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Show 1, V THE SALT IiAKK TRIBUNE, SUNDAY "HORNING, MAY22, 1921 . WESTERN OUTFIT CO Air Pathfinders Pierce Tornado; Escape Unhurt errn of German Agree-- t ment - to Allies'1 Ultima I turn Discussed in Detail. f Costlnuxl fan Om r.fttent need to provide some method by which, if H ehould be that the fixed lum hhd been ft gross underestimate, returns might bo received. ddt-tin- al London Decision Sunutied Up. W with these details In mind, the decision ot the London conference can As, to the be concisely summarised. flared sum, It was .decided that Germany is. should that should pay $12,506,006,000, issue bonds to her creditor for this sum, coincided exactly with total. This figure the conservative figures of the financial experts of all nations, American as well Germany. as European. In point of fact, i her note to Mr. Hughes, had suggested with Im It around this sum, but hedged possible political and financial conditions. been had Her greatest actual offer 21. Flying AIEROEKN, t. D, Msy which whipped their plane gbeut tike s leaf, was the experience of A. W. Nelson of V1 city and Art Wlntheleter of Minna spoils, whllt making their first official trip as Yellowstone air route pathfinders near Webster, A, D., Thursday, according to the stories of the aviators today. Although neither of the fliers wee hurt, their plane . wee wrecked, . l was getting dark and the rein was doming down herd. I have never seen tuoh rain before,' Neleen said. had the force of hell and rattled against ths sides ef the plane like marbles. We did not dare to try to. shoot up above It. As we neared Webster, the wind begat to' twist, and we found ouraelvoe turning abdut In tho air like a leaf. I thought our auroly ship was out of control 'and wo v would crash." The tornado did approximately $80,- -' 000 damage to farmhouses In an ares . thirty miles about Webster, 'It $jo, 006,000, 000. .Having Issued these bonds in two batches, $3,000,000,000 before July 1 and inande3f , Another Sensational Sale DONT PUT IT OFF of Gerrrihny was three payments - amounting In the total to $760,000,000 ait $1,500,000,000 before November 1, Gerintotally, the first to be made on or bemany was asked to agree to certain fore June I, amounting 'to $350,006,060,. t erest apd sinking fund charges to carry be made on November 1 ir Xhe bonda. JTiUs ifSDBaottonto ttre Second toto "the and as dust, the third to "be equal took two foimi First, Germany made' after the end of the first year of A agree to pay $500,00.000 annually. that the gold Germany's foreign trade and to total 2s if ahouid be understood every instance. per cent of the gross of her exports. fJand&rd in Indicated . SEE THEM TOMORROW ilLLID-- A Sale That Will Make Your? Dollars Have More Sense i f Never, before have such stupendous savings been made on such wonderful TRIMMED HATS. Extra salespeople iextra space and arranged ontables to make your selection easy. . We have gone through our entire stock and, because of a surplus, are offering hats that in many cases cost 14s three times the price you pay. - But they must be cleared in a' gigantic sale Monday at straight-ou- t payment. Sec' to turn over First Payment Due June 1. ondly, ahe was required ' vuJiue equal to 25 per cent of her now to pay Literally, Germany has exports, $256,000,000 on or before June 1. This is the first duty. And in her note to rnmerce Levy Figured. Mr. Hughes, Germany did offer to make In It will be seen that, since the such a payment,- either in gold or of equivalent foreign securities and bills aim lit. 1 Interest and jinking fund charge outlined the terms to amount credit. By accepting oil the $12,500,000,000-wrop- ld above and making the payment on June 5260,000,000, and only $500,000,000 was repayment, the 1, Germany would place ofherself in subquired by the Btrarght-o.the supreme mission to the verdict ijlurn from the levy upon the total of council and thus eliminate dll question the tl' $T50,OOo!oob to take care of the fixed of sanctions, which in realty meant ot tho Ruhr. This was the sum of bonds which the supreme coun occupationGerman to had statesmen face, issued. problem London decided must be the ultimatum, which was before the war the export trade in considering had passed $2,000,000,000 an to expire on May 13. r old ms that no one, looking to seems the if prosperity It qtiaily. Thus, turned, Germany could, on the basis of at these figures, can describe the London the the $2,000,000,000 figure and through decision as excessive. Italy, one of the h 35 per cent tax,be asked to pay mot victorious nations In the war, will have $(230,000, 000, which waa required to meet to pay to her allies, Britain, France and ( the Interest charge on the bonds actuthe United States, accepting the same also for rate of interest ahd amortisation, not ally proflded for at London, but this At point, lees than $360,p,000 annually, substandp additional $250,000,000. tfeen, it would be possible to ask Gertially half of the sum required of Gertalked-ofmany to Issue more bonds, since, it would many, and Italy lacks all ths raw which are the baala of prosperity he demonstrated In advance that ahe . In the modern Industrial .world. Cerdould bear the extra burden these hair-raising Moreover, thus Informed, the tainly If Italy can pay her allies Space does not permit our going into a detailed description of all the different styles, as and she has announced that she feoney markets of tile world might be additional be will there no disapmeans to do this, then Germany can expected to absorb these they are too numerous to mention. We will say7 however, that Jkuids, None 0. 0. D. None fairly be asked to pay her victims a pointments., We will have the hats that we advertise, but vie advise an early selection. sum twice as large, representing a total Bill $33,000,000,000. far Inferior to the costs of restoring the Exchanged. shs has created and yielding nothHere, then, we have the ingenious at ruins ing to meet ths enormous cost which tempt to levy on the prospective pros- her attack Imposed upon the perity of Germany, without arbitrarily of Britain, France, Italy and, taxpayers for that burden which might provempoalng matter, the United 8tates, conftlier too great or too small. In counDEPARTMENT-THIR- D DEPARTMENT-THIR- D fertility with this plan the supremeUie re- Bonds Distributed. cil ordered that, if and when, turns from the export tax ehould Hie To use another standard, what Gerto a. point which warranted it, more many Is required to pay absolutely, that a fur is, $766,000,006, Is just about ft third of German bonds should Issue, up-tBier value of $28,560,006,060. This would what Great Britain will have to pay the German obligation United States for the borrowed millions total make the M3, 000, 060 000, taking into account the of war loans. Or, to put It another way, tgmal $12,500,060,066. The right to Is- the aum total of what Germany Is asked sue the bonds waa vested with the repa- -' for unconditionally, represents Just about rations commission, to whom Germany what Europe will have to pay the United AfrSM issued them In advance and In blank, Si States for the moneys advanced by This figure of $33,066,006,666 represents to the nations which were attacked hr - tiie allied bill mads up against Germany, Germany. open mar- than thirty year ot uninterrupted pay- they resided at Harrlsvtlle for a few years form, but will be announced In detail later. such an Untiring worker as Mr, Caines at hi the reparations commission In accord Now as to the $12,500,006,600 bond Is- must sell these bond In the and removed to Plano thirty-foyears However, In a general way, th celebration th head. Mr. Dalnea was raid with the terms of the treaty of Verket. Thus, you may say without exag- ments of bonds are over to the be turned sue, In the last analysis there are not less ago. He had made farming his principle will consist of a pioneer and patriotic th executive committee lastchairman total demanded sailles, and covered, roughly speaking, bv the reparations commission to the year .and geration that the sum sufficient disthan to and in three each that through meeting In the morning. The governor handled the affair Tie excellent fashion. , time, occupation during reparation problems, all of ths costs ot actual restoration; of Germany will ifqt be on the basis of participation nations a measure quite distinct. You have first his thrift and perseverance had attained of Idaho will be present-- , a well as promthat ia, of meeting the costa Inc.dent ad-to agreed upon long ago. Thus, France will i charge the debt owed by the European ,, to persqade er compel Germany to acsuccess. inent church official. The afternoon will destruction In war and. in to th MARRIED BY JUDGE. . .. receive 62 per cent, which reprecienta ap- Mr. White Is aurvjved by hi widow and be taken up with th to the terms of the allies, which recept pay in of were retained certain dollar usual attraction, Europe pensions, proximately $ 600.000.000; Britain 22 per categories dition, Bean RUPERT. Idaho, May 21. Mis her to provide and agree to bear the following children, one having died In such as baseball, boxing, wrestling, etc. 'flue last item was inserted in the treaty cent, or $2, 756,000, 000: Italy and Belgium tor reconstructions. bo sold on tho mar- quire the costs - of - $1X600,060,006 Franca- - October ,20, 1913, while. . In the A special effort wlll be made to enter- Declaim anil Elmer .TUnitoey were maiubdl American protest a$d each 10 per cent, or $1,250,060,000 apiece, But can the bond gninst'the tain the' pioneers who may attend. The Tuesday by service of his country: Mrs. Clara Peterw rough the clever tactics of General the small balanca will be distributed kets of the world? This, after all, ia th which may under certain circumstances Judge W. InB.Hardy. They son, Bellingham, Wash,; Mrs. Hattie Cox, success of tba celebrati Xon , Smuts. Europe believes, be Increased. assured wih will make their home Twin Falla among several other nation, whose really grave problem. Wood-roVou to next have those Mrs. the market bonds. St. that London Seipert, Anthony; Mary Paris trusts, hope, will be Insignificant, shares But tha Mrs. Amy Oakey, Yerlngton, Nev.; the larger por- It they are to serve the single purpose terms Restated. French have already expended freer $$, United State will absorb for which they are obtained, namely, to Mrs. Caddie Peterson, Plano; Mrs. Manilla of this German issue. In reality the To sum up, then, the financial phase 000,600,060 on actual reconstruction work tion market Is the only market in save continental Europe, France, Belgium Dowdle, Weiser; John Whits and Lee the decisions of the supreme council In the devastated area and must spend American and bonds these even conceivably, Italy from Imminent bankruptcy and White, ths latter having served his coun- Were these: at least as much more to rebuild the which, Germany get started on the way to ''normalcy sold, always provided that Gertry two years In France. There also are work having can besooner ftt once ft debt of $12,506,000,006, issuing houses, the reconstruction In the economic world once more. or later accepts the condisixteen grandchildren. bonds for the same within six months, hitherto been limited to restoring roads, many But In there London. Funeral service were held In the Plano laid down canals, railways and clearing the fields tions reasonable chance that the peoffle Must Maintain these bonds to be distributed pro rata and ward Army. meeting house Thursday, with Bishop any putting them to work. One may say, of the United States will consent to In8 he should also among her creditors. Earnest Blaser officiating. A short service accurately, that the actual pay- vest another $13,500,006,600 In European Undertake to pay a fixed annual charge quite you have to Insure continued was held at the cemetery, under the diFinally, ment demanded of Germany would In no rf $506,660,600 in two semiannual payto $12,000,006,000 German payment over a period of years, rection of the Order of Woodmen, of which in addition the first to be made before June instance meet the (mats of making good securities, ments, loan and at least $5,000,. the shortest conceivable span of which Mr. White was a member. I-- of German arms on land on seas and In government is thirty year. Mere signing of the Lonthe current year. Finally she what credits already 066,660 m private tould agree to turn oven a sum equal In the air actually destroyed. don contract means nothing conclusive. 15 -cent Mere disposition of th - bonds in ths te ft per levy upon her exports, Planning'Ilia an additional i per cent, which was Marketing of Bonds Discussed.'' U. S. Doubtful Purchaser. money markets of the wrorid, colossal ft be utilised for further bond issues is amount th to decisive. will task, But the Issue nothing $12,500,900,000 pond hen nd If made.- - Just Is there even any real baala for be- In the Jast analysis, there remains the net the jum which la repreof the almost endless task' of compelling paythe government from thl export trade levy did actually sented by the face value? The bunas lieving that would 21. The Stuntexceed May Idaho, FRANKLIN, United States accept the $266,666,066 annually, the ment, of compelling It in 1621, in 1621, in an Interest rate of 5 per cent, but of bonds, or any considerable part 1641, In 1661 and perhaps Jn 1901. sum total of German, payments would be carry twelfth annual celebration of Idaho day Ihe present current rata of Intereet le of the notes $760,000,606, and the aggregate total of far higher, and good American railway thereof, in return for the And how are you to compel without will be held June 15 in this city. German bonds would not pass the $12,. securities, for example, ar. disposed of allied countries already held, and thus force? How are you going to find fore Th board of govemote has appointed 6oO 060,060 mark. 1th. difficulty at a 7 per cent rate of become completely entangled In the po- if you do not keep it in hand? But this the following member of the celebration This is 611 that la Immediately irn por- Interest. Judging by existing conditions, litical "ks well as th economic problems means, in practice, the Jtent committee: W. M. Datnes, Jr., executive maintaining In the- new reparations program. then, the German bonds must be issued of Europe? Actually, If we did thia, we French army at war strength, or at fh L. W. Hatch finance; L. A All the rest la entirely speculative, for much below par. Thus th actual yield should be the most interested party In strength which existed before th actual chairman; B. R- - Parkinson, sports; program; Young, would and ft Id clear that the total of Oerman ex- to the creditor German In re and a payments, conflict nation compelling resented pe will not be $12,666,. E. Woodward, advertising, and F. Frank And if there 1 a French army E. Durrani, decorating. Much lower ports may not tor a number of years 000 000, hut um, which not impossibly find ourselves presently arma. Just as there is pass the $1,000,006,000 mark. Thua, for will be the price which can be obtained obliged toto cancelto the German bond or there will be Th committee Is working hard and Is e present you can say quits exactly In the open market sure to be a Polish, a Rumanian, etc. compel payment. for these bonds. resort If force determined that th celebration shall be ofnot does State ImJL-ttUBut the theJUnlted London conference-de- w .Geransumed a XbAve -- better than the-bro- wn Moreover... France. Italy -- and . Belgium that --a- nd-grayver Th proittwhaf Wegev-an- d. ficially or through private channels "con many will submit to the allied terms; I gram for the day la yet In a tentative sent to accept the German bonds, to mean give nominal assent. In the end absorb them, TT the American Investors Ibid .must Jte regarded certain, but will not consent to purchase many bil- openly or covertly, ehe withholds con-if, lions or take these billion a an offset sent, even temporarily, each for American loans, then the European here set forth will be Increased difficulty materibe much Improved, ally - and new difficulties will obviously situation wllbfiot even if Germany willingly or unwillingly spring up on all sides submits to the London decision. . The (Copyright, 1921, by the McClure News- - fv new book of Andre Tardieu describing paper Syndicate.) , the whole Paris conference should be carefully examined by ail Americans at 0 this time, to get ft clear notion of what Boise Europe then expected andbevond doubt i . still expect of the United States in th matter of financing world rehabilitation. - This was a f for-4l- fn ' f ut The Values Are fat From $6,00 to. $15.00 Come, rain or shine, and profit by this wonderful event of CHILDRENS TRIMMED HATS. bargains all in your favor. Two hats to a ma-teri- d. 0, will be the most 95c This , sensational, gigantic, HAT SALE ever held in this city of ours. customer. lilies MILLINERY MILLINERY FLOOR TAKE ELEVATOR o FLOOR TAKE ELEVATOR 21 I ur in-bo- . 1 100 Kolinsky Dye 1 and Taupe . Franklin Is Idaho Day Celebration $12,506,-060,0- . both coats are beautifully all silk Imed These are pos itive $125 values and were received late ' ' Saturday. a, Catholic Cathedral Installs Handsome Organ Heres Why Youll Like Knight Coal - It holds up under storage without slacking. It will be the same clean coal nine months hence that it is now. Special to TH Tribune. Values Problematical. The thing France, Belgium, Italy must have Is money, not bonds. And the publics of this country are stocked to saturation with the issues of their own It Is out of the question governments to believe that If and when German bonds are issued- - tha. French, ltaUan.-a.nc- l Belgian publics can take up the amounts Issued to their several countries, and thus supply funds for their governments to, complete the work of national rehabilitation. The real and immediate value of the German reparations bonds Is exactly the value placed upon them by the American Investing public. At the. Paris conference the continental nations believed that the European United States would do two cancel Us war loan to the alliea and purchase the German reparations bond issues. The expe talion was not lin ited to the continent, for It is the main thesis of Mr. Keynes In his notorious book, although he suggests further loan rather thdn American absorption of German issues. - Tardieu says, and Mr. Lamont denies, that th American financial experts agreed to the cancellation and discussed favorably the subject of fresh credits. Read the latest from Paris will and It ba apdispatches preciated that the same general Idea obtains, now that even in a limited degree we have returned to the councils of the , allied nations, , things-Namely, Knight Coal burns freely, leaving a clean, brown ash. It is Utahs great hard coalr How many tons may we deliver to you? Supreme Problem Remains. And hiving noted these difficulties,, there remains the supreme problem of whether Germany will actually pay when he- - ha accepted the London agreement, Mi? IW Oftefp 'V tKiKjj provided she doe accept It without condition, If she refuses to meet new obligations as she ha evaded all past engagements, then we Ire back at tha old problem of collection by force. -- Moreover, this problem does not concern th Immediate present, but holds good for a future almost Indeterminate; for at lowest th decision binds her to more j Da mail orders filled. BOISE, Idaho, May 21 On of the largest pipe organs In th northwest, which ranks with th best In the west, has just been installed and dedicated In St, John's Catholic cathedral In this city. It was built by th Teller's-Ken- t Organ company of Erie, Pa., and ha three manual end fifty .tops Practically--thentire organ Is inclosed in swell boxes, enabling the organist to control the volume of sound at will. Indlvldauliv the various stops are of beautiful quantity The case of the organ Is of of tone simple but Impressive design, end harmonizes with th Interior of the cathedral, Just completed at a cost of thousands of dollars. It is on of the most beautiful church edifices In the west and ha been finished under the directions of Bishop Tan-tM. Gorman by and with the aid of financial assistance ot Catholics In all parts of the state. Extraordinary Early Settler of Plano Dies Suddenly at Home Building New Would Cost $12, 000 ' W-y- . OUR BIG i :V '. a.r j e el ' gpecl.l to The Tribune. REX BURG, Idaho. May 21. Thomas Reed White, one of tho first settlers of Plano, died at his home lost Saturday of a complication of aliments, from which he had suffered for past taro years Mrs. White and several of the children wer with him at the time of his death The afternoon had been spent on the porch. Mr. White feeling better than at any time since his return from Washington, where he bad spent the winter, with the hope-o- f recovery. He had expressed a desire to be taken Into the house and as he was being carried Into his room, he expired Mr. White was horn In Salt Lake 'December 5, 1859, and spent th early part of hi life on a ranch near Ogden. He worked In the mine at Bingham for about nine year. At the age of 25 he..ws 0T Ogden and rled to Betty Anne-Layma- Bargain -- have one of these laid -- and . away. CONTINUED MONDAY' AND TUESDAY, Buy one coat, suit or dress ia stock and get another garment of equal value free. Land Is Worth' $7200 Reduced Price for All Is $6500 Little & Little 807-- 8 - McIntyre Building. i Mbad - 009 JXAA' $y. iD ' J |