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Show - ' , V "' .'.,"'. . ; . .- -'' . . 1 & FOREIGN: NEWS COMICS SERIAL STORY SPECIAL FEATURES MAGAZINE SECTION Li A. , ."; liJ. NLU iJaaJai J iet- " ' :. . A OGDEN CITY, UTAH SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL". 17, 1921. .,S;'..'. '. . - Lis 1 7 Countess to Enter Movies? iUEhGO 1 LIFTING FROM THOUGH TRAVEL TASKS AHEAD ITALY IS EXPENSIVE of Work to Be Nation Terribly Hurt By ' Undertaken This War Strain is Believed is Announced GENEVA. April -- i I6.A11 outline ol . ed It V MANDATES ... unTinn ' his the the 'Slore British nobility goof ing t9 work. The countess' of (Totten backward 'Miss Patricia Burke- of people would again be ham, formerly is.-tLos Angeles, eYiter ; the movies, brought up for discussion at the next say London reports. meeting of lhe council which. It is lio-hu- m! - - a - - '. ". now announced, will be held Jn Juno ' : next- AMERICAS J DEAD - '1 . j tran-sT'rtatle- n ti-xt- j mt X :0 J p r ! , Mr, Sweetser pointed out In forecast of, the season's work of league that the situation affecting mandates over about- 13,000.000 ir ,..r,Ti... - . Pril 16. Thcr ROME. is no longer any doubt that Italy will re April 1C- - Klmt sln ot main solvent ttvtn though lier wealth In ;nRiajid l:ve sputrrd thi pfinc has been terribly undermined by the . .mJ the rompanle expenses of the war. ay the Mar-- r a lourm :ii: nc.ru into of expectqui de Johanne. editor of the Kcon-- i ancy :intl till eyes arc turned toward omiatA. the important financUl1 America j which Europe rtrards as tbt ' ' weekly here. The editor pointed out f ctf the. millionaire, hatint ItalLan th if that (rovrrnnient could Victors from th fnited States &re j avoid adding to the pDer currency, much In the way of aceoru-- j proinleed create would confidence which this modatlorn. with cor Jltlons approxt-- j would improve the rates and tlfht if rnatlnr tho. in days prevail the next two or three neaons were) Ing. Hotc's and persons a rain favorable tb Italian treasury mUnt have plenty ot rooms on eomparatlvt-- 1 nope ior an iiri- return or annual ly hrt . notice, and V NV:-surpluses. rnonle are shortened. pairrporl The necenslty.for further emission coMixjirr AssLitiin of paper money liarbcfn eliminated r still i lcs-- ts Incomlnj ue,w law an the by authorizing ly Hritih by u:ervld port authorl-Crease In the price of bread. This also n.inat Jon rauch"'le?s ties, but the ban reduced the annual deficit In the) exhaustive 5r,it Then it than ieson. state budget to lens than cltl-- , an , was American for nccru'tary 000 of lire, inntoad of the 14,000.000.-co to the. trouble of ztrt to a 000 of last year. even whtn embarklr.c 4or passport rNDUSTHY IIKVIVI1S. bin nalie land, .uch a procedure it Many new taxes aIo will be up-- ! r.o JonKtr neces.ary.. plied this year and tin-s- arc expected I'ollre Jons In the DrlUth . , 'V to provide a continued Increase in j IsVs also are relaxed. rejrUtratlOn t the national receipt. ince the Italian ir.s; required only if a visitor mttf.d 4"' " to remain mor than 60 days, or.d t taxpayer seems inexhaustible in his; contribution?! to the restoration of hl farllities are sreatlv Itrsprov ed railway In schedule-antravel axcorcmoda-- ' country 's finances. Other numerous siriH of economic tkni. revival in Italy tire pointed out by At this date, no steps have been Italian economists. These include a taken toward crrantzeNl welcome f ot American tourists because It Is Ve- decrease in the number and extent lteveJ thty can te taken can of adeof strikes." increased railway earnings; and an increase in tne amount 01 capquately by the rerular lns:stutlons foi this purpose. No detail will te overital Invested in plants. looked, it Is pointed out. to insure manufactured articles Imports .of are ' comfort for all who touch HrUUt from abroad slowly decrowning, shores this iwason. j whllo Italian exports, chiefly to MedTravelers to Ireland.. It la !!. wil" iterranean countries and South Amerte as u I phjuS-calltTien fare of a ica are Increasing. ' ' powlbls under iha clrcum-star.c-s- . BOLSHEVIKS losi:. -'The national savings now exceed - ;;' 17.000,000.000 of lire, as compared to ' ' - I.? niAvrajxo kxpiinsivi: about 7.000.000.000 before the wnr. Tourist acencis are ejulte frank In even th most, admtttlnr that only the are; nay, that .Observers excitable and Ignorant of the Italian th financially able, to of travel at present when m firvrU. people have finally come to reallzo of Inntltuting the .cabin tickt;Costs approxeinistely the flij one. w ay. soviet system in Italy. The recent deliberations of the Italian Socialist parManueU .whose infatuation for tlie laic Gabv pcslvs pfacticaitr without the Urge jmm- Coufederatlon ty and of theJneral of Labor decided In favor of revolu- cost h.m the Portuwt thronr. i5 in love Ms VUip.ftS.Z tionary action and excluded tho possi- liie girl is hU7,annc IieDpicn. sensational - formerry to spend the chamtennis eek violence. French, a of revolution pluvrr, by bility TbCs fciv. the of Manual also a tcunUoxirfcntl thev plav part- - ,n lraTH mnd ttud pion Kuropc.- : j IN DOUBT. : Indications Are That Moro Americans Will Come -Than Can Be Handled : ! Securely Solvent the work to be undertaken by the va-rious commissions of the league of na- ' tions this summer has been prepared by Arthur Sweetser of the secretariat of the league. Preparations for this work wero made at the last meeting of the council of the league which ended in Paris March 4. . so-call- - Sum-me- r April 16. Japan's present naval program which officials say, will be " completed whatever may be arpowers as to fixranged with foreign than the meansmore ture curtailment, of the creation eight, and and eight units. The.' Phrase "Eight offito the according signifies, Eight" cial view here, that Japan will buildshe has eight first class battleuntil ' ships anoT eight first class battle cruisers but it also signifies another "eight," namely, that when one of the above . sixteen units reaches the- age of eight years,' that unit passes to the second line, to be replaced immediately by a new ship of the latest design. PROTESTS COSTS V ' it-that is; pointed- - out therefore outJapan's future navy, as at present lined, will have sixteen ; first class fighting ships of the latest construction numerous ships, of "the secas well as ond Tine-,- to which- the warships' now fall when, a period of building-willsubstitution necesmakes years eight to the "eight adherence sary. 'Hence, plan means constant build-is ing and constant expenditure. It this continuing outlay to which Yukio Ozakl takes objection in his campaign , for an. international the agreement for navy restriction on will ground that the; budget involved prove disastiwusfor' his "country. rushI(PEGTED Manuel in Love Again, Says Paris HAS NUMEROUS Outline 'Eight and Eight' Progrant , Means Feverish Work - on; New Warships ; TOKIO, OF DEBT CLOUD -- . pre-wa- j j l - ...V tre ; i , ; pasj-crret- s ! 1 , -- expressed the hope that the United States would be represented at this meeting of the council so as to present through Its representatives its objections to the allocation to Japan of the mandate over Yap and the other Pacific islands north of the equator and to .Great Britain-ove- r, the Mesopotamia oil region. This suggestion by Mr. Sweetser. Force and was made before Secretary however, Night Busy Day " of ; State Hughes Eent to the allied in Returning- - Bodies powers early in April his note, assertto Home ing that the allied mandates were STRONG ON "SUBS"' American assent to them ' A comparison" of the strength of the were In view of these notes given. 1Cd PARIS. April. navies of Japan and the United States the council of the league at its next to the view held here, bodies of American soldiers who fell shows, according may postpone action on the that in 1921 Japan will have one few in France hatfe, eitherbeen shipped to meeting mandates. er major ship, two more light cruisers. the United or arc now in pro 220 fewer destroyers and eleven fewer pates DISARMAMENT AIMS. submarines than the United States. By cess, of 'being returned ; for burial in The disarmament commission, head' '. the end of 1923, if the programs of the their native country. . ed by Premier Vivlanl of officers of the American France, Fisher of Great Britain and respective countries are carried out, 402 "'ith the United" States will lead Japan by more than the former. Premier Orlando, of Italy, sixteen in. major warships. She wlll army and a personnel of and-damen in will begin its labors shortly. Com2,000 more destroyers and 24 more working night have ' on:." hand other the many .sections of France, the graves menting thereon, Mr. Sweetser, says: submarines, bit: VIn view of the foundations already American thei American light, cruisers Will fall registration- service oftho behind Japan's to the number of three. armyhas reached ,a . paint where it i- laid by the different elements of. the 4,000 bodies a By the e,nd of 1927 Japan will have two mpossible to- - forward It would seem dlfifcull to initi The- - work cf sendine back league. fewer big" ships," three more light cruis month. ate anynductvedlEarmament plans t: ers and 4T fewer destroyers. ,i Jajjaaithe- - Z Xv4nl?r is. however devoting herself fo sub-- 1 meiTE in "AmericaAtvili be jcompleted by ouisiae ' u:e jeagjie except upon-mreduction marines and it is expected that by 1927 the' end of next October; if preent single que3tion of naval , Of which depends very largely course, she wtll;beat the United States',. in. subThe bodies of the, Americans' have on the United States. marines 'to .tbe number of 32. been taken from every ceme'tery in the '. Mr.; Sweetser points out that the inrm rcsrularly.- Recently they defeated the kinp of veden and CAJfT GAIX OX JC. S.; south, of France. The: greater' part of disarmament commission Is one of the COMIC BULLFIGHTS ' businesjt pay, and there are no :n : . , partner. the- effort is now '. being concentrated now that travel w ill If the United States does not start GAME strongest bodies yet brought together REAL SURPASS cheper In Ihf the narmies the near ruture. a new program .after'-- 1923 (either' re- in the zone .of in the is that it by league representaof Seventy-seveetc.' hii is nxrixrrr.n placing old ships transferred to the American. saldierss: who -- diedbodies ju ih Italy tive not only of the more important Is It believed pollIe that "second line" or augmenting her fleet J will alm. A 16. quesI MEXICO CITY. April be removed to the United States nations, members of the league hut be? deterred from is held here, after big expenwin many persons ' " Japan.'itand here considered tion seriously . month. also includes experts in economics, ficontinuous building at her nxt this summer tnraus visitlna; ditures Kurope be to are laughed) The graves registration service is nance, labor, politics and military sub- whether hullflcht of tha unettled condition of businers maximum capacity will in 1927 only .' introducthe Mexico of out through working in Berlin .on arrangements jects from the various organizations tion of the "toros bufos" (comical be in practically the same relative po- for shipping the bodies of 30 Ameri- already under the j sition she is today, 1921. aegis of the league, bullfights). can soldiers who are buried in" variUnited the on the other hand, as' If, Mexican! of th the such chroncilera Kcrloua labor International. office, .parts of. unoccupied Germany. States after 1 9 2 3 adopts a new build- ous Was- rendered very the economic and financial commis- amhsement are concerned by the fact This latter work. in spite or the Men cos; T livlrc. the of only replacing ing program difficult because the location, of many sion and the permanent military, na- that a company ofa Spanish buffoon In .thla connection, the advar.tacv "second line," into the of comic aeries finished ships going hag just of the graves ,was .unknown- -' An. ex- val and air commission. reaim.v in view of th fav, a not as American only, which is regarded record attendancea fights here with has been going over the German b inter-eaout. t SALE American OF WAR sonable assumption, but almost a cer- pert MATERIAL. t much almost Letter and as' Dutchess Dr Rohan Asks iucj-- aaipa pointed kdded Dentist, attracting; burial redords in Berlin for- several ' to the here, lweek3 In conflicts which serious aa In Mr. the this tainty, then' it is the contention Sweetser connection, -and virtually all the graves c r . the have been ha-Carried. .Out Shows, since women . last in Juet "nicr to that Japan in 1927, will occupy she beat the matadors Isthe American, found. The German gov- says that the league of nations has ta estimated that the ehiu and It same relatively weak position that ernment has afforded, every facility to sued a strong appeal to ail govern- appeared.were of Empress Them Stay will be atle this summer Escape companka will have in 1923. when further agitated They the graves service. to ments registration to Gerof the 'St. treaty carry ratify iaor paensers as Those favoring Japan's entering an themselves 2 0,000 bodies More will , be main which was drawn up to prevent six girls announced In 1820. than on a afterinternational restriction agreement ex- buried inthan. "toreadoraa" and, Sunday 1 recent IXNDON". April Th the .four permanent ceme PARIS. April 16. The Duchess de BintLiN iion:ij cnownni) in more backward parts noon, succeeded in dispatching lx rteaih press the opinion that Japan's ofplans taries. which the American of S!r Jfthw Mnntirn Tlnrrnw government HERI.IN, American tour-Ist- s April the of' the world Of the large stocks of puna wn e are laid without any thought companions , famou8 for hi, rescue of the late Em Rohan arres American women and i.Bn will in France come who to this sum' Germany United States policy after 192 3 J And Themaintain now held, in the belliger tT"f, Kurenles at.lhe fall or the Second the United Stales Koremment. to let mer will find conditions of travel fine arts .commission of the jwar material ".Kr; ... favored American far ,v w . J further, that ujapan seriously ent r renen nas War tn mo. council toi the American soldiers remain on the laa attractive than In pre-whast ' countries. empire brought times. or desired disarmament for herself she arrived in Pari Memorial .HnrJ nfIllCht a letter written by ir Johrt to for sriA . Ho adds: In and llerlln hotel facIUtle. What s to bwoms of the noble. gl Henry would take the lead in trying to force and. a tour of .Inspection of the perRhine. 'The duchess, with other mem- areHamburg ten after! dare Tonsopoby. thla "Under trafall such overtaxed 'by bu'.ne agreement constantly one En-Itinquired the world to accept, it immediately manent cemeteries, i The' commission fic was to be sport lhe dramatic voyac across the ',buUfIghtInK.v clowns are men even France-Aand bers of the Comlte persons who hare tela the by erique, , regulated the league sit and back rather "than permit channeL The letter relates the has in contemplation--.planfor the days in advance for accomUnited'States and Great Britain to take beautlf icatlon of the- - cemeteries "and of nations, but up to the' present, or. lowed to make It appear ridiculous details of the escape In which Dr. were guests of General Henry T. Al- graphed modations are turned away by. tha the initiative. will determine "the' character- - of; head Ing.Iargely to. the failure of the Unit- and then senoritae are permitted to Evans, an American dentist, wu In- len arCcblen February 15. when the flrst-clajhotels. If forelrnera are asand a show st ru m e n t a L attempt stones.- to be . used and the :. general ed States totake action in. the matter, enter the arena SPEED POLICY ADOPTED rooms they pay far more to signed celebrated the of of skill ?f troops annlTentary to be lyindicate- that decorative scheme to be followed. The the other interested :governments than is charged to Germans. yacht happened Appearances here visitors to Mexico gener- ingHrInJohn's on to expedite commission-wilthe American soldiers , 1S70, harbor the took their Conditions along" the Jlhlne are not have been "unwilling to ratify the con- allyAmerican Pept. day probably consult with Japan is doing everything enjoyment 1n tho comi- waiting favorable weather for' sailing-artists." , vention for fear of handicapping, their cal" find more French, landscape her building program. Admiral Kato, leading especially In A inviting for tourists. Tfcs an as In the allied front inert the than! : place . tames. oo 2 p. m. two strangers came aboard regular At are overtaxed by the oc- no the minister of marine, recently told larrer places own nationals in a trade which re- In fights horses are cm In used and asked for an audience with "the the formerthe cupying armies, army. She tells of her trip ' the diet that the? following in EngH and It Is almost Immained open to American firms." although th bull is eventually killed. owner. They appeared to trust' Fir March number of FranceEiats-UnIs- T land of the principle of the division ARGENTINA SHOOTS for to get first clsi outsiders possible who ' The much skill display fighters, John and confided to him that the the committee's magaxtne. hotel accommodations. Cologne. . WELCOMES U. S. PROPOSAL.. of work made it possible to build m6re Cot .sorts and all ability athletic, perform was concealed' In. Peauvtlle. FIRST! BIG GUSHER The' commission on amendments to of grotesque stunts with the animal empreiH "Mr tJoy. U profound- she says In lent, and Mains are filled to overflow-rng quickly land at the 'minimum expense. He agreed to convey her to safety In her diary of tbe trip, "to see the by Ilritlih, American and aendU Heretofore it 'has been the policy of the covenant of the league is required before he Is dispatched. waa It decided that Lady American flag on Ehrenbrelutein and officers, respectively. England and Moat of the the Japanese navy to make each navy tttto that body before oo board In I 'do BUENOS AIRES, . . April 1 6. The to' make a report remain should are Uurgoyne hotels as possible, under controt of the miliwill It yard as complete-- a Ainit" a remain there very tary and hope not to arouse suspicion. order big. gushei:; among .the: oil, wells June l'next..- Mr."Sweetser asserts MOVING SIDEWALK IS work. first be carina used ' capable of doing all manner-o- f by civilians time the for not of Jong is only security, recognized in. many quarters It waa arranged that her majesty unless they have authorlratloo field, 'at Comodoro that it When' the policy of rapid "naval ex- in the government, j from CONGESTION REMEDY - aaVa own' but all and of come ray commission . has. should that been 'this' aboard Jimt in minutes country Europe "served at .fire Riyadavia officers. brought commanding pansion was adopted it was' found' that with ' 310 tbe lovers of liberty and humanity. '3IANV IU1STIUCTIOXpast midnight. Meanwhile., at IX: product- of 25,000 league pillar to" any bridge 'which such yards were not capable of quick barrelsana estimated a a Hlr The i a fact which I feel eTen visit John wells had in from m., is p. It "Yes. day. also it previous be between built the for tourUu to the and In meantime, might private league expansion. PARIS, April 19. A movlns; side- young Russian, to whom he has. only more keenly than I did before, that travel betweendifflcurt had been small. "As thl. the United States.". The commission. district, that one-isthe various sections ct manufacturing facilities have develop. to walk relieve conijeUon in a newpart ot the .field he Introduced.- This gentleman had the. Germans been the Po!lc. occupied area,' ed to such:an extent that the navy can new force and Is registrawell respect only says. qualified to enter Into considered by the city of r.iria. The brought a friend who wished to look that this tion Js very strict and permits may mean a dis.cussion.wlth and.-thatnow depend on soms of them to- supply it Is thought Is United States the power United the . In b States. for hancea era of adoplloa'may not - groat over the yacht." They were shown b obtained to enter and lev must Argentina is entering on anheav-yvarmuch of its required materials. It large , The oi' is as case President Harding sees fit to at- but the idea, la btina; eorioush- dis- over the craft, although Sir John said the only people they fear, knowing ious areas, f therefore is 'considered" -probable here is. theproduction. other oil so far produced at tempt. to adapt the existing league to cussed, for fnrisla.ns have. plcsant he waa convinced the men were spies. perfectly that. If It were needful, they In south Germany conditions ars the i British policy.- cited by the Comodora that The visitors were conducted by Kir would come again as numerous aa more Inviting Rivadavia, 'and is of "little his own ideas for an association of memories of the ucrlo.1 MUewalk thut to pleasure-seekerminister of the navy has been adopted user ; except; for, fuel: nations. A. 'J. Balfour of Great:Brlt-am- , was a feature of the 1900 world'a ex- John personally Into the town and hadj possible. Bat I do hope that the gov. Dresden and Munich are not so niJed by the Japanase navy department. . '' -"" here.' ' 09 men and th. tetter scarcely gone when Dr. Kvana. the ernment of the United Statea and our with buRineas is president of tne covenant com- position ' GVS PLANTS BUIIT to le" Rretan came up is Mroe. build hCttels ft roiliand are The such empress able to proposal touri usually mission. Mr. Sweetser says that-th- e sisters, the American women, The .almost: simultaneous establish MARRIAtE MARKET were taken a board without bag- dear ng- sidewalk under the princlpaI"bou-levardists with rooms at ratesprovide and ea much Jeav-Inwill the of understand amendments thus far presented are ment of the t new naval . gun factories : necessity In Deriin and Hamburg. Madeleine to --the gage. the than from BOOMS the troops on the Rhine to prevent ENGLAND extensions' 'of the covenant rather Place de la Republiquc. A pedeslrlari Empress Eugenie' was said to have at Hiro and Sasebo, the Tiaval arsenal The passport prot.Im Is annoying in Sunbki, which-- includes 800 acres than severe, modifications- of it, with not only would avoid dangerous, de- been greatly agitated and to have sob- mischief. It Is easier to keep them even within Gerrnanys own bound- of land, the' Mitsubishi torpedo factory and not be 'Imported bed bitterly., fine was. cared for by here and much less expetslve. than arles. For example, u i necessary fcr the layingof the' Canadian crossing single exception near Nagasaki, the, airplane factories LONDONV.ApriV .16. There was a by cross and counter .currents of tiaf-fl- Lady Uurgoyne through the two days sending them back and having the a tourist going from lierlla to of Nagoya ' and Sasebo, the develop- boom in marriages In England - and amendment ofto eliminate. Article JC. of the voyage to Hyde, England. The trouble of sending later many, many to have tha vle cf the Bavarian of judges of. ment of the ordnance section of the WalesVlast year when nearly 400,000 .Election of Itself was uneventful.. except for m ore t o Tu in Berlin. This precaution har legation trip rope. a Muroranv Steel works. and numerous couples were wed.. , This: easily cdnsti- - international arbitration Is to begin that weather the been and taken fact, heavy by Bavaria to prevent rc1 "The American troops. she lays, agitators from of the traffic will' be asked. to meet by the nasty sea made travel for the empress other. small projects, are believed' to ftutes a record .? says, the .Hegistrar- - this spring. When General men a. are tall tory irem Berlin.Invading their. terri- A landing- was "are magnificent. The held, its last meeting; 27 'nati- beginning of May and to report to the very uncomfortable. show, in addition to hasted in increas league, . For the three years preceding the ons-had made a Ryde at 7. o'clock of the even- and handsome. They walk majestlcal- ing. armaments, a permanent reariiowniJTirA Dnorrni) signed the protocol for the council by the first of June. and division of work that war. the annual average was'only 230;-00- 0 court but only one, Sweden, of September g and are normal in Germany. one Trains rangement and with ing neTer acemprtas FOR ly BLOCKADE. gTeat PLANS regularity had ' and only twice 'has the 30000 for will in -the future be capable of still to Join Bread left are r.ectary to Immediately, Hastings rards Is behind to 'the wonderful It other. will her committee ratification. If Another deposited to her son. mark been passedIn 1915 and. 13 19 tually gt attempt In confusion bread greater expansion without cars and hctls and . dinirr ' " when owing, to. .the recruiting cry the necessary 24 members of : the work 'out detailed machinery for the ". In him letter, says the es- see them parading." John .or disorganization. Slr ar-of ', the mot bread is served heaw of "single mencfirs.t" During the reTlew. she say. "The black. league do not ratify the protocol soon application of tho economic blockade cape was planned by PtJnce Metter-nlc- h now 5 Japan has I wero and in de Rochambeau the second half, of the year went the secretary general of the less than, 9 years of age, namely, the and most skillfully carried out by Marquis is to a nation going to war In defiance of In the smaller cilica and v:!5age j bound and eclipsedy; nil pre- authorized by the. council toleague . . so enthusiastic that we asked permisup with-Evans...... . Dr. Its ask Fuso, Yamashiro, Ise, Hyugaand for agreements. i .is uon . conditional :, oo ,' In 1923 under the age limit poli- vious figures.- sion same as mi..! to of the have 'honor much were t,rcre the the nominations of the Judges. ' Still another committee will conklisiag they J the .war. cy, the Fuso will1 fall Into second line Americans American . flag." ...TRAFFIC IN WOMEN. motortrg sider the. fall scope of Article XVIII FUTURIST PAINTING . Mut-sbut the 'new or on through Germany : international conference An And. In are the duchess traveling beof .to' on a added closing, infor the expected the treaties and making; registration are In commis- total of eight." trains REFORMS DRINKERS treated. There Kaga and Tosa will-bcourteouily ; In war this "America' has Is no lonrrr any d:;-- . :t'.an to suppression of international- traffic in j. i agreements. sion, making, a total . of seven dread reiera In addition to pushing continu- women and children will be held at Ge- ternational, - ot. waJl' this domination the ben secretariatseparating the' .The the use of the English lai.gusgr. and the ::in 1927, league Yamashiro,. Ise ous building program it is undeifstood neva in the last naughts. and ambition and asoo week Justice, in humanity. June: The and Hyuga will go into the second line, that Japan, is turning'' but submarines the international labor office will be . HEREIN, April 16. A shop .propribut it is expected that four others will has fast as possible, realizipg. that un- - sembly of the league -- has asked the gone over to ascertain whether they etor , here, who had utilized the serv- She'as been our providence oo so the total will to appoint a special commis- are operating efficiently and economi- ices of a futurist painter to decorate ; r have been 'completed IRREGULAR BIRTHS crart is best adapted' to' the council" -; : be eight.- . ' : of ' sion inquiry Into the deportation of cally. defense of her empire which istcom.-pose- d " show windows was ordered by the his INCREASE IN BERLIN rAMors smr ;oLn. SUPERIOR IX CRUISER of so many islands and believing women and children still going on In international credit scheme police to remove the decoration on "CONSTANTINOPLE. The' It. April ;Iri powerful: battle cruisers, Japan that, shelter' as they 'can iri the Turkey, and adjacent, countries.- It Is commonly known aa iho Ter Moulon Ibe ground that; it was ' a disflgura The. iVorplon. veteran ef the has , strengthsuperior- to, that- of ' the rocky findingSpanish- offer-- a serious expected that the conference at Geneva inlets, will theyextension of street." unof the the for tlon credits war. plan American Interned hen the! r.KRU.V. April IS The number c; here HaUnited'States. The Kongo,' Hiyei menace to ships advancing; to attack in In: June will take , to a of nations saloon of the der steps The proprietor for the purStates Joined the allies, and UleRitirnafe children bora here Iat league 'organize runa and Klrlshima are all under nine the dangerous channels that surround this commission nearby United to now and a in to business It send to to Admiral economof Jiriitol'a f l.irh!p. has j ear inerrr?Ht the the the attrlbnteI pose per ct. ; over trre slump years of age.. By" 1923 all foui- are coast line cast as soon as the disturbed ic Cyclehelping will be facilitated," says Mr. sin which, eeea for the first time, been erderefl soil 'by the r.avy'der"t j previous 12 mor.tts. scheduled to withdraw to the second h The been elation-- , line defense, bit the projected 'battle aviation and is exerting Iferself to trftihi SJr"1?8.. in that part of the orl(J Sweetser. as a result of approval giv- ho said, caused, his pitrocs to con- Tneut, Fathers r.f Il!egUimate fhi'dm are ' rtl I of much the sinee time hre cruisers Am agi and 'Akagi are expect capable airnverty asv weir astd .build I the to '.were too permit council en the work already clude' they the uppT-- cf tr.e- cMhi' much when sl.e he. ram- - a drinking for tat The. .committee 46f the league In begun by the commission Jn ed to be- placed iix commission by: that !i"t was c!s it auu to lk on that of -' until !he ol few and necessary "go r! a n rf" the A She i a con ... charge ' ' ' .' '.' ' - iijuiu charge of the suppression, of - year. ;By 1927,' six 'new'batlle cruisers '"bTsmuo; h- -s planes." .'.'."' aeroplanes t &e of 3 5. thC the water wagori, opium that plan. pricg erted tvthL ' . and-eight- "' f . ! ;LEA1 " Ex-Miais- e FRANCE I ; i t 1 j e- j "; - ter i I I - 1 I j j : hydro-electri- Twenty-thbusan- c V t . - the-forme- r - -- -- . " fr A ' " 1 y - well-to-d- 1 - rer - - Imp-owibllit- o y j . hfidiea-sKiate- d ,ln. -- e . . . . . "'11 j - , Ar-porin- . "Llx . j e. lr.A' mr S KVlhi - - DEATH RECALLS - WOULD RETAIN . . WMim. i - ; YAWirS EXPLOIT I BOYS ON RHINE r i .cbrr - j - D--v ujr.f-Auiinii- e ttti sum-Ime- one-thlr- d - -- the-dumpin- ir g . lir, - . l. I " ar er - . al-ig- s ih , wi . l . T ; - . : . -- . , . - - - , . . . tr " - - -- :. - - -- - -- -- s. - . - : -- . ' ' ' . - --.- .. - : s, : g IN ' - c, V - : . a Its-varl- t the-cour- . . the-counci- l - v. , . . the'-'marriag- super-dreadnaugh- ts , a - Na-gat- o. . . - super-dreadnaug- u, hts ... i I - - - s: e . . . .- - -- : -- -- ' -- . ' - ; qer-wat- '- :"- er - - , : , - - - - - - ! the-'Nippo- - re-sta- rt n - -- . - - i V V- v ' r.-s- -- I r dj;'r!i r rr-- t - . |