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General Von Kiuck Witheim gaid Von Kluck to the k “We will.” ‘That was back in 1914 op the throne, * * * eport Italian lian For orces land i in Dalmatia and | _ March on Chief Cities ONDON, May 2— (United Press.)—A news agency from Spalato, dated April 29, and relayed by way agen, reported that Italian forces and war ma- have landed at Zara and Zebenico. Their troops were to be marching eastward from those cities and rein- were marching toward the line of demarca- ® fara ison the Dalmatian coast, 90 miles southeast’ of ‘Tebenico is 45 miles southeast of Zara. eas te Dalmatia Coast Cities of the deadlock in the peace congress has a popula- 27,000 are Italians. The remainder are Croats. ort, but Italy claims possession because of its Italian aor or ene Italy has constructed ly. now charg: Dalmatia: Secure Latin ahd the reat fai ambitions because of the Balkan peninsula fell under | perenne & the the rule,of Constantinople. Then | was & group | came the Slavs. and after them V tee ruled the Dalmatian coast again. together under |It became Turkish, and then V. “the House of Savoy | netian again. When Venice fell, Na- of Cavour, prime poleon ceded Dalmatia to Austria, the kingdom of Sardina, together with the Venetian plains tien of men like Maz-/and the region between which Italy |i now about to recover. ggoneend for the! The secret treaty of 1915 by which jis permitted no Italy was to have the Dalmatian + Te: com without a coast In return for entering the war i peg against Germany made no mention the Iskind of Sar: of Flume, which is in Croatia, but is iformed ‘the kingdom about Principally Italian in population. ‘modern Italy gathered. The | TE ae YANKS PROTEST and first principal was “the of the governed” and his | Charge Wounded Men Were to have Sardinia drive out the pei rulers et up| Knocked Down in Fight of Vienna and then) People set up a united] NeW YORK, May 2—(United Hie first plan failed when press)—Mayor Hylan may Fecelve | set out to win the aid! ing a protest against action of the| police in riding down soldiers and | sailors near Madison Square Garden | last night. Mounted police charged the unt formed men, when the latter con gregated in the street, apparently aa dite man at ine | with the intention of marching on M foe the aid of urope in buila.| Madison Square Garden, where a Itdly. Napoleon was | T0™ Mooney protest meeting was in Cavour intended he Progress. A number of the men Be He gave the desired aia | ¥eTe knocked. down. and complaint point of driving the Aus.|¥@" made to newspaper reports by Lombardy. ‘Then, be. ervice men that convalescent Rot want to soe Italy | Wounded. who had nothing to do Ihe deserted Cavour, But| With the trouble. were clubbed. Under way and one by |, The Clash ended a May day of scat Petty states of the Italian | tered disorder, the largest of which fame under the rule of | Of Savoy, in each case by | Of the people after the local Call, socialist daily, where police re nerves were called. Soldiers raided been overthrown. In the | thé office In the mistaken belief that Savoy and Nice, the|# Bolsheviki meeting was going on B favored union with France and | tere these districts were ceded At the Madison Square Garden the seven weeks war he.|favoring a five-day strike, starting 4nd Proceia In i806, | July 4 in protest against imprison ht on the wide of Prussia | ment of Tom Mooney, The resolu Was made to cai Cut |tion was adopted by acclamation, Yo Taly and it wa annexed | Mid cheers, A favorable vote of the inhab ee aie! Rome seat of BOSTON ‘ON RIOTERS also made indy or in Of early Thtria_ ana a “were Homan in the days re jured in May Day Row century, did fight ab.| BOSTON, May 2 “{United Press.) by Venice. And Istria has|—-More than 100 persons were ar than 500 years under |raigned in court here today as a re wult of May day riots late yesterday about| afternoon, in which four persons centers in| were shot and bundreds injured in . Was settled by | street fighting. The persons shot, in- early date, Native| cluding two policemen, will recover. the interior. Here| Following the riots 500 special po- @ kingdom of Iilyria, patrolled the Roxbury district ore Chriat last night, while crowds of boys and came in the second| men and many women walked the Christ and 1ed | streets, some armed with clubs and M, but only after bit-| iron bars, searching for persons who Ro took part in the parade of radicals im empire divided, | onsen started the riots, SSS, POLICE ACTION Plebiscite, and Italy bec ino is ax much Ital | Ver a |Four Shot and Hundreds In-| We'll take our Christmas dinner in Paris,” Mur victorious armies thru, We'll show the French what we can do.” | | a Sardinia in 1848) 4 delegation of sailors today, carry- | 66 | was at the offices of the New York | meeting, a resolution was presented, | | | Frederick Withi AAA PPP PPP PAPAL PAPAL AARP PPPS PPPS PPP PPL > APPEAL PPPAAP PPP PA AAP AL AAA PPPAPPAAPALAPAAAPAPAAPPRPPPRAPPAPAPA APPA AAAAAPPRP PAA APPAREL AARP Pages 15 to 28 [rece 15 028 | "Mhe Se attle Star Section Two : Famous A Art Model sald the kaiser, echoed Willie, who was groom. Germans Present Credentials The German f delegates have presented their credentials to the Versailles, It took just fiv allied comminsioners at agents of victor and vanquished. first formal meeting of the Already the Germann have complained of the close watch kept over them and the restriction placed on their movements by the allied chiefs It was thought necessary to place @ guard around the German head quarters in order to keep crowds of curious ones on the move The Germans on their way to Versailles viewed the shocking deva tation wrought by the armies of the kaiser in France, The Teutons Landsber; Brockdort Rantzau Giesbert ked upon the ruined land silently; some drawing the window blinds « whdor! Rantza perts after a brief sight of the wreckage the allies dictate, headed by these men who have come thruathe fal the katne And they are being kept under guard and march between high fences from thelr hotel to the place of conference with the allied delegates SBATTLE, WASH., FRIDAY, MAY 2 2, 1919. NAVIES OF WORLD AWAIT MEXICAN OIL DECREE * * *% Writes Her Life Story for The Star Ir can Rudina, Author of Fascinating ‘Series "] DISTURBANCES Ticklish International IN PARIS END Wrangle Grows Over Many Wott by Rich Petroleum Fields May day in Paris shes Letween civil troops in all parts of t were wounded in t Mexican Oil Facts at a Glance Annual production, 58,000,000 barrels. Market value at New York, $90,000,000 Capped wells holding back that much more. Mexico’s revenue from oil last year, $6,000,000. Eight groups of foreign operators contro! 4,000,000 acres of oil fields—82.5 per cent; 146 other foreign oper- ators hold another 834,717 acres—17.5 per cent. ntire export production of 6,600 barrels per hour, hardly equals the full flow of two good Mexican gushers. Foreign corporations retail gasoline i in Mexico at dou- ble the price they charge in United States, after paying transportation and export tax. With Russia eliminated, Mexico is second oil produe- ing country in the world. sualtien resulting from the riotw were officially announced today a ne Keridarme killed and 260 wound od and about 100 civilians wounde Fifty of the gendarmes were said to be seriously injured Deputy Jouhaux among the wor Private G American in the back by a stray bullet. He Ay to be “resting bor leader, was Harrison of the xervice was wounded was reported t eanily BSocialiet and labor leaders today placed the entire responsibility for | the disturbances on the government They declared the demonstrators had no’ intention of doing more than ; ‘ , : | NE’ ear. Compare the taxes | quietly parading the streets of the | (create tenon pads Aggy pg ud — idle capital ator, who x in Mex- Efforts on the part of paraderaand| feo. ant trent four| By holding its depreciation and i other workers to invade the Place om special detail for The/s pecial allocations appropriations de la Concorde to stage demonstra- | (copyright, 1919, Newspaper Enterprise down, El Aguila could have paid @ tions before the chamber of deputies oe Axsociation ) | dividend of almost. 50 per cent. land the ministry were defeated only| MEXICO CITY, May 2.—Of, Mex During this y of prosperity the jafter stiff fighting between troops) {co's Kreatert wource of national’ company had neither produced nor land gendarmes on one side and the| profit, ix also the source of her exported at capacity, A great per jmbbs on the other. | eravest international peril. centage of {is transport fleet had Ax the crowds, crying “Long live| It has kept Mexico out of the pro-/been requisitioned by the British | the poilu.” rushed the line of foot | posed league of nations. nan | soldiers in the square, the troops fell) Brought about the chief misunder Further probing of El Aguila fig: back, and their places were taken im. | Standings between that country and | ures show the reserves of that com- mediately by police and a cordon of | ours [pany now stand at about $60,000,000 cavairy. It was then the casualties) Laid the foundation for Interven | Saxioan gold. occurred. ton propaganda. In three months ending January Woman Is Leader Bogie vio gene Gag accredit | 24, As Aguile of, shares thede ps 4 market advance of 20 per cent. Headed by a tall. red-haired wom-|” Gaused France to table the creden: | p An, a mob rushed the soldiery in the tale of Mexico's newly appointed | ROYAL DUTCH square of the Bastile. More than 20) minister, Alberto Pani | MAKES “KILLING” of her followers were injured, for} Laid charges of imperialism, pro-| The Royal Dutch Shell” group while the infantrymen again gave|Germaniam and Bolsheviam against |(practically English government way, the gendarmes and cavalry | the Carranza government, and fright: | owned), which operates the rich Co- jheld firm. Only one red flag ®P-) ened away outside financial assist-|rona wells in Mexico, besides hold- | peared during the disturbances, and | | ance. ings in other parts of the world, in 3 Ps A A i j't was immediately charged and torn| withheld huge foreign investments | 1917 paid dividends of 48 per cent. Miss MANYA RUDINA, who is writing this story, “Sensations of an Artist's Model,” | down by the police from Mexico, and incited smoldering| How much came from Mexican |has posed for many of America’s leadin painters and sculptors—Jo Davidson, Paul) 1" ‘he carly evening arrests: be- | disquiet into open rebellions profits is unannounced, but it is only Manship, Sarah Green Wise, Auerbach Levy, Wasilof Benda, and many others. See eae: tea. | These are some of the political and|fair to surmise that Mexican fields nd ad lene disore vorted. economic shadows which the petro: | paid as handsomely, if not more so, She is a Russian-born girl whose parents brought ‘her to Canada. For the past SIZ | and the police held the mobs in com- | ones gtyeecs cent mantel’ thee shibt [tina thin cttiae nana y New York “Lati t b h and |years she has lived in the New Yor in Quarter,” posing for artists both rich and | plete control skies of Vera Cruz and neighborigg| Figures on Edward Doheny's hold poor, succesful and hard-pressed. An order for all Americans to re- | states, ings, earnings and profits are not so Out of her own experience Miss Rudina is writing this remarkable human document, | main off the streets was obeyed im-|" ro Mexico, oil hax thus far netted |easily obtained. In fact, the Mexi- “Sensations of an Artist’s Model,’ of art-bohemia, taking the reader “behind the screen.” . Plicitly, tho khaki could be seen in which reveals for jeverybody that little known world \every window and balcony. | | “Vive les Americans!” was one of} hag cries of the rioters. ; CRU DE STATESMANSHIP | Blind Soldier Talks ; TO BE REMEDIED Somewhere between Mexico's hith approximately $6,000,000 yearly reve. can government would give much to nw | know. Doheny, besides being the spokes- man of oil interests now at dead- locks with the Mexican government, After failure to reach the ministry is the head of the Pan-American Pe- % erto crude statesmanship regarding | f Illusions Fade When Gir ] I ights Her | Place de la Concorde, the crowd] her richest. natural resource and the |eleum company, the Mexican Pe- troleum company of Delaware, the Huasteca Petroleum company and ched on Pla de la Republique. wed by a blind rough-shod aggression of foreign oil ” S Mi R di | Ther they were addr Interests, American included, lies the | ‘ Way in World Alone, ays Miss Rudina iii Snir i cern oc a ome pate een BY MAN a great city very wonderful great sculptors and full of interest hard work Some of and exciting moments of my life have been spent at little parties” down in Greenwich Vil A RUDINA Famous New York Model in the big city of Kief, and I | ined to earn som ‘The life of an artist’s model in | would get a chance to learn to | the village outside Kief and ask like New York “studio | | It is like going into another | 4 Young girl to be going alone.” | where the whole family | | automobile so T determ “We are the weakest.” he said, I went to Let us not shed French blood. I annot see you, but T can feel you ity for all and supply of the world's | DOHENY HOLDS PROVEN OIL BONA rranza government expects His annuel report to stockhold- RGEST ents would send me to « school but had no money, is | dance. and to study and become | » if they wanted a honest ‘Working. men and. wom-|°? 004 and fiz this midaie-greund ers shows that their holdings in van. |: weltaelanh Tee ein’ canara: 4 Me tienes to pour its olls on the troubled waters,| 1913 profited over $4,250,000 U.S. painters is I wan sent boarding | liked this work very much, The Don't mind the police. The sot 12 Justice both to national and out) gold. The 1914 report shows prof- as of | School for boys and girls at Kiet mujike gave me food, #0 I need | dierx won't hurt you. I’m one of |"!4 ts—at a special petroleum | its of only $2,750,000, but repre- | 1 went all the way by rajtroad not return all day when { stole | them and for 15 months I have been “ORE oe cocumaee nts the Doheny holdings as delightful by myself, altho I was only 14 away from school, They were | fighting for you. 1 haye lost my vtec hg he turned from the peace| “the largest area of proven bo- curls, Because | was small and pay. But next to the big city, I |xerved my country and yourselves, | “t¢P—for the world’s navies and mer-| ownership and control.” ly chantmen depend largely on her | | quid fuel ret etern Mexican government statistics on pars old, and bad my hair in | able to give me only very small | sight, but 1 am not sorry, for it hax |COMference to watch Mexico's next| nanza oil territory under one | looked even younger, everybody loved the open country, and the | But I would ri who saw me said, “This is such little houses covered with straw | French blood flowed today. | petroleum exports this year show lage. ; had to | The soldier was picked up bodily) ip ack sag As ae a Doheny’s companies the leading ex- world, entering Ar: Distiked Discipline | sleep together in one bed. Jand carried on the shoulders of the) Of peepee odgereeg ay pa jPorters. ‘The only deduction to be tists are they I did not Uke the boarding | And after the lessons I would | crowd the remainder by Dutch, French | 2ztlved at would be they are also the make you forget the ugliness of school. 1 did not like its dix. | @ance with the village children - and Spanish, with bu a few | Steatest earners the streets of a big y. I love cipline and rules, or the “class | They came to love me so well | emeli Mexican-owned wells, Doheny’s reputation as a dividend the spirit that | maid” whd had charge of the | they used to come to the station | TUS bunual ot is 58,000,000 | Paver has never been as great as exists among the . strug | girls. I could not go out of the | to meet me. It was while duno: {| barrels, valued at $90,000,000 in | his reputation as an expander. Re- gling artists. smeli_ | grounds without a pass; I could | ing with them, that I met the | New thie |eent Mexican oil history shows the of paint little | not go to the theatre to see the | first artiat who ever asked me to | "Hever ae ik he Moab aes Doheny holdings increasing: pipe lunches sitting before the rusty artists. So then I went Without poxe for him, | nincut last vere wae 8600000, | ines Being laid; new wells brought old studio stove on an old box, permission and was punished, j : 000,000. (in; refineries springing up not only ' New Carranaa ofl taxes rer r listening to the artist telling me | and my parents notified, But I Bp os vse en? | pac ie Ne one as keg roman un |in Mexico but as far away as the old of a 1 o 7 a it | ed | 1, ol 5 aoe of the great picture he ix going | could not live without the /55 Are Held to Answer for} unacr ‘Mt ro have been paid but|Destrehan plantation a few miles theatre—without art (Watch The Star for further above New Orleans, and additions to to paint some day. last four years and think of all my disappointments, lusions gone, and of all the dif ficulties when she fight the | ma det protest But when I look back over the | I wanted to learn to dance, stories in this series. | Yesterday’ 's Outbreak aay eageds 4 |the already great tanker fleet and - | | FOREIGN OPERATORS’ joll storage plants scattered from the fi \Chicago Police |Hero of 91st Will AtAVELAND.O. bay 2,-tttaied | Cet Oe TION! | producing flelds to Panama, Py Press,)—Fifty-five persons, arrested| The cry of all the large oil opera: | ‘The Mexican oil controversy— irl Quell Radicals) Be Camp’ Chief ausing yesterday's toting here, were tors is “confiscation the clash between national 46 ae CHICAGO, May 2—-With the} TACOMA, May 2.—With decora pes 1 for hearings in police court| Here are som st whe taste I have <LEny Ok souuiren foreign in- ? | threatened. explosion by radicals o a: WeciiA “eaiwaea von | Rae gathered after exhaustive research, . girtish | threatened explosion by radicals of |tions from three world powers on | '12" tne rioting which resulted from|which must be taken into account| kept in abeya but think dreamy. Born in Russia I was born ways wanted to used to dance among the flow: | ers in my garden in the province: used to go to the dance for used to give me flowers for that, | declare. ‘Th and also warm milk fre the cow, ¢ seeds in it Altho r professor badly at bitterly resenting the expelled was glad, because It wi . in | Phe firm attitude of the poll with reserve officers to use the college | starting tr very now my par- [at the 4 giant socialist cannon cracker in| his blouse, Maj. Gen, W. H, John ts the world as one May day processions of radicals, one|in connection with the charges of| today confre Chicago on May day fizzled out ike | ston, who commanded the ist di la squib, police today were keeping | vision on their campaigns in. the | Mn Was killed and than 200 in. | confiscation of its most ticklish questions, al their anti-riot organization int { including 17 policemen. In all u Aguila (Lord Cowdray's he next step will be taken in the et, in Argonne and ¥ national I, W. May 5 ers, arrived here nursday night en route to Camp vis, where he will report as com nder of the post . en. Johnston will head the new planned, 34 arrests w nace English co ) last yerr ex- jal oil congress called by Car Police Chief Smith announced that ported in I nihs over 15,000,. naa for AY the red flag should never again be| 00 barrels from Tuxpam and Sesion permitted in any parade in Cleve besides local sales. | lane RUSSIAN SABLE ration for th convention her and 1 | federal agents dissipated any plans | nd | that the radicals might have had for | 91st division, which, it They | demonstration, the police will & rmed there, to perpetuate lice held KE. C. Ruthenberg re- | y'said the open the ideals of the old. 8 demonstration. als, 25 ver cent, pre | FUR BRINGS BIG PRICE from |dence of riot guns and some Ruthenberg, who recently was re. additional 8 =| ST. LOUIS, May 2.-(United Press) LONDON, May 2.-(United Press.) «8 are in Mex Records in fur sales were made arms, showed plainly. the \ art publis in a London | heu a term for) tern gold. on the fur exchange here yesterday ible newspaper that the Bolsheviki hed disloyalty agitation during the w Bestd's paying this enormous when a raw Russian sable hide sold captured Shenkurek and decapitated org d the ved flag parade, police dividend, Aguila doubled its Ten of the hides brought sed from the Cant where he ser 1 (0) work | per cent, The fl for Mre, Margaret A. Wheeler, 85, 60 American privoners with axes was, said deprecivtion slowrnce and sex. ment neer resident and first poston declared by beth the Dritish war of ‘The suthorities Loday were consult Cupled “special allocations.” Wearers of these furs will pay 1 Manzanita, died Wednesday m zifee and American headquarters, to | ing as te what charges would be pr And this company peid $1,887,- | three times the price for the finished Jeattle General hospital day to be untrue, jferved against Ruthenberg. 510,05 export tax on ity off last | product, buyers said, « oar anorenderencr senate RSS petal yneatitee sgyarenapsasearerssanpsettinnbitediibusdatioarseberseenaiomntuanjeinenaainasieetinsiavanaeneuegseremensousanaeeaneaaaegined