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Show f TIIE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SATURDAY HORNING, MARCH rnlffht not t&k some step to Inform iHunoortUc senators, ms he hms done in the past, of his mttitude toward the substitute. It was said by the Democratic leaders, however, that they would make no effort to ascertain his views, and that they had no knowledges of any Intention on his part to make them known either publicly or privately. Lodges Statement. In presenting tits substitute, Senator Iodge said he did so in the Interest of compromise and not because the new draft represented any substantial change In the meaning of the reservation. 1 do this, he said, in full consonance with what I have stated on.tne floor 1 do not of the senate several times feel that I should be Justified In insisting on defeat of the treaty on a mere question of the phraseology of any reservation. If 1 thought the modification made any change in thev substance of reservation 1 not only should not offer I huld 'Ot again. t the treaty " with It included. K wal ,pjiarent that th Republican had failed to unite their col- leadcj-leagues behind the new reservation. Ben-alNew F'relinghuyaen, Republican, Jersey, who voted for ratification last November, told the senate modification had a weakening effect and that he would support any reservation which did not go as far aa the original, He offfered a substitute. and thua avoided haVlng president Wilson and the Wilsonian fourteen point at the peace table. The Investigation commission reports General Poch said In September, 1917: "General Mvelle erred In accepting the Qomptegne conference, but the government, after hearing the facts on the offensive, invited General Nivelle to pursue, his operations. Ita The government eyes remained ought light, but c.osed.'' General Petaln aald on April 1: "General Nivelle s operation might have been tenable, although alwaya bad retreat German but the after tactically, to the Hlndenburg line It waa bud atrateglcally." i M. Gallia report doles: No one In tervened directly with General Nivelle nor interfered with hi instructions, although his plana were regarded as incapable of realisation." 13,-1920- . . politics It I essentlul that American policy should not be maneuvered to tervi the ends of other nations. Poland has peculiar claims upon American sympathy. Poland s liberation is one' of the great facts of the recent war, and we should he slow In sacrificing Poland, by our attitude, when the sarrlflre will result merely In the victory of one set of professional politicians over another and of the strengthening of one foreign policy at the cost of another. When it is possible to guarantee Poland against llolshevikand attacks. It may ha wise to fix the limequally possible its of the eastern extension of territory occupied by the Poles. Rut Just now the agitation In this direction far too patently suggests an unconcern with the fate Of Poland and a complete concentration upon nationalistic and Interhatiomillstie alms, which ought not to be overluulted by Americana Poincare Raps Germans. INDIANAPOLIS. Ind . March Former PARIH, Marrh' 12. ills first political President Poincare, In (Hava) foeierlng of domestic buslnes and world, articlo In the Kevue dee Deux Mondes, commerce was advanced by Major Gen- denounces Germany for her attempt to eral Leonard Wood, candidate for the secure a revision of the treaty of Vern sailles. He asks the friends ji Kepub'lcan nomination for president, as of France, before being moved to pity at i one of the paramount obligations of the to look FYance's at devasGermany's fate, U American people and government In an tated regions "and agree that, having address before Indiana Republican lead- paid with our blood and our property for victory and th freedom of nations, we era at a luncheon at the Columbia dub have an Inalienable and Imprescriptible g. here today. to recover damage on the victory." right A Kentucky Demand. I; General Wood advocated careful traln-- J The former president sharply criticises the debate the of the supreme council with reSenator stand Thomas, During lng of consular officer for all foreign Democrat, late aa August 10, he said, he received Colorado, read a telegram re- gard to the eastern situation, the AdriT countries, to the offices of which would ceived from the department asking that by him from the IOUlsvilit atic, the Russian soviet government and messages be attached trained commercial agents. urnal convoy system be explained, although urging ratification "on the Its attitude concerning small nations. In the "for four months 1 had been exhausting 1m tills connection he mentioned par-f- r best terms possible." It said the league conclusion, M. Poincare expresses the wish of nations could not be made a "clean-cu- t that the supreme council will soon sleep my vocabulary In aveempllng. to explain American and central eouth the the system. tkularly campaign Issue," es It would be ob- its Fast sleep. L and far eastern countries, In which he scured It Is very dlffieult for me to make by domestic issues, and that ratto you now the desperation In which clear reabe had never ification should voted for to has Forced Leave. declared the United States party I found sons and to perpetual the name of Presmyself almost constantly during auch an opportunity to advance Ita trade ident PARIS, March 12 (Havas.) The the early months of the war," Admiral llnon. V relations. military mission which went re- B.n.s said. "1 reiterate there waa no "I construe this telegram to be an apis to Bremen on official business and question that these retommendatlons were The eale or leaae of American ehlpplng peal to me to conform my vote to party cently was a attacked The fact crowd when by remains were that leaving right. Thomand they purpose party ends, Henalor built during Ahe war to American firms as If, said. "This treaty can not and should the barracks after preliminary negotiations vtrtuully alj adopted in the end. only. In order that the merchant marine not become a party question or the sub- with the German officers there, was ultimately obliged to leave the elty without built up might be kept under the Amer-- S ject of a party Issue. NO The senator aald he did not believe having accomplished the purposes op Its lean flag also waa urged by the speaker. vlstt, according to advices from Berlin. acof the senate waa being member any . fav-he CHARGES TO that The entente otfirers were the object of General Wood reiterated BRING by party obligations. and tuated ored adoption of the treaty of peace rea-demonstration upon their departure, He denied he had been Influenced by v VICE the state. the league of nations covenant with German authorities Irreports the of the senate attitude ervationa "which would absolutely Amer-was were compelled to send a strong escort to reconcilable and said It" and a "strong, courteoua for- - unnecessary to perpetuate ratification the mission to the railway WilPresident NEWPORT, R. I., March II. John R. trad station. son eign policy which would Include a name. Rathoin. editor of the Providence Jour? policy. Henaior McCormick, Republican, Illinal, who waa made a complainant yescan look well Sampeck nois, opening the Irreconcilable attack Foch Denies Reports. terday by tno naval court of Inquiry Hi Edwards Refuses Sanction. on the substitute, declared there had which Is Investigating charges of immor-1 12 WASHINGTON. March Marshal won a been "read thb terms of a Republiopti atlons against a naval antivlre 1JNCOLN, Neb., March 12. Edward ofI. just can capitulation aud It only remains to Foch, through the French embassy, today squad, K Fdvrards, governor today announced that he had no antlprohibnion d reports In special dispatches trom drill, if learn are to name to the White to Good his before the not will Adthey acceptable court. of charges tiring permit New Jersey, holding i'sris published In th country, regard journment had been taken fairly early t printed on the April 2u Nebraska prl-- f' House. I a hi toward attitude In of lug allowDemoto league him to decide what mary ballot as a candidate for the and nations The d. "patches said the marshal Ii yesterdayrv he Must Eat Their Words. cratic nomination for the presidency, parto! Jhe charges which he made re, The nator declared that before the was opposed tu the league. advised Recretary of Flat I. M Ami cently lAore a committee of the Unitto the ed States senate he would prefer before treaty could be ratified President Wil- New Treaty Agreed To. berry In a telegram received late today. the naval court. son, Senator Hitchcock, the Democratic 12 A new Hungarian LONIhj.W March Resuming the witness stand todav. Mr. the Republican loader, Senator Asks Withdrawal of Name. leader, or Senator Lenroot, a leader of pear tttaty has been definitely agreed Ratl.om said that although he had de& Adams ST. IAUL. Minn, March 12 Oustaf boys clothes the pta e conference and placed cided to make no charges, he w label to upon mild the by Republican reservaUouiaii, in the hanua of a drafting committee state his attitude. IJndqtilst, chairman o( the Republican He announced he mwt eat their won!.' , serviceable stale Central committee, was today of know which has gone to Daria, it is expected would not qualify anything that he had Senator Lenroot ohjected to the state." the treaty will be completed wiUitn a said or the Provideiue quested by Senator Warren G. Harding Journal had ment anv surtnat had been there . V; Ohio to have Harding's name removed render. He said the original Lodge res- week. be of printed about the practices of tile anti-vic- e stylp. from the ballots to be used at the Ke The territorial terms against which was satisfactory to him; that squad. Ills complaint, he said, had I publican prudential preferential primary ervation so vigorous y remain been against the system of whuh the a he Hungary had to because he protested agreed we is change so complete boys it Monday. Senator Jlarrilng paid he did was not only willing, but anxious, to see um hanged, but various economic concespractices were a part, rather than against V not have time to make campalne in the an individual. ratified wjth proper Ameri- sions have been granted. treaty are so to he where state It primarie he preference added. "Is what is stated that in reframing the eco'Tills svstem." $ canisation reservation. be held. nomic clauses, the conference took a much must be turned out If men in the navy, s, Continuing the fight of the be well Senator Knor, Republican, said more lenient attitude than prevailed in or any other Bervice where such methods -economically . exist, mio to save their the new draft undoubtedly would leave Paris. Jx Johnson in Michigan. - j aswas said he witness The docuThe of anxiouso a the states moral United the completion 12. upon In spite Hungarian obligaIRONWOOD. Mich., March In the Inqiniy and that, although h. ef a raging snowstorm. Senator Hiram tion to preserve the territorial Integrity ment leaves the conference at liberty to sist had no personal knowledge of the matexclusively with the perplexing TurkJohnson. California, candidate for Uepub-lica- n of other league members, while Senator deal Utahs Greatest Clothing Store. ish connected with it, lie wished to' ters was which dediscussed at treaty, Republican, Connecticut, today nomination for president, spoke here Hrandegee, submit the transcript of testimony in a was session. senate a clared the making He pitiable the autocratic this deplored 3w morning several cases on whh h lie said his opin- -' exhibition of itself administration, power of the present Ion was based, and terrain letters and What must the country think." asked Silent aa to Report. A "such as never before conferred upon any we-- e memoranda which lie thought Senator Rramlegee, "of our attempt to Voicing the g, one maav tn the world. deWASHINGTON. March II State The sufficient to prove the charge. a set of weasel words frame that partment officials refused todav to up of every man to express any right deny papers were accepted as evidence by the slip through the senate fpr the or confirm Z opinion within the law on anv subjec t, he may France t..at reports court. published one of meaning thing to one set purpose 1,. Steaded with the American people to be Resuming direct Inquiry the Judge adof senators, another thing to another set had protested to the t Jgnln "Just Americans." against President Wilson's state- vocate brought Into evidence correspondIn Ironwood of senators, a third thing to the presi"? i Senator Johnson arrived lit ment his recent to ence letter betvvetn Mr. Jlalhom and Secretary peace a fourth mavhe to treaty our thing once dent and f lit midnight last night, and went atwhere Senator Hitchcock "that a militaristic Daniels In 1917 regarding moral condiin the league partners h to the American Legion clubroome. under most the leader tions m Newport at that time. The letIn heaven's name, haven't we cour- party, powerful 8'0 members awaited him. was now in control In France. ters, In which there was a reference to age here to stand up and act one way ship," In some official and diplomatic quartera an Investigation of conditions made by or another on thf treaty?' h hink Women Will Vote. It waa suggested that had the French Kathom, but withheld from pubih alion taken cORijisance of the for the best interests of the city of government (Chicago Tribun Special Service ) TROUBLE president a statement its dommunp-afloNewport, showed, the ludge advocate ; CHICAGO, March 12 "Illinois wooiei In the form of an inquity rather sa d. that the editor ami the secretary be would Will vote act the presidential preference REGARDED SERIOUS than of a protest. of the navy were In actoid on the quesS primary on April 13. according to Mre. tion of dealing with vice in tne naval Grace Wilbur Trout, president of the IlliIN QUARTERS at that time. center The nois Equal Suffrage association. told of an of wh)tn continued cooly at their task Captnin J. D. W alnwrlght national headquarters has notified me that r of invcst'gation which he made in Si ptern-leLONDON, March 12 (By the Assothere Is no question that the thirty-sixt- h raking diamonds and ruble out of the IS lust on behalf of the bureau of naviwindow while the third member of their state will have ratified before the first ciated Ureas, i Karl Otirson's speech on was here sent by party kept spectators at bay. He said he gation. of April, ahe said today. "That will give the Turkish proolem, made in the house of chief . H. H. absltant In Lc.gh, a Captain 21 ample time for the secretary of state to of lot da jesteiday and other official and Seeing the rowds h.nt and form the biueau, to find out how the squud 'imc.ic.e round the store, Patrolman Anand unofficial statements on the subject are 2 issue the proclamation of adoption balwas operalng. r. garded aa showing that the hurried there. Just aa he - genera.lv Welgeii thony for the local official to get out the lie reported to the bureau, he testified, hi rived the robbers packed the last of the near east tangle Is quite serious, and Is rj iota. women do that he had found that Inrtrucdons had Rims inlo their pockets, parted company not question the Justice causing the authorities some anxiety , The been given ihe vice squad loth orally and and started, each for himself, to carve Increased ri of Attorney General Hrundage'a opinion an anxiety by complications in writing, those in regard to perversion S denying way through the human semicircle. them the right to vote in this threatened In connection with Sjrla and The shadow of Indian and Then came gun play. Sighting a man oelng oral. t stale before national suffrage is pro- Mesopotamia testified after that treak awuy from the crowd and dart up Captain Wainwrlght claimed. The supreme court has ruled Moslem opinion darkens the problem and, (Continued from Fag One.) (Continued from Page One.) (Continued from Page One.) making Tus rei ort he and Captain Leigh Broadway, Welgen, with drawn revolver, that women In Illinois mav only vote for It la believed. Influences the counsels of saw Assistant Secretary Roosevelt urd gave chne 14 irtain officials, and th primaries are not the allies more than Is always ImmeThe crowds took to cover as they heard to get rid of. His generals and departapparent. er to restrict Poland, the French to make Informed him of the sursance of It. Mr. month of the war 1919 and I f Included either by name or In a blanket diately sugg-stio- n that the employment Foiaril truly a viable state. 1'tie ex- Roosove.t, he Said, told Captain Leigh to the crack of a revolver. But Welgen had ment chiefs, risen from obscurity to high think no Briton or April, JX clause. Suffrage leaders admit It wou.d of The friend of, Britain s operations stopoed. wealth and undreamed on. In forie against Turks might excite genhave the missed and robber of, have front placbs the squad In of course be bad policy to start a fight on the at- sped British the planation lay of the fugitive was a sutway airhole, with minimised much that the president ha need be arhamed of his citizenship or Judge Advocate I lineman asked th torney general when national suffrage Is eral hostility In the Mussulman world is the perception that a strong Poland, necso near and wrhen he Is standing on firm regarded as one that can not he safely essarily united With a strong Fiance, witness If he bad found that any of the the cover off, and through this hole the sought to do. He had to shut his eves his friendship. tlfe been Instruct bandit Jumped to the subway, tracks, while hla general divided the country Into squad had Ignored. In some quarters th feellag would serve aa the foundation for a operators on Judge America by her action when ft legal grounds. In a f'fteeii feet below. He narrowly missed profitable zones of occupation and exahe came into the war, her wholeprevails that there is danger If the Furopean balance of power, which would ed In a "nimeles vit," ax and made themaeivea rich. They hearted and instantaneous Turks are pressed thev may Immediatefree the French from abject dependence letter vr.tten to Freslflent Wilson by being struck by a passing train, fop the ploitation adoption of claim control of th courts. The Italian ly be Jollied hv the Arab. Newport ministers. Captain WalnwYlgot roar of Its pigress was heard on the even1 will British foreign policy. line tne judges up against a eompuispry military service, and, even view that It would be dangerous to em- upon on the other hand, saw that lephej that one of the men had said that street above a few seconds after the rob-bFrance, more the wall If and shoot them striking, voluntary rationing had played his last card and won. ploy against tne Turks British Moslem a strong Poland would mean great Inthey do not give the work had been explained to him and and other Moslem troops In the service crease The second robbery occurred In th that decision," one general la quoted as of the use of food and fuel' in millions For Ger- that he did not like Its general nature, of French of the allliea is evidently based on these many would have to security. and think no American I households, Jof face two enemies, if but had gone Into It feeling that lie could store of Mircua Feldman, between F'orty-fift- h saying. fears. Things got bad In th city of Mexico I or friend of America need be other and Forty-aixt- h streets, where the ahe decided to take up again her age- be of service. when the famous Careful watch is being kept here on long enmity to France. waa thickest. automobtl are gray Is theater throngs inBut it , nroud of his eitizenshin or bls the outcome of the Syrian congress at conceivable that in this Instance there "Automovll grls," operating recently. ORDER as it waa called, careened druntenly Damascus and it Is understood any de- can be any American end served hy acfrl"?.shlp' BECLOUDED cision These are the great eigne of the about the city, stopping at the homes ofi or proposal bv the peace conferBritish pol.cy blindly and thus 1 TO BEGIN, ence regarding Syria would be purely cepting wealthy antigoverpment folk, its occu-- ! pure gold of unselfish idealism in in effect forging the chain by which and Jewtentative. tional souls, and long after the hvsteri-frobbing, stealing entering British policy dominates the continent l-- r CHAIRMAN Among the day's reports was one that ot Kurope for the next few decades. eIeni mur$erlnK- - according shouting and exaggerations" ha vo France had been given a mandate over er (Oontinued from Page One.) is a mistake to think that the mere It away; long after the false gen- l-- f ll Is question of Sllicia, but this was unconfirmed WASHINGTON. March 12 -- The federreally have been expressed and eralizationj In some quartets that France's explains the Polish queat.on. The al argued for vocational "board has education thing their falseness recognized, the ultimate In Officers Uniforms. ; thirty vote In line snd the Democrats hands are too fyjl to undertake this Is the askel for an investigation of charges that this bottom at the lie of that the substitute hoi ed to s,. who favored FOR essential verity, the capacity to forget Britain Is similarly clash between the British and Freni h It had instructed its agents to be "hard-boile- d The men , In the car were in officer than thirty from their side. regarded ruledGioat. 4kdner more out as a mandatory for rn dcaang with soldiers seeking hemes for the future, - for the New uniforms A moving picture recently put self in the service of a common idea-1- , nato ratify. , ll takes eixty-foof same nowand the reason, the league will bind our nations in a yoke of serveuueat.on rehabilitation. Flurone,' that Is so much discussed out carr.ed the story of these killing tions Is looked to as the only hope for adays The French, realizing that AmerChairman Fees cf the house education and robberies, but leaving th tmpreasion ice to mankind." Text of Substitute. subjects. ican aid Is unlikely anj that British sup- committee announced todav that the 'Inprotecting Turkey's the were that bandits only masquerading (Continued from Page One.) ae officer. 4 "The United Slates SMutmc no oblport can only be had if Franee frankly quiry would le started tomorrow night. Killed in Storm. consents to lav aside all the natural iteration to preserve tne territorial lnteg-4- 7 DEMANDS ARRESTS "Charges that tne board has neglected "Carranza's led by the dap- ' ,Five Negroes generals, of a great power, are seeking disabled soldiers arid had deiavet their made public until the capiaaes are GREENVILLE. Miss., March 12. Five rity or political independence of any per young chief of staff. General Juan allisvstem of a a other country My the eiiip,oment of ns inurh as a vear were made reeducation to achteie European killed, between twenty-fiv- e served. It is known, however, Barregan, are the ruler of the republic. negroes were OF GERMANS SHALL ance which will fortlfv them against Ger- in a memorandum (resented to the comThere la a profound cynicism and die and thlrty-Av- a military or iiavai for.es, Us icMnmes or Injured, and twenty-liv- ethat more than half the entire number upon abolish their Harold todav and a mittee New tenant were destroyed dependence Jinny form of economic tliscrimindtion, or houses by Littledale, many byin illusionment Mexico. a ot al are END tnat and tbe AN COME TO oei&tora many Hvho In will one interfere In be of Tork reporter, Britain. the h'ged violations fiof the federal statute S,t0 controversies oeDwen ria-Washington the people tornado county, near Why a new revolution? lions whether members of the league witnesses at the inquliv reto cos mean a new crew Percy, today, according reports ak. It would only antedate the strike of bituminous I or not tinder the provisions of artle X, Mr. Llttledile charged that while the workers whUh March 12. The German DUBLIN, ceived here tonight. Per, brought about the grand of generals to feed Into fatness. iot to employ the military board had 209, 'JM rases registered with oc naval forces charge daffaires In London has handnow that thea men are rich, they This haps, Investigation investigation. jury It last January 17. nineteen months alter will be able to give good government If a a ordeied by Judge Anderson on Us creation. It had plated tn training 'Ithe treaty for any purpose unless In any ed to Premier Lloyd George a note re- Bolshevists It m said more than 300 we let them remain. 4, 1919. men and tictilar tase the congress, which, had trained to gard, ng the entente extradition list, it entitled and possiHold) every only Foland Itself Is The election? That Is a matter for a witnesses have been examined since De onlv 117. He said ceuiber the constitution, lias the sole power was announced today. the 25tbo0.h 0 1'oles placed in emplovment ble consideration; No one 27, when the investigation began. laugh and a shrug In Mexico. to declare wpr or authorize the employ the the men became so tired of waiting that in factor a I talked to, except official apolomust potent cons'itute that The demands of note that the arrest of the military or naval forces of of all for cent Is did ?o It that this passed tnevltan.e but new training jicr Plan to Prevent AppeaL Europe, v'11 gists for the government, put any faith the Germans in the occupied territories "tbe United states, shall in the exercise on two grave not take advantage of it. Ten cent It is taken- for granted that hv to face KANSAS CITY, ,Marit 12 Steps to In them. ihaiges similar to those vnum rated !new of full liberty of action, by act, or joint of those who took the training, be Billthe other Gerone tbe disthey will be a farce, (hat a free and dangers, of or official member anv cease la the list tion and shall extrad abandoned it "because the training prevent I "resolution, so piovides." not new ed, state provided honest If man. the expression at tha ballot boa is trict 14, nited M.ne Workers of Aruer-i- an in presenting the substitute, Senator that those arrested Bhall be delivered to with feu, tide frontiers, at least on tile is often a petense." impossibility. Includes Kansas miners, to wnich German courts the "bardhoiled" to declared did it not new a new in alter and Referring order, any partition h -fjlaaige a case to the recently organized The release of Germans who have been Russiun aide, a i aspect the substance Inthe memorandum said that it appears I appeal of the reservation industrial Dilation court of Kansas were OPPONENTS detained m war prison camps also I aeries of European war are In a circular written In the central of1 "f weaken the denial of the nations evitable. i at the biennial convention todav asked for The note finally demands taken under arm le X. American sympathy with Poland ought fice of the board. of tbe district heie. BUSY MERGER he said, because that the all e abandonto the reservation to he far keener than It la. but American j heHedidmadehot thefeelmove,Justified An amendment to the constitution waa in Insisting regal dn.g their right try for crimes of the Polish question unhapcommitted during the war any Oeimans knowledge adopted. pla lng a I.'iO fine on any mem J on a mere matter of phraseotogv. Interested most source from comes MEMPHI3, Tenn., March 12. For the lnr of the d. strict who aprealed a case Only two Demo, rata expressed their not merit.omd In the list If encountered pily the American mind against In to the Industrial court over the head of purpose of preventing the union of the Opinion on tins f.oor, Senator Smith of on allied territory, saying that incidents the preludicin both of the Geris true This Pole. proThe amendment officials. con-s war of s district be the out ar sn..u,d ng ,G.orgia, who has supported the original mans, the Bolshevist and of the British, vided further lor a fine of HotiO to be Methodist Episcopal church, south, with gned to oblivion with the advent of all reservation, declaring himsGf for the three of whom are, for quite different paed on any district official who ap- the northern church, minister and lay..substitute, gnd Senator McKellar of Ten-- . Polish to state. the the not saws restoration of reason, unfriendly otherwise pealed a case to the Industrial relations man of th north Mississippi conference nossee, who baa stood consistently witn of Lloyd h direct -interposition At Paris court. organised th Southern Methodist league "the administration forces, announcing his normal elation between tie different George cost Poland those frontiers whhh here today. Officers were chosen to ort atioiis'ifts la hardly coin eivable aud even JUJDUCITY Negotiations Resumed. riPIOMiion t the new proposal. Wtison was wlllng to conPresident - understood, however, that Senator Hitch-- 1 11" on Its ganise other chapters opposed to reunit ,l,e government part cede. and since that lime British Influence aubcom 12. Th YORK. March NF:V lng the two great branches of th church. ok.of Nebraska, the adnijvlatration wfi bi obliged to Uke iu"asure with British publication have been steadmlttee of miners and operator appoint-for .r -- .ad sire (he Civil war, aa agreed leader, objected to the substitute as he a view to the expiation of punishable and hostile to th Poles. the to wage agreement ed ily Gerthe negotiwt war committed to acts the upon by a joint commlaslon recently at by during jjhad draft, and mans Now, the question of the extent to the anthracite miner resumed their de- w a.sva. Ky. .would make aa effort to hue up (Continued from Page One.) against, a1 hod subjects. Which America wishes to act In Europe In executive ,eslon here ll "IVmocrats to prevent ratification enough Judge J. B. McGowan of WaJervtllay.' should is ohvloualv problematical, but certainly Miss, one of the southern church's Jtbe substitute adopted. n President there ran b no desire on the part of the up and down aide streets and scoured of award th GALLVS SUMMARY that Hope at the Louisville meeting, In American to be used in th Polish mat- th subway for the four missing bandits. bituminous coal commission would an address denied published reports 'Taken by Surprise. that BY MADE of the two stores estimatter. to be overpersuaded to reach a deavailable aa a basis Of settlement In the unification report ITopr.otors le was unanimously cision and exert an Influence detrimental ed that thousands of dollars' worth of the hard coal Pell ha virtually been adopted, declaring he and five , Senator Lodge' presentation of the colleagues no accurate with miners Brecon-I.'soiP. to c Poland, White, substitute apparently look the recognition Jewelry had been stolen. In addit on to abandoned, as John voted against It. bv surprise and aside from tlieir of the fart that Poland haa unhappily bethe pedestrian who waa shot, hut not representative, refused to egn th retn the game of mere h a come larations on tbe floor there were pawn one other of member injured, seriously port. 1924. Th Tribune Co) hy (Copyright. Sentinel Editor Ensigns. iai y private expressions of their d,a-- foreign policies. the crowd sueveeded In getting h fingers tj ?.iU9irif PA Rid, March 12. Deputy Henri Galll. ton. ou a fugitive. He was rewarded hy a Takes Optimistic View. March 1?. The resignation POPTON, I of 12 chamber of It her AS tittle the deputiee Tber men, army . NEW YORK, March crack on the sort frorv a revolver butt finally stood the substitute rep. of William H. MeKenal aa editor of th will be a suspenconsideration bv th Re- - commission which Inwshgated Gereral there hi long caused to that arm fall helplessly possibility" whuh Christian Science Hentlnel. a weekly pubpnh.nan leader, m whh h Senator Lodge Nivelle a 1917 spring offensive, which to to h a side. sion of work In the pnthraclt coal fields lication. and the Christian Science Jourend Senator Watson are understood to some writers have said should have won The first rohberv, In which Fchwartz March 31. when the present contract ac- nal, a monthly, waa announced tonight, had the advice of Root, for- - the war, publishes a summary of the miner srd operator expires, To be eure the French Interests are in hrotacra were the virt'ms, wna rng.neered together wl:h those of Mrs Ella W. Hong, mer secretary of state. International vice associate report in th Temps. this case aefved by the erect. on of a wil t great daring While rubbing e.bows cording to Phil Murray, Mine ed'tor, snd Elisha B. Feeley, - It was n Workers At the secret war council In understood, however, that till of the United to end eierj with passing peiextrtans one of the banand Jxand. editor. Mr. McKenzie said that assistant strong (resident on April ( eleven dava bfor at mlgiit be made to amend it on stalement and made of tonight this Iran an of bar were due to the fact dit the expediency Murray justice aPpped the through resignation she floor and every one admitted that tn the offensive began,- Minister of War argument to point, wh!1 British' lnfiuem e Is handles of live door, so that It could not the close of th second day tension of that the trustee had Insisted upon the view of the unsettled situation and the Patnlev and Generals Fo h and Petiuti directed toward and miner of Poland operator keeping weak, to be opened from the Ins.de, Then a the subcommittee publication In these two papers of matter vven balance ef voting power to th sen- wire urgent for abandoning or postpontn cloth brh k wrapped waa hurled appo.ntcd to draw up a hew wage agree- which the editor did hot think ajtrahle prevent tne construction of a hew contis. ate, the outlook contained many said t .at negotiations are and which they feared would cause dising t e offensive until Ameriiaru troops nental system of alliances and thua to through the window. He SALT LAKE PHOTO SUPPLY ment. were In France In force General Nivelle' preserve the domination of the continent At 'he sound of filling glass, Frank , "satisfactorily." turbance among th subscribers." In some m ariers there was much Fi.ptiorter alwavs have contended Gen- and COMPANY - American geb wart ran excitedly tnat the demand of woed th aald of the Mr. to Mnrrav Anglothe by door snd tne front partrers'p. which tonight as to khether Fresi-tie- era! Nivelle could i.v the league of r ed n pui 't of en as he sbou'ed lor Dm mine s for a SO per rent in. rase, a V i Ison, r.o'itnst the Room, tousea or apartments 'are W. F. an and ha e defateiT the Germans before nations Eowennan, In advv re of an American , hep RepuVi But have a Manager. and week y also The crowd attracted the ij', bought, aold,. rented and exrhar.sed every modifications ha w taken def.nue form. t.ie American got ready into the War, Sc IS, on to enter or W retire from world erx.h, swarmed abou the robbersby t wo not been duKtiaaed. 271 Main, Near Broadway. lay tftrougo ads In Tha Tribune Want U-T- i s Anglo-Saxo- other sent me over to ask -- Courier-Jo- f t te VV We may be sure mother proud of her boy. His shoes are sturdy and his stockings trim and tight. We can see that the suit is of smooth, fine fabric and well fitted. Tie and collar are as clean cut as his happy face. RAJHOM HAS 1 BEFORE i i PROBE if they wear Boys always Clothes." reputation for Sampecks" have hard wear. their shape in spite materials workmanship; careful attention that secret. buttons and seams are stitched stay arc - are specialists. Wc that mothers want things for their Our children and yet they must proper are department prepared to that fit any youngster in every detail, may dressed. and Gardner ' i Irreeon-ril&bie- I a SeS-- ' two-ho- Adams Gardner Company American-governme- I TURKISH -- BRITISH GEODES ff GRIP " 1 FETED; REPUBLIC e- HARDkOlLED INQUIRY STILL i,ri STATES i Pd !rrtefP PRESENT STEP ur iy A British Germans and Unfriendly. pr Ru-sla- n, - 1 a, well-nig- OF CHURCH GET EfiY pac. VI Oe-ma- n. Watson-Himmo- Laxative Brpmo Quinine Tablet a ns v. ra Yl'tl-ro- PUBLIC PARIS NEWSPAPER . V' Anglo-Frenc- British Influence Directed Keep Poland Weak. Bring your Kodak films here and say be-ti.- Ll-li- Com-picg- pt Velvetone finish. - poevi-tihltie- proi-eed'- nt am-ah- 1 f nvc-da- aix-ho- If l l |