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OLa=S0 { H - WEATHER. . 4 Q : “From Press to Home .| || _am today. Full report on page 2, ’ as fast as the papers are printed. H Closing N. Y. Stocks and Bonds, Page 28 WITH SUNDAY MORNING EDITION Yesterday's Circulation, 98,572 . post” offics Washisgton, B o WASHING! D. WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1924—FORTY-FOUR PAGES. * TWO CENTS. ECONOMY REMEDY s 2o Betermine 1h € BLOINGBILL it Dt ona URAFTING OF RIGID { If Hard Gale Sways} « U ! To Try Old Friend FORU.S.ILLS URGED * cotecoreh Buitding ER S50000,000 1§ | O Teauor: Chaege: 1, (. TRAFFIG LAW « Us | By the Assoctated Press. | y y i | By tie Assoctated Press. « U | NEW YORK, December 3.—Dur- | 1 SAN FRANCISCO, Calif., Decem- | ing the next gale that sweeps lower | ber 3.-—Federal Judge John & Manhattan, engineering tests will | Pariridge hus refused to preside BY PRESIDENT IN it BIOCKEDIN SENATE ezl RDEREDINHOUSE SU[}BINET MESSAG[ B (;,,T“ Duilding. «:;.4,“,’,‘ 12 | Fletcher Insists on Amend- | S e o S e s Prompt Action Expected on e i W | ment for Structures Al e St s Measure Initiated by gale of 90 miles’ velocity and did | | s ever given there was whe 2 Orderly Progress, Without "ot -vas's fracuon of an inch. Over Country. | §vm1 ot e : Committee. Ere?e;'si' Se;" b Bas':r? R DL T SAYS NEEDS ELSEWHERE | | el e B CONFERENCES PLANNED -egisative Frogram TR0 | - e Wostworis Bunding was de | 1 ON CAPITAL'S NEEDS posed to Congress. NEW ARMS CONFERENCE SUMMONS IS INDICATED Farm Relief Proposal Delayed. Further Tax Cut Asked—Plea for Divorcement of Shipping Board Fleet Made, and Emergency GOULD LINCOLN. red BY re G. dent Coolidge edicates himself to a system of rigid econ- on public expenditures in his t ouses today g through the practice re President Woodrow ring before | deliver 1913 of appe joint session of Congress tc iessage in person, the nitted the document The message today | stration’s legisla- impressively esseuger. outlines the admin i program both domestic and ioreign roblems and sets forth the Presi- s conception of the purpose and ch should be ic 1t bristles with concise senten conta no surprises, leave no doubt in mind as to w! the President stands on the subjects th which he deals Sounds Progress Note. and ed—although | T L side s al by | proposals advanced Wheeldr platior: stitution zad Gov- | country | President | that would seem i st 1t n from recent t is termined to go forward. But) vants no pretenses, 1t wants no| s It is determined to ad-! in orderly, sound and com 1t ‘does n theary of th people have majority ment n nvinced that the people to pro- | Government unless to own their own prop- | asa the propos: Declara- | alienable | no the the vhich r for own ue destroy will | of It preted President day 1 well as head of the the adminis- progress and ut for progress “in | and common sense essing to everybody.” les an hour. BORAH IS CHOSEN TOFILL LODGE POST Committee. I &= | Smoot, Sponsoring Measure Urged Gets Chairmanshin of Pow-(;’,fljfi,j,'.f"[,l}’:’:.’n,T;,',lj;",: Sl . 5 Senato: oot of Utah, chalrman ! erful Foreign Relations |or the Fubite Butitings Commission | by President, Refuses to Sanction Change. District of Columbla public buil bill, providing $50,000.000 onstruction of Government but! shington, recommended by tor ings had called the measure up and sought its passage. Senate Fletcher of Flor- b under one ling roof. He proved by the Republican conference | bulldings in Washington to si on recommendation of the committee | ready owned by the Government. Sen- on com tees. This was the first|ator Underwood pointed out that the party gathering since Senators La|Government now owns large trac Follette of Wisconsin, Ladd and Fra- land to the south of Pennsylvan zier of North Dakota and Brookhart|avenue, eastward from Fifteenth | of lowa were excluded from party|street, and also land near the Pan- councils. Their names had been| American Buildin available for the eliminated from the conference tally | proposed buildings. list, but they retain their present| In his arguments urging the pas- | committee assignments sage of the District of Columb i Other Senators. absent from the |Smoot said the Government is now | conference included Norris o spending $732.469 in rent for build- braska and Borah, who have ussa i]c(liu &< in Washington annually He | the action of the conference against|estimated in addition, the Government the four Senators, and Couzens of |would save $1,00 in labor by Michigan. | ha g each department of the Gov. | 1} ms Nation g smocratic vacancies on commit- |ernguent i President insists, for nost | tees caused by the retirement of Sen- [said that every head of a department | part cconc and, with th nous | ator Adams of Colorado were fllled |had appeared before the Public] bt still existing, econmomy is thel8s follows: Banking, orge of Buildinks Commission and said that| urest remedy Georgia, and irrigation and "rn"ulnA-‘:h' loss of time caused by the ] Economy reaches everywhere 11 tion. Ashurst of Arizonu | bureaus of their departments l:cilu.,'! | widely separated was very great. ] ut says. In economy, i i o the picture the President ¥ liest the hope of lessening the 1 tax burdens now resting on the shoulders of the 1 The costs ! 1 President estimates. reaches the \ of $100 for eath inhabitant, | rich and poor. one-third of this says, by national nditures. Governmient, the cing its debt, | municipalities | <ontin pile up theirs at the rate | ¥body can reduce taxes, but it s0 easy to stand in the gap sist the pussage of increasing priation bills,” says the Pres. lent in his earnost plea to the Con- kress to keep within the 1h of the hudget Discusses Surtax. thout mentioning the “Mellon plan.” the President in his discussion of tax 1 on—10 be expected, pro vid in expenditures is system of sur-| wve for their | ebject v nt of success : disconragement of business i productfon of the greatest of revenue from lar in- | With resard to foreign 1he message of the President bre spirit of pesce and good will. He ! ceclares that at no period in the last | vears have our foreign relations | Teen so sath at_ preseat. iut the President reiterates his oppo- | fition to the entrance of the United | Stutes into the League of Nations. | “Whila we desire to co- | nd to help, we ars egustiz| i to be independent and| " he says ! e President renews, however, his | nmendation that the United States adheré to the protocol, estab- | lishing the World Court, but upon the | { ! condition that the | “shall not be bound by dvisory opinicns which may be ren- Jered by the gourt upon questions | ch we have mot voluntarily. sub- | «ed for its judgment. conditions stated in the recommenda- vions transmitted to the Senate, and further ten vith nited St Treats of Arms Parley. ile views with sympathy the various | roposals advanced for the outlawing | of aggressive war, and gives promise | of initiating another conference for ihe limitation of armaments. This " “(Continued on Page 5, Column 4.) ext of the President’s Message on Page 4. TOWN LEFT IN RUINS hour, converting the streets into tor- rents and causing a rise of three feet in the Rhone River, and In the marshy Camargue district a cyclonic storm ravaged properties along Val- cares Lak Senator Fletcher expressed no hostility ings bill, to the Distriet public but insisted that his amend- build- ultimately removed a period of ten years The Smoot bill pravides for a total expenditure of $50,000,000, not more than $10,000,000 in one year, over a period of five year: ertainly within Millionaire’s Wife Defies Officers { R ida insisted on offering as an amend- | ment a bill introduced by himself wator Borah of 1daho today be- | providing for the construction of came chairman of the Senate foreign | public buildings in all parts of relutions committee, succeeding the| country where sites for such bu 1 - crNTY - - ~NTF 7 . : i s r ASTENINC () RESIDENT'S late ator Lode At the me | ings had been purchased by the Gov- ISTENING T THE TRESIDENT nm-l two mew m n‘vv,i_v. were named | ¢rnment. AT 0 7 on the committee—McLean of Connec- wator Smoot suid he w t [ ticut and Edge of New Jersey l to Iny aside the bill for ¢ I TEN MINE UNIONS LOSE | ser r rah was one of the “frrec buildings in Washington rather than | oncilables™ In the League of Nations|sce the amendment adopted. Sen- CHARTERS FOR STRIKING | fight; has opposed American adher- ator 1‘ er, how -~f»m-‘;m';"-‘j" "-7 ' _ | cuce to the World Court unless the| FIght to ol iy | 12,000 Men in Pittston District Re- | nal is disassoctated fro all e as -laid aside at 2 | ]' et tedx Dpmistle k, when the Muscle Shoals meas- I8 S rea to i Retmr o W Lcague of Nations, and is an ardent | 4r "Gl U UD aytomatically as & £pe | | ponent of the State Department's|eial order of business, the | as Ordered. | ¢y of non-recognition of the Rus- | r amendment pending to the P—— | I SiTliaos eament 1 | SCRANTON, Pa, December i 1 | ire Charters of 10 lod unions of the | rah was ot relinquish the | in order : the Pittston district were revoked | chairmanship of the Senate education Savings Pay, New Tells |toiay by the District Toard of the and labor comniittee. Senator Phipps Says States Need Bulldings. Min Un ere i of Colorado s dedd | Iu insisting upon his amendment Fallure of 12,000 striking miners fact that eleven vears have Sa | President John wwis to retur Johmson Hendw Commiltee. \psed sinee e Government pur. to work was the reason assigned for o T O o 2| no buildings have been erected in mail postal savings. evers serv-|that the strikers ure no longef mem- | oIt as ehalons of the Immisra.|meuy of the States. He said that ted by th Office | bers of the miners’ unior | : gt e e e | public buildings in the partment shows ! - . | i committee. In accepting that[BUPUe DULC iplhrs sir g plac nator Johnson rettred from | Reeded s much as in Of loss, Postmast anbership on the military commit- - Fis 3 formed t S . result | : £ soom Senator Smoot urged that Senator ; ! tee, and was succerded by gtanfe SeRter Suont mre st nat Snator Lo ar-reaching sation Wiilis of Ohio as chairman s e 3 0wni Handling of s v insular committee. et ekt e 1P Inewspapers und magazines—i the District of Columbia building bill Seuator Cummins of lowa beeame | b v at a lo to the Government of "u‘;(.;xw.‘x,‘.‘o\r,“-).!”-‘,\m,'-. '.“_:,u by the death | o ioher and said that Senator Sma .A”““‘h;““:;\w Sl | Assignments givon (o the three new | MOV kuow that the House would| " pourth-class mall, paree] po i ! Republics Senators were: B er, Serdz by it # o e, e, € ha; - loss 19242 ce ] N vachusctio: Tudiciars. naval and | District o Columbla_butlding. bill| ittt U “orat-atnen mail: dnstiend ) i e e rndo, mmigea, | Without dmending f2 &5 ux 1o provids | P 2 Deofit of 25.05099 cote] Foreign S | tion, Judiciurs, mines and mining and | PUddine i all e Stts LG oreign Secretary to Go to) claims; Metcalf, Rhode Island. odu-| Hefore Sens ".'(," red his} = pogtmaster General New in sub- 1 cation ‘and labor, uaval patents und | mendment Senator Underwood of|mizting the report sald it was mere-| - ROme Next Week to Re- | ibrary jAwmamie preconted -and e sopled, |1y ‘s act-find ¥ statement, and E | Changes Approved. | two amendments, one of which wou - P i port on Sltuatu)n_ The committee changes were ap- |limit the construction of the propos il Gunts ore o fiscal vear of 1923. It e | evenus r the | Br tie Astociated Press and the ex-| LONDON, Deecember - Austen 3, with a loss of nberlain, the British secretary of | Paid Arst-class mail was handled | (Orei&n affairs, will personaliy 1 at n profit of $50.417,716, and the | Pefore the League of Nations coun-| savings system at a profit of | Cil next week any informa- | (11, The losses were lar tion he may be able to give regard- nd-ciass mall, newspapers il BRrbas Eaate i and third-class mail, S ‘!."l s s was $16 [ anberlain, speaking ai a| xt highest loss was in the registry | lincheon of the Non-Conformist| service, with a total deficlt of § Unionist League, declared On fourth- . or par- the loss amounted to $6.91 4,013 1 post, think it is quite clear that w surred in Egypt does not come | within the provisions of the covenant | of the League of Natlons, but out of | has oc respect and regard for the league my | | colleagues have asthorized me to| leave England in order to attend the | f | council and lay before it any infor- { mation I may be able to BY RECURRENT QUAKES |m:re wes wavalls worthy ot con- | D | sideration. | B e TS { 5 5 { Y Called Up in Senate. | Students Advised, to En r | {Nangt Joloredo, ~in Kedn RBesi-| (oppigeration of the bill was be- iGa ki | P s . e ; enil Lo it s i ainst Briti e < | dency. Jave, Destroyed—=90 | gun in the Senate today al E i 200 8! ish Demands. { : | mediately after the compl | Granting of Vises for Emi-|e: e acoiniea precs i Lives Believed Lost. | the reading of the Presid, - . CAIRO, December 3.—Former Pre-| =4 Suge. Presid [ lidge strongly micr Zagloul Pasha today urged i By tiie Associated Press. sug! & rongly | e ¥ urged aj & S0 460 Mt Toleed { Bill in his budget message. | school of professors to end the strike | native town Nangt Joloredo, in| “genator Smoot obtained unanimous Allowance Made. which tifey began in protest against | Kedu Residency, has beeh destroved | gonsent to call the bill up. It had the British demands upon the Egvp-| in the recurrent earthquake shocks|been favorably reported at the | tian government in c on with { and it is feared the death toll will| session of Congress by the committee | 1o\ hne the assassination of Sirdar Stack 1 reach 980 on public buildings and grounds. " " S In fulfillment of my patriotic dut T ST | The tremendous saving which would| TOKIO, Decomber 3.—A mew wnd consclous that the nation's par accrue to the Government through |national situation, created todas ament will defend its rights,” he| HEAVY LOSSES CAUSED the ownership of Its own buildings, | the Brazilian consul notified the Japa- | sald, “I have counseled calm In this instead of occupying rented quarters, | nese government of instructlons re- critical hour.. Again I teil you that BY SQUALLS IN FRANCE |was described in detail by Senator| eetved to suspend the granting of;1 am entircly free to go twhere I 3 Smoot. He pointed cut also that to- ol e ® pin el omigrants intend. | please, but I have not asked for | . 2 2 day many of the Government em-| . G e 25 o a | passport to go abroad, .nor have 1! Streams Overflow, Buildings Dam- |1 yes housed in the temporary | INE fo £0 1o ‘:"m “’-l“':’““” il | thought of doing so. | - P o buildings erected during the war, newhat tonig when the SU'| “Continue to stand by the nation’s| aged, Crops Laid Waste—Rain | ,Gr08 o e e ot well fitted | advised the Japanese forelgn office | rights, hoping that the country by | Falls in Torrent. for the purposes for which they are!that passports would be granted 1o unity will soon secure restoration of | 5 A {used. The Government clerks suffer | emigrants now at Ko ready to em- | its rights and liberty.” | ¥ the Assot ed Press, from heat In the Summer froin v oF The Japanese for-! 2 i PARIS, Decomber 3.—Squaiis Sl chid in the Wintos The reisatle sor |PaTE 7 G k“! Fen e, Sexntorsr Alsojnect. | i e e e B ntes 2 ign office has asked its minister te | to, that which tecently didjords of the Government are imperiled { L0 P4 "5 00 2 hoport on the mat-| A petition. signed by 113 Deputies, | 00007 damage to Nice in four|by the fire hazard of thess structures, | Broil o St requesting immediate convocation of | ee struck rions parts of | he said {ter e otion heralds an exclusion | the Chamber, was presented to Kink | wthern Trance Yesterday, par-| Wil Remove War Buildings. I"_“" e U Fasinena At Mr‘lb‘un(]l today. The Senators are taking | ticularly In Gard department, causing| Senator Copeland of New York | Apnsaton of ‘the immigratior | STilar action. i | renms to overflow, damaging build- | asked if the removal of the war | section of the foreign office, “the situ-f. ‘7 ‘°h" intry s traversing a crit- ings and laying crops waste { buildings was contemplated in the |ation presents itself in a decidedly) ft BUAse of its existence,” the At Uzes lightning struck and|Dplan contained in the Smoot bill. | Serious aspeet to the Japanese na-|deputles’ petition says. “The usurper damaged factory and a cafe; Senator Smoot replied that all of | tion " as come down upon it with brutal | Arles a half inch of rain fell In an |these temporary buildings would be | AdEi Nt S Sl i force, hoping to regularize his situ-| ation and drag out consent to his usurpation, but the country, affirm- |ing its will to live freely and inde- pendently under the shelter of your | happy reign, will accept nothing but | tndependence.” MEXICAN REBELS FIGHT TO RECOVE # DEAD CHIEF By the Associated Press. Month’s Recess Taken. MEXICO CITY, December 3.—A des-| The Egyptian Parllament was, pro- perate but unsuccessful attack by rogued on November 25 for a month, rebels upon the mining town of El|after Ziwar Pasha’s assumption of MESSAGE Chico to recover the body of their the premiership in succession to Zag- In Running Away From Her Husband By the Assoclated Press. ' Mrs. Hillman accompanied by X . ¢ A Efi(chG?. ml:ec;xr‘-;?;‘r & T‘llw Mr. and Mrs. Thornton Adams— | millions o q e Mrs. Adams was matron of honor falled last night to stop Mrs. Ed- ward Hiliman, jr., from her de- termination to g6 away, and unless some new obstacle prevents, she planned to board a boat today for Europe. Her husband wade energetic ef- forts to stop his bride of a month at the Hillman wedding—dashed eastward in her husband’s motor car, but the police of Garret stop- ped them and took the car. Mrs. Hillman and her companfons char- tered a taxieab and sped on to Fort Wayne, Ind., according to the from leaving, but when police of newspaper. There the two women Garret, Ind, and Crestline, Ohio, boarded a train, and Mr. Adams presented themselves Mrs. Hill- returned to Chicago. man told them that they could not | arrest her without a warrant and that she was only rumning away from her husband, according to the Chicago Herald dnd xaminer to- ay. t Crestline the police got on the train. 1 “You can't arrest me,” sald Mrs. Hillman, “you have no warrant and T'm only running away from my hushand 5 | wounded and captured. chief, which was being exhibited by | Joul Pasha. » the police as @ warning to law vio- | During the last few days members lators, 18 reported in advices from | of he Chamber of Deputies have Pachuca. been arrested fn connection with al- |’ Emiliano Ortiz was shot recently |leged plots against the British in Egypt. and his band forced (o flee aflter a| g3 3 y fight wit] roops, o St upon recovering their| Swedes Want to Come Over. leader's body for burial, reorganized| GOTHENBURG, Sweden, December in the mountains under Juan Jose,|3 _The lure of the Golden West Is second in command, and descended |sfill strong in Sweden, as shown by upon the town, only to meet With &|the announcements from the United second repulse, Jose was seriously|States consulates here and at Mal- moe that the number of advance ap- { plications received for passport |visas for America already exceeds |the entire 1925 quotas allotted to | these consulates. Peace Prize Withheld. CHRISTIANIA, Norway, Decembe: 3.—The Nobel prize committee of the Storthing has decided that the Nobel peace prize shall not be awarded this yoar. thoss Somsulates: o ool L Radio Prografi:s——Page 35. D.C. TOASK 6040 PLAN RESTORATION Commissioners to Make Fight for All Budget Items at Hearings. The District Commissioners will make plea for the restoration of 50-40 plan of appropriating for e National Capital when t before the subcommittees of tl ate und House to 1estify on the new District appropriation bill. it was au- | thoritatively stated at Distriet Building today. The city heads, it is understood, ! take the position that the 60-40 ratio fs still the permanent law on the subject of fiseal relations bteween the ited States and District gover t= und that the lump #um method itten into the last appropriation act was for the current year only. With hearings scheduled to begin | within a few weeks on the District bill, the Commissioners be today to prepure themselves to testify in support of all of the items recom- nended in sent to th Budget Bv Although the budg th several millions xhort appro budget f the amou Commissioners originally asked it is approximately 990,000 n eurrent appropriatiohs, and minissloners are over increase the gratifled Bell held morning tment figures Wwere gone over ‘ommissioner al conferen t assistants and which ster ae the budget chiefs, made public and plans diseussed for the forthcom- ing hear at SHIPWRECK CREW LANDED AT NORFOLK Schooner Henrietta Simmons Sun by Storm Off the Vir- ginia Capes. Ity the Associated Press NORFOLK, Va.. Dece W. O. Perry and three members of th erew of the schooner Henrietta Si mons, which went down off the Vir- sinfa capes Monday, were landed here last night by the steamer The Lams, which picked them up just a few minutes hefore their storm tered vessel went down. The mons, built 59 vears ago, hailed from Portland, Me., and was en route from Claremont, Va., to New ‘York with a | cargo of cord wood when she ran into the storm Sunday night. Her salls were carried away and the seas quick- 1y _opened her aged seams. The Lams came along just a few minutes before the ship made her final plunge and took off the men in a lifeboat at great risk to the rescue crew. The Simmons sank in 21 fathoms of water and her masts are visible above the,surface. These will be blown out by a Coast Guard cutter, as the wreck now fs & menace to navigation. Foot Ball Star Shot. RUSSELLVILLE, Ark., December 3. -“Pug” Edwards, quarterback on the College of Ozark foot ball team, wa shot and serlously wounded by Jay Rogers, traveling salesman, at Rog- er's home here last night. Moscow Is Financing Insurrection In Balkans, Bulgar Premier Assert BY A. R. DECKER. By Cable to The Star and Chicago Daiiy News. VIENNA, December $.—Premier Zankow of Bulgaria has revealed that Moscow has sent, considerable sums to organize a Communist insurrection in the Balkans. Now the Belgrade committee for fight- ing the Third Internationale states that the Vienna Balkan committes is & Moscow agency for propa- gandizing the Balkans through in- citing the Croats, Macedonians, Albanians and Bulgars against the Serbs, and pitting the Catholics against the Orthodox religion. Two Bulgarians, Rakovski) and Kolarow, are the Vienna commit- toe leaders. Moscow is represented by Zaltl . Horlakow, the editor of Legislative Program to Be I'rawn Up at Joint Parley of T Branches. TWO AUTO DEATHS ADDED TOD. . LT Man Killed by Truck. Whose Driver Reports Accident. Boy. Hurt, Expires. r0 Washington's tr#fle toll of humar life was boosted to another higl mark today when police recorded violent death. wo more pedestra accidents outlying thorough- the wheels of running 4 esolution bus a uth end of Highway «tive Ernes last Monday ! Seek Joint Meeting. Driver In Arrested. Robert P. Butler « - 3 which kflled Mr he d is in estigatior 1 whil 1 t w Hos to police tal his upon death driver was taken 1 In both of 1 the drivers complicd wit other ci drivers It Represes ed man vesterday veintrody imposing Te penalties on drivers failing to = themselves knows after collisions. In commenting v “fair pla Wantx New Books. of drivers like t involved in t s AR tal accidents, Inepector Cli iy e Satihone irant, chief of the Detective | ¢ in ed the real Washington today is not the drt {Continued on Pa Colum: GILBERT'S IDEAS ONCOLLECTION WiN | nace er who with er ing ) this point Puts Through Arrangement | to Handle Taxes Levied i on German Exports. Bill Remedied. destgned to AR ure figures BY EDGAR ANSEL MOWRER. 1 he Fire ! By Radio to The St $3.250 | ERLIN, Dec Mr. Reed ling e ‘-- al Gilbert has apparently In”um. rv,.»”\.r,':;:\ ‘; ni T ,._\i,,:, | fer committee under the ‘u i o \",‘l':‘ sl <1‘ + 2 1 s —and he thereby has d a e which all Germans and peace | Representative Thomas Blanto lovers may properly be grateful. Texas moved that some sort of po Although the text of the Ankio atfon be worked out sc man commercial treaty wiil not bers of ss would be s be published until Friday, the writer | (¢ ’fflvl\m:: Govern t u\‘n._:.“(m:‘: { has been informed that the Germans ‘f'.'"v""l':_““_'«‘ i ',‘. v o ;‘1"l';:niluv.. |are particularly well satisfiea with | iie POUee Tl BOIERG 00 At e the new arrangeme fhs asiver | b e Rlia bedan Imber cent collection on German exports by b heie Goverriners England under the British recovery | matter was referred act to a committec o fthree, composed of Fund te Be Segregated. Mr. | on, Mr. Zihlman and Repra- iferetofore this mo: has heen | Sentative Florian Lambert, to arrange taken d by the B \ wovern. | & conference with tho Commiss ment from the British importers, |00 the subject huss gindig the Cranwier oause. of Quick Action Foreeast. the Dawes plan. Henceforth the tax The resolution of fectedfiom the Pri vidihg for immed will not be tmporters, but will be paid by the Viding for imm 1 German government monthl | lation for the traffic situation, is ex figures furnislied by the British gov- | Pected to recelve quick action on th ernment, into the hands of i the ~<n\!mul_wn e s general, and will be kept in BOW e anla) il peonlg account for England killed and maimed daily The agent will credit the jon & e it Rl G with the payment of the condition should not be allowed lected aund will consider it | continue. The whols traffic matte: in the rman annuity | should be m‘v»-.vu nly goue Jinto and mans believe that from now on they ”‘ 5 ';{‘3; : S dh:~ M dae can wash their hauds of the entire | . Mr. Blanton polnted out that ti problem, which must be thrashed out | district attorney of the District had between the British gover | today ordered warrant swor out for a spee who had forfeited the allies, with judem®€nt rights re served for the agent general and th transfer committee. (Copyright, 1924, by Chicago Daily News Co.) collateral. “That is the right step in the right directlon™ Mr. Blanton sald. “When these law breakers find out that i stead of merely forfeiting a few doi {lars in collateral they will have to appear in court, they will not be so quick to violate the law. To my ming | his solves the whole problem.” “Nét the whole problem,” answered {Mr. Gibson. “The matter should be the Federation Balcanique, Is the leader of the propaganda. His office houses a branch office of the Third Internationale. He is also Lupu, the Rumanian peasant leader at Belgrade, and has a spe- cial agent with a deputy as an Serbs—all with the knowledge of the Albanian government and In liaison with Rome. The pre-election clashes of Sat- urday_in northern Croat resulted in 29 Nationalists and Republicans being injured. (Copyright, 1924, by Chicago Dafly News Co.) thoroughly gone into, and T hope Mr Rathbone's committee will make an intensive study of the question. | ¥ourteen members of the commit- 5 , tee were presant. They were: Repre O e ¢ aditch. | yentatives _Blanton, Reed, Zihlmar, ugoslavan peasant leader, and Dr. |, pert, Keller, Underhill, Gibson, Beers, Rathbone, Gilbert, Kunz, Kent | Stalker Gasque. assistant. 5 | = Since Albania recognized the | - Soviets, Moscow has had a military | Noted Surgeon Succumbs. S irana, who direc i e A e et halaTocts the | CHICAGO, December 3.—Dr. Rudolph bantan comitadjls against the |Menn, surgeon and father of Miss Olga Menn, for love of whom Baron | Oska Rothschild was reported to have | committed suicide, died yesterday | Dr. Menn was 60 vears old and was | born at Vienna, Austria. He was on | the staft of several Chicago hospitals !and had been senior dean and vice president of Jenner Medicul Coll