| OCR Text |
Show ?i no. SPORTS EDITORIAL AUTOMOBILES FINANCIAL MINES 4 REAL ESTATE SOUTH AMERICA MECCA FOR JAPANESE IMMIGRANTS at Nivelle Says People of America Are Simple, Honest and Proud at ae O0 Pretty Little Belgian Princess ateit photi Former Emperor Charles Hapsburg A r err nl photo of Charlei Ilapaburg, on time emperor of Auatrta, king of Hungary, Hr., ate., (seated , and hut wife, th former Koipresa Zita, who nearly were seated on the throne of Huitgarr not long ago, With them are two of the famous Hungarian magnates. r' the wealthy landed noblemen of tha Magyar nation r railed, fount Hunvadt (IrVt) and Count of rrinreaa Marie Joe, eldest daughter of th king and proving that anmrtiinrs royally really la good to look at without its ernuna or military trapping. Mart Jo was born In Oatend on August 4, lUOd, so thrr will be fiftrrn randies on her neat birthday take. queen of Belgium os Uertrrary. '1 V. 7 Stresses Apparent Love for the People of France as Evidenced br Generosity. . ' - v - . lav . , 1 Explains Why Yankee Soldiers Did Not Return With Right Impressions. p - f following. th ftret authorized by th victor of Dousmont In 101 iitni.n Ilia h'.a mum from an official mission 1 nlted General Nlvalla describe State. aaw II. I A mrrr aa ha y OENERAL NIVELLE. TARIS. April 23. Th frlandahlp between FYanc and lha United Stale, bawd on popular htatortcal memories. oympo-tni- a of race, admiration of th French army and th unforgotten collaboration of But la mora aolld than, ever. thar ravarthalraa, treat naad for French propatanda in tha Unltad States Th American t almpl. honrat, frank, proud and luaceptlbla. Ilka a debutante who know hta worth but I afraid ha won't be taken seriously; at th earn careful aa a novice who la tlm ha la a new pame. The batnp Introduced Into treat naed la that w ahould giv America rauaa to have eonfldenc in ut, and not ceaae our effort In thla regard even when wa have won It over. t , .a , Oc"" ' I, ; V W-- II 1 V : wnV'-- ; A., Propaganda Is Urged. - - , I at e I r J U r , -- Too Few Frenchmen. There are too few Frenchmen In the United Btatea. We have In America toe few buatnees men and too many deaertera. During my vlalt It waa often Impoaalhle to accept Invitation! bv the French col on reI hecauae the Frenchmen were of a kind did not care to meet. , i The prestige of th French army and or th poilu In America is Incomparable. I waa aura of tha moat generous enthusiasm whenever I apoke of our military efforts. Tha blue horiaon In America la tha symbol The Marseillaise" of victorious Franca. la sung everywhere, and I waa struck by the fact that "Ia Madelon la known throughout America, and la sung, not in ridicule aa In France, but in homage to France. French prestige in art and lileraturr la enormous, and It Americana believe that In finance, industry and commerce they cannot be equaled, they know that in the artistic, literary and scientific demands our superiority is undoubted. 7m. I ' Ctfprright, unre-spectf- ul Airplanet Being' Used for Smuggling Dogs 1X1NDON, April 23.r(By the Associated Press.) Dog smuggling by airplane has arrested the Interest of the house of lords, which recently devoted part of an afternoon to a discussion of the subject. g The pampered was roundly excoriated by a number of their lord.vhlps. Willoughby de Broke supporting Bedislowo l.i a demand that "such be excluded from the useless brute toy-do- country. It waa pointed out thaC It la an easy task for a person to smuggle the small lap dog Into the country In a muff or basket. -- d"he .ministry of promised to renew Its vigilanceagriculture in the matter of preventing dog smuggling and to increase the. Pf.ng1.tle if., necessary., ., English Duchess Is Cited for Refused to Pay Tax Universal Service Cable. - , LONDON, April 23. One of Englands greatest noblewomen, the Duchess of Rutland, mother of Lady Diana Goofier, formerly La civ Diana Manners, has been summoned before th court for refusing to pay rate on her property in Chiches. ter The amount of the tax assessed was 31(0, and according to tha rate collector, the duchess threw the demand notes In hi face when he served them. JTh PQjlc rotiau-aj- a hetar..whonir. duchess appeared with other defaulters, ordered her to pay the amount within fourteen days or be liable for contempt The duchess. It. Is declarer!,, waa upset bv tha great Increase In the amount of her rate. ; t v " Underwood Underwood, New York. & BRITISH M. P. SETS EXAMPLE FOR RICH I OVER PLEBISCITE Affection Manifested. American affection for France manifests Itself by their generosity. But tnev must be left with hands free to direct this trait according to their own Ideas; it would b a vital mistake to offer suggestions and to Indicate a tins of conduct toward Europe. Ijeft alone. America can be trusted to do the right thing Unfortunately It must be steted that American aoldiers returning from France have not brought back a good Impression. This was because In th hurry of war they did not have the opportunity to become acquainted with the cal France. They believe that France Is Imperialistic and militaristic, antirellglous and of th liberty of conscience; that her women are immoral and betray their husbands as a matter of habit; that Frenchman are lasy, refractory to progress and not to ba relied upon In business. Th greatest single role plaved In America la that held by the press. It la there that we should look for encouragement, and It Is In that direction that we ahould aim our propaganda. By CHARLES DAILEY. Chlraao Tribun Foroign Na Rervte. MANILA. April SS.-- Th pant tor pagan (egtalatlon baa com back to shams th statesmen who paaaed th act and t a roue a advera comment In th American and European press a to (hair ability for aa If govern man t. And on top of thot tho passion of tho legislature which recently pletel for politico adjourned passed. (aw, which, from tha derision !t has received In th local praaa, promises also to prove another boomerang, once th news travel acmes the Pacific. carrying of Tho measure par ml (a firearms by member of tha legislature and other elective offlearo. Thar Is considerable myaiery behind tho reason a for thia unusual law, and th praaa ia pointing out thot It Is certnln to give rtao to to tho eefety considered eppreheneioo end ooundneaa of the political situation In tho Philippine. Oply a Tho Polly Bulletin remark: little more than tao rare ago tho governor general announced a policy designed to reduce the number of Itreerme, and revolver, held on llcenee, that justified hi couree with argument hav What aound. wei perfectly contranspired In th meantime to alterahould And why ditions so materially? to extended be only coveted th privilege elected official? Them are disquieting In of firearm ue reports regarding th the province, and constabulary record show clearly that shooting ar Increasing rather thaa otherwise. Thle la not an .Integrided comments; announcement of a Rooaevelttan hunting tn African Jungle. It ta a solemn trip end children warning to all men. women like tho cat' for their live, which ar not fabled nine. No longer do alienee, concord and amity reign here. Instead of disorder have the hurly-burl- y the Bolsheviks, th pestering treoch-rou- a purring of Kilkenny cat and tho otab of brother against brother. Governor General Harriaon. Speaker Oamena and Senate President yueson a re not free to walk or ride about town even in brood davlight. lest some assassin awoop down upon them. The department secretaries and legislature member hAVB to take out their Ilf Insurance pdper fnuen faster Ttwirth life Insurance clerk can croaa.thair ta or dot thair fa. live and prosper th recent amendment to section ? of act 2711!" The Phtllpplnea Free Pres grows Ironl-ra- l. thus: W ar making progresscanIn th More and mora one Philippine. aun of democracy lifting over the radiant the horiaon and tha mtllannlal dream of materialising liberty, equality, fraternity.' It I alao provided Into reality. that when thev retlra from thair electlv onto the member of th legislature, nevertheless, may continue to carry a gun If they feel like It. It matter not that of 1st the director of constabulary has been urging greater and greater restriction of th license to carry firearm. All th offithat matter, apparently, I that cial have a chance to ohow hla authority must be reand la and that he somebody spected." Under Which. n They Are Shipped Little Better Than Given Cattle. Conditions Hereafter, Little Criminals Will Be Sent to School Instead of Penitentiary. Universal Service Cable. WARSAW, April 23. Juvenile criminal. most of them conticted for Illegal begging or for petty thieving, wilt be sentenced to go to trade schoos instead of the penitentiary under g bill passed by' tha Polish diet on the recommendations of Judge M. Vincela Brxeaclanckl of the Warsaw juvenile court. The judge points out that the number of juv enile criminals'! bound to increaie a long aa conditions In Poland remain what they are, and that Poland la woefully lacking in teehnirally trained workmen for her industries He proposes, therefore, to recruit technician from hi court, vv here many bright boys are brought dallv. Tile introduction of the bill reveals a amount of child crime in Warstartling saw. Since the juvenile court, modeled Inafter Ben Lindseys famous Denv-stitution, waa established two years ago bv the Paderewski government the number of convU-tinn- s of youthful offender has averaged 300 a month. The crimes committed bv these youngsters, aged fiom 10 to 17. include Several cases cf murder. Housebreaking and robbery In all forma are the most common crimes. - Begging has increased among the out h of Poland. The country has alwavs been afflljoen dwitn beggars, hut Infirm ,nd old hitherto they hSxe-treisuxUvi viit....-ia Noa A.ecntUigli the youngster., nieetg foretgftey St 'ev'ery : corner, asking for doles. Since he usually gets fifty pfennigs or a mars, and since It takes a thousand marks to make A dollar, begging can hardly be considered a profitable business. But Indus-trle- a are flagging and children are hungry. An American Red Crons official who has atndled the child eltuatlon carefully states that the majority of child, criminals spring from th ranka of these beggars Driven to desperation bv Inability to beg enough to buy food, the child commits Ills first theft, and thereafer concludes that robbery Is his beat - mode of earning a living. r gr-at- ly gt man vjao p? Chicago Tribunes It Labe Tribune Cahle. PARIS, April 23. Casualties In, Paris's war on rat have reached a total of 83,-(8- 4 rodents, an average of 1309 a da y but estimate place the survivors at J, 00,000, with more arriving daily. - ' BY J. W. WHITE. Trikes fable. TYthuaeS.lt 21 fiouth AIR KB. BIF.NOM April America has become a Mecca for Japanese Immigrant, who, assisted by their ewn government and by government-backe- d colon Isa i Ion syndicate, ar fairly 1h' 77.7 e, French propatanda In America ahould be at once atmple and active; routine method a ahould be epumed and attention evolugiven to the aortal and economla tion which la conatantlr In movement In (he great republic, above all eince tha war. The' French cnnaular repreeentallon IIIl. tha United State la abaolute'y a lnauffl-clenNew Three coneula general York. Ban Francleco and New Orleana, and three eooeule at Chicago. Philadelphia and. Beattie la much too email a number for a country of 110.000,000 Inhabitant. - where - th mireav dlle ar separated- - hy dletancaa which make centralisation difficult. Ctties auch aa Boaton. lava Angelea, Cleveland. Bt. lamia Cincinnati and other ahould alao have French coneula. The work might with benefit be confided to Americana of proven amity to France.' Greater Part of Work on Coffee Plantation! Donq by This Clata of Labor. -- la Ik war-tim- Said to Be Proving Very Active Boomerang. Ia " i s PitoU for Politico" Act Rich Revelers Wasting Means tyhile Starvation Faces Poor 0 Never in Its History,. Itis Said, Has Paris Been So Crowded With Dens of Infamy as at Present. dawn, despite th law which aa J a music, dancing and dining must ceaa at 2 a. m. Th competent authorities, service ot hviilene. agent of manner, keep a close surveillance on thaa pleasure boxes" bv means of spies. Th commlsalonalrwwho hands you from your taxi,, (he fat jpromeq who chi ks your hat and oust, tha maitr d hotel who obsequiously waves you to a table, the waiter who pulla ths corks of your champagne bottles, even tha seductive, languorous creature who seats herself beanie you and capitalises on tha art of landernas and ,ham lov aa did Crysla and In th dava of Aphrodtl any and tt of them may ba an agent of police, (her for th express purpose of keeping th under a strict wealthy spenders watch. Newly Rich Exploited. Police Keep Watch. ' poofficial complicity lice, certain profiteer have formedex- a ta tha truat, the object of which ploitation hy anv and every means of the newly rich and th foreigner. Never In Us history has Parts been so crowded with dens where th night ran to win, be passed tn consecration women and song especially the first two. The day is passed when vice operated Its nefarious practices behind closed shutters and doors. Now it flaunts Itself openly, unashamed and officially tolerated, tor all the world to see and judge that which I Parla. With th of-t- - Ma-llt- ta By thla the police find surveillance their excuse for what amounts to -- an of open licensing vice; but ths actual working of lha aystem Is that the detective ar too often serving belter tn tango placea than the public weal Ths personnel of the "Pleasure boxes Includes always, beside th waiters, dancers, musicians and rommlvanalrea, dozens of women, some scarcely entered on their girlhood, and aim. amazingly aged, all wearing as few clothes aa possible, who ar charged to ae that Up gueat escapes without paying for the maximum bottle of champagne or with out ordering th most expensive dish on th menu. , r, i - the armistice, and particularly Attire Ia Scandalous. sines tha last six months, the night In other theee Women find holes have multiplied until now an en- rivals in menplacea attired, who tire quarter of Paris la exclusively de- are an unhappy scandalously product of open- and unvoted to them. ashamed vice. American" bars, tango palaeea, Kvory night Paris watches th scandal shimmy salons,' supper - halls, all fur- of thousands of automobiles discharging nished in the soft red opulence which at tho portaia of these pleasure places advertised vice affects, touch elbow to their freight of newly rich and Internaelbow the streets of this dlsrlct known tional profiteers, to say nothing oi tourthroughout the world as Montmartre. ists satisfied at last that they are seeMany of the proprietors aie toiuier courthe real" Paris. tesans enriched by their practices since ingAnd down In the abvsa of mlsary on and during the war. the brink of which th profiteers are In an eternal delirium one dances, one carelessly dancing are the loO.OOO starvone Since Taken Today Argentina and Uruguay hav resolved large addition to their Japaneoe population during tha last three year, but 1m- In these two republics thy J pence migrant ai of a much Inhigher quality than' thoe arriving neighboring countries. Brought on Contract. Universal cervlce Cabla. ARIB. April 23. Tha Scandalous Imbecility of modern manners In Parla cannot be bettor understood 139.099 In contrast to th Sain than bv examining unemployed tho- - character end , the ehenlele-- e tho and (he special coally divertissements house where tha spending, luxury-lovin- g minority wastes na munis. Who hy haxard frequent th pleasure city of Montmartre can without difficulty Instruct hlmeelf on toe vice of prasent-da- y society, and pass condemn lion on th regime which tolerate.- - for the satisfaction of Its big business, the of the money Indiscreet debauchery princes. Dens Are Multiplied.. Action peril. l Universal Service Cable. LOMPOtf. April 23. Austin Hopkinaon, member of parliament for Lancashire, say that boaaea" ahould not be millionaires and, aa proof of hla declaration, Much Upon has given up hi 3I&0.009 mansion and is living In a barn, which ha has converted in Strassburg-Innsbruc- k into a bungalow. lie has presented th mansion, together with twenty houses, which cost him (3000 each, to the Audenahaw urban Districts council. The council has made th mansion Its headquarters. I am going to spend the remainder of stifles, drinks, from midnight until ing unemployed of France! my life for the benefit of jny fellows," By LARRY RUE. If other public men sava Jiopkinson. Chicago Tribune gait Lake Trtbnae Cable. were inclined to sacrifice mora there VIENNA, April 23. France has signed would be more confidence between the n men who of necessity have to control Inan agreement with the and, the men who have to be government providing for the occupation dustries of Vienna by Slovak forces In case .the controlled. Ijopklnson la (ha head of one of the companies In plebiscite tomorrow In the moat eiucessful engineering but I now living the life of Strassburg and Innsbruck districts, in aLancashire man. Ha recently gave hla lim. working Austrian territory, goes In favor of Gerousine to hie chauffeur, and now pays mane, according to reports in diplomatic to travel in It. The chauffeur has built circles, published m a newspaper here. up a successful taxicab business with the By KARL H. VON WIEGAND, J The treatv is alleged to have been car.-- -, Universal Service Staff Correspondent. th son of the late Prosigned in Paris by M. Bene. Czech Hopkinaon minister of foreign affairs, under presfessor Sir Alfred Jiopkinson. vice chan-ellEHL.1N, April 23. Hunger and un"This turning of the back to city Ilfs II Is an sure that unless this was done the of Manchester university. employment In the large German end desire to return to the country has French would eupport Hungarian claims Oxfprd man and took high degrees. He made also strongly fell in a numindustrial centers are killing the at- ber of Itself in t served during the war aa an officer and students in th agricultural high n General Devitch of the tractions of the cities and reversing schools. In m v school private. He is a bachelor and 49 jears alone in Berlin army Is said to be now at the city of age. the country movement Into that increase is about S3 per cent. Forof Coding, near the Austrian border, It was the sons of landholders and merly of a to strong country. tendency city working out details of the military move. farmers who studied scientific "Back to the country" Is the new slo- wealthy Lays Claim It is said that In case Austria atagriculture in the schools. Today it is gan. tempts to Join Germany, the Czechs will son of merchants and officials and the to Statistics just published show that a large number force through railroad communications of former, naval and thousands who had left small farms and military In the Burgenland district In Hungarian officers. villages tn the last few yeara and were territory ceded to Austria after the proProfessor WARSAW, April 23 IBv the AssociatAuhagen said that, prior to to ed Press.) Poland claim posed corridor from 26 per cent of the th oldest drawn to the industrial ofcenters ny the the war,-onlpopulaattractions and hav life, was" abandoned. variety city In ie She centre! Miss tion of Europe. Germany- lived In the country tired of ths gnawing of an empty stom- and 75 per The alliance is declared to be a part spinster Anna Dobek, living In thocholow, who ach were cent in cities. employed are yearning again for the free- No of the offensive and defensive agreerecently celebrated her one hundred and dom,and statistics were yet available, health and simpler, but more abun- but specific ments between Poland. Cxecho-Slo- v akia twenty-thir- d annlverearv. Miss were sufficient on to birthday hand ahow th flesh puls of the country. and Rumania refusing to Debe4r Is still quite active, physically and dant, big change in these percentages a This exodus from the city is manifestJoin, so far providing for reciprocal mentally, and does some housework each waif that change steadily Increasing. ing itself in various wavs. guarantees of territorial Integrity and dav. Ihe demand for small plots of ground protection She also has a sense ePJntmor. and to against the soviets on one comwith and little the farms colonizing .lWhd,..9n.d ,Girni?.ny,,ndHungary on h.fL hex, acUUIUltncf8,!ptbul qher lopgev-it- v sSifd-ceocher; Military set ion is er ifxilsteit" In to the flfflMt he hes hev ar been panies since 1914. Ths number of students case monarchies are restored In - Austria, bothered bv a man about the on Decorations having in the schools has inhigh agricultural and house.' Miss Dobek doesn't like cate, Germany. Hungary creased tremendously in the last year. The parliaments In the Austrian states either. The enormous increase In the price of Universal Service Cable. of Strassburg and Innsbruck annonncA land, largely dne to the money inflation. PARIS, April 23 The that the planned plebiscite la to decide that If Is the most difficult barrier to overcome ho isnt decorated he isnt adage a Frenchman the union with Germany because present for thos who desire a small farm may nearly ,b taken as gospel truth, conditions are Intolerable The allies, from one to twenty acres. ession to recent figures published by they claim, after dismembering tha old Discussing, the back to the country the grand chancellory of th Legion of empire, made existence economically Immovement, professor Dr. Auhagen, rec-tHonor, accordingto which nearlv a milpossible and ahen refused to provide re- Chicago Tribune Foreign New Service. of the agricultural high school at lion Frenchmen are entitled to wear the lief. BERLIN, AprH 28 Fraulein' Amalia Berlin, said: coveted red ribbon. - t Czech Influence is blamed for murh of twenty-year-oof Ebert, Frit "There Is no doubt that a strong yearnBesides th fact that one In every daughter the alleged policies of tha Ebert, e of te to return is matii-the president Frenchmen is entitled to wear the fifty the'Germgn republic, forcountry in ing allies regard to Austria, as the Itself In wide circles In citv popdesiring to become an Independent, modmer fear that If Vienna regains commertesting In th "ribbon, upward of thirty-fou- r ulations In Germany. Three things have fifty are entitled to other decorations, Cxech Industries cial importance will ern young womanTias taken up a profes-oio, war the cross become1 dependent on Austria. brought this jbout: and the t medal (principally She !sin Heidelberg, working as an - - N aA'"g prop! e.yhs, could not I of puulli:.lniuriu:riniu.-- t -6 id do military library trfrifm'Ts JTT6 liiirTng the war wereT Four hundred of the members. NOTED PHYSICIAN OIES. beHeidelberg university. Her aim ia to employed on farms, learned agricultural however, have Jvist discovered that thev come a real scientific librarian, who knows work and liked tt; Chtrage Trlbaaegalt Lake Tribune Cable. are not really entitled to th decoration ' Th uncertainty of employment tn at all. because when Napoleon founded IjOXDON, April 2d Dr. Markovtcky, all th books of th world. w ho waq Tolatnva medical attendant and Befor going to HMdeiborg. Mis Ebert the cities and Industrial centers; tho order h made no for confidential eeeretarv for many ysara, has took a course tn domestic science, so a Last, but not least, many people auch an excess In numbers.provision A law to ho ready to meet all eventualities. died at Ruzomberk, In now being prepared to remedy matters? hopf for better and more food. Defend pouring Into the principal republic of the continent. Brasil has favored Japanese Immigration for several year and has repeatedly, offered Inducements to attract rooli laborer to th coffe plantations. In Per and Chile th population of low-cJapanese Is growing ao rapidly that weal coast newspaper hav repeatedly railed an (heir governments to put an and to whet they editorially call "the ) allow Copyright, Underwood A Underwood. New York. sound-deaden- Gives Up Mansion find Twenty House In Order to Aid Hit Employees. Many Being Imported. Th Sao Paulo atat government recently signed a new contract for tho Importation of 20,099 more Japanese coolie and these or now arriving In largo consignments on every Japanese steamer. When tha contract waa signed ther were1 already (9.999 Japanese In the state of Sao Paulo alone. 4 Japanese Immigration to both the east end weat coasts of Houth America has been greatly facilitated by the recent subsidising of two Japanese steamship lines, one to call at Brasilian, Uruguayan and Argentine ports, and th other to maintain a regular trad with Peru and ChUa. An effort Is now being made to run a fortnlghtlv aervic with these steamers, which means that a new consignment of Japanese Immigrants arrives every (eo or three weeks. . Are of Lowest Type. In Brazil especially the Japanese immigrants ar of tha very lowest tv pe of laborer produced In the Japanese Islands. Tne colonisation syndicate which semi them out gathers them from th outlying Islands of the archipelago, and tha condition under which they are shipped to Houth America ar little better, if any than the accommodation provided for th exportation of cattle. They are not looked upon With favor either bv Brazilians or the better class of Japanese, the latter realizing that they are a serious reflection on that clang of Japanese which ia trying to enter ithe higher business strata of th South American republics. t; But these coolies Inaura cheap production of coffee, ao their Importation la expected to continue for a long time., ... Czecho-Slovak-la- Poland Oldest Spinster Ozeoho-Slovak- la ia .lugo-Slav- la Surprising Figures Cwen French Fraulein Amalie Ebert Is Following Prof gny-whe- ra ld dilly-dallvf- Leader Society 1 zecho-Slovaki- a. Announce Palac Will Hereafter at Midnight. That , Hi do ! Chicago Tribune Foreign New Service. MADRID. April 23. Leaders In Spanish society probably have never heard the ancient American musical comedy classic, "Ain't It Funny What a Difference Juat a Few Hours Make," but they agree with the sentiment, as they are making a valiant effort to Introduce a social day that ends at midnight instead of at dawn. At present the tendency In Madrid to to drive today into tomorrow, end society functions are gradually becoming later and later. ; r Nothing begins before ( o'clock in the evening, at which hour afternoon tea commence and last till 8 o clock. Theater matinees start at 39 or T and continue till 8:30 or 19. ttinner Is taken any where. between i.9ud LL84... xTErs:--xT- r. Meanwhile, the main performances at ths theaters and opera have opened, but the smart set never think of entering their stalls or boxes until the second act is well on Its way, as one of their purposes In going la to ho seen. When the performance I over at 1 or 1 89, a nipper da nee follows, ending at dawn. Th acknowledged pinnacle of aristocracy, th Duke de Alba, has set Ilfs face and decreed against the that hi palace, which ia a central point for gathering of diplomats, scientist, artists and politicians, shall never remain -- open after midnights n. u' . e ' Czeeho-Blovakl- 7' - a. V ' the only South Brazil, however, 1 American republic that ao far ha openly overtures mads through government source for the Importation of Japanese laborers on contract. Several yeara ago It waa found that tha Japanras were temperamentally aad physically suited to the coffee plantation of the atat of Pao Paulo, and the ttat government?1 wlffcItT largely in the hands ' of th coffee growers, began to import them by th hundred, until now they have .almost entirely Ytplared Brazilian labor. The Japanese coolies work for a pittance and their standard of Ilf Is so far labelow that of tha cheapest Brasilia borers of southern Brasil that these cannot compel with the Oriental and . hav had to go olsawher. Gaunt Hunger Fast Driving TRYING TO 77. Germany's Poor From Cities MADRID REACH BED EARLIER Czecho-Slovakia- Jugo-Hlav- Lil Chi NOT WORTH COUNTERFEITING. C.kiavaa.Trlhu Alt..Jak. Idtuuui rtia..: . VIENNA. April 28. Th value of Hun- garian crowns and Folleh marks I so low that a band of Counterfeiters stopped reproducing them because thev found tt unprofitable, and when raptured by the police were turning out epurioua Ameri- can currency. |