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Show V V EDITORIAL AUTOMOBILES SPORTS MINES FINANCIAL REAL ESTATE 1 i HOLY WAR POSSIBLE ON NORTHERN FRONTIERS OF INDIA; . JAPANESE ARE REFERRED TO AS PRUSSIANS OF ORIENT Open-Ai- British Women Become Expert Shoemakers Barber Shop for Paris Poor r As the result of the experience they had working in English shoo factories tlunng the war, manv English women have become expert shdemakers and are continuing at the work. Nome factories employ women almost exclusively, as, it is sard, thev are more efficient and economical than man Cmplov ees. The picture shows a pretty worker putting plates on workmen An outdoor tonsorial parlor id. Paris where those who cannot afford to patrCuise regular barber shop can get a haircut and shave. Here one may get a shave and haircut for 50 centimes, normally 10 cents. The photo shows one of the patrons getting a haircut, while several more are waiting for the knight" of the .scissora to call next, - shoes. Antique Furniture Obtained From Estates in Country Is Piled High in Shops. Nipponese Publications Are Not Permitted to Print - Truth 'b in Cases. Many Text of California Law Has Only Appeared in a , Few- - Prominent Journals. ' By FREDERICK A. SMITH. Tribune-Su- it Lake Tribune Cable. TOKIO, X ec. 18. Students of Japanese international affairs and of the psychology of Japanese domestic Ufe are so often Chicago struck by the similarity methods and Prussian has become rather a the Japanese are the between Japanese methods that it trite saying that Prussians of the Orient. The German Influence on Japanese life Is strikingly exemplified In the fact that a hen a Japanese, learning English, mejies an error In syntax It follows In a majority of Instances the nature of the "error that a German student would make. The Japanese boys who have shown me their copy books have been most courteously and yet most deeply puxsled by efforts to make them understand that should not write 1 have gone to they see my aunt already yeBterday. Japanese soldiers on parade offer the d goosestep for the admiration of curbs. Badder still Is the tendency to permit German architecture to mingle so freely with the distinctive and pleasing Japanese products of art In building that cities like Tokto have lost ot 'architectural atmosphere without hating acquired another, thickly-people- ( News Is Suppressed. 6 , it Is perhaps from the Germane also that the Japanese have borrowed their theory of compelling the newspapers, of the empire to suppress certain Important facts that seem to be unfavorable to the In some measure this sysgovernment tem of suppression exists in France. was U most arbitrarily followed In For Germany throughout the - war. years tha German public was fed with false reports of the German armies or deceived by silence when tha truth would have been depressing. Early In November of J918 the German people, shocked bv the news that a huarmistice was to be signed, miliating suddenly realised that they had been misgovernment-trammele- d led by their newspapers and that throughout all thalr bitter sacrifices they had been following false beacons. It required only a few days for the German people then to throw .out the military kaiser. This explanation of the suddenness of the revolution was given to me by hundreds of Germans while tha resolution was still lit progress. Today we find Japan and America compelled to meet various Issues that possibly will have permanent Influence on the future rejattone of the two great nations Observers here agree that It would he far better for Japan If the shackle were struck from the editorial hands. Facts Not Published. For months It was not published tn Japan that Japan had been Induced to yield In Its demands that Manchuria and Mongolia be exempted from the operation of the Interpower consortium Other facts are being suppressed, but they all eventually come to light. Tha truth will reach the people, although it takes a tortuous path through periods of sarrlflc and misfortune as it traveled In Germany. The majority of the great newspapers In Japan do not publish the text of tha new California ltvw. They simply denounce the unwarranted agitation In America " The newspapers do not frankly admit that tha present Japanrse-America- n treaty of commerce, a mutual signed agreement, does not give to Japanese the right to own or lees agricultural lands in the United States. They content themselves with Ignoring that fact and demanding that the Japanese be accorded their rights." One writer contends that so Indifferent are other state to the California situation that an armed Invasion of California would not be resented by that part of America outside of California. This la only a sample; hundreds of other similar fulminations Triumph Predicted by Dean t For . Science and Eugenics Unusual and Sensational Note Is Sounded by Head of St. Pauls Cathedral Respecting the Future of Great Britain. - dangerous Signal Quartermaster at Constantinople Give Samples of English and Yankee Humor. By JOHN CLAYTON. Chicago Trlbaae Salt Take Tribune Cable. CONSTANTINOPLE. Dec. 18. "Those .T clg-are- 1 disguised-repudiati- feeble-minde- a. . ) ' Deo. BERLIN. ' By XAEL IL VON WTEOAND, Universal Service Staff Correspondent. aeelstanta to stork pay better for th II. Th namely, the German demands of them. have decided to organise Into a union. Th association has been called upon bv Frau Pchlnkel, one of the leader of ih Prussian branch, to reorganise upon a broader baal. It la not proposed to try to force th stork to conflns hi labors to certain hours, snd th Impossibility of enforcing a demand for th union day of only eight hours Is admitted, but th stork' assistants are preparing to demand that th work that he There Is general complaint that Mr. Stork Is nlrgardly toward hi assistants, gets them out St all hours, day or night, and In all kinds of weathsr, and that henceforth a union schedule of fee will be presented to him. It is not clear yet whether "Th Union of th Stork's Assistants" will strike, or whether Mr. Stork wl! lock them out and use the doctor as strikebreakers, who, among tha common people In Germany, are seldom called In when th stork arrives. SUGGESTION IS MADE AIRPLANE DISPLACES CURATES PRESIDENTIAL, TRAIN FOR NEEDY - - - r of France Orders Predict of Medicine la Connection leas ludicrous. Chief Executive With Their Pastoral Duties Is Magnificent Machine In Which to Official Make Urged by Doctor. Tripe. Germany Aristocracy of Is Flocking to Doom REPARTEE EXCHANGED BY SHIP CAPTAINS have a happy Benue said the signal By DEAN INGE. "but they want to get up ouartermaster, earlier In the (The famous head of St. Pauls Cathedral, London, prophesying the early morning. There had been an exchange via th collapse of Great Britain.) semaphore with the quartermaster of an destroyer, which ended In hla h members of' breed so fast. It is usually orUy ltc the Englishretreat. d lower strata that the worst specimens get hasty movement said Boilers, but this one was "Yea," married. In the higher ranks a thor- not a circumstance Lopnsw-flaweto one that happened world are Initiating a oughly degenerate stock tends to die out, not long ago." is great beauty or wealth, or against the real causes of aunless there We took a few long drags on our ts title to act as a makeweight. half th Ills that afflict mankind, and waited for the story. more Is nothing religion Organized was It her as In he Constan," right bit they ara still regarded by tomany Ninethen a creaking weathercock continued. The Scorpion wan berthed interunpractical cranks who wish teenth century England wa a going con- alongside a Llmle th quarterand sloop, fere with the right of every man and cern, postwar cona is gone England masters used e lot o' good corkin woman to choose his or her mate. The goose that laid tha golden (sleeping) time up one klddln' another. One the present cern. Th enemy of eugenics Is having his throat cut. afternoon Iron Duke steamed Into entiaclentlfio temper. There Is a general eggs There must before long be a thinly port. Tha the science of sigScorpion's quartermaster the revolt against dictatorship of naled. What of the English ship is that?' and a great new growth of superstition. paper on which the nation's scraps of debts Iron of the believworld, flagship Feople are no longer ashamed of honor are Inscribed. This will mean the replied theDuke, Llmle. which was pretty fair ing what they want to believe. , disappearance of th taxpaying .class. repartee accordin' to Llmte standards. Tha q. m. tucked that up and put It into Says Money Is Wasted. his pocket for future reference Awakening Will Come. t be should That the intellect, About a week later the Arizona made such, Thence forward the masses will have spoken of with contempt la a' new thing, to tax themselves. The country will be port. Th same two quartermasters hapof barbarlzatlon to be on tnelr signal bridges. W hat It indicates tha public poor and to a large extent barbar- pened Is and social life Th vogue of lrratlonal-ist- s very that?' asked the Britisher Duck but sentimentalism, th great en- Yank our q. m. Quick aa ltght he shot for and emotionalists like Gilbert Ches- ized; soup bar a will at ef science snd eugenics, emy our what shows terton Iron Duke reading public discount. Wastefulness will come to an back, 'U. S. S. Arizona. Send likes The'whole BrlMeh nation, and es- end because there l be nothjflg to alongside for liberty party.""There was beer all around for the pecially Its government. Is behaving as waste. If we had com Into a huge fortune by shore gang that evenln.' Im When the working man haa to support Bcorplon's not Bayin' who stood It. but I've my susth war. W vote end spend money in d schools, hospitals for In- picions his skipper ashore penuter recklessness, and tha few articulate curables. That's and the like, he will realise It from ths Scorpion's forepeak proteat are not attended to. to hie Interest to apply the sacred nant flyin -now." The mind of the average men, called Is principle of limitation of out- right group mind," Is tradetounion by psychologists th activihis bunprocreative neighbors put unsifted end an undisciplined really If th output be of a COAL MINERS URGING dle of emotions and prejudices, gathering ties. especially bad quality. by preference round a sentiment rather thoroughly GOVERNMENT ACTION chief I am afraid many of the best families than an Idea. Th alums are the the face of breeding ground of undesirable cltlsene will Inevitably disappear frwm Of rid thousands be In earth. cannot th got professional Since .their Inhabitants Socialization of the Fuel Fields of. It Is better that attempts should be class households the tradition of culture Early and refined living will be maintained at Is made to raise them to a position of Again Demanded by the In which they would probably not the heavy price of family suicide. Workers. Union Formed by Midwives , Newest Thing in Germany PARIS, Dec. 18. (By th Associated Press ) President MUlerand, despite th TtOORN. Holland, Deo. 18. (By tha Associated Press ) The constantly growing earnest contrary advice of Madam German colony her, where former Emla reported to have ordered an peror William resides, la causing uneasi- airplane llmoualn for the purpose of ness among tha Inhabitants, for a great number of tha members of the German making official visits to foreign capitals aristocracy are buying up old Dutch and rllteg In the provinces. manors, snd Doom Is already called In Should th report prove to be founded. i he Dutch satirical papers "a branch ofIt will mean a departure In the mod fice of - Potsdam." of traveling of presidents tn Franc and Home- weeks ago William ordered Martha permanent sidetracking of th presiKoggy. a German artist llvlhg In dential garita train. A squadron will I loorn, to paint scenes- In the park and hSv to be providedregular for the presidential Ills resilience j suite and th flttr or an Journalists who tctonipaby th president on all hta trips Ain8t rvice ucctsruu. from Faria 18 I.ONDON, Dec. bom newspapers call the prealdenl'a (Bv Ih Associated Brit Ini and French companies attention to the fact that a fall from Frees air aervlc th window of hla serial llmoualn would lonductlng the Dondon-Fart- a carried from September 8. I9, to Octo- have more terrible result than leaning ber 90, Din. IsiJJ passenger. 18 M too far out of Ih train window, referring pounds weight of goods snd covered alto- to the accident to th former president, 1 aul Deal hanol. gether a distance of SOf.rtOO miles. d, IN DON. Deo. 18. (By tbs Associated Press.) A controversy It on among th poorly paid section of clergymen who find themselves herd hit by th high cost of living over 'a novel suggestion put forward bv Dr. Robert Rentoul, a prominent Liverpool practitioner, that the Clrrgymrn could augment tbclr Incorhe by acting ae doctor aa well aa paraotte Tv Rent, ml advisee young to study medicine, lake their degr and combine body curing with soul saving work Many clergymen do not look with favor Ort I he Idea. The rgu that thev have lo do already and that local prac. plenty I It Inner would bitterly onposn oompvtl-tlo- n from them On want to Ithow where a poor curate la lo raise the 20 necessary to qualify lor a mrdlial degree and others hold that n "within a month th nlerlco-medl- c o would l thin, and that Ih soul would euffrr at th expense of th body, nrr-rno- V With Precaution Taken, Fear of Outbreak Looms Like Black Cloud Chicago BOCHUM, Germanv, Dec. 18 (By the Associated Press ) The general committee of tha German Coal Miners federation has notified Chancellor Fehrenbaoo that It Intends to force through the relchstag a law for tha socialisation of the national coal fields. In an open letter to the chancellor, the committee haa called upon the government to make an unequivocal declaration on th laaue. The miners-als- o demanded to know how Boon th government proposes to submit to th relchs'ag the draft of the new law. The miner letter to he charcellor sets forth that. In view of the premie bv the government to miners the given last March, and tn order to fulfil the Bpa agreement and aupplv th horns demands foi furl, the miners have willingly agreed to stimulate to work overtime In production. with now the government charge They that they hav Ccraatlnatlon inandtheallege deliberations carried on by the socialisation commission and ths cenferencs In committee sessions of ths Imperial economic council. or-le- (By the Associated Pres ) Five monuments made from an Identical des'gn ars to mark ths crest advance made on th French of th front by th Flrat American division In most Its flvs important attack. Thev are now completed and ready to b et up They ars seven feet high and th bases ars concrete pillar surmounted by a shell, on which Is th American eagle. Bronze plates bear the name of the officers snd men of the division killed In th attack for which each memorial lands The monument will b set up at Bujenev Faint Mlhlel. faint Juvln end Redan. They were designed bv Jo n American Devtdaon. the Dea. two-thi- Machines Being Urged in France to Make Up for Lost Man-pow- , 4 Cannot Be Kept Quiet. Individualism in Factory and Mill Must Give Way to Automatic Time-savin- g Devices, Says Eminent French Engineer! . (Universal Service Cable.) Individualism In the factory and mill must give way to mag modern automatic il chines, whose work can aupplant of the country, the lost If French Industries are to regain and Increase th hold they once had In the world a markets, la the keynote of a paper by M. Grlpon, a prominent French engineer attached to the bureau of tech niial studies, which has Just come to American Red Cross officer during an Investigation of conditions In th wrecked sections of France. manufacturing - It Is on of the big lessens the war has taught French manufacturers and will met hanlcS be a hard one for the to assimilate, for nowhere as in France, perhaps, was the Individual such an Intimate part of the shop and the thing he was working on. To the French' mechanic his hands were better than any machine, and ha considered their product as hla own When, In 1814, France mobilised. Irrespective of occupations, she threw all her men Into the army. The mistake was seen lnReptembr of that year, when both armies found their ammunition practically exhausted and their guns already worn. fj r ARIR. Dec. it time-savin- man-pow- er old-tir- oe In th emergency the women of Franc responded nobly, hut, as Profeasor Grlpon points out, despite thsir energy It was found that good will could not overcome lack, of professional experience and the knowledge required to give that precision to shells which is so necessary. Machines which could be operated by women, at the same tlm giving this needed precision and also capacity, were required. Certain factories were turned from making shells and cannon to producing standardised machines and tools. The value of machine labor over human labor made itself apparent, for where. In 1914, a certain factory was turning out alx of tha FYench 75a a day, in 1918 it had increased Ha output to thirty-fou- r per day. Results were also seen In the production of shells, with some startling figures now being revealed. In one large factory toward the end of the war tha dally output waa 80,000 a day, while in 1918 the plants of th country were making ahells for the 76 a at th enormous rat of 660,000 per day. Equal, progress was mads tn aviation and automobile works, th demand for parts, motors, tools, etc., being especially (heavy. Machinery Promises Relief. The machine shops of France were empty of mechanics; what personnel there was was completely disorganized, while, according to Professor Grlpon, ths organization and efficiency of the German plants, filled aa they were with modg ern machines, gave them a temporary advantage. France recalled her mechanic from the Held, but not before they had suffered heavily. Rhe mobilised her plants from the smallest tin shop to the greatest factory, though many of her largest plants were even then In occupied territory. Orders for machines and machine tools were placed In America and Switzerland, and, thanks to the French ability to adapt and improvise, the German advantage waa soon counterbalanced. As the war progressed the need for standard machines and tool! became more apparent, i Loises had been heavy In th ranks of the machinists, and as loraea in the army grew It became necessary to withdraw men f(om the factories. Today the manufacturers of the country realise that their Only salvation in tha peacetime battle for the worlds trade rests In continuing the modem scientific methods and . the use of machines. Machines, Red Gross- - officers have been told, offer the only solution for offsetting the loss In the ranks of the machinists Figure, It said, show that the war has taken by death or Incapaclt ting wounds twenty out of' every ' 100 French machinist Modem methods. It Is pointed out, reduce th number of men needed, while easily controlled automatic machines mesn employment for those not Otherwise tilted for the machinist trade. Among the older machinists there are some objectors to machines supplanting men. , They ssy Individuality Is lost and that ths results cannot be as good as before In reply, their patriotism ts being appealed to on the ground that tha future of the country necessitates th change being made and that the mill and factories of France- - must never be caught again ae they were In 1914. They are being asked to sink Individualism for organisation and national Interest, Telephone Inventor Empress Follows Many Shops Deserted. st man-savin- Yisitihg Native City man-replaci- 1 .Scent of Violets to For the Last Time Sees I clvrr.nl Service (able. IjUNDON, Dec. 18. Alexander Graham Bell Is paying a farewell Visit tii his hath e city, Edinburgh, after fifty years' residence In the United States. He Is shortly returning to New York, expecting never to visit Scotland again, as he la now 78 years of age. "We are only at th beginning," and sculptor. not at the end. In the advancement of telephony." said Mr. Bell, who Invented Young th telephone. Man "I have had nothing to do with telephone experiments for the last thirty-fiv- e fhlraan Tribe gelt lake Trlbuue table years, but I lake a red! Intereat In ARGOT, Dec. 18 VI lav Margaret Finch their progre.M, and especially now la Wa given a six' months' probationary aenteme for amtnyipg John Bryan Harris wireless telephony, which Is only in Its Infancy,' with hrr affections Brvan told the court that he "lotild The British telephone system Is far not go to a church, dsnes or even his especially th would be Inferior lo the American, club hut that Mias Much c lines. ' there." Woman Is Fined for Annoying Mere lons-dlatan- 4 t warfare against th British.--Aa a consequence Britain penetrated through five great passes Into this Independent territory, roughly fifty miles wide, separating India from Afghanistan, and now holds th valley peases. I p the famous Khyber she ts now building a roadbed, end soon a railway will run to the Afghanistan border. Country Is Helpless , Great India, with her city millions In whirlpool of unrest. Is militarily helpless because she la unarmed. But her among the frontier mountains there are Independent tribes, ready to defy law and ths civilisation a railroad bringa For ths moment they are fairly quiet, a yet recently they entered the barbed-wtr- e armed camp In the city of Peshawur and In the kidnaped two British soldiers. peases the sniping warfare la continual. Today It la play warfare. Tomorrow a religious storm may break that would soreiv stress the whole military strength of British India. In th meantime unrest In Great India proper grows. GERMAN SOCIALISTS ATTACK GOVERNMENT Q Poverty and Profiteer ' Much la Being Made of Condition. and Slogan , . . - J RERUN. Dec. 18. (By the Associated Press ) boclallat newspapers and communist agitators are making much of the mlaery resulting from unemployment end the high cost of necessities, ami ere contrasting the condition of the poor with the prodigal spending of the profiteers. Tnere Is perhaps less extravagance than there wee before th war, but th number of Idle snd very poor la said to be greater, and emphasise present condition. , Worker for the red revolution. with the slogan of ."Poverty and Profiteer," the ammunition they most frequently employ, ere urging the overthrow of the government and the establishment of a dictatorship of the proletariat to relieve the condition they cell Intolerable. Ae the misery of the workleaa Increases with the advancing winter they expect to gain enough strength to make an effort to overturn the present regime, which they blame for the troubled economic conditions- ' Die Frelhelt, organ of th Independent Social Democratic party. Issues an "earto the government that nest warning conditions are coming to a head and that It will be 111 for th administration If torn tangible effort ts not made to Idleness, It adds, "It Is time for th capitalistic regime to take heed. The proletariat has not lost Its strength: It la growing stronger against that tlm when ths hour of decision shall strike." - Edinburgh Fifty Year's Absence. Can-tlgn- v, From time Immemorial they have raid ed the rich lands to ths east and south, and gathered their toll from tho caravans from Afghanistan and central Asia which use their mountain peases. For years the British have been paying tribute to them for a propeace policy, In lieu of their ancient caravan plunder. In this Khyber pass, gateway to waa Asia," the old payment 16,009 annually. But with war, and later re ltgtous agitation, fanned by shrewd and Afghanistan, even money has tailed to keep the tribe quiet. During the Afghan war last year many thousands of tribesmen took part in guerrilla Bell Trail It Pursued Through Stolen Cross Valued at After Undergrowth Until the ; $200,000 Sold for $25 b . Sons Jungle Grave 1 Graham rd these districts Independent, and far lest subdued then the Yaqul Indians of Mexico, these fierce tribes are always a thorn In the side of - . British India. er 18 J By FRAZIER HUNT. t Lake Tribune Cable. Trlboca-gal- 1 American Advances lo Be Indicated by Monuments Alexander PARIS, Every KHYBER PASS (northwest frontier of. India) Deo. 18. Mutant Penis lamlsm, will possibilities of a holy war, overhang Britain's hold on th northern frontiers of India like a black cloud. Her among these frontier tribes there g a true Mohammedanism that any moment may be whipped Into a religious war against Britain over the Turkish treaty and Arabian mandates. For almost a thousand miles these tribes, totaling 400,000 fighting men, knowing no allegiance except their tribe and religion, are scattered among the mountain fortresses. . Not Afghanistan nor Rad Rbsela, hut these fighting tribes, offer eternal dan ger to Britain's rule, and are keeping of the whole Indian army In , of humor, could ba cited. do-wlt- LIBAU. Latvia Detf. 18. (By the lated press.) The appearannee of the here indicate that the. shop windows Ubau tradesmen have retched some of th plunder taken by the vrripti armies that have swept over the Baltic states. They are piled high with antique furniture tram country estates. Statuary, silver and bronze ornaments, silverware and jewelry also abound In the commission hoi ees. English dealers In antiques overran the Baltic atatea after they first freed themselves of the Bolshevik regime and picked up much of the valuable furniture and the Jewels, oriental rugs and old silver. Consequently the shops now offer fewer rare piece than they did a year ago. Besides the war loot, the shops carry an amazing lot of second-han- d wares which were the property of peraons Impoverished by war. who must now convert them into money. Luxuries went first, but now furs, (ur coats and all sorts of wearing apparel are being, sold In the shops. These stores look like American rummage sales It la common for prosuerous-lookln- g strangers who are Inspecting shop windows to be approached by owners of rare old furniture or works of art who desire to offer their precious possessions at private side without the humiliation of placing them on sale where their friend will recognise them. The shops of Llbau are much the same as those In Riga, Wlndau and the cities of Esthonla and IJthuanta. Condition were the same In Moscow and Petrograd untl) the soviet government closed all the private shops, seized their Blocks and forbade trade which was not conducted by the government. JLimles (Englishmen) Propaganda Is Ludicrous. It la sometimes difficult to tell whether this Is Just Japanese propaganda overreaching Itself or whether It la the best h the oriental editorial mind can a In a previous letsubject. As indicated some there is In consolation the ter, thought that tha thinking people In Japan do not believe their newspapers any'e how. Yet constant reiteration of such may well have an effect on the Japanese public. Many Japanese have told me that they regret thru so serious a question aa the on now loonupylng the mind of representatives of oota, government should be In the least Influenced by press reports that aeem to belong to an age when knights were bold and barons held their sway. Theao Japanese recognise that If Japan-lto be resrued from her Isolation and retain her place among the progressive nations she must abandon the sort of transparent propaganda that might b If It were more Fighting Tribesmen Force Country to Keep Large Army in the District Ae-e- ot f I Objectivels Reached. I'aimatl Service Cable. LONDON. Dec, 18 Mow the ex-E- preee Eugenie traced her son, th Brine Imperial, in Zululand along a violet wented trail Is described by Dr. tthel Smyth In Blackwoods Magaalne, Accompanied by Sir Flvelyn Wood, the empress sought the cairn of atones in th Zululand Jungle where her arm waa buried, but the undergrowth had w encroached on the spot that ths guides were unable to find It. The orlnc had passion for violet Scent; It was the only toilet accessory of the kind he need. Ruddenly the became swsr of a afrong smell Of violets. This Is th wav," ah cried. Snd went off on a lln of her own " Kir Evelyn Wood ld ah tor along Ilk a hound on a trail, stumbling over the deadwood and tuooka. her fa hasten bv the high grass that parted and closed behind her, until, with a loud cry. the fall upon her knees, vrvtng, "feat I hi!" hare"). And there, bidden In almost Impenetrable brushwood, they found the cairn! (It Cklrete Tribes lelt Lake Tribus Mil. AN. Dec. II. gtolsn CtM. from the rhurvh of Oravedon. on l.k Como, s fsmoua Bvsantln silver gilt crops valued at $200 Ort and a collection of fourteenth century chalice and pyxes were sold to a silversmith her for too lire (about 25 . Battista Aondlo, formerly sacristan of th church, has confessed that h organised th theft because American and English tourists offered him enormous sums for relics. One of Aendlo'e confederate dropped personal papers In tbs church snd thus tbs polli were able to get on th track Th booty was found thlevea of th In th shop of a Milan silversmith, who had already started to melt It down Nothing but th brass base of th ftmnus cross was left. IHAWT PLAY HISttD, Ibtraao TrlbureZalt lake Trlhuae CatUe. 18 Th flrat production VIENNA, Heartbreak iloune if Hcrnrd bhaw at lb Hurg theater waa cotdlv we eot The flret applauded, th second ait was reclvd In sllenc snd toward th end th play waa hlaasd. lc. rrevd |