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Show c I THE SPANISH FORK PRESS SPANISH FORK, UTAH CUT OECIDES Meeting of Minds NAVAL SCIENTIFIC III Brazil I estimated to have 11,000,000 bead of sheep and goats. PROGRAM A FACTIONS SINK DIFFERENCE TO MAKE UNITED FIGHT ON RADICAL REGIME. SOCIALIST EDITOR AND ASSOCIATES IN ESPIONAGE CHARGES TO BE GIVEN NEW TRIALS. Constituent Assembly Just Created in Paris to Ask Recognition by Allies; Delegates Being Named to Present Petition. 8ays Program Was Inaugurated a Decade Ago, and Even if Completed Would Not Bring Japan Naval Strength Up to Others. Bench Divided In Declsioij on Radical Cases, Majority Deciding Judge Landis Was Ineligible to Conduct Trial. Toklo. Regardless of the United States navul program, the Jupnnese program requires completion of the sight buttleshlp and eight cruiser unit, aid Vice Admiral Kato, minister of the navy, In resjxmdlng on January .'0 to an Interpellation by Lieutenant General Usimru, chief of staff, as to Japan's view pf Senator Rorah's resolution concerning a cessation of warship construction. Japan's navul construction plan, however, he said, need not he carried out with the United States us an imaginary enemy. , He said Julian would adhere to a world curtailment of construction plans. He declared Japan's naval program was Inaugurated a decade ago and was born of Imperative necessity. Even If completed, he said, a wide margin WAR CONDITIONS ACCELERATE AN ADVANCE jN RURAL , would remain between the naval LABORERS WAGE. trength of Japan and other powers. War Minister Tanaka said Ju pun's forces had been organized to insure From 1919 to 1920 Farm Laborer the snfety of her territorial right. R Working by the Month Received was true, he declared,' neither Russia a Gain in Hia Salary as nor China could now menace Japan. High as 115 Per Cent. Any effective plan of defense, however, lie added, must presuppose the Washington. Wage rates for farm necessity of operations beyond Japun's labor reuehed their highest point In frontiers. the history of the country in 1920, as LORD MAYOR TOLD TO LEAVE national average. As ascertained by the burenu of crop estimates, United States depart men t of agriculture, the OCallaghan Ordered to Depart From average wage rate for lubor hired by U. 8. by February 11. the month was 840.89 with ami Donnl J. OCullaghnn, 804.95 without board ; for board, Washington. at labor day lord mayor of Cork, has been ordered with board, und 84.10 harvest, delabor the of Wilson by Secretary without board. partment to leave the Uuited States War conditions greatly accelerated by February 11. He is now In the an upward movement of farm wage nn seaman as opa country awaiting rates that began after 1895. The rate portunity to reshlp. The Irish official arrived In the of that year for hirings by the month United States as a stowaway without without board was 817.09 as an aviv-agfor the Uuited States, and no a passport, tie was classified as a other year In the record of the buseaman, however, which permitted him to remain until he could find a ship. reau, extending back to 1SCG, had a Whether he left as a seaman or as a lower rate, except 1879, with 816-42- . By 1902 this wage rate had Increased passenger was held to be no concern followed 822.14; by 1914 to to, In of the department of labor. order In 1915, with no evidence of to clear the records a certificate of by O'Callaghan's departure, citing the cir- war effect. This effect appeared, percumstances, must be filed with the Im- haps, as a small beginning in the next migration Inspector at his port of de- year, 1910, when the wage rate was 812.81. Then followed rapid rise to parture. 840.41 In 1917, to 847.07 In 1918, to 850.29 in 1919 and to 804.05 in 1920. Bergdoll Will Become German. The rate of gain over 1895 was 70 citizenBaden. German Eberbaeh, cent In 1915, and 207 per cent In ship papers for Grover C. Bergdoll, per American draft evadpr, for which he 1920, so that the gain of 70 per cent in twenty years, from 1895 to 1915, was applied a number of days ago, have been made out and are ready to be followeiby a gain of 197 per cent in Issued as soon as the technical state of five years, from 1910 to 1920, or nearwar between the United States and ly three times as much in a quarter as Germany have been ended. Ills chauf- many years. From 1915 to 1920 farm labor workfeur, Isaac Stecher, has already been ing by the month without board regranted citizenship papers. ceived a gnln in wage rate as high as Wilson to Tell of Peace Parley. 115 per cent. This was one of the Washington. President Wilson Is causes of the greatly Increased cost having collected and arranged for ref- of producing things oil the farm, which erence all papers and documents In has hit the furmer so hnrd In the dehis possession relating to the Paris clining market for his crops of 1920. peace conference, with a view to the So high had the farm wage rates become In the last two or three years preparation of a book. that they were prohibitive in a conDies. Officers of Volunteers siderable degree when lnhor could be New York. Colonel J. J. Kappel, 57 found, and farmers more generally deyears of age, commanding officer of exclusively on themselves and the Volunteers of America In the pended members of their families, In .addition Greater New York district, died Sunto extending the use of day. lie was formerly head of the machinery. Volunteers of America In California. E AGREE THAT GERMANY MUST PAY 226,000,000,000 GOLD MARK8 FOR WAR DAMAGES. According to Plane Payments Will Made In Yearly Installments, Coverering a Period of Forty-tw- o Be Year. Caught In Net of Martial Law. Oerh. Cornelius Murphy of Ruth-to- r was shot Tuesday after being found gsllty by a courtmartial of huv-la- g a loaded revolver. This Is the first exeeatlea carried out on such a charge ntnc tbs declaration of martial law In erh. Paris. Full agreement on reparations, German disarmament and nil other important quetions before it bud been reuehed by the supreme council when It adjourned to meet In London on February 21. Germany will be called on to pay In annuities on a sliding scale gold murks. Her exports, in addition, bear an export duty of 12 per cent for the allies. On the bimls of last years exports, this would give the allies 1,250,000,000 gold murk, or 12 per cent of whatever money in which the exports are paid for. Thus, It Is estimated, the first payment made by Germany will be 3,250,000,000,000 gold marks, the export tax being paid In cash, v. It Is pointed out that, besides being a sure method of collection, it will act as a protective tariff In countries near Germany which are likely to be flooded witli goods made In Germany at a low cost. Penalties agreed on for violations will apply to nil agreements alike reparations, disarmament and coal deliveries. A feature of the reparation plan, from the French point of view, Is that it associates the allies in the benefits of Germanys prosperity. Examination of the reparations plan showed it provided thut the 12 per cent tux on German exports would extend over the same period as the stipulated reparation payments. Germany la to be allowed nn 8 per rent cash discount on pnyments made in advance. (The total of 220,000,000,000 gold mark 8 of Geruiun reparation payments culled for by the plan would equal approximately 850,000,000,000 at normal exchange rates.) It la understood that, for the purpose of Inducing Germany to pay off her reparation debt as rapidly as possible, she would be allowed discount on her These discounts annual payment. would be nxed at 8 per cent the first two years, 6 per cent the twrt following and 5 per cent the remaining thirty-eigh- t Years. As a guarantee against Germany's defaulting on her payments, the comrecornntcmled that In such un REAR ADMIRAL TAUSSIG DEAD mittee event German customs might be seized new or Increased taxes be Imposed. Took Possession of Wake leland Dur- and Spanlsh-AmerlcaWar. ing VICTOR L BERGER Newport. R. I. Rear Admiral K. D. TauHsIg, 74, retired, died January 29, Rear Admiral after a long Illness. Taussig was graduated from the United States navul academy iu 1S07 and a year later was commended for service during an enrthquake at Arlca. Later iu the Spanlsh-Amei'icawar, while a captain commanding tin Bennington, lie took iHissesslon of ake for the United States, lb- - utter-warserved In executive posts in the Philippines. He was retired in p.zrj. House Hostile to Large Army. Washington. Taking up the army appropriation bill, the house ta Its debate on Tuesday showed It was ready to fight any attempt to put the enlisted personnel above provided In the measure. Eleven Meet Death In Hotel. Hoboken, N. J. Eleu-i- i prisons were burned to dentil earl) Sunday In a fire which destroy'd the Hotel Colonial. Four others were badlv burned and were taken to a hospital. It is not known how the fire started. Aneient Town Destroyed. Constantinople, Lapsnkl, on the east side of the Dardanelles, opposite Gallipoli, was destroyed by fire Tuesday. It Ins been noted for 25x years for Its fine wines. Kaisers Yacht for Sale. The jaebt .Meteor, Barcelona. MAY PUT IT UP TO HARDING Will Fall Heir to the Japanese Problem. Washington. Settlement of diplomatic problems with Japan, especially arising from the enactment by California of land ownership legislation, will be postponed until the assumes ofHarding administration fice, It Is Indicated by state department officials. President-Elec- t anti-alie- n White no forma announcement has been made, it was intimated by officials that because of the short time left to the present administration and g the character of the problems now In process of solution between the two governments, it would be the part of wisdom not to hasten unduly their final adjustment merely to conclude a treaty under this administration. long-standin- - PRESIDENT VISITS THEATRE. First Tims In Year That Chief Executive Hat Witnessed Performance. Washington. President Wilson, accompanied by Mrs. Wilson, Tuesday night went to the theater, for the first time since he was taken ill, more than a yearkand a half ago. The president and his party, which Included Mm Wilson's brother, John Randolph Bolling, and Mrs. Galt, appeared unexpected at a performance ef John Prink waters "Abraham having entered through a stage door. As the president went to one of the lower boxes he was recognized by the audience, which rose and cheered. Ms. Wilson responds! by bowing. ' e lubor-savln- PROF. C. . GUILLAUME Lln-soln- ," g n j n d 150,-00- Victor L. Berger, SoWuHhlngtou. cialist editor of Milwaukee, and four who were sentenced to terms ranging from ten to twenty years for violation of the espionage act, will be given new trials under a decision on Juuuury 31 by the supreme court. Dividing, lx to three, the court held that Judge Landis of Chicago was Ineligible to conduct the trial and should have retired on the filing of nn affidavit by the defendants charging him with "personul bias and prejudice," becuuse of the nativity of certain of them. nre Berger and his Adolph Germer, national secretary of the Socialist party, a native of Prussia; William Kruss, editor of the Young Socialist magazine, whose parents were Germans ; J. Louis Engdnhl and Irwin St. John Tucker, writers und lecturer, natives of the United States, and claiming to be not of immediate German descent. The sole question ' before the supreme court was whether Judge Landis had erred in continuing to sit in the ctue after defense counsel had filed a pro;terly drawn affidavit of prejudice. Six members of the court, Including Chief Justice White, held that he did. Three other members. Justices Day, Pitney and McReynolds, held he did not, and filed opinions dissenting from that of the majority. Next to that of Eugene V. Debs, the case of Victor Berger, publisher of the Milwaukee Leader, a Socialist paper, attracted more attention than any other brought by the government under the wartime espionage act. A movement to bar Berger from the seat In congress, to which he had just been elected from a Milwaukee district, was at once started. Representative Mann, former Republican leader, being one of the few influential members of the house who came out in behalf of the Socialist editor. A new election having been ordered, Berger was again returned und again the house voted to bar him, 328 to 6, within an hour after he hud presented himself to be sworn In. OF ABDUCTION Wilson Refuses Clemency to Debt. Recommendation by Washington. the department of Justice that the ten-yesentence of Eugene V. Debs, long a. prominent Socialist leader, and now r sentence at Atlanta serving a for violation of the war time espionage laws, be commuted, effective February 12, Lincolns birthday, was rejected on Monday by President Wilson and commutation refused. ar ten-yeu- Colby Calls It Ghost Dance. Senator Johnson of Washington. California asked Secretary Colby on Monday to make public the negotiations between the United Stntes and Japnn on the California land question, und Mr. Colby replied that if Senator Johnson expects to do a ghost dance on this subject hes got to do It without me as a partner. Mob Relerves Prisoners. Bremerton, Wush. Authorities at the Puget Sound navy yard are investigating circumstances of a raid on the Kitsap county Jail Saturday, when, It Is nlleged, n crowd of nearly 100 uterine, some of them armed, overpowered the two policemen, broke doors leading to the cell und released L. C. Karron, a marine, held on a charge of drunkenness und two young women prisoners. Bolshevik Troops Active. Bolshevik Constantinople. Tartar troops have entered Kasvln, ninety miles northwest of Teheran, und British force In the latter elty are reported to have begun h withdrawal, It I said in dispatches Sunday. Man Burned to Death. Italian Boat Burns at Sea. Chicago. man was Newport New, Va. The burning at burned to death, five person inU,,-eo, with a provable loss of life, of an ured, including two Imhlcs, wlm were Itullun stearnhlp believed to oe the dropped from u thlrd-Htorwindow, Nettupo, wuli reported here In a wireand n dozen others were rescued when less dispatch. Severn! of the rescued n boarding house was burned were seriously burned. Train Strikes School Bua. Two children were Baltimore. killed, several seriously Injured and a dozen others slightly Injured when a train on the Annapolis Short Line railroad struck a bus filled with school children near Shipley, Md, Harding Enjoys Flehlng Trip. Fla. President-elec- t Harding returned to Miami beach Tuesday afternoon with a fine sunburn, n some ' new fish stories and the that his tentative cabinet slat would remain unchanged in personnel. 8torm Northwest San Francisco. Northern Inclfle coast points are recoerlftg from a torm which raged Saturday night and which was described by the United State weather bureau here as "one of the worst we ever had." Honor to Unknown Podu. Brady Jury Disagrees. Inris. Simple ceremonies marked San Francisco. After having been the permanent entombment of n "sol- out for nearly twenty-fou- r hours, the dier of France," representing the ury In the case of Thomas Brady, Rare Surgical Operation. Milwaukee. A child was born early Monday by a Caesnrlan operation performed In a Ruclne hospital a few minutes after the mother had died ot Injuries received when a train struck an nutomoblle. The child Rvlll live. Mluinl, con-virio- In A bed-ridde- n , French unidentified war dead, tinder crlnilnul gang suspect, accused of atthe Arc do Trlotnphe lieie Friday tacking Ml Jean Stanley, reported morning. it was finable to agree. An English physician bas Invented a new method of producing dyes from Inorganic matter. An electrically drlvea machine has been Invented for the quick removal of , putty from windows. Tests are being conducted In 'England ef what la claimed to be a notse-les- a and fireproof airplane engine. A new source of alcohol for commercial purposes has been fonnd In the mahna tree, which flourished In India. ' PATENTS lalMNUOUbl AdvlM m4 took frM. UllhMiNtolMOM Bmimtvim j(j Comfort "You children would rather go to a moving picture than to Sunday school?" "Yes," answered the small girl, ."fts darker in the picture theater and w dont have to have our faces waslied. Important to Mother Examine curefully every bottle of CASTOK1A, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletchers Castori A good word can always be suiil for beans until the Imhy pokes one up bis nose. m often Perseverance more Jhan power. accomplishes Here Comes , The Bride! Everybodywishcsher well! Happy and radiant she starts oat lifes adventure. on She should have health to begin with. Good looks in woman do not depend upon age, but upon health. You never see a ng woman who is weak, irritable, out of sorts, fidgety and nervous. Headaches, backaches, dragging-dow- n pains, irregularities and troubles of that sort are all destroyers of beauty. Hen do not admit sickness. It is within the reach of every woman to be well, healthy and strong if she will take Dr. Pierces run-dow- Angeles Woman Returned to Homo and Abductors Captured. Los Angeles. Mrs. Gladys Wither-ell- , wife of O. S. Withered, Investment company president, who was abducted by Arthur W. and Floyd C.,Carr, and held for ransom, was rescued by officers Monday, she having been held a prisoner on a lonely abandoned ranch near Corona. The Carr boys, who are cousins, pleaded guilty to a charge of kidnaping within a few hours after they had been captured. Mr. Withered was unharmed, but has suffered a nervous breakdown. Los WIK Account for Every Dollar. Washington. Kvery dollar exwnded ifor construction of a government liter-hufleet eventually will be accounted for, Alonzo Tweedale, general comptroller of the shipping bonrd, declared before the house committee. Bed-ridde- When closed a new electric sewing machine resembles and can be used as a writing desk. FOUND Prof. Charles Edward Guillaume of Franco hao been awarded the 1020 which once was the proper; of the Victor L. Berger, Socialist leader, He le the former kuWcr, will arrive m IVbnviry convicted of espionage, will be granted Nobel prize for physics. head of the International buroau of to lie put lip for sale. Tin i, serve new trial, aa result of supreme court decision. price Is 9,t l.oi Hi marks weights and measures. N H An artificial cork la being made In Sweden from cork waste vnd a binding1 paste. good-looki- VICTIM Judge f Jndseys Appeal Ditmissed. Washington. The appeal of Judge Ben B. Lindsey of the Denver, Oolo., juvenile court from conviction on charges of contempt of court, was dismissed Monday by the supreme court. nt bole drilled lengthwte of a new oil to be fed to its point. 'drill enables VICE ADMIRAL KATO BELIEVE8 PLANS WILL BE COMPLETED REGARDLES8 OF U. 8. ACTION. Purls. Formal application Is about to be made to the governments of Great liritaln, France and the Uuited States to recognize the Russian constituent assembly us the present tie Jure or rightful existing government of Russia. The Russiun constituent as sembly has Just been created at a meeting here of ail the Russian elements opposed to Rolshevlsni, for the purpose of sinking all differences of opinion and presenting a united front against Bolshevism. President Avskentieff, a member of lie former Kerensky cabinet of Russia and presiding officer of the conference held here, will call in a few days on Premier Iirland of France and present the application for recognition. Alexander Kerensky, head of the former Russian government, bus gone to London, where he will make a simitar request of the British government. Boris A. Bnkhmeteff, Russian ambassador at Washington, is understood to have been requested to present the application of the United States. The precedent invoked will be the recognition by the allies of the Serbian government set up on the Island of Corfu during the war while Serbia was completely occupied by the central powers. Thirty-thre- e of the members of the Russian constituent assembly created here were elected in Russia In the latter part of 191T by popular vote. These elections were held under Bolshevik rule and the Bolshevikl failed to obtain more than 40 per cent of the seats. Lenine, the soviet premier, dissolved the assembly on January 18, 1918, when his followers were placed In the minority. A majority of the members left Russia, but many were pot In Jail. Those succeeding In escaping regrouped In Paris and formed "The Russian constituent assembly." NOTES n, Favorite Prescription. Robebcko, Oregon. "I suffered something terrible from an organic trouble. Could scarcely stand on my feet. 'My head and back ached so hard and I was weak and nervous. 1 had a severo pain in my side and my limbs and feet ached. I was also troubled with constipation. I took Doctor Piprces Favorite Prescription, Golden Medical Discovery ana the Pleasant Pellets, and these medicines relieved me of all my ailments and 1 was well and strong." Mrs. W. D. Moore, 1219 N. Jackson Street. Send 10c. to Dr. Pierces Invalids Hotel in Buffalo, N. Y., for a trial package of any of hia medicines. Vaseline Reg U. S. Pat. Off. Carbolated PETROLEUMJELtY A convenient, safe antiseptic for home use. InvaloaHe for dressing cuts and sores. A time-trie- d remedy. refuse scBsmuiis CnE5EB3MWJGn MFC. CO. Vtw York Slats Street Cuticura Soap Is Ideal for The Complexion $Mp 2S Ointment 25 nnd 50c, Tiktn 25c. For irritated Throats trtH and reeled that ecu promptly md effectively .nd Cl. contain. opiate. You (t that remedy by MkiD foe eke BO w. N. U., Salt Lake City, No. |