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Show drsrfl WEATHER I I J XTAII Showers tonight and (Sat unlay; colder tonight and in v north portion Saturday.. jk It .If ii i ; ! ill 4 F I I 'l xv " hrfx "-- ti ll I I ! J Iff! i JU Ik- - x II V-- aa AH F A. vv 11 r! II I . Ail Fill II nrxp Bmjrrirr ogden 1 For frc Information on how XV - fiA - Al t M M -- . r . to beautify your home grounds caH 89. The city has cm. ployed t a horticultural adviser to was 1st In Ogden a more beautifulmaking use Make city. - . , ot him. - Fifty-firs- Year No. t OGDEN CITY, UTAH FRIDAY EVENING, MAY 6, 1921. 116 n v1 a vvy G AP REPORT 1 R V tary dictator. . . s.f. CHICAGO, as figging holes in the pay of railroad employes and were said to help make it impossible for many of the workers to make both ends meet at 'present rates of pay, wire cited by representatives of the "big four" railroad brotherhoods' before WOUNDED Appeal for More Troops Brings Response There Are None Available (By The WARSAW. May reports ciated Press ) Unconfirmed mHv todar say tiiat- . decreased. . ' W. G. Lee, president of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainrent figures men, , Silesia, May6; - from a presented of cities. In OPPELN. Upper number, Polisn lnd,, v. Awftplatftd Press.) , VJJjr c?V.Ht' urwoa Omaha, Neb:, he said trainmen S3.i"" forces enierea dirirnt n wmi TTnner Silesia about 20 miles, who paid $20 a month rent in last southeast of here at 10 o'clock 1916 now paid ..$35. Others among the troops night. The casualties are given of occupation in the fighting and two who paid $35 in 1919 now paid aa one French soldier killed $75 and fuel which cost $7.50 wounded and several Italians wounded. enThe Poles agreed to permit the in in 1918 cost $14.50 in 1920, he remain tente and local troops , to continued. d repreAn barracks. their to arrive today was j . - - inter-allie- ' ! . oo PREDICTED REVOLTS , OF MEXICANS FIZZLE MEXICO CITY, May 6 Observance of Mexico's national holiday yesterday passed off tranquilly, according to reports received last night ,by the war office. Not only did threatened revolts headed by Francisco Murguia and other leaderg fail to materialize, but General Gomez, federal commander in Tamaulipas, was ordered to send an emissary to the international- boundary, near Laredo, for a conference with General Mnrguia, who is said to be planning unconditional surrender and giving an absolute ' -promise to keep the peace. After reviewing the military parade yesterday. President Obregon, in with newspapermen, pointed out the Vnation-wid- e peace and security which reigns in Mexico," whichrec-he thought justified consideration of ognition of his government' by the A United States. The president also took occasion to reiterate his personal opinion- that Article 27 of the constitution should be nonretroactive when applied to petroleum and agrarian problems. oo . con-versati- pn , -- - . KU KLUX INITIATION IS IMMENSE AFFAIR ATLANTA, May 6. Initiation of more - than 1,000 candidates into the Knights of the Ku Klux Klan was carried out with all the mystic ceremonies of the order at a meeting of knights from all sections Thursday of , the country, . according to announcement. It was stated that more than 5,000 members of theorderwere in attendance, the gathering "being in celebration of the founding of the order of the same name in reconstruction days. . Ga-.- " KJDBliiS Terms Sent to Berlin Fail to' Please Most Paris ' A A . t command of the local narcotic division, asserted that not only was Japan man "drugs on a vast scale, but iufacturlng some of her merchants were importing narcotics from the United States only this country (to smuggle them bacfe-into and China at large profits. He explained that while American j manufacturers were barred from sel- to peddlers here, ling their products' ithey were. not prohibited from exporting their wares. ( Japanese merchants, he continued, .were purchasing every ounce of narcotic drugs they could buy in America. ;A ton of these drugs was snipped from Seattle to Japan in a single month, he declared, adding that the Japanese 'merchants knew American manufac law-abidi- and that street ng Nippon Against'' ' :Y .' ;? : " LONDON, May 6. British overseas dominions would Jiot tolerate an A ' - , Ulster Premier Insists His 'Section Will Not Sur- render Rights . 1 . - LONDON, Anglo-J- treatjT having as its obopposition to the United States, ject declared the. Weekly Spectator today. The newspaper devoted considerable space to a discussion of can relations and Japan and cited facts to show that an alliance between England and Japan was never meant and never could be used against America. "Blowing of the British empire Into smithereens in a single instant would be the result If we went to war against America, not to support some rights of our own, but In order to help the Japanese," the newspaper continued. ' WOULDN'T HESITATE If the people of Australia and Vew Zealand were asked on which side they were going to be In a war between America and Japan they would not hesitate a second; They would not waste time in reading diplomatics papers or considering legal, points. They would say:, flesh and blood. "With our own aid ' mother country has If the-pogone mad we cannot .help it. Help the Japanese to take San Francisco by assault? Good Heavens, what are s apanese Ang)o-Amer- V .....:....:-.:.::...-.'- ' l- ' r if - .'.v. : I ' -' s,v - s - .'. VK' .''..-j,.- r .v - - - , , J' ' v v s s : ' ' 's - ' ' - : ' 'x - , ' ' - i ' . - ' , ' ' 'y - 'I ' " ;J ' ?va 6.-- Thc week-en- Distin- d. Eamonn de Valera and other, leading Sinn Feiners are. expected to be pres- ent, the newspaper adds. guished y - - " - V" - - ' . during the j ' ' May . ' - , ning Standard says tonight it hears that a momentous Irish con-- , ference will be held in London 1 " sy ' v ; y ' i' $-... J- . y. Irish-prelates- , BELFAST, May 6. The Ulster Unionist party in a meeting called by Sirrof James Craig, premier-designato vir hla rrnort of his conver sation yesterday with Eamonn de Va XI-ide- te . : ' ' ., ..; . .. " o . " r it ' ' $ J - N , f T ' f leaner, accioeu lera, tlie Republican liavln? accepted the covernment of Ireland act, could make ' no f urtlicr concessions, -- w tnriav ' ' that-iTUtcr- . venders could get their supply of narDUBLIN," Miiy - (By Vlie Assoccotics only from smugglers. conversation be'' iated Ire5w) Tl .. n ..... "On the other hand," said Mr. Sim;i tween Blr Jamc Crals: and Kamonn dos mon, "we have in Germany. the biggest qtuvr-tcrValera is said in manufacturers of drugs in the world. you talking aboutj" n imisc over, reached to have Thes"er men know that Japan is ' at'"There could be only one place fot of a republic for Ireland. to obtain of Canada in a fmisllfhoetwm --Jiim&QT control the Valera in a lengthy apstate tempting It de is - of nnd 'AnieriCa bythr side of Anierica. j win to oter Sir James to tried the'woritfIn peal consequence, theer is a drug1 war at tho idea of a republic for the wholenc-ofsame answer." ,Klr JnmM ronllc! that no present between these. two nations." oo TO KEEP PEACE gotlaUons on such a baMi could. occur, is asfrtel, and uie interview it asserted" one "The Spectator of the Uiere. NATIONAL HIGHWAYS reasons for continuing the alliance Japan had been the keeping ol ARE CONSOLIDATED wifh TTi1r t.sIt Attnc-L.TvrnT TV Afo. peace, to be able to 'help calm down -- with 2 S casual crown on the forces, should it become population, Japan's on was rmo or a "point of honor." Th wnicn i8Mi, ties, XWA m Of TOPEKA. Kan., May 6. Formal excited KII rT nAMnl In ttr 'nPLlv concluded by suggesting consolidation of the National Midland newspaper events in Ireland, issued from Dublin to two British! United the proposals i trail and the Roosevelt hi eh way, to States. . . castle toaay. TFI-be known as the Roosevelt-Midlan- d of "The the first these," newspaper trail, was announced here by R. M. be 'to make our position LONDON, May 6. Hope that yes.Sawhill of Glascow, Kan., secretary-treasur- said, "wduldclear to the Ameriwhole in Dublin of Kir absolutely of the Midland Trail asso- can terday's meeting, to premier-designafor Hiand of also the people people James Craig, ciation. ' our own we Irish the would de Eamonn Valera, empire, ami pster, declaring Under the terms of the consolida- not renew the ot al- Wilson a be alliance, sign Japanese may, Also British leader, Would Five Aver: of republicanof the Midland trail though of course, we would remain tion, the officers Big Says Ireland in pervaddawn the peace become the officers of the new high- in :r Make 19 Cents Profit on comment here today. amity with Japan. Next Mesopotamia" Air. ed newspaper Times ages way and the Midland markers become we perfect a should naval convention propose said that at least London The : ; the official markers. . Each Animals Ground with the United States. We should Training to obtain peace, f efforts distinct five The length of the new trail Is 29 34 say to 'You America: shall over take carried by Sir James besides that being miles. It traverses the states of New command of the sea th were andde going forMr. Valera, Flucua-tlonrl- n a . 6. Formation1 of Jersey, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Vir- Pacific and carry on throughout 'LONDON, May. WASHINGTON, May the policing ot Fel-zafiimultaneouslr. ward l, West ginia, the Mvestock market are large- series of Arab states with 'Prince Virginia. Kentucky. Ohio, it. Just as be answerable son of the King of Hedjaz, as first The Daily Express counselled Indiana, Missouri Kansas, Colorado. for the Pacific,youwlli so we will have com- ly due to the unscientific. and Ineffiby- - Englishmen in any Utah, Nevada and California. The old mand of the sea in the Atlantic, which cient system employed by. producers sheritian ruler, tantamount to the potrails traversed practically' the same means not only all the northern waters in marketing their products' and the sition of- king; are among the- plans of negotiations, concluding by saying "we route from the west coast to Char- of Europe and the Mediterranean, but real trouble at the base of. the whole Winston- Spencer Churchill, secretan' have muddled the Irish question long Let us give Irishmen a lottesville. Va. From that point the also' the waters encompassing the question is not so much; a packers of state for-thcolonies, who has just is a producers" prob- paid a visit .to ..the ..middle east, ac- enough. as to Roosevelt trail went north to New western and settle it." it chance southern coasts of problem York, the Midland east to Norfolk, Africa." lem, ' Thomas E. .Wilson. of 'Chicago, cording to thePaily Sketch, today, It The Daily Graphic enthusiastically Institute of 'American says Churchill plans t'o establish a new congratulated both Sir James and Mr. Va. Both routes are Included in the oo president of. thetold the "house commit- overland aerial route to India and to de Valera and exulted. by saying "the Meat Packers, consolidation.- , on tee in,' appearing make oo '.' today; Mesopotamia, a' huge, training Sinn Fein is at its last gasp." agriculture ATTORNEY DELAYS in opposition to the for British military aviators. groundULSTER'S-VIEWSpacking-indu- s of the control to bill 6.000,000 in Expenditure PLOT CASE BELIEVES AMERICA LIQUOR BELFAST. May 6. (By the Associthe railroads.' reduction of try.Mr. ' on his batated aaserted Brilieh military forces 'to twenty Wilson Press.) Sir James CraigRaid WILL ENTER LEAGUE his Dublin conto serve from return here would talions of the and 6. feorfproposed eventually military CHICAGO, May Invoking the divert the was Valera de Eamonn with in air of the trol Mesopotamia- by meeting reyal Industry .largest, single;efforts-ttreaty of 1831 between, the United to wlthhis visit he force also were said to be 'planned. energetic. entirely unconnected PARIS, May 6. Belief that the States and Mexico, and attacking the America from he a be to in and difficult itself Feizal's said, would Fitzalan. fact, Prince brother changed, Viceroy United States could not stand aside of the Volstead act. said, would made provisional , ruler- of. the .. Arab did, not know that Mr. De Valera de- from "the work of, world regenera- constitutionality for the defend- situation.' aslThe result.-he- ' the Levy Mayer, attorney Trans-Jordan livestock province of Jo la, the news sired to meet him until Viceroy Fitzation", if the league of nations cove- ants in the Sunny Brook Distillery be quite" as harmful ' packing-Industrto the Bald.';--.'--lan had started for London. paper nant was drastically amended, was ex- case today obtained a continuance un- producers ) , .' is oo as is "What itself injurious retil May 20. Whether his visit to Mr. De Valera pressed today by Rene Vlvianl in The preliminary hearing was to bound to prove harmful tf the other. would have good resulti or not, said plying to queries from American corsunnusi'D' Sir James, it never could be said 30,000 LOCKED OUT respondents as to what he thought of have decided whether "the defendants, bill.;' Mr. The auieady' the prospects of the league after his Louis Rosenfield, secretary-treasurUlster and Its leader were not that BY SHIP OPERATORS prepared recent Visit to the United" States. of the Sunny Brook DisjtiUery company Wilson ' declared, docs not deal with to urge a cessation of "tho ar "The league of nations will, by the and F. W. Harrison, an employe in or solve the economic problems of the wicked campaign." But present He orwould Texas public. consuming indicted Ulster in he same for of the assembly. Chicago, added, alleg- producing time, September .meeting : LONDON. May 6. A lockout of be- the be relieved. of lta cumbersome, ed conspiracy to transpdrt 1,000 cases added that by delegating radical and surrender not any rights or privilege n objec cooks and stewards' to a commission tionable features through amendment of whisky into Mexico," should be tried revolutionary powers act. The only safe new. the taken by under this gan step being today, or the covenant," he said. "It will in Chicago or in El Paso, Texas- it would set up a form of governmentwas for Ulster to he course, declared, because of . the sweep the six counties at The liquor was intercepted -- before al 'despotism over private ; business shipping1 companies' become rid of the articles which make the polls, to accept a wage cut of and it was up to the opponents Mexico. The shippers. Attor which would be destructive to private men's refusal of it appear like a super-state- ." reaching He aDout 17 per cent. The lockout may Ulsterites to use the same methods.the : enterprise. was oo ney Mayer, said had procured a Der- - initiative and individual steamindustry-alreadinterfere with the comfort of from the commissioner of internal asserted that the - v rAFER HOPEFUL. MICHIGAN POTATOES ' mit and. regulated by more laws ship passengers, btit owners of vesrevenue- - .They had no knowledge. supervised r industry-in-thto be are confident all said sels DUBLIN. May 6. The Freeman's that country. claimed, that the whiskey, was to than 19 CENTS PEH ANIMAL GO FOR FERTILIZER they vacancte3 can easily be f illeJ. , The Journal in an editorial commenting on be used for, beverage purposes. Mr. Wilson declared other Industries Transport Workers' federation has the meeting between Slr ames Craig Mr. Mayer argued.,that ,the case la ; were making 'much" greater profits promised its support to the Stewards and Eamonn de Valera says: OWOSSO, Mich., May 6. Thousands question was an excellent opportunity than the not union- ,. During will 1920, leaders . the" ;meatwmen. Cooks' trust "We and , that a on for "show the down", of bushels of potatoes will be used constitu. : . oo ; said, the five larger packers avereasily lose touch with one another, oi for fertilizer in this district this year, tionality of the Volstead act which, he he anion "cents each a "oris the two men will readily despait that profit as a result of the slow demand and contended, departed from the mean- aged them "and that of. commal success. Now that by slaughtered TO NO OKE EAGER the low prices," according to growers ing of the eighteenth amendment as it about 87, per cent of every. dollar reit established been has munication here. Another result of the low prices, concerned the question of transporta- ceived by the packers went to liveJ CABINET be should maintained." FORM NEW tion of liquor. it is said, will be to greatly reduce stock producers." The, falling; off in The .editorial says that it does not oo the acreage planted this season. export demand, decreased meat, conthe many difficulties which disregard J. V. Shep, county agent,' has ad6. (By the Associat- will present themselves to any negoper. capita in. the. United sumption, May BERLIN, vised farmers to form a potato grow- DISTILLERY LbOTED States, increase in unemployment and ed Prospective candidates for tiations and adds:' ' ers' exchange, declaring that this In purchasing power, the de- the Press.)decrease new the political. parcabinet. "It is"known that the' divergencies woId equalize the distribution and BY LIQUOR BANDITS velopment of thrift In consumers buy- ties are reservinganddecision But the and wide. are concerning stabilize price. in com- the formation of a new ministry until meredeep decline the and general will cause ing of the fact meeting 'oo modity values and general' deflation the parliamentary attitude with reg-armen o! all of heart an among uplift LOUISVILLE, Ky., May were ascribed by the .witness .as rea- to the allied ultimatum on financial in- good will and .intelligent patriotism COMRADES RETURN cases of whisky, valued at sons for the decline in, prices, of live- demnities has been clarified. ; Unless we are for Ireland-- . WITH A. E. F, BODIES hundred 55000. was stolen late last nieht from stock and meats. to leaders will the Dr. Oustav leader of doomed the Stresemann, anarchy OO the Dowllng distillery at Tyrone. An- ' t. . . , r German People's party. Is prominently find the necessary sympathy and derson county, according to reports , mentioned as chancellor or. foreign NEW YORK, May 6. Bodies .of received here today. Ten masked men HARDING REVEALS minister in, the .new. cabinet.. ' ' ' I CANT' HAVE REPUBLIC. 1,255 American soldiers who lost their held up two guards at the distillery oo lives in France and. Belgium, arrived the reports said, and alter . SIZE OF SLIPPERS BELFAST, May 6. The Unionist loading the at quarantine Thursday, on the army liquor on four motor trucks, Wrhiff says that'.while conNorthern made MAN DYINGPLACES transport Sorame, accompanied by 418 their escape. siderable political importance attachcomrades returning from the German Oo: JCEW YORIC. March- - 6. President s CRIME UPON WOMAN ed to the mating between Sir Jaraea frontier. Ilardingr's size for bedroom Craig" and Eamonn De Valera, "them slippers ooN. Y. FOREIGN BORN la ten and danger that some isjusfamay Confirmation of this fact was made TAILSPIN FATAL TO exaggerate it." OMAHA. Neb.. May 6. Nathan , NUMBER 2 MILLION by the president himself in a letter Long-- 44, Marshalltown. Ia., died in a of the paper two the In opinion , NEBRASELA. AVIATOR addressed to Doris and .Edith .Brown. hospital here last nipht from a bullet points are clear, namely, that there Camp' Fire girls. They planned to &ive wound Inflicted, by Mrs. Tony Goglia, can not be an Irish republic, and U6. The for- him a buquet" of flowers while he was of Omaha, who told police' she fired lster's fights under the new act can not WASHINGTON, May ' LINCOLN. Neb-- , 6. Edward eign born white population of New here for the unveiling" of the. Bolivar at The Whig sugLong: because she thought'bp was be interfered with. Gardner of Lincoln May died here today York City was announced today by statue. Failing-to-reacMr. De Valera's desire for the that o a watch at home gests'' steal president, her; trying from Injuries received yesterday when the census bureau as 1,989,216, or the girls decided to Fnd him a pair of with the Ulster leader Monday night. Long, however, denied an interview his airplane was wrecked a 3".4 per cent of the total population bedroom slippers nnd wrote to ask tho any to the admission by the Sinn "amounts following had he at and said theft attempt tailspin during an aviation tournament as compared with 40.4 per cnt in size. Ills appreciative ' response re- gone. to. the place in an effort to' buy Fein that they can not get a repubat Holdrege, Neb. . 1910.- vealed the secret. lic." some liquor. ' h ' " 4 '. i t , C- ' - , - fc t ' icr-minat- r cd J -- S.--HffliS- Newspapers I er PARIS. May 6. Leaders of, German political parties met this jmoxn-ln- g to take action regarding the allied ultimatum, says a Havas dispatch , from the German' capital. EDITORS GLOOSIY. PARIS. May 6. The agreement reached by the supYeme allied council in fixing the reparation demands of the entente failed to satisfy a majority of the newspapers of Paris, which commented today in varying degrees of gloom on the situation as it stands at present. "It is. not, perhaps, have hoped," said the it is, perhaps, all .that : , all we, might Journal, "but it is possible to obtain in the present state of mind of our allies. "If we do not. put our hand on Gerdeclared the Figaro, many's colla0 "we will not put our hand into her pocket. i. The London conference let slip an opportunity for action." MUST DISARM FOE. LONDON, May 6. (By The Associated Press). The necessity of making Germany disarm was placed first in Importance by Premier Lloyd George in', announcing in the house of commons Thursday the result of the supreme council's deliberations on the reparations' and other --questions at issue with. Germany. t ' As .regarded reparations, said the premier, the allies were compelled to act. not merely because Germany had defaulted, but owing to r Germany's general attitude, showing she had no. intention of performing her.obUga-tions. . The speech of. Premier Lloyd George in the house of commons on reparations, apart from a recital of the findings of the supreme council and-aexplanation of the terms Imposed on Germany, was, in the main, a'defense of his position against accusations fro nv Liberals and Laborites of undue yielding to France, and an apology and justification for the French atti- . tude. He was followed by - Lord Robert Cecil, who 'appealed to the French ministers to frame their policy and model -their language to avoid any cooling- of the sentiments between France and England. Jotm R. .Clynes. chairman or the parliamentary labor party, and former Premier Asquith. favorably of the moderation of epoke Mr. Lloyd George's pronouncement. Mr. Asquith said he thought a most reasonable and practical 'issue from- the difficulty had . ;, been found. -- - , . - , , - r, o-o- v- ALIEN MELTING POT IS ALL MYTH ELIOT BOSTON. thirty-seve- n May . te Plan"' -- -- '. , non-Interferen- ce . s e . - - - Norris-McLaugh-l- - in - - re-hulld- ihg " - that-legislatio- 1 n - ad-Ju- st - . -- ( . . . : to-on- e - - NCrris-McLaughl- er in - - - ' y ' . e any-othe- - . ' . e ' . 4 , v - - 6. city,-hear- W REPUBLIC HJPOSSIBLE thc-ucstloo- Students from countries, undergraduates at colleges in or near this President (emeritus) Charles W. Eliot WALL STREET SETS of Thursday, picYEAR'S HIGH RECORD tureHarvard a futureuniversity federation of the world The educator asserted that the figure of the pot as applied to the NEW YORK, May 6. Active and United melting States was in error, and that confident buying characterized today's there had been no such in this thing in the stock market," sales country a8 assimilation or amalgamaoperations in the first half of the session at gains tion. Each of the races that had set5 points approximating tled here, he of 1 to n rt nearly said, had retained chariou.uuu snares, a new men record for acteristics while giving to the whole the year. 1 the. of all strength j oo , N Newspaper Comment Hopeful That Parley Will Lead to Settlement . or "' - ny 1N-ER1- . U. S., Editor Says J turers are " t.,... Join Habit-formin- g Ger-jma- luPf- . PEACE Nippon Merchants Buying British Dominions Will Not Every Ounce of Product HE TO re FOUGHT WOULD RUJN EMPIRE the railroad labor board today NEW YORK, May 6.Carleton Simin replying to the request of the mon, special deputy police commlssion- charged that Japan and roads -- for reduction of wages. ier, today were waging a contest for world They contend employes' pay jwide control of ;narcotics. , the National Police Addressing should be increased rather than ..Chiefs' convention, Mr. Simmon,, in! .Asso- sentative expected to negotiate with insurgents. REVOLT EXTENDING. The revolt area is reported to be reached nearly extending and to have to this city. The lnsuf gents are declared in messages received here to be including forcibly recruiting 16males, and 45 years of Germans, between age, in th vicinity" oT'Eichanau and . .. Dcnoppimu. Two hundred'Italia'n" soldiers, commanded by Colonel Bond, of the BritStrehlitz; ish army, evacuated Gross town was last night. At that time the under artillery fire from Polish insuralgents. In making his report to the lied commission here. Colonel Bond of sending reinurged the necessity forcements. Th.e French officials here declared they w.ere unable to furnish more soldiers, saying they were short of men everywhere in ' the' plebiscite zone. POLICE ORGANIZED. The Pohss are reported to be in possession of the entire eastern section of Silesia as far north as Rosenberg. Fighting is still going on at Rybnik, in southern Silesia. Organization of civilian police to the number of 3,000 to reinforce entente troops is contemplated here.. These police would he Upper Silesian Germans, it is .indicated. When a copy of the proclamation issued by Adalbert Korfanty, in which he declared himself governor of Upper comSilesia reached the inter-allie- d mission here, a French official said: ' "Korfanty Is now a rebel and should we apprehend him, he will be treated as such." DRUG. WAR FIVE EFFORTS . . '' One Town . ?-- .. . . Police. Commissioner : Ac- So Declares .Weekly Speccuses Japan and Germany May 6 H i g h tator in Review of Inter-- f of Narcotic Schemes described were national Situation Silesia Insurgents in Upper From Drive Allied Troops Adalbert Korfanty, rormer If aaer o who lias proclaimed hlmseir that territory, in the PoUsh insurgents i mo y arrestea been baa commission, together wltn his entire staff. - mi head -- General Degoutie, under- - whose "command many Americans served in the war, is the allied commander in the recently, occu' pied Dusseldorff region,, east of the Rhine. If this occupation is extended to include the whole Ruhr valley and ."Westphalian industrial-district, General Degoutte will probably continue as mili- WEI'S WAGES, j P. M ILpll OF POLE NSIJ BOIDISTOLD SOLDIERS u'vl II in IiS 4 fr'R 1 uu LAST EDITION . d V . . sup-por- . ! - - ' " . - . i -- one-hal- f. over-enthusiast- ic - r h , n - - |