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Show THE SPANISH FORK PRESS, SPANISH FORK. UTAH mittee on foreign relations, proposing socialists seized control of the governThe United Statee entertained a companied hy airplanes, c roust'd the amendments and four reservations to ment. nn tuber of distinguished officials from border In eenrch of the bandits. PresThe situation Jn Ireland w'here the jdiould be enforced, If necessary, by the pence treaty. Senator Hitchcock abroad during the latter of the ident Carranza demunded the withthe prevention of all flnnnclul, com- presented a minority report, recom- Sinn Fein continued Its efforts to es- year, Including Cnrillnul part of drawal of the United States troops, Merrier mercial or personal Intercourse" be- mending the adoption of the treaty tablish a republic grew more serious Belgium. Albert and Queen hut hie demand was Ignored. , The King as the reservation. There begun then tween the nation falling to abide by without year advanced. Repeated dis- Elizabeth of Belgium, and the prince punitive expedition attucked a bandit the decision and all other member a determined fluid between the oppos- order occurred and on September 12 of We lea, stronghold on August 21, killing four In tsenunt the which ended senate, stuns of the League of Nations, French, lieutenant governor ing forces During the rios'ng weeks of the men, hit on August 24 the pursuit was of deadlock a In that in Irelund, he On prevented the that sunte finally Found further Great prohibited Difficulty presented day World meetings year a determined attack upon the abandoned and the troops returned to Irish parliament. Many war-timthis plan to the peace conference Pres- the ratification of the treaty either of the to prohibition act held the at- tbe United States. War From Returning arrests were made by the wllltury. ident Wilson sailed for the United with or without reservations. tention of the country. On October 27 The relutlons between Mexico and The lighting In Russia hnd continued President President Wilson had continued to States to uttend the closing sessions Peace Conditions. Wilson vetoed the stringent the Uultcd Stutes reached a crisis on of congress at Washington. combat every suggestion' of a ohnnge without decided advantage to any prohibition enforcement bill Opposipassed November 19 when Secretary of State tion to the Incorporation of the Lengue In the treaty or the eovennnt of the group until on October 23 the force by congress on the thut the ground dispatched n note demanding of Nations covenant In the pence treuty Lengue of Nations and In an effort to commanded by General Yudenltch, ad- emergency for which the prohibition the Imnledlate unconditional release MAKING THE GERMAN TREATY already had developed In this country, force Its ratification hnd undertaken vancing against the holshevlsts, tow hnd been enacted, had passed. of William O. Jenkins, United States und President Wilson, upon Ids return, an extensive tour of the country, be- reached a point within fifteen miles of Congress Immediately passed the bill consulur agent. at Puebla, who had deliv4. After In on I'etrograd, Boston delivered an September address at ginning over the president's veto and It be- been arrested ou charges of compile-- . Europe In State of Ferment, While which he emtdiuslzed the necessity of ering more than hlle other problems forty speeches out of came a law. Attacks were made npon growing Wae Struggling the United Statee the United States taking a leading throughout the West he broke down the war were being settled, the ques- tho prohibition tow In federal courts Ity with bandits who kidnaped him and held him for $150,000 ransom. A With Grave Induatrlal and part In the organization of the Lengue under the strain and wns forced to tion of the disposal of Fliijae continued In all sections of the country and vary- few Problem!. days later Jenkins was released return to the White House. Ills con- to cause trouble. On September 13 of Nations. " ing decisions were given. Appeal wns on bnll, hut this did not relieve tho Meantime the pence conference was dition was regarded as very serious, Gabriele d'AnnunzIo, the Button tnken to the United Stntes Supreme ond he was unable to take a leading By DONALD F. BIGGS. entered Flume at the head court which on December 13 uphold strained relations. endeuvoring to reach a solution of After nearly five yeur of frightful several other vexing problems. A bit part In the battle for the treaty when of several thousand soldiers and took the set. Aeronautics. warfare. In which all of the great pow- ter dispute had arisen between Italy the contest reached Its climax. The control of the port In defiance of the As a result of the great developLabor and Industrial. er! and many of the smaller nations and the new Jugo-Slastate as to the president still Insisted, however, upon Italian and allied military authorities. ment of nvlutlon during the war, rapid had been Involved, the world found It possession of the eastern coast of the the adoption of the treaty without res- On September 19 the representatives Serious Industrial disturbances were progress wns made during the year la difficult to return to anything like nor- Adriatic. The Italians demunded pos- ervations, and when the question came of the great powers handed a pence prevalent during the greuter part of the use of both dirigibles and heavier 1010. on Novemto a senate final vote In the mal conditions during the year session of the city of Flume on the treaty to Bulgaria. Under this treaty the year In nil countries that had been thnn-al- r machines for commercial purWhile the armistice which was signed ground that 'Its population was largely ber 19 the Democratic minority, aided western Thrace was taken from BulIn war. The series of great engaged poses. a brought 1018 of number Republicans opposed garia. her army was reduced to 20,000, strikes In In the closing weeks of main- by while the Jugo-Slav- s Italian, United States was InOn May 8 three United States navy a cessation of hostilities between the tained that possession of this port was to the leugue In any form, defented the and she was required to pay $443,000,-00- 0 augurated the on January 9 by a walkbeen had seaplanes of the started from New York on resolution two groups of nations that Republicans, as reparation for dumnges done by out of marine essential If their newly organized na- majority workers In New York. the first c with It which the carried would have her flight by way engaged in the great straggle. It did armies. tion was to have access to the sea. This strike was of short duration, how- of Insenate. the the N. peoples reservations Halifax, all not bring peace to by S.; adopted Reverses Bay, Trepassay for The also all of the gave forces opJupanese delegates ever, as It ended on January 12, pend- Newfoundland, and volved. Technically he world still an early Indication of their attitude Senator Hitchcock thereupon offered posing the bolshevik! were the Azores. One In an reported arbitration of ing the dispute by of these machines, the NC-- 4 arrived ,o resolution providing for ratification was at war throughout practically all by Insisting upon Japan's right to November. On the 15th General Yu- the war lubor board. South America at Lisbon, of and the without of the year Just closed as the peace reservations, Portugal, on May 27, havtrenty denltch was the Marshall and Caroline Islands, forced to retreot to the apparently was affected also In framed by new ing completed tho flrflt flight across was Iarls In number a this. wns which turn, defeated, treaty Esthonlan border and resigned com- conditions as which had from she taken Germuny great strikes were Jn of Democratic senators voting with mand of the f after months of negotiation could not Russian northwest army. progress during Junuary In Argentina the Atlantic In actual flying time of President Wilson returned to Paris the f 26 hours, 47 minutes from Newfoundbe made fully effective until ratified after a With compromise Republicans. On the same day It was reported that and Peru. spending little more than a .week land to by the great powers and formally pro- In the United States. With his arrival between the opposing groups appar- the bolshevlkl had caused the othOn February 6 the country was er two Portugal. Fog captured Omsk, the adsenate mulgated by the peace conference. In France on March 14 the to lose their courso. ently Impossible, plunes seat of the con D'AnKolchak the government. peace startled by announcement of a genFailure of the United States senate to ference Two British aviators,. Harry G. journed. nunzio created a still more serious sit- eral strike In Seattle called In began consideration of reconi supIn ratify the treaty, because of opposition niendntlons Itowker and Lieutenant Commander the meantime the treaty peace uation for he when seized various committees, Italy Zara, by port of striking shipbuilders. Author- Mackenzie Grieve, left Newfoundland to the covenant of the League of Naand the to tnke hnd been ratified by the other great Dalmatia, on November 14. ities announeed that this strike was on tions, which was made a part of the definite pence treaty begun allied nations and by mnny of the 18 In the first attempt to cross shape. forced by the radical labor clement tho May peace treaty, prevented the formal smaller been had Domestic Atlantic nations Affairs without stop. that engaged Engine On March 24 the council of ten and prompt measures were taken hy declaration of peuce until more than In the war against Germany. trouble forced them to descend 850 which hnd chief been the The return of the United States to a Mayor Ole Itonson to suppress It As miles from considering a year after the armistice was signed. Ireland and the aviators condition of peace was not accom- a result the strike ended on February were Affairs. Internal disorders and territorial problems before the pence conference Foreign picked up by a passing vessel. conwas of council e four, natvn-wlda. replaced by plished easily. Unusual conditions ex- 10. On February 16 a disputes arising from the establishWhile non-stop was The the first negotibeing treuty flight across tha isted and the people of the country strike of building trades workers wns ment of many new nations kept a sisting of President Wilson and Pre- ated conditions unAtlantic wns remained made on June 14 and IS very miers and Clemenceau George. were confronted problems that started and on March 4 the marine large part of Europe In turmoil. Such Orlando.LloydFrom settled not only In the territory which had been unknownwith Cnpt. John Alcock, British flyer, by the to time that up In York workers New out. went In of before the days a complete remaking of the map again actual Blgnlng of the peace treaty all had been Included In the four defeated the war. On April 15 a strike of girl operators and Lieut. Arthur W. Brown, bit Europe as resulted from the great war Rusnations but American navigator, who Avereil tha were of th problems arising throughout Europe. disposed tied up the telephone service throughThe adoption of nation-wid- e prohinaturally could cot be accomplished of sia continued In a state of turmoil In council which, of four. this by bition and the submission by congress out the New England states, but this 1,900 miles from Newfoundland to Irewithout friction. The great empire of land In 16 hours and 12 minutes. throughout the year. Although the of the Austria-Hungar- y had fallen to pieces at times, the premier of Japan also bolshevlst constitutional amendment for was ended on April 20 by a comprodirecunder the The British dirigible government carrying with the defeat of the central powers participated. complete womans suffrage were Im- mise wage Increase. 31 persons, started from Edinburgh on The revised covenant of the League tion of Lenin and Trotzky maintained portant events of the year. Ratifica18 On the and out of the wreckage new states July Building Employers Its control over a large part of the flight to New York on association of Chicago, combating a a trans-Attonarose. These new nations Austria of Nations was presented at a plenary former tion of the national prohibition amend2 and reached Its destination on empire It was hemmed in on ment came on July out of locked strike In a workers, with Hungary, Poland and the Czech and session of the peace conference building the year early all sides hy which 6. If made the return trip withJugoslav states could not establish April 28. President Wilson, as chair- attacked It withopposing groups rapidity that surprised the nation. On 200,000 employees. On the same day July success. The out framed varying In three days and three which mishap Boston went on street car their new boundaries without friction man of the commission 29 the state department proemployees constituted nation of Poland January newly hours. the the covenant, changes explained strike. Chicago surface and elevated among themselves and with their was beset for a time on all sides, but claimed the ratification of the amendRoland Rliolfs, In a Curtiss trlptone, Tbe new government of that had been made, mostly as a result ment and set January 16, 19?9. as the car men struck on July 29 but the neighbors. It, too, succeeded In weathering the date when It would strike ended three days later with a made a new altitude record on SepGermany, which had been transformed of criticism In the United States. One storm and had effective. become established a stable into a republic, was striving to main of the most Important of the amendOn Januury 9 Attorney General Greg- compromise wage agreement Rail- tember IS by ascending 34,610 feet. A transcontinental airplane race was tain Itself against the attacks of radl ments made was that providing that government before many months had ory tendered his resignation, to become way shopmen throughout the country started cal elements. Russia was torn by the covenant should not affect existing passed. 1 Increase ou simultaneously at San Francisan struck for PalStarch effective August A. Mitchell 4, and Failure to reach a settlement of the civil strife, with half a dozen groups understandings for maintaining pence. from 68 cents to 85 cents an hour, but co and New York on October 8 with on mer was him succeed to appointed 65 competitors. Five aviators were At times While It wTns not so stated specifically, Flume question continually threatened fighting for the mnstery. February 27. On January 11 Walker the strike wns called off on August 14. killed during this race. Lieut Alexanworld peace seemed still far off, but as this amendment was designed to pre- an armed conflict between the Italians D. Hlfies was On 7 a there wag gen-erAugust inaugurated director appointed state. Serieu the year passed conditions became vent the League of Nations covenant and the new Jugo-SlaIn New York one of the most unusual der Fearson was declared the winner. .4 of railroads to succeed William from Interfering with the Monroe doc- conditions existed In Hungary both be- G. McAdoo. On December 10 Capt Ross Smith more settled and it seemed probable strikes on record & walkout of actors. of Australia coriipleted an alrptnne that with the formal promulgation of trine. The revised covenant wns cause of Internal disorders and bewas to The and strike Chicago blow spread the first at The the peace treaty the chaos Into which ndopted by the unanimous vote of the cause of clashes with Itoumanla and radicalsgovernments w trip from Englnnd to Port , Darwin, during the year was deliv- not settled until September 6 hen Australia, with the new Czech government ' In 30 days. peace conference. . won. Europe had been thrown would puss actors the 8 on when ered Congressman Janunry In Germany a split among the GerOn April 30 the council of four, In the United States conditions were 9 On of the SoSeptember part largest other four L. and Victor Necrology. Berger I not so unsettled as In the nations that which by this time hnd been reduced man socialist leaders resulted on Januleaders were found guilty by the Boston ollce force went on strike Death took a heavy toll among the ary 7 In serious street fighting. The cialist achad been longer engaged In the war. to a council of three by the withfederal a Jury In Chicago of conspiring after the suspension of patrolmen In mnny fields of world activleaders I hut here, as In Europe, the transition drawal of the Italians, agreed to government was seriously threatened, fol to Interfere with the successful con- tive In forming a union. Rioting 1919. The most prominent on but during 9 ity In Its Berlin January from a war to a pence basis was not transfer to Japan the Germnn possestroops duct of the war. On February 18 they lowed In which seven persons were of Americans who passed away during were and control deleChinese The regained et1Sy. New Industrial problems had sion of Klau-Chnvoted , killed. The striking policemen the year was former President Theoof the situation. On January 10 Dr. were sentenced to 20 years imprisonbeVn created. The high cost of living gation objected strenuously to this seton September 12 to return to duty. ment. dore Roosevelt, who died suddenly at f cml-c- d Inhor to make Insistent and re- tlement, although Japan agreed ulti- Carl Llebknecht, lender of the 22 steel workers On September On Slorch 2 Herbert noover was home at Oyster Bay on January 6. his or nntigovernraent faction, was pelted demands for higher wages and mately to restore the territory to dithroughout the country went on strike, The following are among tbe more resulted In numerous strikes among China. On May 6 the council deter- killed while attempting to esenpe after appointed hy the president to be wage Increases and shorter demanding relief American of rector II classes of workers. general men and women who died arrest In Berlin. Ills companion. Ilon Radical lend mined that Great Brltalu and her coloprominent hours. Many plants were closed for a the year; ers took advantage of the unrest that nies and dominions should become Luxemburg, long known ns a radical among the population of Europe. during weaksoon Because of the necessity for legis- short time hut the strikers existed to recruit their forces and mandatory for the islands north of the loader both In Germany and Russia, January 4. Count George F. von ened and within a few weeks pracconto meet the new after-wa- r lation so became conwns active that the killed by a mob.- Disorders in they former German chancellor; Ilertling, equator. rewere ditions, President Wilson on May 7, by tically normal conditions stituted authorities of the nation 8, MnJ. Gen. J. Franklin Bell, January By May 8 the treaty hnd finally been Germany were suppressed and on Janstored. sesU. S. A.; Janunry 12, Sir Charles finally found It necessary to tnke de- completed and on that date tt was uary 19 the people elected a national cable from Paris, called a special On October 6 aft Industrial confersion of congress to convene May 19. termined steps to suppress disloyal Wyndlmm, English actor; January presented to the Germnn plenipoten- assembly, the majority socialists led On repPresident called ence VicWilson, by May 10 the campaign for the propaganda. Nathaniel C. Goodwin, famous 31, tiaries at Versailles. The pact, while hy Chancellor Ebert retaining control. war resenting labor, capital and the public, American It represented chiefly the deliberations The assembly met a Weimar on Janu- tory Liberty loan, the tost popular comedian; February 17, Sir IS The Making of Peace. oversubopened Its sessions In Washington, Wllfried a closed with loan, heavy 6 11 and on February elected former premier of of the council of four, had been adoptary Lnurler, after Ineffectual attempta to agree Canada ; The first steps toward the organied by a conference In which 27 allied Chancellor Ebert ns first president of scription of the $4,500,000,000 bond but 22, William P. BorFebruary to the a prln recognize upon proposal zation of the peace congress were and associated powers were the Germnn republic, after adopting a Issue. In congress from land, representative larepresentThe special session of the Sixty-sixt- h clple of collective bargaining, the taken on January 12 when tile su- ed. At the same time It was an- provisional constitution. In Poland Dr. Walker, former Missouri; Mary members Withdrew on October 22 preme war council, members of which nounced that President Wilson and opposing factions reached an agreenoted as an advocongress opened on May 10 with bor and surgeon army were President Wilson and Secretary Premier Lloyd George had he Republicans in control of both and two days later the conference cate of male attire for women ; Februnegotiated ment on January 17 whereby Ignace without huvlng acLansing of the United States, and the treaties with France providing that Jan Paderewski became premier, with house and senate for the first time came to an end ary 27, George F. Edmunds, former result. any complished premiers and foreign ministers of the United States and Great Britain General Pllsudskl as foreign minister since 1912. The house of representa United. States senator from Vermont; minconi On October 15 bituminous Grant Britain, France and Italy, to- would come fives was organized by the election of March 10, Mrs. Amelia E. Barr, auImmediately to the assist- and M. Deraoskl as president ers were ordered to quit work on OcMassachusetts of Gillett ance of France In case of any future gether with Marshal Foch and miliCongressman had to control Opposition thor; April 4, William Crookes, Japanese tary representatives of the several unprovoked attack by Germany. When been developing rnpldly In Korea and as speaker. In the senate Senator tober 31 upon failure of the miners British chemist, and physicist; . powers, began aetunf consideration of the peace treaty was submitted to the on March 12 Korean nationalists Is Cummins of Iowa was elected presi' and operators to agree upon a new April 9, Sidney Drew, comedian; April The schedule of wages and hours. the terms of peace to be Imposed upon Germans the Italian delegates were sued a- declaration of Independence, dent pro tem. 21, Jules Vedrlnes, noted French aviathe central powers. The peace con present, having returned to Paris In declaring themselves new leaders of the miners refused to con- tor ; May 19, Edward ; Payson Call, of acts the first One of the to to fight ready woman suffrage sider an appeal by President Wilson prominent newspaper gress Itself, without delegates from response to an Invitation extended publisher of by the last drop of blood." Serious disor- house was to pass the the defeated powers or Russia, met In President Wilson and Premiers to call off the atrlke, pending an efders also were reported In Egypt In amendment to the Constitution by and New Ykrk; Boston, Philadelphia Lloyd a compromise, and the the ministry of foreign affairs at George and Clemenceau. 29, Robert Bacon, former secresupport of the nationalist demand for vote of 304 to 89. The amendment fort to effect Taris on Janunry 18. President Wll to take vigor- May The German delegates were not per- autonomy and on March 25 the Brit- was again brought up In the senate on government proceeded of state and former ambassador tary son proposed Premier Clemenceau for of ish secretary for war, Mr. Churchill, June 4 and this time was adopted by ous steps to prevent the shutting mitted to discuss the peace to France; June 5, Manuel Franco, permanent chairman of the confer- the conference but were treaty with admitted that the whole of Egypt was a vote of 56 to 25. the mines. The department of Jusof Paraguay; June 11, John fifteen president given Fedence and the delegates elected him from an Injunction The activities of anarchistic ele- tice obtained by days In which to submit their reply In virtually In a state of Insurrection. C. Spooner, former United States senunanimous vote. It was determined at On March 10 a new Germano-Austrla- a ments were manifested on June 2 eral Judge Anderson at Indianapolis ator from Wisconsin; June 12, James writing. Announcement of the terms the beginning that only the five to prevent the leaders of the union A. bombs were exploded slmultan when great of the treaty caused a storm In Ger- government was established at Vienna Tawney, former representative In belligerent powers, the United States, from In men ten directing the strike, which, how- congress from Minnesota; June 14, of residences at the Doctor with terms Renner The chancellor. were as denounced eously many. by Great P.ritntn, France. Italy and ever, began on November 1. Count Karolyl had been made presi eight Eastern cities. Japan, Ernest Lister, governor of Washingshould tnke part In all meetings of the President Ebert of Germany as being The shortage of coal, especially In the e emergency the most severe ever Imposed upon a dent of the new Hungarian republic on On July 1 the war-timJuly 2, Dr. Anna Howard Shaw, ton; conference and commission to be apwestern states, became former president of National Womans 11, "but on March 22 he was prohibition act went into effect ond middle and Several commuJanunry vanquished people." pointed; that other belligerent and as- nications and the situation was renSuffrage association; July 26, Sir Edrequesting changes In the forced to resign and there was rontl for the first time In history the sale alarming sociated powers should worse dered by a severe cold wave. ward John Poynter, English painter, the new a tuted was participate which prothroughout were submitted Illegal of government German the trenty liquor by In only and local meetings at which questions delegate and these were claimed a dictatorship of the prol- United States. On July 12 President The fuel administration of the Royal academy; Augiven considconcerning them wore to be discussed. eration effect Into drastic president commissions put Rusapproetariat the and vetoed 'an alliance the with agricultural Wilson 1, Oscar llammersteln, theatrical by the council of five. As a gust As the for conservation of coal. Pres- and operatic producer; August 11, Anrepresentatives of the mnny result some parts of the trenty were sian soviet government priation bill because of a "rider" re- orders Wilson then belligerent nations entered upon the made more lenient Conident tow. proposed that the drew Carnegie, veteran steel manufacA as the In ministerial crisis arose daylight saving toward Germany. Italy pealing task of bringing pence ttf the world The revised terms were presented to a result of the governments policy In gress promptly passed a separate bill miners accept a wage Increase of 14 turer and philanthropist; August 23, Europe was In turmoil. Poland was Count Brockdnrff-Rnntzau- , to work at once Gen. Louis head of the connection with the peace conference. repealing the daylight saving tow and per cent and return Botha, premier of the being reconstituted and the fixing of Germnn of three to be commission a that and vetoed this delegation on June 10 and the As a result the ministry of Premier when President Wilson Union of South Africa; September 6, her boundaries Bathim and , gave rise to mnny con-i- f Germans were given seven Investigate overwas measure, both houses passed the bill appointed by Admiral Baron Charles William Beres-forunexpectedly days In Orlando rovmle between the roles and aur-- which to sign. The tle wages and conditions for the fuGerman national thrown on June ID ond two days later over his veto on August 20. British naval conunnnder and Voumllng peoples. The question of The country was aroused during the ture. This plan was accepted by the critic; September 9, John Mitchell, laassembly on June 22, by a vote of 237 Francesco Nlttl, former minister of hot her a League of Nations should to 138, authorized the At summer by a aeries of race riots, the miners on December 10 and coal probor leader; September 21, Theodora government to finance, became premier of Italy. I e "ented as a means of preventin' resame the cabinet the German time On sign the first of which occurred In Washington duction was resumed. h 23 June trenty. the P, Shonts, president of the 1 future wnrs wns one of the first to be treaty was of on July 21. Four persons were killed Mexico and the United because determination nt of the Versailles signed . signed of by Transit repRapid company States. 1 taken, up by the peace conference. On resentatives of Germany and of the Chancellor Scheldenmnn not to recogIn the rioting at the capital. On July New York and former chairman of the ,t January 25 the conference allied and associated powers. Conditions In Mexico continued to Isthmian canal commission; Septemformally The nize the pence terms offered by the 27 the most serious race riots of the declared In favor of the establishment Chinese delegates alone refused to allies. Gustav Adolph Bauer, former year began In Chicago. It wns found provide a perplexing problem for the ber 27, Adelina Patti, famous operatic com-I1- " mi!. Le?!! of Natlons- sign because of the Shantung settle- minister of labor, was appointed channecessary to call out state troops and United States government during the singer; October 19, William Waldorf of President Wilson ment. cellor by President Ebert and formed before order hod been restored 33 year 1919. Astor, former American millionaire Waa minted to A report on July 6 that armed MexOn June 29 President Wilson sailed a new cabinet. A clash between the persons had been killed and hundreds pre-'oare irT.n who beenme a British peer; October lfln te p,anThe n!. icans had attacked and robbed a boat- 21, Alfred T. Longue of from France and returned to the new German government and the allies Injured. A Rlngllng, head of the faLCn,lMl0n hp,d lta fl"t meet- - United States after an absence of wos threatened on Juno 21 when the In recognition of the services which load of American sailors near Tam- mous circus family; October 30, Mrs. nlofj. alth PresdSen WuFy and 0n of pico caused bitter feeling and on Au- Ella Wheeler Wilcox, H more than six months. On July 10 he Germnn fleet which had been Interned he rendered as commnnder-ln-chle- f writer; Novemi, Itch read and explained presented the treaty to the senate and in British waters under the armistice the American expeditionary forces, gust 17 this was Intensified by the cap- ber 1, Col. J. D. Bell, commander In to the peace conference a Sort5 there at once developed bitter oppo- was scuttled by German crews, twenty General Pershing was made a general ture of two United Stntes army avia- chief of the G. A. R.; November 12, d a rcmstltutlnn for the League of sition to Its and cruisers being sunk. for life by art of congress. Ills com- tors by bandits, who held them for Thomas S, Martin, United States senlurin' M tW an oxecutlve or reservation.adoption without change battleships e On August 1 Bela Kun, who for four mission was handed to him os he $15,000 ransom. The ransom was paid ator from Virginia ; December 2. Henry itefot Uvr, of nVl?M,PSed of "presenta- On September 10 Senator Lodge subor five months hnd been dletnr , n landed on September 8 at New York by the United States government on Clay Frick, steel mngnnte end and for an later mitted the majority report of the com August 19, and a troop of cavalry, ac Hungary, was compelled to retire wheu with the First division. EVENTS GF 1919 national secretariat. It was provided that decisions of the executive council PASSMBEVIEW e Eco-nom- lc v -- truns-AtInntI- re-tu- ln - R-3- tl ' v , : Spar-taenn- us - - d, Inter-boroug- fll lt r miml |