn [l 1c3,and our connections esimned ot onte. H. BAUM & SON. ¢ |HARRY T. MOSHER, 304 13th st. n.w. ° |not for war. They are the only three | way, which are trying 16 determine | W. Davis, former American ambassa-|lll facilitate t ti e TIEREBY GIVEN THA Hair great naval powers of the world to- i | just how much of the loot stolen from |dor to Great Britain: acilitate transactions. 3 s day. | ipoon weak, debauched China shall be “I cannot resist your telegram. I returned to her. have nothing to say which will not be NOT! smeeting of the stockholders of the Washington d Ordn; Steel Company, & corporation | Scalp treatment and faclal massage at your 2 Py Created oa orpaniacd under the laws of W | bome. Mrs. OCHSMAN, Franklin 3074, 21° The‘:',':‘nv::l',' ,:",’,: :::,::;d,““ | Proposes Four Points. sald much better by Mr. Balfour. Of “Maximum Service Ay of December, 1921, the following reso- AS AN INDUCEMENT FOR |of the conterence here. due to the fact | Beli c 5 -Admiral E ts Week Will Instead of this sort of sophistry and ,‘:}‘,J‘é‘;,j;fiffi,‘,‘.“&’h;"mfehinfifi-“ et service with,a degree of lons. were adopie the holidays T will put you in a |that the. Tokio zovernment must (D0 Not Believe ConcessionsjAdmiral Expects Week Will inaseing, suppose secretary” Hughes | R ar % enjoying you knowledge and thor RESOEVED, fist Tt the Washiogton Sect| DA Y i dp y fl" @l heard from before further steps can ehouia declare, I a_pienary meeting, | R°5RIL Y (OMERG ME The trust. and oughness that makes and Ordnance Compans, erfect, new, ardwi 0Or, {be taken by the Japanese delegation that this country wa in order to " ind orgeoized under e Tawa of the wiat of | D e, o e fmieion oz| Will Be Made—Resent Pass Before Reply IS {lihcvate poctiniiny ‘of ‘war in “ne. Fag | affection of his countrymen. We have |[j successful results practi- West Virginia, does hereby discontinue bust | fyrnished, laid, scraped and pol- Eas i : 3 as & corporation and surrenders to said | - d, ‘ala, {armaments. It may take several days, " ” . t, and in order that tie standards|corded him by the United States. ‘eharter and corporate franchises. The | jshed, dining room, parlor and|it was sald, before the instructions “Wrong Impressions. Received. of civilization may be_observed, these | ““T1 "\ Tniint opening of the con- of directors, who are as follows. Cor- tion hall, not ding 450 |"°quired can be obtalned. 5 four definite actions, taken by all thelference the rapld progress made "'nmm, presiden wis J. 225, | reception all, not exceeding The Japanese people, it Was pointed| pegentment against what is called a! That he had sent “various propo- powers concerned, regardless of ‘special | toward the great result, have been m . W. Kinnear, vice president UL D: = _regardless of ¢ o - y Mr. Mochizuki today, might ” interests’ and special pleading: {iitke, mov €. Mekeans, Wiliam Defton and | square feet, for the sum of $125. | out, by Mr. Mochizuki today, might| . "\ r;ression regarding Japaneso'sals” to his government in Tokio. | "*{ "Ciini's lines of communication of | S (SUDLEhE Piercios, an Overcact T s 1n action and sii asets of ‘tnis | C, ADAMS, room 203, Bar- |70 per cent naval strength if various ! concessions in the newspapers has along with the proposal for the lim- |all sorts restored to China. Teet in happiér circumstances, for crporation into cash, set aside sufficient mes: problems of the far east are settled {}gen expressed by the Chinese delega- | itation of naval armaments, for that{ Al foreign troops recalled from |the Englisir-speaking Union knows ¥s to off and discharge all its debts, lia- | pig . at the present conference in a wa: Ve T China’ , and the land T blities 'and obligations, and pay the same; sud ter bldg:, 635 F st. n.w. B e O e aeace povmanesy |tion'to the conference sitting on Pa- government to pass upon was ad-|q le land Teturned t¢ | what that historic gathering has after fully discharging wich et clent cash Office phone Main 1457, House |in the far east. It Is his opinion that|cific and far eastern questions, ac-imitted last night by Admiral Baron| ' 3. Control of her own revenues, of ey the same. they shall proceed to pay off [ ph Franklin 6347. * |a definite understanding between the | cording to an official spokesman. Par- | Kato, head of the Japanese delega-|every, sort, given back to China. 3 e e ‘wih tne | PRONE Franklin 654/ United States, Great Britain, Japan cor ® 02 S0 ONE0 00 N tines | tion. “4'The natural resources of China, erma of said stock, and when said preferred | WITH ONE-THIR YOUR LiFE IN BED, |and France and possibly other pow- |ticular stress is Iz | v coal, iron, gold, wather power and all stock has been fully paid or the """";"m": the bed should be right. We are equipped | ers at the present conference should |appearing in the’ American press at| 1 cannot at present say what] .. ich Zave béen taken from’her’ T provided for o' cash " cney ahall Givlde | to] reporate MATTRESSES. 'DOX SPRINGS | be entered into. If such a course i flarge, which the Chinese beleve tend |those proposals were,” continued the jon a variety of pretexcs, mostly bad, mon stock Pro rata with thelr several boldiogs, | modern plant complete ‘and a By ced that there was no haces, |to make the country, as a whole, feeljadmiral L = iy g |® Y Fhen the conference, the fall confer- | %A% the coming meeHng: Mr, Hughes then asked him to move that the s _now a but no payment shall be made to any Stock-|service. BEDELL'S FACTORY, Main 3621 | g y v k c holder until after the publication of notice |10 B n.w. sity of insisting upon 70 per cen(‘lha! Japan actually already has made , & SRR e & “Week to |ence, wouid have something definite to | {Neh askeq BIM 12 FACe e chair BUSINESS COLLEGE meant for you tonight. My warmest greetings and good wishes to you.” Relates Talk With Mr. Hughes. The evening before the opening of S the conference, Mr. Balfour said, he ,s and Secretary Hughes had a private conversation, the subject of which hereinafter provided. S naval strength. This would naturally | binding promises to concede many |get 1 talk about that concerns ral h 5 e ident of | GOING TO NEW YORK RY TRUCK DEC. 11. = 3 get a response from Japan to these K A cerns general human 1 President Harding had con- (WRESOLVED, second, That, the Breetion | Can take about 900 Ibw. _Phoe Maln 6033 be 2 Substiiute for the Anglo-Jan-| igns and privileges which she has proposals. They would be considered welfare and the peace of the world. The AT ‘mie ndress, Mr. Bafour said. | @ 719-21 13th St. (Bet. G & H) of the foregoir lution to be published in A TN[ENT r— x * i . he said, by the department Of 2 suc snouncement Wou . Hughes as follows: e oo e ‘ot meneral cireuiation, ‘THE DEPAR AL |, The Japanese parliament 8 to'open j obtained.In China,’ whereas the Chi-|frat, ho sald, by the Gepartiien ol |akin to the effett of the American dec. | 1. duoted Mr. HugheR Yor thirty or ot g it iy Tished near the principal office or place of or business January 21, and it is tonese feel that up to the present time |ufmament was included, then by the |laration upon Taval armament. All | tnirty-five minutes, but I shall not|E pe*ted pped Tushoons of thin: copenities_und Ce B be expected hat the present confer- |y Japanese delegates have not com-| cabinet and by the so-called advisory |civilization would be _instantly - com: o on what T propose to 8ay.” in Washington. newspaper of general circulation I tbe, ity | yNDER GOVERNMENT suPERVIsIoN. | Shc® T P (IOR0ERY dlscusted AL, g themselves on any matter that | {iplomatic council. The final decision, | nefied Ko line Hp o Beo e Bt | Bar e E eonphasts. Inspecton and sompartscn tavitad four successive weeks; and that he certify “Y ” ? the = < " |he , would be made by the cabinet | de and decl ion of interna-{RBalfour added with emphasis, Twenty-{ chers. ofoers. Por Your Bank of the opposition in the lower house,|has come up. A spirit of discourage A cateas ST tapatt. tional morals T Most remarkable utterances sitions procured for all ‘gradusies. These Tesolutions to the Secretary of State of 3 NI Teavs hers. Boon: £5: b 2 West Virginia, and deliver to him a certificate| 1714 _to be in Japan|ment now _pervades the Chinese = ; been made by an: st Virginia, a 1714 Pennsylvania Ave. N.W. |for the opening of the parllament. |camp, and the feeling is expressed| Admiral Kato admitted that “ques- Status Quo Talk Fatal. which has ever been made by any|d ‘of'sway: showing the publication of said notice, as pro- N o . o P 5 e vided by law. N'T — continually that the hopes of the dele- | tions of political import” were con-{ “All this talk about ‘status quo' is |, = ded By law. 4. That, tn e settiement| DO SELL YOUR o e 'y one, ‘are being dissi-jtaired in the proposals, seeming tofatal to the interests of peace, and of St atruci/home e FELEa and_winding up of this corporation, the board LIBERTY BONDS— pated by Japanese statesmanship. bear out the reports that the propo- |free. fair dealing by all nations upon ;Fec{l¥- & th mbers. of the of irectors may appolnt such committess from e WitNNGN D esiate Sals contain propositions for a gen- |equil terms in the Fast. In the same |0, the thres otBer mempest, o ola mployes, pay such compensations and do uil BUY THEM p P |eral understanding among the prin- {spirit, this *pifiiing querying _about | American, QSRR JL goh, 00 Shantung and | cipa] ons 1 W1 > : that they may consider advisable Briefly sketching the d i cipal powers on far eastern questions |*What is China? and ‘Do the present | gmi’e d_proper. That all actions of the board extraieiritoriai questions, the Cninese !,ng also a limitation of armaments in { delegates represent China’ is merely so | =y, v s R governed by thepresent briaws of They are expected to y ‘When the climax was reached the n spokesman dwelt at great length on paya] bases in the Pacific. much dust thrown in the eves of ¢ the preface was ihe. company; the oficers and direetors reach the situation regarding the attempt|" Published suggestions that Japan |prosress. & appropriateness. o . P e 3ot 2 4 . brious, but while the preface was T e he. soard ot Siectore shall”de pat to have the postal systems of qutside | was playing a “bargaining game” at |° “Tne principles that Tie behind the o L Eave no Rint of the ] w nTHls CHRISTMAS “ian otherwise.. Given under my hand this S5 | povgersr or, "for way stockbolier, we. wil ?:guotn: rteh':ov-epde:lr(:'rn Che “Amerjean | the Washington COm e O e de- | conference would apply even if there | imax. I don't know whether Mr. |gifte "Xl Xmar cardn "o ° oltable for day of December, . " the ' Gt " !nied emphatically by Admiral Baron {was not a single Chinese delegate es onscious that he was > S ¥ o CORCORAN THoM, | fnance’the ‘purchase of such bouds on an in- newspapers gave the impression that i {iat, in statement to the Dress. |here. |Our State Department is famil- | st hat moment not merely s great Pearlman’s Book Slwp all the powers-holding postal rights | ge pointed out that the question of iar with every fact and argument|statesman, but a great artist, and 933 G st President of Sald Corporation, | Stallment basis. - 16,13.20,27-4t Occupying Our New Store l imr China were willing to forfeit them. :jimitation of naval armament in v i % = brought forth by the Chinese and |to speak perfectly impartially, T say Dr. Tyau Protests “Negative | whereas ne maintains that the iruc!| japan was one of great importance, |could present them better. Right is that e was both. N ioleaaces Bave withnel ithely ; 2na ons 1o which the Japanese S07- fsight, whoever Doeaches It : gates ernment must give due considera- |" &inera is no denying that the Chi- e Results” for Nation in Far declsion untl such time o8 Ui Chi- | tion, in view of all the issues in-|nese officials, north. south and middle, | {|GH ALUMNP'S PROGRAM. Chri ree e advised from Tokio, and the Chi- | yolved, before taking action. This{nave peen debauched by the .same 0 A —] 10N - Noisy Radiators Banished |5 s 0 Qubgite, 1814 ¢ ot oopo- V-P-V HEATING SYSTEM Claflin Optical Co, Radiators have no_ valves—thete's only one ormerly at 9th and F sta. for 52 Y. A control valve in each system. This eliminates ( — Tears. fese delegates have expressed the! gD VG IO 00 o0 cideration with P ing. e-racking noises so character- s i an: el 3 g ith { sredatory powers that have taken jompiae, werserackisg noises s charscier|A New Roof With a Brush East Conference e elinquieh her s Torening gver | the ‘delay on_the ‘cables, necessarily | (T ferritory. Does that fact make|Vaudeville and Speeches Planned Electric seasonably—also plumbing. When you use Liquid Asbestos Roofing Cement. bli was causing some delay, he said. the wvillainy any less? Is the rogue : ioos Engi T wit apply seine and guarasies ‘roof fve | DT- PhMllp K. C. Tyau, Chinese min- | system in the Chingee TepUule, Text of Statement who robs a man less guilty because . for Eastern. estoons from all leak ist e. Japan o L &L ';gg_' O s ox. T T ek o0 peold_in bulk. | ister to Cuba, has resigned from his|oypa the speaker. explained, is a| His statement is as follows: he first made the victim drunk?| mpe program for the annual Christ- . e o e V. Bhron: Prcident. -7 | Madison Clark, 1314 Pa. ave. i3 |post as secretary general of thelyery complicated affair, having over! “The question of limitation of | Everybody knows that China hos not|mag reunion of the Alumni Association | - 8-light Mazda G N W._BIGGS. SHATR. CANTNG. §1.50 UP. SPELINGoxN. | Chinese delegation to the conference [a hundred and twenty officers and a'naval armament involves issuesreally and fully exercised soverelgnty ot Eastern High School. December] ORI GLASS to fit gift tables, buf-|iag upholstering ‘parlor suites. Sreaide chajra, |on the Pacific and far eastern ques- |complete machine built up thraugh . which are of far-reaching effect upon |since the Boxer days. Is that fact any |32 was announced by Miss Mary Mur- {{f 2 5 fets.© deaks. and Tbie roonr chairs. _ Call, phone or drop pos- | ¢ 15 eabling. hi many years. Instead of this causing |the national and international life of | palliation of the present situation? |ray, chairman of the reunion com- 16-light Mazda 5 ors. cabling his resignation |TaNY, YeOrn (ISGET 2 ernment, as ' Japan and on the policies of great| “Take it from me." concluded my |mittee. at a meeting of the executive| e TOPS |[reaus. Moderate| pmaommogs > s yesterday to the Peking government |postal systems do in most countries, powers for decades to come Zna®per- | intense friend, uniess those of us who | committee of the organization last { ? e o e Sl - | = 10th n.w. _ihe gave as his reason the desire lo’he' pointed out that the Japanese or-ihaps permanently. These _issues|are trying to help Secretary Hughes |night at _the school. One of the fea- Nt Outfits, Benrsation in China brought in an!should be brought fo the full knowl- {see that now, before it is oo late, he | tures will be a vaudeville show by Fancy Lights b protest against the negative results a_vau G B revenue yearly and that it edge and consideration of the Japa- |should let the blow fall in the case of {the alumni which will include selec- achieved for China's demands in "“iwn O dse Cof this fact that his nese government before definite ac- |the far east as he did in the case of |tions by a quartet. 16-light Outfits, conference thus far. He sald that he |country felt assured the. Japanese jtion is taken. Unfortunately, there |armaments, this conference will never| Speeches will be made by Prof. De- gl 88 Plenty of it will be yours if you will CUT [PHSSS: i srery o, | Heat! Heat!] Heat!1] Becker Paint and Glass Co, let us overhaul your heating plant, CHAS. E. HODGKIN, Mgr. uld never give up this holding. are at present serious delays on the {do what the American people believe | Witt C. Croissant of George Wash- Fancy Lights .. 1220 Wiaconsia ave. Phone West 67. R. K. FERGUSON, Inc. E‘l‘“’;‘:“w';:::';0;::::,‘:::‘.,“? f,,::';f,e T osiee c:lux e orea A los and naturally the- consultation | it was called to do. It is not enough | ington University and B. G. Foster, CARPENTER, JOBBING, METAL GARAGES 1114 9th St. Pyone North 231-232. P 2 1 £ 1 with Tokio on .such important prob- |to limit the means of war; the cause {vice president of the association. The Jobbing_promptly attended to: estimates fur.| ______Boofing Experts. protest in resigning carried out his| Opium is the chief source of income,}jems cannot be completed in too short jof future war, which is the present | proposed memorial to Eastern stu- S5 pRRCSEA. "orT Ma. ave. sw. 6° P Becemich Qrl. | oWn personal views. 2 the spokesman continued. It is es-|,"opoce of time. s o Teastern condition, must be elim- |dents who died in the war will be = DECEMBER 2. 1921 We Wil Furnish Stock, timated that 5000 chests of opium Sees Hope for Success. inated.” exhibtied, It has been plannad to erect. All claims against Rebecca Karp and Elmer 5 Cites China’s Demands. enter China yearly through the Jap-| e (Copyright, 1921.) @ memorial flagpole in front of the El tri o 2 0 _st. n.e., shoul 3 X of 4, 5 % ¢ s 2 ToPLFr CARLEY, 617 § . The Duplicating Office | o, Dot e e | EovSFnment of Japan derives an an- |conforence should be 205 1° 4% ce|COLT SONS ABANDON e pe plscel it e ‘ Washer Elzctr! W' 0 China in the Washington conference,” Inua.l revenue of not less than $20,- 'upon plans of adjustment that will be five and will be discussad at the re- A c Wiring 14th and Pa. ave. 4w. Phone Main €271 _ {eajq Dr. Tyau. “Evervthing hasi000,000 from this commerce, accord-!fair to all parties and will incalcul- E union. ! i Sir Hus- ATTEMPT TO BREAK WILL |"Fre" reunion program siso inctades! | band, you'nl By Expert Mechanics; Repairing. Adth ang Pa. ave. sw. Phone Maln €211, Tstics referred to by the |ably benefit not only the nations con- Tin Roofs—Slag Roofs [been agreed to in principle, turnea|ing to statistics re y A TR A e R. VOGELSON, 504 H st. n.w. Main 3734. i g - . : 100 REPAILED AND BAINTED. over to s subcotmittee with purely A bin. e st et the drug |fort will be spared on my part or that Franseotin. will have charge o1 ‘::.: :::n:' IANTED — A VANLOAD OF FURNITURD . nega ~ one of djoi ter- |of colleagues to ng the various Py "l < = from New Soru December 7 and 16: Haree-1 Grafton Wouh, Tots a|China's demands was for things tak enters Manciiuria and adioining_ ter, |of my co/lesghes O eat possibie con: |Had Alleged Col. 5. P. Colt Was of |, Charles B Bestler. oy of the | e burg. T 12. o . 73 ke " 1 TR, T 12 RANSFER CO. 1N, . | _"Bearing und Rootne Exveris 3 ¥oarar | Slents or because the powers were |Lyough Japanese mails (Dscause clusion consistent with wisdom and| gngound Mind when Document | The Bulletin” reported a muccesstul | wear ¢ pu- IR ESLEL, A —Msio 299, Too Late to Build ataoug snouslE Mgdu dE i1 lina::c':e ol ‘bags In Japanese set- My attention has been called withi Was Drawn. e hor Suse waatl e ih e \ zled irown Our Printing Service ‘They continue their violation of | {JoPeSt ™*[n 1815 China was forced ithe past few dgys to mewspaper ar il Within a few days. This issue| for many iSiding, | —tns winter ualems vrmcnmu:nm‘.vg sovereignty and then tie the, y®NeleS Dt Japanese goods landed [ticles containing _intimations that| pROVIDENCE, R. I December 6.—|will carry full details of the reunton J days if you ~is wo far above the average that an i quickly. LO' settlement of the questions up in sub- g - H 1 Iy leads t business. | Floor! worl in Tsingtao on “certificate of goV-|japan is playing what is called a bar- Z Earl G. Jonscher, president of - - B SR aDE, BOT NOT HIGR PRICED. - | T g R vttt o M amillwerk committees. In no case. did Chinalgrpment” should' be free from eX-lgaining game. I think that no ono|Russel G. Colt and Roswell C. Colt, | Earl G Jonscher, president the i f iy o m 5 E & Trim ' fon. _make a demand based on the proposed | gmination by customs officials. Mor-|within the conference would make sons of Col. Samuel Pomeroy Colt, : agine s bet- i N S, ADAMS, ranvrnss, | Geo. M. Barker Co., Inc. |than®Sustioo to China. has bien i | Brune 2190, 15 STUEEICS, 104 ania, 203, P58 ATES, 10 Do pearetied thag |huve abandoncd thelr attempt 1o YR s g ithan justice to China_hes been in- nese muils, he said, h {hav < BYRON S. ADAMS, 5, in'st | giomm n- v, ave 1517 7 e i " None of the. ten points. re. | LIrOUER e Japancse o e Dot fEac e It e Tty metive should be break the will of their father. The LUMBER RATES CUT. ; mas ;;ol:t 1 R or r LIFORNIA CONSOLIDATED CAR ~FOR ilar = |quired” delayed action because they|Tapanese and Chinese, each of Whom |ljnked in the popular mind with the ' decision was made known in a brief o 1ife partner. jwere based on China's rights as a 8ov- | carries a passport certifying honest endeavors for the betterment |statement by their counsel. Important Freight Change Is An- % We'll Arrange i S S A Lok 2 evey. L. wee ereign nation.’ Form which ren- " 7 Y 3 1140 _15th P]a_n is a citizen of 088, and progress of mankind. Col. Colt, multi-millionaire and or- Down WANTED—TC CARRY A VANLOAD OF FUR- | 3 t Discusses Postal Situation. ders Chinese officials powerless to ganizer of the rubber industry in nounced in Chicago. thic Terrs. oo 0 S e iture_from Washington to" Philadelphia nll"”"‘flfl-- large scale at economic cost. . | .gpeaking particularly of the with-{ Punish them. !this country, died August 32 at his|' ~ynaGO/ December '6.—Luml % P New Tork. SMITH'S TRANSVER m-'lThe National Capital Pms!g-‘w:x of forelen postal eystems from | Japancse Inioation Depbibd, /T -SPANISH CLAIM VICTORY. |homo in mristol, = X" His will was | 0 s Pacinc St tmmber Cash Price, $160 Hea —The Iimit 3 Good Service 12001813 Dist- o v Semanded a long investigation by a en&e;'::n::? By the Japanese govern- the two sons claimed’ an appeal, al-|to all points east of Chicago will be Other Good Gifts ting s _guaranteed when we = | ittee which was in dirdet viola- hich Tucrative a|Capture of Further Positions in |leging that their father was of un-|reduced December 24, H. E. Plerpont, s By Shedd 5™ sigs™ o 1w You Know b e e righis, 1 we. sign | et ety Sleancd, maintained prima- sound mind when the instrument was | general traffic manager of the Chi- Hotpoint Electric Cleaner. W ol :::.‘:-b:o oommit RIghway ro‘t’:{»etrh; o ‘gl:hg.“ny-:es:m for give up RID, December 5.—Minister of | 't TNE! 3 P onegation of undue influ- | The rate to the territory east of [{| attachments FREE. We SAVE YOU MONEY on T ehe powers have been gullty of!jer holding unless there is great pres-|War Clerva announced tonight that ence. s Buffalo and Pittsburgh will be cut|fj Price. $:5—Terms highway robbery in taking this nv-[-ure put upon ‘her, and it is because of | Spanish troops fn Morocco had oc- ugg&;i‘r‘-’a Mll;ls grgl;fite:-e:-:s:}} ;m ‘:1 °{-},‘ e 1’33 «&’:‘:nfiu‘.fi?’ “.‘L’;.L'G'}; e en Ma onue, and China should be given an: % the Chinése. delegation has ex- | cupied furth: % ihi c. e iemmity instead of being Baked ‘(o pressed regret that newspaper headlines | on”Monday. er positions of the Moors | & Cl 106,000 outright. The estate | burgh " territory the "reduction will ||| #10 up. I today. . W. STOKES SAMMONS, A Practical Xmas Gift. sanction further persecution.” Rave formed the impression that Japan|Gen. Cabanellas took the defile of 8% oneck, N. Y., was.given to|be 88% cents and to Cincinnati and: TOASTERS—8IL.T5 Phone agre - ; 1 G. Colt and his wife, Ethel|Detroit common points the new rate ! L 830 13th St., Sidney Co. has already agzesditn ks Crene SN aralayy RescHld -Bonarail | while lan: | B more Colt, during thelr lives. | will be 85 cents. The tarift on shin 7 Col. Colt created a trust of his real |gles and cedar products will be 13% -~ T Offices cessions. Get.Our Factory Estimate T e e b A O 12 AUTOS BURN IN FIRE.- PR Sk A s e iissdociot Barangaca) golumn | CXlate holdings in Bristol, and ‘direct- | cents highér than the rates named 7 . —_— 2 s 3 'y W e avia- . 3 on_Finest Window Shades | ™ o “Neo, Heating Plant | Loius "svsraminaing 45300 wirs | WINTER GUESTS FOUND DEAD. | vors causea serious iosses amone <he | o, Bt te® 7" of Sne: Homestead sa. | oo e S VI s tmstall an “Arcols Heating | CRUSEA hore yesterday by a fire which | DAYTONA, Fia, December 6_—The Moroccans concentrated at Pun Kijuse dWiRE Too M Tl eiven |2 ol house ortapis | Started when & negro mechanic in a | badies of Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Smith, | K the use of the Colt farm, long a cele-| - 1t rima. have the comfe ‘holtday tles. Installed ny | Garage droj 3 match into & pool | winter visitors from La Porte, Ind.,| The minister of war said he was %—m’f"" Tne ot gmlln-pmeh had run out of an | were found in their apartfent here, | without reports of the Spanish losses, brated show place. right—Get Casey.” -.u',o’x’nobfla tank. Everett lsotor Com- ! death having been due to asphyxia-{but one official report says only two | Lo R IR T aysiem, g e g e L D tation fordotng. ‘rght, | " Have reputation roof. us up$ &Cfi 3207 14th ST. N.'W. gn 's - display room garage, | tion caused gas escaping from a |Spaniards were wounded. - Contact|, tjantle Coast Lime will Rooflng r . Cuey 1 ther with twelve automobiles, | Bot-water - heater.. The couple. had|was made by the Spaniards with the {arrange your trip sonth. Expert informaties moue idin 3% ant ore" AL lmnn:.ly been dead since Saturday. French sone & A . Yat 1418 H st. n.w,—Advertisement. J-RONCLADG—.-: Ppoue Mata 16 Plumblng, Bteantiting «ad Tizminge were' destroyed.

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