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Show w mlm Pew ' Editorial and Telegraphic Section . News of the World for. Busy Readers TREMONTON, UTAH, THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1919. ENVOYS STAND BY Her New Spring Bonnet EXPECTS TUMBLE D BEGIN SPEEDING III PRICES OF FOOD MONROE DOCTRINE WORK ON COVENAN I nTTT ON THE AMENDMENT TO LEAGUE SAFEGUARDING CHAIRMAN OF THE INDUSTRIAL BOARD BELIEVES PRICES WILL, RECEDE IN NEAR FUTURE. PACT AMERICAN INTERESTS PREPARED. Statement of Ultimate Consumer ference With Food tion Officials at Paris. The American peace delegation, It Is understood, ias definitely agreed apon the amendment It will offer to article 10 of the covenant Of the league of nations to safeguard the . (Monroe doctrine. The amendment provides that agreements under the covenant shall not be construed as an Infringement upon the principles of International policies heretofore generally recognized. Article 10 of the draft of the league of nations covenant reads as follows: , "The high contracting parties shall undertake to respect and reserve as against external aggression the territorial Integrity and existing political Independence of all states members of the league. In case of any such aggression, or In case of any threat of danger of sueh aggression, the executive council shall advise upon the means by which the obligation shall he fulfilled!" ' As framed, the amendment will be an appendix" to the article pledging members' of the league to respect and preserve against external aggression the territorial Integrity and existing political Independence of members. Mention of the Monroe doctrine by name is 'avoided purposely. as President Wilson and . Inasmuch Colonel House on several occasions have discussed the subject with Premiers Lloyd George, Clemenceau and Orlando, it is assumed that the presl: dent assured himself of favorable action In advance of the submission of the amendment to the. commission, GREAT FUND FOR EXPORTERS. Billion Dollars for Financing Foreign Trade Soon to be Available. Washington. The government's billion dollar fund for financing foreign trade soon will be opened to American exporters through loans from the war finance corporation. Regulations now being prepared by the corporation to cover advances will provide for the lending pf sums up to $50,000,000 to any individual firm, corporation or xport association, probably at 5 ' per cent for a maximum e years, on adequate collateral. . Reports indicate that exporters are planning to make extensive use of the government's, foreign trade fund as dbon as the regulations are completed and the corporation is ready to accept formal applications. DERNBURG IS DEFIANT. Declares Germany Must be Admitted to League of Nations. Zurich. Dr. Bernhard Dernburg, former chief of the German propaganda service In the United States, writing in the Tageblatt of Berlin, declares that the German people will not ign a treaty of peace which does not contain a league of nations in which Germany is admitted with full rights, and will only consent to disarmament when other members of the league disarm. . - nt Daniels Now In France! . ., Paris. Josephus Daniels, the American secretary of the navy, with his party reached Paris Tuesday morning. Mr. Daniels came from Brest, where he Inspected the American military embarkation camp. He declared that he found more reason to praise that camp than any he has visited in America. AdministraNew York. Washington. Cheaper food in. the near future was predicted on March 24 by Chairman Peek of the department of commerce Industrial board, as a result of a conference with food administration officials In New York. Mr. Peek said there had been general misunderstandings of a recent statement by Mr. Hoover that wheat might go to $3.50 a bushel, and he added that the million dollar grain appropriation was made by congress to enable the public to get wheat products at seasonable prices, as well as HUNGARIANS MAY LEADERS OF VILLA to make good the guarantee to the producer. With wheat prices reasonable, Mr. GANG RUSSIAN DEATH Peek said, reasonable prices of other could be because products expected wheat was the barometer of the food trade. SITUATION SO SERIOUS THAT IT FOUR BANDIT CHIEFTAINS ARE After explaining the situation reIS FEARED MAY EFFECT THE SHOT DOWN IN BATTLE WITH garding the grain appropriation bill, WHOLE OF EUROPE. FEDERAL TROOPS. ' Mr. Peek said: . "I believe, therefore, that there is every reason to. expect lower food Provisional President Resigns and Lopez's Band, Credited With Numer-our- s Attacks on Peaceful Citizens Reign of Terror is Inaugurated prices in the relatively near future. and With Dynamiting Trains, This view, I believe, the men In Throughout the Country by is Badly Defeated. Plundering Bolshevik. charge of the affairs of the food administration will share." London. The Budapest government Juarez, Mexico. Colonel Augustln CONFIRMS DEATH OF CZAR. is reported to be signing a proclama- Mora, commander of the Juarez dis tion acknowledging a state of war trict, announced Friday he had re Romanoffs Butchered by Bolshevik, between Hungary and the entente, ceived what he considered additional says a dispatch to the Exchange Tele confirmation of reports received from Reports French Officer. .'; General Fortunato Zuazua that Martin company from Vienna. graph San Francisco. Confirmation of the adds that the Czecho Lopez, Epifanio Holquin, Ramon Vega The dispatch execution of the former emperor of slovak government is preparing to is- and Felix Martinez, Villa generals, Russia and his wife, and daughters sue a mobilization were killed during the battle of Bouorder. under particularly revolting conditions Michael Karoyl, the Hungarlilla, del Marquezote, , Chihuahua, Count by Bolshevik troops was made . tiere ian miles south of the bor provisional president, and his cab seventy-fiv- e March 24 by General Robert C. Paris, the latter part of last der. He said this confirmation came inet, resigned one of the first French officers to be week after many vicissitudes, includ- in military messages from General army in ing a reign of terror throughout the Zuazua, sent by runner. assigned to the Czecho-Slova' No additional details were Russia. General aPris is on his way given in country on the part of plundering home to make an official report of the Bolshevik these messages, he said, except that gangs. occurrence to the French government The lisorders necessitated the oc- the federal cavalry was pursuing He arrived here the day before from cupation of the greater part of Hun- closely the remainder of Lopez band Vladivostok. gary, with the exception of Budapest and hoped to overtake and capture Nicholas and his family were shot in and the outlying districts by allied them. The losses sustained by the the basement of their house at Ekater troops, according to reports. bandits was heavy. Martin Lopez is the most famous inburg, Siberia. The women of the The resignation of Count Karolyi once royal family were subjected to followed his presentation to the cab- revolutionary leader in northern Mexindignities and- mistreatment in the inet of a note outlining the new bound- ico, next to Francisco Villa, his chief. Born in San.Ysidro, Chihuahua, the presence of the former czar before the ary between Hungary and Rumania. executions took place, General Paris The Chronicle's Copenhagen corre- scene of many revolutionary battles, , ' said. spondent says that, according to a Lopez joined Villa's command as a A few days following the murder the Berlin message to the Politiken, the boy when Villa was operating inde bodies were taken under cover of night Hungarian crisis is so serious that it pendently in the Sierra Madre moun villages, may affect the whole of Europe. The tain range of western Chihauhua. by automobiles into near-b- y where they were Cut into small pieces, new government would seem to be Yet a young man, Lopez had gained and burned separately.' The charred in communication with, the Russian fame , through Mexico "for his daring remains were found by officers of the Bolsheviki, as it is said to have admit- deeds of banditry. He was credited with having orig forces opposed to the Bolsheylkl. ted the Red army into Tarnapol, near inated the plan of dynamiting passen the Galician frontier. There already have been riots in ger trains, executing the federal esWESTERN MEN RETURN HOME Budapest,- where a mob attacked the corts, . isolating the passengers and guards, occupied the postof-fic- e then forcing men, women and children Utah, Nevada and Colorado Soldiers military and destroyed various monuments to remove all their clothing, which he Reach New York. carried off to his women followers in in the city New York. Fourteen thousand and the mountain caches. sixty troops of the American expedi- FORECASTS SHIPPING EXPANSION tionary force, more than 3400 of these Preparing for Flight Across Ocean. Six officers of the convalescing from wounds and sickWashington. Presents Report In ness, arrived here March 24 from Chairman Hurley navy and one of the marine corps have Mood. .Optimistic been assigned to the transatlantic secFrance on the cruisers North CaroEdward N. Hurley, tion of the office of the director of Wasnington. lina and Montana and the steamships r naval .aviation to duty in connection Matsonla, Antigone and Manchuria. chairman of tne United States hoard, has rendered a report to with the preparation of plans for the For the most part the homecoming soldiers, were of former national guard his colleagues of the board on the re flight across the Atlantic ocean which units of Colorado, Nevada, Utah, Arf sult of his mission abroad to get in; is to be undertaken by a seaplane. zona, New Mexico, California, i Penn- formation on the shipping' situation SIR ROBERT BORDEN of the world as a result- of the war, sylvania," Ohio and West Virginia. Mr. Hurley says: "My ooservauon durinir the three months spent abroad HOMER S. CUMMiNGS and in the midst of the great events following the signing of the armistice, have afforded convincing prdof that the matter of merchant shipping is now one of universal Interest, kvery nation is alert to the vital bearing of ships upon their future prosperity. But the. chief interest centers on wnetner America can henceforth maintain her new placo upon the seas or Whether she must now disband the energies that brousrht her merchant fleet into being. There Is every reason fo"r be lievlnc that America , has come back tipon the ocean tp ;stay. My observa turns compel optimism."' . IEI JOIN - , - . k ship-ninc- Anarchistic Outbreak in Australia. Sydney, Australia. The first serious Bolshevist outbreak in Australia occurred at Brisbane Tuesday,' when a red flag procession of Russians was stopped by the police, resulting in a street battle. The police clubbed the demonstrators mercilessly. . Huns Plan Resistance. Rotterdam. A series of simultaneous meetings was held under the auspices of various political parties, the announced purpose of which was to "protest against entente annexationist plans." s Hun Leader Still Raying. Copenhagen. Germany cannot and a peace which involves will not-sigthe annexation of ;Danzig by Poland, President Ebert declared In a speech Berlin says. Sunday, a dispatch-fro- m The German president added that Germany could not give up West Prussia or part of Upper Silesia n New photograph of Homer 8. Cum. imlngs, chairman of the Democratic nai tional committee. AGREEMENT ON IS EXPECTED DUrtING THE WEEK. President Wilson Declares That He Is Pleased With Progress Made and Hopes for Early Completion of Work of Committee. - . . Home Loan Banks Sought. Washington. Congress at Its next session will be asked by the department of labor to enact legislation establishing a system of federal home loan banks, through which building and loan associations their securities and make a greater part of their assets available for further loans. COMPLETE AMENDMENTS Interest to the After- a Con- Makes Provides That Agreements Shall Not Be Construed as Infringements Upon International Policies Heretofore Recognized. ' A Paris. A complete agreement on amendments to the, covenant of the league of nations will be reached during the present week, was the prediction made Saturday evening following the conclusion of the meeting of the league committee, with President Wilson presiding. Substantial progress is known to have been made and President Wilson, when he departed from the gathering apepared very much pleased over the afternoon's work. A committee was appointed te deal with the suggestions made by the Japanese delegates. These suggestions were referred to the committee at the request of the British delegates. President Wilson has let the various peace delegates know that he is most anxious to sidetrack lesser matters now under consideration and devote the week' to the essentials which will make possible a complete treaty agreement before the close of the week. n i v W SD f mi I ' ! GOOD ENOUGH. Collection money was to little Torny my one of the essentials of church! going. Every Sunday morning he saw; that his penny was ready. One day, just as the ushers began toj take the collection. Tommy noticed that a guest in the family pew was not duly provided. Sidling along the seat! he whispered : "Where's your penny?" "I didn't bring one," replied the lady. Time was short and the matter waS urgent. But Tommy was a quick-witted kiddy. Thrusting his penny lntofl the lady's hand, he whispered: "Here, take mine I It'll pay for yon and I'll get under the seat I" -: The peace conferees will be able to The Vanishing Point devote their entire time to bringing "Mighty small quantity you gave me1 about agreements In the various com- for 10 cents." mittees as soon as the amendments to "You wouldn't have gotten anything; the league covenant are agreed upon. if you hadn't brought your own botJ The Japanese have eliminated the tie," the drug clerk replied. word "equality" from their proposed TAME BY COMPARISON. amendment to the covenant of the league,. it was reported, and now demand only justice alike for the nationals of "the members of the league. Their original amendment asked for "justice and equality." . . Thq elimination, the report had it, was decided upon at a private conference of the Japanese delegates. This modification would make the clause virtually unobjectionable to America, it was said, because the constitution of the United States says the same thing the Nipponese now propose. The British dominions, it is understood, find even the modified clause objectionable, especially Australia, and it appears the whole matter is one for British solution. The Japanese continue to insist that something similar to what they suggest is essential to quiet the anxiety of Japan. ri r PRESIDENT VISITS BATTLEFIELD Makes Auto Tour of Area in Which Recent Combat Raged. Paris. President Wilson left Sunday morning in an automobile for a tour of the battlefields, visiting the Sois-on- s area, where the allies seized the initiative from Hindenburg on July 18 by sending General Mangin's Tenth French army to attack the Chateau Thierry salient. The president visited scenes of the American army participation, as the First1 and Second divisr ions were incorporated in General Mangin's army as shock troops for this offensive, while the Twenty-sixtdivision struck toward Chateau Thierry and the. Third threw back the across the Marne.' . The president motored out the main high road, which was the first day's the First and Second diobjective-o'- f visions on July 18, which they reached with the French Moroccan division before noon-- . ; ; . The president saw the vast American cemetery near where several thousand doughboys nnd'marines are buried. He returned to Paris bout 8 o'clock. h Ger-Jba- - Missy-aux-Bol- ' "I'm just back from Europe." "I suppose the costumes of the peas ants seemed picturesque." "isot atter our queer sKirts ana aingi nius.- Better Yet A woman's way Is all her own. Her skill we're proud to note. She cannot learn to throw a stone. But she can cast a vote. Missionary Work. long, speeches In your can t V paign?" "I should say so," replied Senator Sorghum. "Some of my constituents have talked to me by the hour." "Any Statement A Bald Flobb A lot of men pride themselves that their brain is set on a hair trigger. Dubb Yep; bufethat doesn't go fot a man. bald-heade- d "How can son have a anybody but "Get him . sistant." Quick Way. I set about making my, serious '.attachment for himself?"; a job as a sheriffs a .... YACHTING. OUSTED AS POSTAL HEAD. Burleson Removes Clarence Mackay from Management of Telegraph Co. Clarence H. Mackay Washington. his been removed from the management of; the Postal Telegraph and Cable company.'" Differences between the management: of the Postal Tele? ' graph & Cable, .company, and Post:, master General Burleson, acute ever since the government assumed control of the telegraph' and telephone system, fulminated on March 22 in an order by the postmaster general summarily relieving the chief bfflcers, directors and owners of the postal company from all duties In connection with government operation of their systems. , . Preparing for Extra Session. Washington. In the light of recent developments senators and representaRadicals Attack Secret Service. tives who have remained In WashingCanof Sir Robert Borden, premier New York. A suggestion that mem- ada, has been mentioned as possibly ton since the adjournment of congress bers of the National Security league being the next British ambassador to are agreed In the belief that the extra und the United States "aneakret" ser- the United States. - This Is the latest session will be called not later than vice agents be ducked In the East river photograph of Sir Robert to reach this the middle of May. The most probable date suggested is Tuesday, Mary 13. was cheered by nearly 6000 radicals. country. Ilodge-r-lles- :er ' a very prominent mom-- . of our yacht club. What Is his official Dodge Indeed 1 apacity? llodge Four gallons. Felt Like It "All that you are." said his frail. You owe to me." "Here are thirty cints, and now We're square," (aid he. 1 |