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Show THE OGDEN AHG COff iTokio Wonders How Far, Wilson's ;;: Washington Conference " WiU Affect Orient' : rtreatv ; Vl of alliance. iderstanding already has been reached between Britain and Japan previous to the formation of the league," the article continues, adding: "This be Ting so, the formal renewal, or of the alliance is not a ques-- ftion of such urgency as is supposed in some quarters. In diplomatic reia tions, however, it goes without saying that the tradition of the past 20 years ! T non-TTrene- 1,3 should be sincerely respected. GRAVITY POINTED OUT. In sharp contrast to this passive at latitude on the subject of the alliance is the magazine's f Japanese evident fear of the effect the Wash ington conference might have on Ja , pan's special interests in the far east, ;'On this subject the article says: be "Although we may for the time ing survey quietly the progress of the .alliance problem, the suggestion for disarmament newly made by the Am . erican government can not be treated in the same way. In principle no state objects to disarmament, for it is principle recognized by almost all the .world, it being one of the fundamental of the league of nations. But features the gravity of the proposal does not lie so much in the suggestion for dis .armament as the proposal for discuss lf ' ing all questions bearing on the ta-rie and the far east." u. s. policy CHANGES. then points out that in y view Of the process by which the new consortium for China was organized, ia not difficult to guess at America's z:t attitude toward Japan's special ests in the far east, despite the fact the .that they have been recognized byvar--ioZ" alliance and by other agreements, between Japan the United States and Japan and 'and France,, and especially by the agreement. , . The-edito- r , NEWTON. Kan.. Sept. 8. Reduc tion of naval armaments is not enough; the- world should be made navyless, William Gibbs McAdoo. xor- mer secretary of the. treasury and for mer director general of railroads. de dared in an address here Wednesday Mr. McAdoo was the principal speaker celebration of at the the founding of Newton. He criticised sharply policies of the present administration, particularly its protective tariff bill, which he saia favored "the trust," its tax bill whicn. he said, "reduced the taxes of those most able to pay," its failurei to. 'Join At j lb no icrui anu. me .league ui. liiLuuni. ed it. "the short sighted policy of attempted isolation forced upon the American people." APPROVES ARMS CONFAB. He approved, however, of the disarmament conference. Mr. McAdoo asserted there is no possibility of a reduction in federal taxes this year. The prophets of bet-- , ter economie conditions ahead are all wrong, he saldr claiming "the gravestis business depression in our history upon us." "It will grow more acute." he added, "as the policies of international Isolation are turther developed and enforced." Turning to the .administration policies, Mr. McAdoo said: "In a sentence these policies seem to be designed to obtain the least possible political and commercial intercourse with the rest of the world. DARK PREDICTION. "Apparently this is about to be accomplished: "A. By with the nations which now are bound topurpose of gether in a league for the preserving the peace of the world through arbitration of international disputes and for the purpose of cutting down naval and military armaments which are crushing the life and prosout of peoples everywhere. perity "B. By putting into effect a tariff so high that it will restrict our foreign trade and in a large - measure destroy iu "Economic disaster will be the inevitable consequence of such short sighted policies. Already we are feelWe are in ing the effect. the midst of one of the gravest eco' nomic crises the world haa ever faced. The first thing we have got to Warn is that prosperity is international and the policy of isolation should be abandoned." -- Anglo-Japane- us se Ishil-Lansl- t: REPORTS FUGITIVE TELLER IN MEXICO Definite PENVEJl, Colo., Sept. information was received here '.by Lue, head of a detective agency, he announced, that Edwin F.; Morpe, former head teller of the In-Trust company here, who ' (ternational Is charged In a federal warrant with havlnar roobed that Institution of about ...$T8,000, and who disappeared about 15, Is in Mexico City. -T'Ausuat r ' ,This information, according to Mr. 2e came from Morse's father, So 9 ave- 8. -- L-u- Oeorge O, Morse. Ir. rue, Los Angeles, Cal. Vernon Mr. de Lue eaid that as a result of communicwith Dr. Morse he had learned ations - the son's whereabouts and that he was t W the Mexican capital yesterday. Lue said the younsr man's it' Mr. de declared his son had obtained f only about $35,000 of the money he is jrCharged with having taken and that ie was the "dupe" of two other men - who names have not been ascertained, the detective said. Officials of the International Trust company admitted negotiations had tbeen carried on with Dr. Morse in an : "effort to obtain the surrender of his . -- " son. -- non-cooperati- 4-- oo- U. S. DRAWS LINE ON CONDUCT OF GIRLS . . -- GREEN STAR LINE IN FINANCIAL CRISIS cjuU mfrrmttipn, W. a CALLOW AT Pait. Traf&c Mr. Krech,-presiden- -- oo . 'BANDIT DESERTERS1 DENY MANY CRIMES TROYES. France, Sept. 8. The three men in khaki uniforms, who are alleged by the police to be deserters from the American forces in Co- blenz and who are under arrest, robbery and charged with highway other offenses, give a different version concerning their escapade than the French police. They deny robbing a business firm at the point of a pistol, but, according to the French authorities, admit having obtained a bottle of rum. three bottles of wine, six tins of sardines and three loaves of bread and to have left without paying. dinner at another place They also had and forgot to settle the bill. They admit driving furiously, but deny firing. The firing, they declared, was done exclusively by the French the alleged Americans gendarmes, merely Jevelling a shining monkey wrench and a screw driver at the people in the villages and towns through which they passed and who were terrified by telephone calls from Troyes, instructing them to arrest" the bandit automobile." They charge, the French gendarmes with grossly exaggerating the affair. r2rJ tkkH f dJrru sr( W.O.BXOWN Ag cat -- Pat. Ami 0n. Cincioasti, Ohl Baltiniort Geo. P. CbUa 22 Baltimore & Ohio Railroad w mm mm tm mT mWml ir er nd MITCHELL GO.' 2354 Hudson Ave. WILD WEST JUDGES' WEDNESDAY AWARDS Phone 331 cars Prices or studebakerS, 1S21 hew f. 0. b. Pscttrlis. fffictlv fttptamtxr Bareback Drone Riding Louis Pan-- , 84 first. $25; second place split. third. $10. $15; Cheyenne Kaiser, 83 Trick and Fancy Riding Dutch Seidel. first. $20; Bonnie McCsrroll, ec- ond. $10; Frank McCarroU. third, $5. Girls Bronc Riding Bonnie McCarroll, first, $30; Mary Bernirr, second. $20; third place split, $10. Shetland Pony Race Marlon Hinckley, first, $20j Tex Miller, second, $10; 1-- TuHng Cart and Roadttara lim 111SO ROADSTER UtOMT SIX LIOMT tlX TOURINQ CAR SPECIAL-SIROADSTER SPECIAL. SIX TOURINO CAR SPECIAL-SI4. PASS. ROADSTER DIC-SITOURINO CAR..... tlW X X doubled for today.) Cowboy 4 Mile Race Richie Lewis, first, $15; W. Harty. second, $10; A. Baker, third, $5. Bareback Steer Riding Richie Lewis, 86 first, $20; Tex SniHb, 85 2 3, second, $15; Lewis Parr, 83 third, $10. Steer BuUdogging Mike Hastings. 41 seconds, first, $30; Bob Askln. 1 min ute 1 necond, second," $20; Dutch Seidel, 1 minute 5 seconds. tMrd. $lu. Mile Rslay Frank McCarroll, first. $30; F. R. Boulton. sec Cowboys' ond, $20; A. Baker, third, $10. Mile Race Bonnie McCarroll. first, $15; Miss Ogden, second Cowgirls' $10; Miss Brown, third. $5. Calf Roping Mike Hastlnua, 55 seconds. $30; Ray Kane, 59 seconds, sec ond, $20; Cheyenne Kiser, 1 minute, third. $10. Wild Horse Race Cheyenne Kiser, first, $30; John Nicholus, second, $15; Oklahoma Jack, 'third, $10. Men's Buckiirg Contest Lee Sepulveda, 89 2 3. first, $40; Hank Askln, S3 2 3. second, $25; Jess Coates, 8& third, $15. mile Relay Bonnie McCarroll, first. $30; Miss Ogden; second. Cowgirls jzo; zeida Hatch, third, $io. Mile Relay John Hue, first, $15; John rhljlips, second, $10; Jim Indian Wagner, third, $5. 11SJ 1ll Caupta and Sedana COUPE ROADSTER LIGHT. SIX SEDAN LIQMT.SIX SPECIAL. SIX 4. PASS, COUPE SPECIAL-SI- SDAN X ...12M 4. PASS. COUPE... SEDAN OIQ.SIX ALL 6TUDKOAKER CARS ARE EQUIPPED Wll M CORD TIRCS X Jj. Call, third, $5. (On account of horses not being Shetlands in yesterday's race, money OIO-SI- S2SV9 X sS3 1-- 1-- 1-3- 3, , K-L- 1-- MADRID. Sept. 8. Dissatisfaction over probable adjournment of the the rebelSpanish offensive againstnear llelllla lious Moorish .tribesmen is apparent among the people here. Dispatches to the newspapers here from Morocco state the efforts of the Moors to utilize airplanes abandoned retirement from during the Spanishdisastrous. Several Nador have been would-b- e aviators have been killed and their machines destroyed1 The time to detach viSpanish fliers hadmotors before aban tal parts of the wax doning the machine, it is saiu Dycomcorrespondents. mander of the tribesmen, haa been pilots, but is trying to engage foreign said to have. been unsuccessful. bd-El-Kr- in, oo CHICAOO. SpdL I. -- Dr. E. C. Mer-ri- s nt ! W - 300 yr" racial ntlpathy assumed greater propor "' itimi ii mil i ma " Jine, condlHons are not partieular- near y all racial groups." he said. In i race Amer-ra- n "The ," aM"lc v . , nerro la nM rriction. .(.bu. llOn Of an V nlhr rrmin II. ( . 1. ns nants as an American clt , .Y- . -- United DENVER, Sept. States circuit court of appeals for the eighth circuit Wednesday took under advisement four suits appealed to them by the Utah Consolidated Mining company against the Utah Apex Mining company, involving laaa ana other or bodies and claims valued at nearly 110,000.000, the ownership of which was disputed. The Utah Consolidated company contends that the entire Yampa lime stone bed near Bingham, Utah, constituted a vein or lode- - This conten tion Is denied by the Apex company, which asserts that the ore bodies are associated in fissure veins and situ ated beneath the surface claims owned by the Apex company. A .lower court awarded the Utah the property Apex Mining. company ""VV S.-T- he ONi -- oo- SALVATION LASSIE ' WEDDED IN BOSTON RORTON. Xfa Hjui Iran a. salva Memtvre. wnni miniti tion Army "lassie.", overseas with the Twenty-sixt- h (Yankees) division, won her R distinguished service cross, was married here to Robert E- - Walbridre, of Peterboro. N. H. Tha bride is the daughter of Colonel and Mrs T. A. Mclntyre of the Salvation Army. SLavtt a -- .vnn PASADENA. Hal.. Emt Sow, Chines cook, shot and killed chauffeur here, ac Oeorge EngU. cording to the police. bcaua Enfja remonairataa with him for rattlingpots and pans. The Chinese then kllleu himself, the. police said. Tha shooting occurred in the home of Clayton II. Oarvey, In a fashionable residential district where the eook and chauffeur were employed. an ii fl t.-I- mm MEXICO REDS WOULD AID W. VA. STRIKERS MEXICO CITY. SeDt. I. A vote of confidence in "the revolutionary in West was extend er jat night byVirginia" Communlat oon the grass, now In ifMion in this city. An agreement to assist th "revolutionary Socialists" in any way possible was "V. sts , rie a as SS IVlalted Milk 3212-- J OLDEST TOWK IN ' CANADA DESTB0YED ANNA TO US. rtOYAU N. F . Sept. I. The buslr.eta section of the town -- was detrjed Wednesday by fire which raged unchecked because cf lack cf water due to the prolonged drought. Many dwelling houses were burned. Mere than 26 bufldJnga, were destroyed, Homeless families are Velr.g cared for in town and In the village of A Jihtad clraret, dropIs In haT3 stable a ped been the rau cf the fire. Thla town la the o'dyl In 'Canada vf ft." A tgui ana with the exception tine. F2a., the oliest Uuropean settleIt was ment In Nrrth America. founded by the French In HCi. C'.f-rrentpf- Nied.tv sa Wfrt-Vwmwrn IbJSS , OO" GRABS. BORE HOLES IN SOLID CONCRETE ST. PETEItaTtERO.v tmr Infants rvd XniraJlda Avd4 Imitations od Substitutes ' ' ASK FOR and GET The Original Phone 796 or s reached during the meeting- - o Classes in Social and Ballet Dancing r . Os BERTHANA e Y So-ciall- at th atl-fle- OO- ii September 26th than In 1M. rHon.vno!? pnnioo. to Ths decreases broadly 10are IScent cent for artisans. per cent for sheathing the piling of a for technical employes. 15 per aerc clerks and supervisors and 20 per cent Doce Ceif a Hay near herebridge were mj d for certain, other of the supervisory at the of holes and appearance positions. d classi- cracks In the concrete on piling near A new plan for payment fication of mechanics provides for one the channel. An Investigation failed disclose the cause of the trouble gentral grade of the first class, spec! to but the problem wii solved b,' shall serve & probation of six months CJeorge IJxotte, local autority cn crabs, prior to reaching the highest pay clas- who upon learning cf the difficulty sification of their trade. Machinists declared stone ersbs were responsible. 1U hold this first rade rating dur- A further Investigation developed that the channel contained thousands of ing efficient rrfprmArx--on and will be failure to the crabs and that they were tearing subject to discharge hole-In the concrete to make heroes maintain the established standard. for themselves, the species tnbab'.Unr, t.A rfAmmni1tit that twhenever available, holes tn rocks and Vinnr hm fixed ss a fair Piling. It rnti nn The contractor has decided to and Juat rat of pay for the basic wetlc be sbeath the piling In and near tfce chan trades." and that the five-da- y until the gen nel with sheet Iron. temporarily continued reuevea. oo eral unemploymentIn is The energy In the dally rations of wages is due to The decrease three causes. the report said, "de- the average ma:?, converted to me. 2SI 0 tons. crease In living costs amounting to chanlcal power, would 16.7 per cent, according to department of labor figures; the gsneral in iotsf iru?rrt ireaiment dustrial oepraasion; m KatP V rlAvasa Ant w JJ V" aa4III Mil i WIKWI labor purely as a comfnodlty to be ne onupfii poiDie ODiainKi a i rate." 14-pc- 1 i will open WASHINGTON. Spt. t. The new by 10 to navy wage scale decreasing 2a per cent the pay of ahout S,000 civilian employes was approved by Wednesday. Secretary JDenby In general, theI new scale, effective made uniform for September 15. , . ..... BlUli'MI WWI ' of the departto 'the report cording mental ware board of review, th re-- i vieed schedules will be four cents an wages for hour less than prevailing railroad trades and fiveincents per Hour, those shlpbuUn higher thsn trades. The . board said the wages recommended are it per cent higher he than prewar scalesSOand estimates cost of living at per cent' higher (colored) of Helena. Ark., preal-deof th National convention. Vtdnesday made Raptiat a plea for the of crimes, the. nature of ohbln,c which afford excuses for mob action. Speaking before the annual meeting of the BaptMa. he declared that "not since the lanrit n Of at Tarn..- tow.n School of Dancing But Higher Than In Shipbuilding Work BIG UTAH MINE SUIT AGAIN IN U. S. COURT RATTLING OF PANS ENDS IN TWO DEATHS 1 CHRISTENSEN'S Made Lower Than Railroad 4 SPANISH POPULACE BAPTISTS DEPLORE DEMAND OFFENSIVE RACIAL ANTIPATHY t J l- CIVILIAN WAGES 3-- 4 : -- 4 1-- u, S-- JUgrTiU' A- NAVY REDUCES 8-- 4 LISBON, Sept. I. The British Roy al Mail steamer Almanxora, having on board X.200 passengers en route to off England from Brazil, is asrround aouth or nere. cape Espicnel, JO miles Eight launches and m. cruiser nave gone to the assistance of the stranded . vessel, WMio They acf; w motm OEO.W.SOUIOG1NS COAST OF PORTUGAL t im all-year-rou- Mr. Guy Gtrdaer, District Fretjht and Psiener Rpreatative Room No. 214, Uaited States Nstioot! Btak Bldf., Dearer, Goto LINER AGROUND mtmmmw mm two-passeng- schedules between stations in over 1000 cities and towns. All through trains carry sleeping and parlor cars, first class coaches, and dining cars noted for their excellent meals. mmj 1! Roadster is the Coupe THE light weight car of the enclosed tv pe on the market ideal for the doctor, the salesman or any other man whose duties demand a sturdy, economically-operate- d car, for use. Studebakes engineering jenius, coupled with, the Studebaker policy of funding complete in one plant, have alone made it possible to produce a car of this unusual Value at its remarkably low price. This is a Studebaker Year Baltimore and Ohio trains are operated on convenient , mm mm ' I.lll LlGHT-Sl- X 2-- NEW YORK, Sept. 8. Declaring the Green Star Steamship corporation is" in danger of being thrown into re ceivership. 2000 of Its bondholder .have signed a petition to the United States shipping board appealing for a revision of the contract under which the line purchased nine vessels, it was learned today. t of the Alvin W. Trust company, made public Equitable the petition, which shows that the shipping board holds first mortgages on the vessels for $13,743,311. The pe tition declares that If the board fore closes, a receivership proceedings will be brought by the Equitable aj)d pos sibly other banks among which the Equitable distributed an $8,000,000 bond issue. The petition asserts that the Green' star, through "an error In judgment," contracted to buy the shipping board vessels at more than double their pres ent market value. Its resources are declared to have been so depleted by the falling off in ocean commerce that it is unable to meet payments due on the vessels. A r mm 1 i. o. o. touth Otnd 1 1 !ovi Chicago. Ft fats, rtHMtient court roadster Liairr'-Sr- x Bald-mor- e, oty -- m $1550 jf'H- i on CHICAGO, Sept. 8. Bobbed hair and short skirts have received TTnr.l "Sam's approval in the federal board ..;lor vocational training here. But Colonel Charles R. Forbes, the direc-'to- r, drew the line on pondered noses, calls during office leafing or social Xhours. i.v "Wear anything: you please, girls," ,"he said. "Be comfortable, but don't J.be salary slackers, because there are hundreds of .cases of disabled men "fcwaiting your attention. And when a crippled doughboy comes in here, amile his discouragement away," oo ; COtTLD . HATtDIVy STRAIGHTEN UP When the kidneys are overworked or disordered and fail to throw out waste matter from the system, it causes aches, pains, lame back, swoloo len ankles, sore joints, dizziness. ; floating specks, etc. J. W. Seabock, FINDS LOST RING Chester, Pa., writes: "My kidneys and back hurt me so when I got out of bed IN CHICKEN'S CRAW tin the morning I could hardly stxaight-- en up. Had to rub the small of my back before I could walk. I could SOUTH GLOUCESTER. N. J., Sept. my shoes. I haven't 8 In the craw of ohicken killed hardly button felt the soreness since I took Foley Wednesday for Mrs. Edith Bloome's AdKidney Pills. Sold .everywhere. table, she found her $3000 diamond x vertisement. engagement ring, lost four months ago- - ' ,mm T Arrangements have been made for the continued operation of Baltimore and Ohio trains to and from the Pennsylvania Station (7th Avenue and 32nd Street), New York City. This station is located just one block from Broadway, In the midst of the shopping, hotel and theatre districts. Underground passageways connect station with Pennsylvania Hotel, Seventh Avenue and Broadway Subways to all parts of Manhattan and Brooklyn; also direct service by bus lines, elevated and surface car?. In announcing its terminal arrangement in New York City, the Baltimore and Ohio also directs attention of the public to its centrally located terminals in other important cities reached by direct passenger service Philadelphia, Washington, Pittsburgh, Akron, Cleveland, Colum bus, Toledo, Detroit, Cincinnati, Louisville, St. Louis and 1 ng oo Z" York i semi-centenni- al "As regards the United States, which lis not a member of the league, an un ,; 9 Station Bnnsyivania Cfy ati SSw New Be- 8, 1921J R - nt m EVENING-SEPTEMBE- cause of G. 0. P. Policies (Correspondence of The Associated Press). The "grav-iity- " of the situation created by the at "icoming international conference dlsarraa-;:mein the not lies, Washington suggestion, but in the "proposal all questions bearing on r"for discussing - h Pacific anr! th far east." says the Diplomatic Review, which is supposed ZJSo have imperialistic leanings. ww. This magazine, which with its nu- u merous Japanese contemporaries, is jjevoting much space to the forthcom says: ing .Washington conference, EFFECTS OF ALLIANCE. "Rluntlv sDeaking. the Anglo-Ja- p 'Tanese alliance has fulfilled its mls- r sion in its first stage. Now that the t; league of nations has been formed and of general arbitration made ;ia treaty the "'mon!t principal powers of the Tworld. there is hardly any country are and Japan which Britain xagainst .. Q a X... till 1UJ THURSDAY R at and depart.from Trains will continue to arrive Pre Son-in-La- w dicts Acute Depression -- 17. 'ZZ -- TOKIO. Aug, 1 n If i ALL WARSHIPS 1 STANDARD-EXAMINE- ria.. Sept. s . $. M hi nr rStit t t rrtatfVt trr ' evs wr1 tools and high . explosives . - . nw. but it .has . Mi tA mm 9m --m sa es i'vu oeen aiicjTtra ione erao, common to Florida waters, digs into and crushes it as so much chalk. The Is his tool the crab aa a table delicacy after a heavy ham mer nas &een Drtrugni jnio plsy to crush them to ' permit extraction of the flesh. Engineers for many years have lourht an irnnomtral methnrl f driven In salt water from piling tectlng ... . . - nthor mA w ... wormi trsumi wKlr. v n V.UI them in fwn mnA bllevi1 lhav . - a eoKe4 the problem by sheathing them wun concrete, dui ne ion-- crsD has snown mim tneir mmar. The dlscoveo' w mads only re contractors ceuuy. in engaged . L us V case-harden- - ed . e You may think all corn flakes are alike until you taste-P- ost To as ties best corn flakes KBtfrtAJid why tb. Ctw, cricptta fH tod Uxtnr. n.it. IctToullM" t&t laperlor kind. The rU |