The evening world. Newspaper, May 30, 1919, Page 4

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} BY RHINELAND IN JD _OEFANCEOF EBERT * Getman Government Warning : Against Treason and Threat Ee” of Punishment'ls Ignored. GENEVA, May % (United Press). a —The Frankfurter Zeitung states i that \a Rhineland republic was de- 4 clarpdain Coblenz on Tuesday. ‘ ‘The pewspaper mays a general 4 strike was-declared immediately and that whem the tlews spread demon- i strationasfor and against the repub- be lie were held and committees were < formed in many towns of that region. 4 American intelligence officers in Y Coblens are enforcing strict meas- ; ures againet demonstrations. ‘Two nu hi agitators are eaid-to have been ar- rested at a street meeting in front mnial Chiffon Taffetas Tucked Georgettes Beaded Georgettes Flowered Georgettes Crepe Meteors Newest Satins Taffeta Combined Bxclusive Foulards produced.’ It is a gu extraordinary wearing em The largest and most net dresset offered circumstances oer ary (The Modern Beauty) Every woman ‘should have « smal) kage of delatone handy, for its imely use will keep the kin free from -marring hairy growths.” To lair or- fuzz, make a thick with somedbf the powdered dela- one and water. Apply to hairy sur- face and after 2 or 3 minutes rub off, wach the skin and it will be free from hair or blemish. To avold disappoint. hed be sure you get real delatone ve for Bab pe es WIEN vou £0 on your vaca- tion this Summer have your favorite paper mailed to you every day. Evening World, 12¢ per weak Dally World, 12 par woek Sunday Werld, Ge per Sunday Tucked Crepe de Chine Beaded Crepe de Chine with Georgette Mihest class . ruffled, tucked, shirred, (95 All Wool ‘ 60 Point d’Es At one time at tl $25.00. Also combinations of avec pm. ssith ribbon sashes, ly youthful types ‘in They of the railway station, Military po lice also broke up secret meetings in hote! rooms. BERLIN, May % (Associated Press.)—The Governmept has pub- lished @ statement in black type un- der a huge head “Warning” sayitg that those planning to separate th. Rhineland from Germany and to create an independent fepublic are} guilty of high treason, punishable with lifelong imprisonment, and that the Government's duty would be to take measures to the fullest severity of the law against those persons, The Prussian Diet discussed the situation yesterday and there were violent criticisms of Herr Kastert, Herr Kuekheff and Herr Frohberger, who are alleged to have negotiated with Gen, Mangin, Commander of the French forces in the Mayence dis- trict. Herr Frohberger is editor of the Cologne Voikeseitung. The Social Democratic Rhine Gazette has been suspended for eight days for printing the nows relative to the conference between Herr Frobberger and Gen. Mangin. - ‘Two Hart When Auto Skids, Jossic Weil, thirty-three yearn « age of No. 66 Broad Street, Manhat lacerations of the left ankie and) Van Wesel of 77th Street and severe cules and bruise when an automobile b an Wesel skidded and ¢ > an her automobile in fro hmond Koad, Staten Ista day | Hoth were taken to the Staten Island Mirit of religion, that they know they | Hospital, tle Saturday Values to $45—at 4 models, dra arantee that these dresses {vill Service. THE EVENING WORLD, FRIDAY, MAY 30, WILSON AT GRAVES of America OF HEROES SAYS THEY {Continued From First Paga) spirit, WON PRAISE FOR THEIR UN- FLINCHING COURAGE. “It wil memory on the and kne to the point of alwaye vo that greatest of ali gifts, the, gift of life and the gift of | physteat might, and those of us who know and love America know that |they were discaverihg to the whole i world the true spirit and devotion of | their motherland. “It was America who came in the |person of these men and who will BURIED IN FOREIGN LAND, NOT ALIEN BOIL. UT | entertain these thoughts because we know that these men, though buried in @ foreign iand, are not buried in an alien soll, They are at home wideping with the spirit of those who thought the same thoughts and en- | tertained the same aspirations, The | noble women of Suresnes have given be a treasured part of those who|Vidence of the loving stnse with love these men| Which they received these dead as who that the testimony of everybody who saw them inthe ficid of action was their unflinching courage, their ardor audacity, their full consciousness of the high cause they |had come to serve and their constant tan, received a fractured skull and | vision of. the ineue It in delightful to their own, for they have cared for their graves, they have made it their interest, their loving interest, to eee hat there was no bour of neglect, and that possibly through all the | months that have gone by the moth- {ers at home should know that there carn from these who suw these mer| Were mothers here who remembered were exhibiting a spirit as well as a! * 47-49-51 West 42d Street™ CMU, WILL CLOSE OUT Nile, Gray Mauve Liberty ive e Smart one-piece pin-tucked model, newest suit, dress, embroidered sport tredels. dress models with Persian embroide Peesate an line, tight fitting, narrow shouldere red Grecian ry designs, and straight button trimmed and Sold Up Till Now at $39.75, at wonderful selection of white or ecru -ensational price the spirit of the day. | West Forty AE ER, AACN ELS. 6) RIE ES, of red: nets with Geor- dainty models Seysioned. ty eh ut for Would Be Sold Up to $65.00, at 410 Smart Silk Dresses COLORS * Nav Blac, n ‘an Pekin Henna ‘ Midnight ' iy ~~ pe Flesh, etc. prit Net Dresses d tunic, surplice collar, ded and embroidered, ‘Schreiber” Jersey Dresses ne name ‘Schreiber’ means the { nest jersey cloth that is - second and West Forty- Third Streets Our establishment will be open from 9:A. M. to 5.30 P. M. To-morrow, Saturday. |fight and saw them waiting in the| am! honored their dead trenohes for the summons to the fight| "Y 1476 | that they bad a touch of the high u have just heard in the beauti- ful letter from Monsieur Clemenceau whut 1 believe to be the real mes- ge of France to us on a day like | this, a mei ge of genuine comrade- chip, a message pf genuine sympathy, and I have no doubt that if our Brit- ish comrades were here, they would speak in the same spirit and in the same language. “For the duty of this war is that it hag brought a new partnership and a new comradeship and a new understanding into the field ef effort of the nation. “But it would be no rofit to iNustrious high duty to afresh on a day ti is objects for which they fought. “It is not necessary that I should | rehearse to you what these objects | wore, ‘These men did not come across the seas merely to defeat Ger- many and her associated powers in the war. “They cam@ to defeat forever the thines fomwhich the Central d ers sto he #word of pow- ¥ they meant to assert in the | world#the arepcant, selfish dom- mation which they meant to ea- tablish: and they came, more- aver, to woe to it that there should never be a war like this again.” OUR DUTY 18 TO PREVENT ANOTHER SUCH WAR. It is fo! particularly for us who are civilized, to use our prope Weapons of counsel und agreement to see to it. that there never is such a war ugain, ‘The Ration that should now fling out of this common con- cord of counsel would betray the hu- . ‘do it is our duty Ao take and maintain’ the safeguardy whieh will gee to it that the mothers of America and the mothers of France and land and Italy and Belgium and al! the other suffering nations should never be called upon for this sucri- s] | fice again, ‘This can be done, It must be done. The thing that these men left us, though, they did not in | their counsels conceive it, is the great instrument which we have just j erected In the League of Nations. who were pri in their mot country will mingle with the dust of the men who fought for the pr of the Union and th. in order to secure the freedom of a nation. “These men ha order to secure the fred@om of kind: and I look forward to an age when jt will be just as impossible to regret tho remults of their labor as it is now impossible to regret the results [of the labor of those who fought for the Union of the States, EXPECTS OPPONENTS OF THE LEAGUE TO BE ASHAMED. “L look for the time when every man who now. pu his counsel against the united service of mankind {under the Loague of Nations will just o# ashamed of it if he now regretted the Union of the States, “You are aware, as Tam aware, that the airs of an older day are beginning to stir again, that the standards of an old order are trying to assert thom selves again. There is here and there an attempt to insert into the counsel statesmen the okt reckoning Mfishne ing nae | tonal advant were the roots of this war, who conn. which these nen ve given the: for if this is not the final battle for right, there will be anocher | that will be final * these gentiemen who suppose [that it is possible for them to ac- jcomplish this return to an order of | which we are ashamed and that we are ready to forget (cable omissien) capnot accomplish it. The peo- of the world are awake and the JOYFUL EATING Unless your food is digested without the after- math of painful acidity, the joy is taken out of both ‘eating and living. KI-MOIDS are wonderful in their help to the stomach troubled with over-acidity. Pleas- ant to take—relief prompt and definite. “And it is the more delightful to}, Private counsels of statesmen canfhot now and cannot hereafter determine the destinies of ‘nations, MEN MUST BE SERVANTS OF | OPINION OF MANKIND. “If we are not the servants of the opinion of mankind we are of all inen the littlest, the most contemp- | ble, the lea: with vision, “lf we d our age we which not kward; | the standard ns w t just?” sts it in st of mankind?” 4 challenge that no previ- | ous generation ever dared to give ear to, So many things have happened, and they have happened s0 fast in the last four years, that I do not idea that we must have a League of Nations: that we could not mere- ly make a peace sattlement and then leave it to make itself effectual, but that wo must conceive some common organization by which we fshould give our common faith that this peace would be maintained and the conclusions at which we had arrived had been secure as the united counsels of all the great nations that fought against Germany could make “We have Hstened to the challence, | and that is tho proof that there #hall never be a war like this again, BELIEVE SPIRITS OF SOLDIERS STILL HERE, “Ladies aud gentiemen, we all be- lieve, { hope, Unat the spirits of these men are nut buried with their bones, Their spirits live. £ hope—L believo— | that their spirits ure presont with us at this hour. I hope that 1 feel the compulsion of their presence. 1 hope that | realize the siguifieance of their presence. Think, soldiers, of those comrades of yours who ure gone. 1f they were hege what would they say? They would not remember what you ere talking wbout to-day. They would remember America which they left with high hope and purpose. "They would remember the terrtbie ficld of battle, They would remember what they constantly recalled in times of danger, what they had come for and how worth while it was to give their lives for it. ‘ And they would say, ‘Forget all the little circumstances of the day. hamed of the es that divide you. We command a in the name of those who, like ourselves, have died, to bring the counsels of men together, and we remind you what America said she was born for. “She was born to show men the way of experience by which they might realize this gift and maintain it, and we adjure you in the namé of all the greet traditions of America to make yourselves soldiers now, once for all, in this common caus where we need wear no uniform ¢: cept the uniform of the heart, cloth. ing ourselves with the principles of right and saying to men everywhere: ‘You are our brothera and we invite you into the comradeship of liberty and of peace,’ “Let Us go away hearing these un- spoken mandates of our dead com- rades. “If I may speak a personal word, I beg you to realize the compulsion myself, feel that I am under. constitution of our great country I was the commander in chief of these men. I advised the Congress to declare that a state of war existed. These lads over here to die (word mixsing). Shall I—can lever speak a word of counsel which is inconsistent with she as- stirances I gave them when they came over? .It is inconceivable. “There is something better, if pos- sible, that a man pan give than his Nfe, and that ts his living spirit to a service that is not easy, to resist counsels that are hard to resist, to stand against purposes that are dif- ficult to stand against and to say, | ‘Here I stand, consecrated in spirit of the men who were once my com- rades and who are now gone and who me under eternal bonds of fidelity, ORLANDO SEES WILSON ON FIUME SETTLEMENT lialian Premier Shows Further De- sire for Final Agreement on Territorial Claims. PARIS, May 30 (United Pregss).--Al though there was no meeting of the Big Four to-day on account of the general observance of Memorial Day, Premier Orlando called on President | Wilson thissmorning. The visit was accepted as indicating a further desire of t! lan delega- tion to effect a definke settlement of ltaly's terrHorial claims at once. aeto-esulied 3 RANTZAU BLAMES WILSON FOR GERMAN SURRENDER BERLIN, May %.—'The theme of President Wilson is @ very ticklish one,” was 4 statement made by Count von Brockdorff-Rantaau, chief of the Ger- man peace delegation, at Versailles, ac- cording to the correspondent of the Deuteche Zeitung, “for Mr. Wilson is the father of our surrender ‘The German people count nts the friendly He quotes him a he present terms are Count. asc toward America suying that If * | enforced ¢ |that all dec especially were nothing less than ry ruse which decel¥ed the German people and Government. ‘fount von Brockd jcording to the corr being pes aa es wae PR Best, Mang ete connections ted Germann: oe: between Ver- BEAUNE, France, May 30,—Capt. Andre Tardieu, member of the French think many of us realize what it is Peace Delegation and former head of that has happened. Think how im- possible it would have been to get & body of responsible statesmen seri- ously to entertain the idea of the or- | ganization of « League of Nations four years ago! the General Commission for Franco- American War Matters, defended the Treaty of Peace in an address at the And think of the|closing exercises of Beaune Univer- wity, where 10,000 American student- | soldiers have been studying since the armistice put an end to actual hostilities. He said, the treaty: ‘ “First, it is honest. It agrees with I found the statesmen with whom |OUr Programme of I was about to deal united in the lic engagements ception of interna’ matter for reproach in this character is to misunderstand altogether what ideals have contributed to our vic- tory and to strip us in peace time of one of our greatest forces in the war. . “Besides, it is common to us both, by and vouched for in every one of its ‘ them, layticles by the whole-hearted adbe- sion of your and of the Allied gov- ernments. While he is studying and discussing this same treaty, the en- omy well knows that he has a block of granite in front of him. one tries to belittle this solidarity, he thereby confesses that he has learned nothing from the lessons of the war or from the creative greatness of our Union. is “Finally, it is eMcient, for in that world which it invit makes Germany truly harmless, It forces her to repair everything which she should and can repair; thing which we condemned her to re- pair on the 1lth of November last, and everything which the universal conscience of the world demands that she should repair. “To challenge the need of such a guarantee lived for five years outside of human- ity, and to ignoring the martyrdom " such aggression has ‘inflicted t. Tardieu said that during the labors of the conference, just claims of France found no more fi advocate than. President Wilson, He in France and America. “The Franco-American friendship, offspring of Washington and Lafay- ette,”” warmed up by the common effort in, this war of justice, will triumph over all the hidden attac in all its splendor be: conscience of the two he ae 1919, | : TARDE DEFENDS Ou WL TH ‘LEAGUE TO 10000 I S SOLDERS French Member of Peace Dele- gation Warns Against In- trigue and Praises Wilson. r) many with The keen in their bri They do not conceal thefr desire to reduce Germany to military im- potence and to give her a taste of DOWN GERMAN DEMAND ON LEAGUE MEMBERSHIP —. Coptinued From First Page.) chance to compare undamaged Ger- loium and mutilated ire for revenge what her self-invented “reckleseness’ be The in discussing r, without pub- 4 with our eon- onal life, To find If any- to peace, it every- is to confess to having seeing ‘Woodrow arned against intrigues said, “stimulated and and will arise re the clean tion: — Paris newspapers agree that the Allied The occupation of all Ger rritory for an indefinite time High AT most mothers are look- te ing for in their boys’ shoes, * these shoes contain, that is; WEAR. There is wear in the leather, wear in the workmanship, and wear in the last, for do not forget that practical lines add much to the life of a shoe. Specifically, the se- lection embraces black, brown and Ko-Ko calf, in sizes 1 to 6. They are fine value. THE FRANKLIN SIMON BOYS’ SHOPS The Only Institution Where You Can Buy the Famous generally os nd Associated man tations, regime, advance FRANKLIN: SIMON Boys’ SHops FIFTH FLOOR BOYS’ SHOES and Low $600 A better shoe than Six Dollars will usually buy | Feanklin Simon &Co. Fifth Avenue—37th and 38th Streets MADE-IN-LONDON .- Handyman Sailor Suits for BOYS ALLED “HANDYMAN” because it is so practi- cal. Made of a very fine grade of white English drill, with a fast color navy blue collar of the same stuff, a silk handker- chief tie,a handsome hand- ‘embroidered English em- blem on the sleeve, and a lanyard and whistle to complete the nautical effect. Looks awfully good on a youngster, not *so much because it is novel, but because it has a deep sea quality about it that youcan’t help butlike! Sizes 3 to 9 years With Short Knee Trousers With Long Middy Trousers Fifth Av ue—37th and 38th Streets $5.75 6.75 Franklin Simon Co. - Boye’ Shops — Fifth Floor Powers “ha the pretensior counter. will not cunsider Papers say pro: Dosals are an attempt to escape thi moral and material consequences 6 the war and give the impre Germany paiee Rio.New York Cable Probab| RIO JANEIRO, May 90. sion by the Government for construd tion of a cable betwee J New York vii fore the courts pected, I be laid of South na. Veneauela and answered in ut forth in the G@ posals and tl the proposal that the counte jon tha is trying co open oral o The Socialist L’'Humanitie declares that Germany cannot reject rempon: sibility for the acts of the {mpert It says that the German dismissed the former Government ft order to gain absolution, It adds thi Germany in 1871 did not stop of its army because French had revolted against the im perial government ‘The concey: ero ani me again bé iortly and {ts approvy: om this city the lin along the ¢ Ameri

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