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3 /¢ [ ~ ¢, JULY 2, 1922 PART 1. . e, RTANREAFRS | PAESTAEPOLEY, - Speech on V!do,'u’ Pénsions. LONDON, July or the first White Paper; Denies, How- . THE SUNDAY STAR, WASHINGTON, D.’ PLOT KAISER'S RETURN, TT|RKS GlARD SEA VAT TR TORL STy SBMARNES | Only Initernational Action Can Save German s 1 B (heien Republic Now in Grip of Royalistic & ne. and_ the SLAYINGS DARKEN EUROPEAN SKIES Policy of Crushing_ Germany time in Lady Astor’s career as a leg- W heard ect of widows' ' pens! house registered Impat ce when she _arose th time. “You'll be here all night if you go NCVALTVONI D 200 VOrw. Craft Seen Near Bosporus, second ambitious millionaire would have favored any reasonable understanding with the royalists. ' I knew him bet- ter.than anybody. After twenty-five years of intimacy, and just two years ago, I' felt obliged to differ with him and sharply to criticise him. I must now declare that underneath he was drawn much more to the right than to the left. His last work was the organization of a great campaign to [pairing the German submarine U-11, IN MANDATED TERRITORY i —-— sufterance. . “But his majesty’s government h Increase in Population, in German |, sych aim jn'view as that Palestine should become as Jewish as England 1s Engl B The statement says the disappear- ance of subordirfation of the Arab tion, language or culture is not The status of botween two peoples. Here com- patriots murder each other merely on account of party differences, without the excuse of age-long strife. S Britain's Greatest Liberal Editdr. Z Bpecial Dispatch‘to The §tar. LONDON, July 1.—The clouds are * not lifting from the European skies. = Assassination has darkened the out- S look. | The murder of Rathenau Is the | = heaviest blow that Europe has sus-|ist has been touched since Germany's = ¢ collapse. As the latest victim's % tained since the killing of Jaures. I[TSURRES A5 the latest i e =knew him well. His profoundly saga- \home crowds were cheering Hinden- < cious mind and ‘liberal spirit were a |burg and two of the kalsers sons at |orgenization of a paign b S _| Potsdam, only half an hour away. any’s innocence of start- |which has < plllar of Europeanclyilization. Eng- | oistal. ofly hall an hour away | Y he war. e had hoped thus fo | 1o1k been in these waters since =land awaits the-consequences of the|John was holding its annual knight|Win the support of the monarchists < dastardly attempt to torgedo the re- |duhlbmg lu!lv:ll‘. ]vyilh all :! 1"; gg:n(eh;sm:ernment,lnot ;enlulnxtrn ) : ancient monarchial pomp, and wit e people support such a campaign Tdublie. At the moment of cabllng 1t | (ne names-6f each of Wilhelm's mau- lonly” for the purpose of discrediting € would seem that ‘the criminals have |garing printed on the program with | the republic. S overlcaped their mark. ‘The revulsion itheir full court titlé and Eitel Fred- | enau tirelessly courted the < z eat that |erich named as his royal highness. |favor of the press and now he is eulo- S of feeling In Gormany s o BT hut & | The officiating clergyman, called hof- |Bized. = A speclal law to protect the o1t mayAaves thelisiyuation. ¢ prediger (meaning court preacher), |républic has been introduced and the < forecast is impossiple. expressed the hope of soon seeing |Bovernment says it mustn't happen |lished important works. = . The leisoh for the -allies is clear.|Doorn Castle,blossom -into new life.|again, but the same thing was said | When the U-11 is ready the Kemal- = The policy of crushing Germany must | Everybody was |after Erzeberger’s assassination and [I5ts will possess a flotilla of three The survival of. the republic meant. the only result was that a fine of |Submarines and they claim that the so long amid the difficulties from | Wilhelm, who fled from his army |5.000 marks was imposed on a man |activities of the Greek fleet in the Within s a miracls. But the miracle [and is now exacting 100,000,000 marks | Who twice demanded in his paper that ! Black sea will be completely para- cannot last. Either the allles will [from Germany's misery for his me- Harden, Foerster and other traitors|l1yzed. | Though the nationailst au- aupport the republic's reasonable poli- | moirs, still cails himself emperor and |should be shot. thorities admit that the few towns on Sles or .Germany collapses between | king; his eldest son calls himself| The government still does not dare |the Black sea arg' not worth the ex- the devil of monarchism and the deep [crown prince; in Bavaria Prince Rup- [to compel its troops to carry the flag [Penditure of keeping up a fleet, the =ea of bolshevism. precht reviews his troops. and the|of the republic. and so long as tho [last ralds of the Greek crulsers the last hope of saving the European |abdicated grand dukes do likewise in |government does nothing to engender | Proved that Turkish communication vstem disappears. Strong British |Baden and Hesse. Old Hindenburg |respect the murder epidemic will con- | With the soviets might be seriously sentiment now favors Germany's in- |performs this ceremony in east Prus- |tinue, and those striving fervently to | handicapped. clusion in the league of natlons. |sia, transported there in a special car, |purify Germany spiritually, morally; Land communication with There arg hopes that even France will [and for weeks is adored like a god |and politically will have no weapon |through the Caucasus is long agree. | This IS a belated expedient.|and homored more than any general|wherewith to meet the world’s judg- |difficult through the lack of rail Pait seems the only visible means of [after a triumphant victory. The re- [ment that Germany is a dangerous|roads and roads, the only easy com- stopping the dissolution of Europe. |publican flag is torn down and spat |animal which must be kept in chains. | munication, being by the Black sea . B Sty aud el upon wherever hoisted. The presi- |This is our vicious circle from which | routes, so ‘long as no hostile fleet el 2 e dent of Germany is hooted in Munich. [ young. bright America must realize [ endangered them. A P RS The edy is that America is out-| Dozeng of imperial officers in bright | Wo can only be saved by international Bolsheviki Paying Turks. aptaglene, side.” The svmpathy” and help of |drees uniforms take & morning rids laction. ATl Pariae Teens Australians,” he sald. - me: o ve Europe fro . 2 2 Mo JlonccaiiRese Bonep i the Thise Garten. followed by uni suming control over the nationali . The German crime still is over- mind by the formed footmen. The old court So- uminig fcontrelsover itiie mational x ~ A s in - e clety gave its balls during the winter i L urkiaom il WILL SEEK RE-ELECTION. murder of Marshal Wilson. Public feeling against this dastardly crime is intense. The campaign of the “dle- hards” has been powerfully strengthe ened by it. The demand for the repu- diation of the treaty grows. The danger, of course, is that the British government might be stampeded into ably the bolshevist AG-23, recently lent to the Turkish natlfonalists. Despite serfous handitaps, the Ke- {’n’.“'“ have established four na: ™" ‘New Guinea Likely to Follow Land Settlements. SYDNEY, N. §; W., June 5 (by mail). A noticeable revival in. development in the mandated territory of German New Guinea and a considerable in- crease In population are expected to follow the adoption by the federal government of a series of ordinanc governing land settlement and mining operations in the region. The administrator of the territory, now here, said that the native prob- lem i8 regarded as the most pressing and difcult question confronting the new administration. The adoption of laws protecting the natives, provid- | mandate are not being fuilfilled will ing for proper treatment for laborers| have the right of‘appeal to the league and arranging for the education .1‘.: nations. 2 o There have been 317 victims in Ger- many, all from the democratic group. Not a'hair of a natlonalist or a royal- ases on the Black sca. With halp of the bolsheviki they have pro: vided a submarine base near Kera- sunt, where, under the leadership of Commander Von Hochwetter, former executive officer of the ~German cruiser Breslau, they have been, re- Getting the Cooking Done popu contemplated. citi- < 6 . i h - £ Must Cease to Save Day, . g Intrigue, Says Harden: Thought Bolshevist Loan, to op lkce st saia che Viscountors, | - €v8F, That Arab Culture ; B i y t . A moment later the lau = ; 2 Says’ Gardinet. Open Routes to-Russia. 1% 2°0n her, for she begami - :‘ <+ 'WIll- Suffer. & - e remind some of o g 3 BY MAXIMILIAN HARDEN, sied a certain military victory, pub- BY CONSTANTINE BROWN. members who are not here. By thie Assoeiated Press. > = Germany’s Foremost Publicist. licly opposing Prince Max of Baden's | BY Cable to The Star and Chicago Daily News. y Astor has a new hat for{ -LONDON, July 1.—The British gov- :AMER'CAN AID “ EDED 2 peace offer that autumn and callin; Copyright, 1922, parliament of black straw with a = > By Cable Dispatch to The Sta d g : ernment’s Btatement of policy regard-: = 7 Cable Diapatch to Tae tar. Coprrigt, 102, | for 3 continuation of the war. CONSTANTINOPLE, July 1—Fish-|Smart turn of the brim Accordlnd |y " palestine, tssued today in the < 7 rted the repu . s : ~ ermen at work near the entrance to this s only the third the |form of a white paper, says: % Famed Liberal Editor Tells Effect |1°" epidemic is disgracing the Ger- (/¢ O Ilyry":::“co}l:?d"i;le‘::s;'i‘lm‘lvn. if [the Bosporus were disagreeably sur- |first woman commoner has had sin “The British government reafiirms z . ST “""MW’;"v In the opinion of the|pjs ambition to hold high office, prised Friday when in the early |taking her seat. the declaration of November, 1917, : * _ of Rathenau Assassination moeld. cul:;".??l:ndl:l” has one. | maiiclously and Stupldly slaughtered |morning they saw a submarine ap- which is not susceptible to change. .A < nated in the assassina- - e militaris e - and Heaction. _ tion of Sir Henry Wilson, but that Wanted Understanding. :’::“’:l:::“'";':p;‘::r "":c:;:'l'n: DEVELOPMENT REVISED -:"'P':l".:"“" Remp i be "l""'fl:lfll BY A G. GARDINER, Tepresents the last agonies of the war | This extraordinary intelllgent and | 2% S “momw' e irets S: o m::l'n :‘" oz.‘r'um‘:::;o:on S I sens, it says, will be Palestinian. The aestablishment of full measure of self-government in Palestine will be fosteréd and executlve council set u; The clal position of the Zioni executive, it says, does not entitle it to share In the government of the countr; Immigration will not exceed the economic capacity of the country. Any religious community or consider- able sections of the population claim- Ing that the terms of the Palestine How do you do your cooking these warm days? Do you stand over a hot stove and get very uncomfortable? If so, a Thermatic Fireless Cooker will enable you to avoid this. & Have Flotilla of Three. This submarine became known to the world in 1915, when it torpedoed the hospital ship Portugal. All the Spare parts for repairs were supplied to the nationalists from the Sermove (rclol‘:' 3 n;HKNlJnl Novgorod, Rus- sia, where the Krupps recently estab- 5 A A Thermatic cooks automatically. All you have to do is place the food irf it and leave it, and when meal time arrives everything is cooked. Think how much cooler you will be when you are ready to eat. understood what native children will contribute in an| The white paper concludes wi impprtant degree to the solution of |annodncement that the Zionists! or- the problem, he said. ganization has given. formal assur- Chinese traders and artisans are|ance that its activities will be con- “getting a grip on the commercial |ducted in conformity with the above activities of the territory and are | policy. multiplying rapidly,” the adminis-| - trator said, adding that the Japanese and Malays do not bring their wives v 8 a B @ K REYAT) —_— SHIPS'TO BE TARGETS. British. Bightseers Face Doom * From Aircraft Attack. If Germany goes, to the region, but the Chinese bring the entire milies. have formed a league trade union. “It would be & big job to get New Guinea back to normal life snd to bulld up an effclent administration, but I consider that the success al- ready achieved is a remarkable trib- The artisans mbling Come down to Mayer’s Lifetime Furniture Store and see the display of Thermatics. There’s a splendid cooker at $24.75. \Russia , July -Although some of the British battleships which are doome to be scrapped under the terms of the Washington conference treaty will not participate in any more wars, they will serve as use- ful targets for the aircraft in per- fecting” war meth Announcement hi been made in the house of commons that it is osed to carry out experiments with various kinds of attacks from the air against capital ships. The experiments are to be carried out the doomed crulser Superb, but they will be preceded by experiments on the Monitor, which did not come of the MAYER & CO. Seventh Street Between D & E UPPER SILESIA TOWN FOILS POLISH ATTACK German Self-Protection Company Suffers 34 Casualties Defend- in a luxurious hotel, while the devout bourgeoisie looked on reverently from the outside. Nationalist leaders In the reichstag publicly declare the people want the monarchy restored and promise an early fulfiliment. As an Ugly Stop Gap. And the republic allows all this! rubles at the rate of 700 plasters (al little over $5) for ten gold rubles. The gold, which arrives monthly, is deposited at the soviet mission in Angora. The soviet representative there personally supervises the na- tionalist treasury, which receives regular monthly installments from Moscow. Gov. Stephens of California An- nounces Intent to Run. LOS ANGELES, Calif.,- July 1.—Gov. Willam D. Stephens announced here |on last night that he would be a candidate for the republican nomination _to suc- P! EHATEEE R R R R LT R R ] ARG T violent courses. and that nothing less than a reconquest of Ireland would be made necessary. Fortunately, the new Free State government has met the ultimatum from Westminster sen- sibly. Prompt steps have been taken against the rebel hgadquarters. The battle for possession of the Four Courts was promptly begun. 1If the Free State chamber eventually re-es- tablishes its authority over the rebels, the effect on English opinion will be great and the government may ride the storm without a resort to vio- lence. The alternative. of coursé, would be reversion to the policy of force on & scale unprecendented in modern his- tory. The Wilson murder played Into the hands of the Ulster firebrands and the empty-headed boys of union- ism. The violence directed against the Catholic minority in Ulster is open and notorious. No adequate steps have been taken by the Ulster Vug Unless our leaders are blind or dead they know numerous officials and all military men regard the republic as only an ugly interim stop gap. This ‘®explains why not a single political murder has been expiated and no {murderer caught, despite gigantic promises of reward, and why the mili- tary murder business can be entered 2Imost without risk. The murder of Rathenau was the greatest mistake thd military has made. This extraordinarily gifted man was nelther a republican nor a democrat at heart. He inherited a large business after a sound scientific education. He had many talents, was a favorite of the Kkalser, received many high orders and wore them proudly, and he purchased the Queen Louise country seat from the crown with the right to call it a royal cas- tle. When the war broke out he took charge of all raw materials and as late as the summer of 1918 prophe. ing Hindenburg. By the Associated Pre BERLIN, July 1.—Polish bands at- tacked the town of Hindenburg. Upper Silesia, but were repulsed by a German self-protection company with some Thus far, though the bolshevik! control the flnances, they have been unable to do anything with the na- tionalist general staff, which remains independent of foreign Influences. The soviet military representative found that it was dangerou to control the work of the s losses, says a dispatch yesterday to the Berliner Zeitung Am Mittag. The dispatch adds that when French occupation troops heard from the Poles that the Germans were occupying the northern part of the town & violent combat ensued, with fatalities on both sides. French reinforcements were then attacked by self-protection patrols and renewed street fighting occurred, after which the French retired to their bar- racks. The newspaper records thirteen Germans killed. A later report said one Frenchman was killed and three wounded, and that seventeen Germans were killed and an equal ngmber wounded since then has been satisfled to re- main merely an observer. NOTED DOCTOR DIES. Special Dispatch to The Star. ‘ GLADE SPRING, Va., Ji 1.—Dr. ‘William Logan Dunn, Whouyoda with Jonee, Stuart and Mosby throughont ths civil war, died at his home here Mon- day. Dr. Dunn was born in the vicinity of Glade Spring September 15, 1838. He was the son of Dr. S8amuel Dunn, who was a prominent physician in this sec- tion of Virginia for sixty vears. ceqd himself in the August primaries. under the treaty. government to protect the wretchtd victims of intolerancd, Life in Ulster for the Catholics Is impossible. There is no apparent remedy but the de- portation of the whole Catholic pop- ulation There has been no protest - from the British to the Ulster author- ities. Craig, the Ulster premier, has the effronte to deny there is any persecution, while it is a notorfous fact that it hag been in progress for two years. Irreconcilable Orangeman. Wilson was one pf the most {rre- concilable Orangemen and one of the chief authors of the rebel movement of 1914 His murder was more than a crime; it was a dlunder. It in- flamed the English epinion afresh on thoughtless reactiopary lines. Thirty thousands British troops now have been imported for the defense of Ulstare. If events go wrong in the south, it is not difficult to surmise what will follow. But it {s very diffi- cult to forecast the end of such tragic happenings. Meanwhile, a domestic storm has broken over the head of Lloyd George. His distribution of titles has outraged public decency. South Africa for- mally has repudéated the peerag: granted J, B. Robinson and threatens to follow Canada's example and re- fusa roval honors altogether. It . openly is declared that titles are sold i ¥ ) for cash for party purposes. In one E | -. case a peerage was given to a man ;ho h:\i transferred his business to 5 jouth merica to dodge taxation. . = . . There 13 univereal indignition: tut 5o —And it was only yesterday, too—“But I am buying it because ; a : . an inquiry. But the matter is too b, 9, . =1 9, - . for Sippreasion, ' The house of jords i : T’'ve looked -all over town and there isn’t anything in probably will take independent ac- | . . . . . . 5 o The sale of honors nas een & | s Washington like your display of dining room suites—and scandal for years, but never has- it ] 3 1 2 5 Deon 80 gross an outrage as under the | R . the price suits us, too.” And more than the good-looking -suite he.purchased and the low price he found, was the Tact that he was getting real Lifetime Furniture—whose present government. No man who unusually long wear will make the first cost trifling. : (AT S333 “I'm Not Buying This Suite Out of Sentiment,” Said a Customer respects himself can any longer af. ford to accept a title. JAPAN’S POPPY FARM AREA MUCH REDUCED “We would-like you to come in and see for yourself just how rea- sonable are the.prices in our dining room furniture—and we’ll show you lots of new ideas that most stores don’t -have—small apartment suites that are inexpensive and desirable. 4 < Revision of Law Regarding Sale = of Opium Given as Cause of Short Production. . A Leonard Pays for Itself . ; ) . A Leonard Cleanable Refrigerator will quickly pay for itself in the’saving of food and ice. It keeps food pure, fresh and _clean. Its ten walls of insulation keep out the hot air and keep in-the cold so that the ice consumption is com- paratively small. tion in Japan, have this year been de- creased by about 50 per cent, as com. pared with ths area cultivated last year, owing, it said, to a revision of the law regarding the sale of opium. When the Imports of oplum for medical use were stopped during the wa: ] " If You Are Kitchenetting You will be delighted with the dozen and . one little sets we.can work up for ; i “you that will give you that homey, / usable look, yet be artistic in de- sign’ and beautiful in color. he government gave every pos- encouragement to the growing of poppy in Mishima district, the sofl of which is said®o be specially suited ot the cultivation of the plant, and for the past six years the opium indus- o = try in this locality has been very = prosperous. < . During last year 500 cho of land ='were under poppy culture, and 2,000 «+ workere engaged in the cultivation £ of the plant, and 900 kwan of opium < was produced. Things since the b = Einning of s year have been - ing a turn for the worse. 5 Every style of Leonard is on display at Mayer’s Lifetime Furni- ture Store—from the smallest top icer to the largest all- porcelain refrigerator. We're here to serve you—we think we do :a bit. better than'most of them— we'd bedelighted to just show you Come in and séc.these marvels of efficiency. They.are all reason- ably priced. Why there’s a splendid one-piece porcelain- WHERE IS. ‘_‘LED_A"? A g::gsreffigtrator%-white inside* and -out—for only, e around—any. time. Famous . Painting - by Michelan- gelo Is Lost. PARIS, July 1.—‘“Where is Michel- angelo's Leda'?” Maurice Roy, who asked the que: tlor before the Fre: Academy, says mebody id the world has the fa- Lifetime Furniture Is More Than a Name b a « UR TR g 9t ' . "o ASSIGNED TO WALTER REED. Maj. Guy L. Qualls, Medloal Co bas been relieved from duty in the - Pansma Can: ne an duty at Walter Heod Goneral Hospilal LR TR this city. Ead i 8 } (] w