OCR Text |
Show y. , WEATHER. fH Thursday 0,ntrl,y f,P Wednesday nd ehowers wwtA portion, local v; south; - - tot1 Stlr.r Donrttc- Lead (cathode Copper 99 V " "" btt,rr, Price. foreign ,,...57 Ho f&v 113.00 - Tribune's 24 PAGES SALT LAKE CITY, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JUNE 1, 1921. VOL. 103, NO. 48. h FIVE CL RAIL LABOR BOARD ISSUES WAGE CUTTING ORDER; U. S. APPROACHES POWERS ON DISARMAMENT PLAN Antidry Parade Provokes Rival Camp to Action YORK. 1. May Th parade hero big on July 4 Sews for Living in City Hospital i'. -- d. jProblem of Stability of Forces .Domestic , rope jp n. Issues Into Background. Eu-- ? m rad. liSame Puzzles Included in tt League of Nations Are - t G Giving Most j are pledged parade, ac- for th cording to report from th headquarter of th parad committee. c 1 , marcher' Over-100,0- By MARK SULLIVAN. The Tribaae. Special WASHINGTON, May 31. A good . s'' I I 1 X , fvveblA it la the clearest, fact ta that every other question j has no taken a position Inferior to our At the. begin-- , international relations. three month of th administration, nlng ago, emphasis was l&ld chiefly on our domestic program, on th tariff, on taxation, and on the reorganisation of the 8o far aa emphasis was eminent SdQd on our foreign relations at all, that emphasis was In the direction of making ' tVsshirgton! --v- Europe understand ' -- that we wanted to bav .the least possible to do with her. In a political sense at least. From the time of Hardings Inaugural speech on the fourth of March until Ambassador Harveys speech two weeks ago, the process was one of telling Europe, In louder and louder tones, that as would have nothing' to' do with the league of nations 'The general impression seems to be that Ambassador Harvey effort was sufficiently high pitched to be un-- i ' mlatskable. Problems Unchanged. Leaders Admit Situation. - ft i j, ; The Republican leaders know well sgd frankly admit that our economic prosthe stability of perity Is dependent on that practical! They know Europe everv European country wants to buy They goods and credit In America. know it is to America's Interest to sell In fact, goods and credits to Europe they know that we can't begin a new cycle of rising prosperity until we begin to ship goods to Europe. They know thl would come sooner If the Putted - States would join the league of nation, or would if any other way were found to help to guarantee the stability of the new and old political entities of Europe. They know that if w insist on a policy rbf Isolation, thadate of stability for Europe and consequent prosperity for us may be much longer postponed than If we were willing to take a hand In guaranteeing th stability of Europe. A ' however great the economic motive may be toward going In, the political motive for staying out Is the greater. I Copy-righ- t. T21 T bv Eveslng Post, the REPORTS TERMED New York Inc.) WASHINGTON. May 31. Five men were killed and ten others seriously injured by the explosion today of a bomb at the Aberdeen, Maryland, army proving grounds during preparations for airplane bombing experiments, according to reports received here late .tonight. An Immediate Investigation ha been ordered by the war department to determine the cause of the explosion. The dead were Private A. A. Bhermer, Fourteenth, and E. H, Crlnnel, Fourteenth squadron, air service. Captain J. E. Hall, air service, of New Haven, Conn., It was aald, was not expected to live , He waa wounded severely about the eves and face. First Lieutenant C. G, Elleson, air Mr., the reservice, of Hagerstown, port said, was expected to recover. He received a deep wound just above th right hip. First Lieutenant Ll R. Reese, quartermaster corps, of Owynnbrook. Md., also was expected to recover. Hla thumb and fifth fingeg of the right hand had been removed.. Private Samuel Weinstock of the urth ordnance company, suffered a punctured lung and waa not expected to recover. r- Thirty-fo- Private I. S. jllte of the Fourteenth equadron, air service ; P. W Halt and M. D. Bleztn of the same organisation; C. J. ONeill of the Thirty-fourt- h company and Edward Jerry of the same organization. all were wounded and recovery wpe reported doubtful R M. Herr, a civilian employed on the grounds, was said to be suffering severely from tbe shock of th explosion. Privates S. P. Maace, ordnance company; J.. J. Titlow of the Thirty-fourt- h ordnance company and R F. Bohls of th same organisation were less severely wounded. Neither Major Borden nor Captain Roberts attempted In oral reports tonight to fix responsibility. They said they had been unable to ascertain the full facts, but Would make a thorough Investigation. 7 hev were ordered to Aberdeen by airplane upon receipt of first- reports ef th explosion According to other reports however, d a bomb rolled from the airplane and was struck by tha rudder as the plan swung around th fifty-poun- Postponement Refused in - Stillman Divorce Case NEW YORK. May 31. Requests for a postponement of the hearings in the Stillman divorce case by John D. Mack, guardian ad litem for Guv, and by attorneys for Mrs. "Fifi Stillman, the defendant, were refused today b Cornelius Sulilvsn of Nicoll Anabele, Fuller & Sullivan, attorneys for James A Stillman, the plaintiff. The hearings begin at 10 o clock tomorrow forenoon before Referee Daniel ue Gleason st Poughkeepsie, and wi'l Thursday The first request for further delay was made by Mr. Mack, who had other legal engagements for the next two days. At Mr. Macks request. George Conglll of Taft, attorCadwalader. Wlckersham neys of record for Mrs. Stillman, conveyed this Information to Stillman During the afternoon a second request for postponement came to Mr Sullivan from the office of Stanohfield A Lew of counsel for Mrs Stillman. The message said John B. Stanchfieid, senior number of that firm, had another engagement for tomorrow. Mr, Sullivan replied that Stillman was en route to Poughkeepsie and that he would not consent to any further delay In the hearings Cun-tln- Radical Newspapers Given Second-clas- s - Privileges i WASHINGTON May 11 The MilwauTork Call were rekee Leader and New eecond clast mailing to the stored today was announced by th privileges, it department these two Us of the mails were denied Postmaster by former Newspapers daily of character the because General Burleson of the matter appearing In their columnIn In relation to American participation the war post-offi- -- ABSUFO. Recent In control In May ll Washington, the militarist now itr Five Are Dead, Ten Hurt in Accident at Proving Ground in Maryland. Forty-seven- And vet th fact Is that today th body of questions which are included In the league of nations Is precisely the luydv of questions to which our government is giving most concern, and which. Incidentally, Is giving most noconcern to Inconsistour government There is ency in this, and It is probably entirely Harding undoubtaccording to schedule edly regarded It aa his first business to of get it clearly into the understanding Europe that the verdict of our people on the league of nations had been such that his administration must stay out of it, and that Europe must adjust herself fo tills condition before Hardings administration could make any progress with .Europe toward .a. different . sort nf understanding. Anyone who wishes a short cut to understanding of the administrations position ran get it, in a wav. by rememberwhat Is poing the distinctionIs between economic. litical and what Politically w will have nothing to do with Europe, economically all our concern is with Europe. Politically we will tak no hand In th stabilisation of Europe or In th en- I maintaining of any of the political All our economically titles of Europe concern Is in the direction that Europe j .shall b stabilised as qulcklv asof possible and that the various nations Europe shall arrive as soon as possible at a state where the world feels secure about -- e their permanence. - by Preliminary rs by Peking" for th arrest of I)r. Run Tat Ren, head of the Canton government In Oh is, war characterised a a "absurd today In a statement Issued by Ms Soo, Hr Bun's personal representative here To order Rr Sun s capture when knowing full well that It could not be don the statement said, "was a confession of utter impotence' Put-O- ut t-as State-Departmen- to Parleys. SAVES BOYS LIFE; SUCCUMBS. 3. ALLIANCE, Neb, May 31 -J- ohna few Vance 60, died auddenly yeaterday ha had Jumped Into a pool minute after boy from of water to sav ato th reocue Vane Prior drowning. sidecement a work building had been at the shock walk and phvalclan aaid that while In water cool of plunging into the an overheated condition ' caused heart .. failure - Tribune-Sa- lt President Is Policy of Assistance Considering Further Hearings Involving ' Filed Since Dipute Government to Systems. April Proposal Discussed at Cabinet Meeting Made Pub-licNational CapitaL 'ARTHUR Monday. gin Pay Decreases Now Made Embrace Em, Effective ployees of' 104 Carriers. at B to-Be- SEARS HENNING. CHICAGO, May 31. (By ths Associated Press) An estimated 3400,060,606 will WASHINGTON, May 31. To relieve the financial plight of the railroad as a Ltadftp of tht big navy proponents In tho be slashed from the nation s railway wage bill when an order cutting wage , ftght on tho Lon root amendment. vital step- - In reviving business. President an average of 12 per cent to be habded Harding Is considering the adoption of down tomorrow by tbe United Btates the following policy of government asrailroad labor board . becomet effei tlv e, sistance' July I, The order affecta member of 1. Immediate pay ment to the railroads thirty-on- e labor organization, employed of 3400,000,000 due In compensation from on 104 railroads. the period of government operation and While the decrees is specifically appayment as fast as adjusted of tha railplied only to th road whose cases have road undermalntenanc and other claims, been heard by the board, the decision the total remaining amount which ths It may later be applied to any other says railto Ig the pay obligated government road asking hearing under prot talon estimated these under heads being roads of the transportation act. at 31 800,000,000. Percentages ef reductions computed by 2 Funding of the railroads 1800,000,000 to Cut members of the board gave the average debt to the government for capital ex- Lenroot of 12 per cent, and the same source es6 per cent penditures into flfteen-yoa- r Appro- timated the annual reduction in wages $15,000,000 obligations at approximately 400,000,006. Under th present system of settlement, The decision brought reductions varyin Senate th government deducting from the priation ing from five to thirteen cents an hour, railroads ths amounts It owes th or from I lo 18 per cent, and In the BRIAND amounts ths rsllroada owe the governcase of eectien- - laborers wiped out the Is th th in Tilbur.-SalRiot Under president Are t policy ment,, Lake Tribune ImH Wire. mere Chicago VOTED CONFIDENCE granted them by ths 600,000,-00- 0 would prothe 31 g WASHINGTON, government considering, May of July 20, 1920. wage for Ha unanimously expressed desire Gov- ceed to pay what It owes carriers and in PARIS, May 31. By the Associated men the reduction was approxithem fifteen years to play their debt for an International naval holiday, the section give confivoted senate Th 18 today Press.) per cent, or from 31.70 to mately senate today made It emphatically clear $3.02 dence In Premier Briand , In connection per day Troops to th government United State Is determined to that the with the reparations settlement, Thevote Discussed by Advisers. go the limit In naval building unless (Jreat Reduction Is Varied. wa 377 t 3F , Tb proposal Wa discussed at .(he Cab Britain and Japan agree to join In a proBwltchmen and shop ctafts weie arose Th question of confidence during Okla., Juno I (3 a. m ) (By Inst meeting today and later at luncheon, TULSA, reduction program. a 3 per cent reduction, while tialn given servdiscussion of the budget expense recovAssociated Press.) Two white per- to which ths president Invited Senator portionate the By a vote of 35 to 30, It rejected an ice men were cut approximately J per erable from Germany. The radical so- sons and one negro ar known to be dead Cummins, chairman of th senate comof Lenroot amendment offered Senator by csnL Car repairers were cut shout 10 cialist, M. Hery, presented a motion that and many other persons Injured, some mittee on Interstate commerce, and the decision at th London conference be seriously, as a result of 'race rioting James C. Davis, director general of rail- Wisconsin, Republican, to cut $15,000,000 per cent. bill naval Common labor pay, ever whkh the referred to 'the finance and foreign com- which broke out here late last night. roads. Senator Cummins approved ths from tho appropriation In th fur carrying out th program to mak tha railroads made their hardest- fight, is ta a' mittees. Three unit of national guardsmen were plan th president is considering, but United States the foremost sea power In be reduced ( to M. Briand. In asking for a vole of contj cents an hour, tut- ordered out by Governor Robertson, and took Issue with President Hardings beUng freight truckers average monthiv fidence, said he wa not the on to adopt early today officials believed the situa- lief that freight rates should b reduced the world by 1924. The Lenroot amendment would have reduced the appropria- toss to $9710 and track laborers to a policy which disregarded the agreement tion well under control, although armed Immediately. 11, ronstrnc-tio- n $7 This new schedule atilt give $53,000,000 for battle-i'- y the allies had reached at London and whites and negroes were still In ths At the White House It was stated that tion of men an average dally .wage of action during the fiscal year, 1912, to $38 which sought fo obtain from Germany a streets. dav , altituugu there might b a communication from 000,600. The total amount carried in the 13 38 for an eight-hou- r testimony offered b. tne greater amount than the reparations com Minor clashes continued at frequent in- tha president tomorrow on the project bill for naval construction Is appruxlmats-l- y considerable showed roads common labor $105,000,000. wages . a mlttee'had swarded. tervals. It was believed that many of he has In mind. In the debate preceding the vote on tbe low as 31 50 for ten hours The exchange of views between London the casualties had not jet been listed. Senator Cummins said th government Lenroot amendment. craft Bhop Senator Poindexter employees and train and 900,0u0.000 of the rail and Paris regarding a meeting of th of Washington, acting chairman of the engine service, men except, these is pasThe trouble Is believed to have started acknowledged servh-eclaims and pointed out that Presl naval are reduced 6 tent an senger "the that notice served committee, supreme council to consider the Si- when a negro was arrested late Tuesday roads' dent Harding had authority to order th big navy faction which he represented, hour. Construction amt section foremen lesian question has reached a sort of for an alleged attack on a white girl. payment of this amount. He expects on would naval are reduced 10 tents an hour. International that insist any dead center. Mr. Lloyd George, British About 7 o'clock, automobiles filled with of the principal railroads to instituta suit reduction agreement entered by the United Passenger and freight engineers who court of claims at an early date In must be based on an American were given Increases of 10 cents and ll prim minister, Is insisting that the pre- armed negroes appeared on the principal tor the settlement of Its claims, which will States, cent an hour by the l2u award are to miers meet previous to th creation of streets, headed for the county court- form th basis of th settlement of all navy equal to that of Great Britain. be cut and 3 cent an hour reipeetive-wh- o 81 an expert commission to examine the received increases ef 12(5 and U the claims. Pacifists Criticised. house, where the negro was confined. CumSenator said In 1926 are cut ?r4 and i eents reagrees. cent "Everyone leslan problem Shortly after the jail had been sur- mins, The senator Intimated that the disarms, spectively. the railroads must b kept that Premier Briand handed the American rounded by approximately 200 negroes, running ment advocates were, on the whole, carryTrain dispatcher and yardirtasters, ambassador hers last evening a note re- several armed whit men appeared. ing on ths tradition of pacifism which op- whose avontnly earnings average 3.60 u $270. are cut 8 cents an hour posed war with Germany when Germany The first firing occurred when a negro No Rate Reductions. peating the French argument and dwellto run amuck on the high era Th smallest reduction will to and his gun It Is all very well to talk of rate re- attempted ing upon the Impossibility of the premiers was stopped by an officer to "If we are to maintain a policy of office boys and other employeesapplyunder acbe reduced at cannot He rates result, but taken attempted away. ductions, based 1 a all effective action the peace the, with world, previous jo taking peace years old, whtrwhl receive 3 cents an to the officer, and waa shdt this tim They cannot be reduced until on and the protection of the right hour less, examination of the question by ths ex- cording " dead. Three hours later his body was the coat of operation comes down. There and justice f of American cltiaens, then we live to In taken that direction, police and street some the from are hopeful signs perts picked need strong navy, said Senator Poin- Clerks Are Reclassified. when we propose to cut rates, we dexter. but headquarters A call for Governor Robertson was put must be prepared to face a deficit of Germans to Disarm. Clerks trt 'reclassified so (bat enter Senator Lenroot argued that there was and within a half 3600.000.- 000 to 31.000,000, OoO, which the In about 11 o having Ins clerks, usually )ouitg men and OBERGLOGAU, Upper Silesia. May Si. hour Adlutant clock, necessity for .the United Slates General Barrett had or- government would have to pay under no IU retelv mn of 1$ to 20 said and he old, In the world, W dont want to the largest navyfor (By the Associated Press ) German de- dered national guard troops at Muskogee. present conditions. a monthly salary years for ths first of no reason trying to outstrip Great Okla, held force the roads back Into government op- saw . months e0 second mv six fense organizations In this city and in Oklahoma City and Wagoner. three and 4he $77 for j , Tulsa eration. because they probably would cost Britain. in readiness, and had placed the senator think ws ought to months. Clerks with Was than one esr a other towns west of the Oder river will units to telleDoes In the streets This morning the tbe government from $1,100, OUO.uiw siovu rsceivs" off our Bas- every tlroe- we- meet -units formed a cordon about the main 33.000.0- 00.11(10 annually," disprm and disband as soon aa InteralA new monthly sUiedult for floaln asked Senator Great Britain and bow? Samuel Rea, president of the Pennsylreestablished In business section and negro districts. were lied authority-has-beequipment empioxses on ferrl, tugs Poindexter Th mobs about the courthouse vania. told the senate committee that and steam lighter gl es captain very glad to g( L the senator' Upper Silesia, said General von Hoefer, broken without firing by the guards, the question of financing the remainder realI am up mo firemen and oilers $?. deuate $iw, engineers this Into views In gradually this city, but scattered Bring still was heard In of the 3L200. 600,000 capital expenditures commander of German guards month. On lighters and bargee capunderper I Do Lenroot. Senator replied Is to the before vital roads dayby- the government will Hod rscfe( to $120 tains jesterday. He added that the allies several sections shortly from senator f engineer the stand the position at this time be $140 to $160 and duties $100. should be thankful that the Germans had break, Transcontinental railroad freight rate Washington to beintothat he will not for The attitude uf ihe raimay unions lo to enter agreement any ocean meet to 1 willing altered competiorganized these men- - and had maintained Police are being June MUSKOGEE. Okla ward ths de. reaes ordered remains to leu nr, in that of armament Palimitation order Instead of trying to disarm and this morning were guarding all roads tion between the Atlantic and the be are determined. The big brotherhood la stipulated I t the United Panama canal. Edward j agreement It be disband the defense troops at this critical leading from Muskogee to prevent the cific via the shall ,the first naval power in expected ta meet hers July i to comttdr of the States vice Atchison, after Chambers, for president Tulsa, of armed negroes tho board decision. leaving world?" time. been warned that ft movement had Topeka and Santa Fe, told the committee the"On hav hard hit by th Claiming they the contrary, 1 db not want the "We lo not want to keep these men beeningstarted among the negroes to join winter slump la business railroad titan I do but to be the first, State United Statement. Tulsa Chamberss necesat the arms with rioter a minute than forces have been longen under etenioring for tower want It to be the equal of anv other, agement wages and the decision mill mark tip I, mvseif, "We ahail fix the 'rAtes from San Fran- answered Senator Poindexter sary, he went on. "but we must protect BONE NAMED ALASKA GOVERNOR. cisco first relief granted by the board sine to New York to meet the water will not agree to entering Into any agreeourselves 31 Scott C carriers," Mr. Chambers said, "and then ment of a limitation of armament except It set the advanced sags seals more than . Mav Wash SEATTLE, von Hoefer lost his right aim Bone. New General months ago tho bast that we eball be assured ten iork, former Washington and modify the Interior rata structure so that Th dsclalon tomorrow will say that during the great war. 11 has repeatedly Seattle newspaper editor, prominent tn Kansas City. Chicago and Cincinnati, for upon that the United Statea will tobe substanaa same rate that will ths 1&2Q sags award there has Deen the been ir( prevented the Germans from starting a4 national politics get has for other any Instance, and practically equal years, a decreaa In tho coat of living and general advance, rising one morning at Tork, and producers in all points tially In the world upon the. aeae. governor of Alaska to suc- to New power basis." of wages for similar kinds of on seals a oclotk to send orders to Germans al-to appointed the be competitive was announced placed It will ceed Thomas Riggs, Jr., work in other Industries Kas In' general ready under wav toward the Oder Mr. Chambers discussed Panama canal Lenroots Argument. todav by Secretary of the Interior Fall water the decreaatid. that Ibeas (so point were disH a shirr gt on spectaT Competition, declaring to iwrenlmg lie-OnSMd WASHINGTON, May 31 (By the As- ths chief contention of ths railroads. rates should be regulated. olucas One ) patch to the I his In PreB Mr he should rates sociated supporting fixed, "Reasonable The Chief Contention. Chambers said. "The public would be amendment. Senator Lenroot expressed the ports of the the opinion, In which Benaior J llliame. better served. Between 4he offered la hearing, that Testimonywas 1 nlted States, the water carriers should Democrat, Mississippi, concurred, began 4irll IS and ended May 1, be under the jurisdiction of the inter- the United States should not become which 26 lo 50 per cent of to reductions show second the and th naval commerce more than commission, strongest state an lug reductions In the cost of living. be high enough to allow the power. Opposing the Lenroot amend' in rates should wages, mostly for common labor, wei Republican Poindexter, Panama (.anal to pay Interest on th ment, Senatordeclared camera The hoar by the for a navy at least also cited the costs of construction Washington, that bee. de islori ssv believes, Repeal of the provisions of tbetrrtB-portatto-railn equal to any Th Lenroot amendment the decrees, was supported by ten Republicans and on th areelements shown act, which declare that fixed justified and required. shall be fixed to provide ten Democrats. Ths former Included freight rates as be said lo tbe or'g , Whatever may Kenon their acto California. the roads return Borah, Idaho, Johnson, adequate contrlbutlmf causes, there has bee or in a bill eing yon, Iowa, Norbeck, Oregon, tual valuation. Is provided Bweet of Iowa, South Dakota, and Norris, - Nebraska and 1 a marked depjsfcavoa tu lsdusuv. drafted by Representative the board says "Aa a result heavy f Included of the house Inter- The Democratic supporters Republican, membercommerce have been suffered, si nanctal ki committee. and Arlsona, Wyoming; foreign Kendrick, Ashurst, state of thousands thrown Leased Wire. - The state would, therefore, not only many hundreds and and Sheppard. Texas. Utah, Chicago Tribune-Bel- t King, ft criminal have to this kws cl purrh but prove guilty, Republicans were Joined by sev- of nvploymnt HICAQO, May 31. That ft presump-sane Preswould him has scoeieistsd also them DISCUSSES have by CONGRESS Lentn tojvrove power Senator lng en Democrats rejecting tlon of ft prisoners Insanity, In ent procedure places the burden of provn by producing the s proposal. The Democrats included STATES root thev would ot fhe RIGHTS addition to that of hi Innocence, ing Jneanity upon th defense, and. ar mami for products Walsh, Montana. While it hss to Dr. Hickson, there should be wise have purchased may be aeen Incorporated In crimi- eordlng tn fall no the such that, price he presumption argued to WASHINGTON, Mav ?! The issue of Kings Amendment. nal lawris th conclusion reached Almost all murderers and most suiasy large extent the ro reached of Vie states as opposed to the rights In his wlvhout amendment of Senator Dr proposed report cides give plenty Kings aays roer. U has question Hirst i warning. by Dr, William B Hickson the federal government Is threaton all six new battle a tros)y reached and affected, th i we know that the those of of In suspension of work debat of the psychopathic laboratory of th Hickson, "now thatcriminal the become to .subject on also the and ening a mental cruisers except Saratoga tvplc&l dangerous on the subject of higliwavs the bo ith dueer elx ti)ierdrednought municipal court, mads public today. Reductions ptr hour for- various defective, that he is Incorrigible and that congress The Issue thus far hasIn reached th the MoIndiana. Carolina. Nortg Th fundamental principle of criminal he la recognizable early, ours Is the fault lakota. employees follow r the discussion only senate of eald He stage and station forces and crimiIowa Massachusetts. him The Clerical ntana, law for centuries bes been that a man that we do not segregate and post roads committee at of the postoffices soon atx the menchief clerks srl e't as auperdreadnoughts to that be are Storekeepers, nals recognized on coming to he completed the shall be presumed to be Innocent until he' tal defectives. hearings should I cent class be completed. If proven Insane, they Townsend bill to establish an Interstate California supervisory forces.more Hlck-gbon the hie amendment ground He Dr. to or years experle-- 3 urged to an Clerks Institution sent (two could be If proven guilty. .According Expert hlghwaj evstem and to create a federal on that theory rents ' jlhe Members of the of economy and also this pre- witnesses testifying for the state almost, highway rommlssion premises. In addition to accused debe should itmatructlon ship capital of always find these criminals normal, end. C0ftthkn6 sumption of innocence, a manto Fat ferred until the value of big ships iq fuCon tbi 11.4 as Page Elena be Insane If acquitted, they are turned loosg again a crime mav be presumed olMina ) ture naval warfare is determined. p oliiniB (lue i , to prey upon the ptib'ic, until he Is proven aane. May 31. "Informal feelers with respect to an International agreement for a reduction oL armaments already have been put out by the American govern ment, It was learned today Th In high administration quarters. purpose, It la understood, was to develop the attitude of foreign governments on the question before any formal negotiations are undertaken. The approaches already made are understood to have been conveyed through American representatives sitting Informally In the allied councils. Th process-- la expected her to be a slow one, and generally the belief ts held that the Informal feeler will be the only dlrct action taken now by President Harding in response to the Borah amendment to the naval bill requesting that the chief executive begin negotiations for a disarmament agreement, j WASHINGTON.- Taxes and Tariff Secondary. , f. Informal Feelers Briand Again Scores Decisive Triumph for Policies French Parliament. Concern. deal vf tlte epic that goes, with Washington consists of recon venation nowaday Witaon marks quoted from or attributed to him. The burden of many of three remark, authentic or alleged, Is Ironic comment on how the Kepubllcin party, having marched violently down th hill from where Wilson took the world, la now turning aswly around and getting ready to rfiarch up again. It would be unfair to Wllabn to Imply that any of his humorous Irony, If he has Indulged In It. has been In any degree touched with malice or the satisThe Jact la faction of 1 told you so quite to the contrary. Wilson has beeh he'pful to Ills present administration In the untangling of our foreign relations in every way that he could help, or that the administration has wanted his help. Also It would be a most incorrect Infer. enc to suppose that any Republican leader las tha faintest notion of going as far up the hill as President Wtlaon one wu. , Lake Tribune Leased Wire ) SI? Vsrg Pavlowa, CHICAGO, May Anna Pavlowa, famous dancer of th ballet Ruts, was fl covered almost In poverty today, sewing In ahospltol for a living. With th discovery was revealed a story of th vicissitudes of war almoNpwitbout a parallel. 'Five years age, Vera Pavlowa was living In Moscow, gh had but on mors step before the became the star "dancer of the Moscow Imperial ballet. Her mother remarried after the death of hor father, and Vara bocama a member of th family of Count Contain. Then came th swift chang In th Russian government,- - All her relatives axcept her deter, Anna, were killed. For month Veya wa hold captlv In a Russian prison, a uf faring with w stab wound In hor back. When aha" waa released from prison aha cam to Chicago, but the-- stab wound wmuld not heal and ah had not entirely recovered from typhus. Finally, ah he said waa taken to a hospital. that Anna had given her soma financial assistance, and had visited her In th hospital whan ah wa her this spring. Vara admits that ah Is not cautious about money. (Chicago ' will have a rival. Th Rov. E. A. Corbett, Wall atroat vsrvgsllst, ha aent latter to all of th nawapapara calling upon "citizens of New York who believe In the con titutlon of th United State and of our nation air that th lay ahouid bo roapactad and enforced" to nd thlr name and addrt.iei to hint for enrollment In a ; "dry pa 1: S. QUESTION Senator Poindexter PaVlowas Sister AGAIN IS Chicago Trlbuaa Kelt Lake Trlbuae Leased Wire, Proposal From Beaten 1 Others Injured Oklahoma Town; ernor Orders Out Notwlth-standin- ar,l. - el-li- en 1 ( bn t.f -- Would Presume Criminals Insane Until Sanity W as Established by the Court V , Lske-Trlbu- Iwen-tv-eig- L OF genera)-depressio- i 1 cl-- " 4 f . ... |