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Show si f EDITORIAL AUTOMOBILES SPORTS MINES FINANCIAL REAL ESTATE Photo Revives Memories of Long Ago i Building Up Devastated Regi3n - A rare photograph, showing former King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra, parents of King George V, present monarch of England, taken in their historic wedding garments Queen Alexandras quaint flowing gown decorated with floral buds, and King Edward in royal robes. How different is Queen Alexandras wedding gown from the oneworn by her granddaughter, Princess Mary, on her marriage to Viscount Laseeilee, recently. Queen Alexandra, iiqw the queen mother of England, still retains much of her beauty, she wak the eldest daugnter of, Christian IX of Denmark and was born in 1844 in Copenhagen. In 1863 the 'married Edward Albert, who ascended to ths throne of England in 1901. Bines hi death in 1910, Alexandra has been honored as tho queen mother of England. TREATY STUB ST Photo shows typical houses under construction in the devastated regions of northern France, being built by German material to replace houses destroyed during the war. This material was delivered by tbs Germans to tho Freueh according to the reparations demands of the alUee. FOR DESTITUTE -- T" ! Ck v , N O- '- i'? $ t J at Genoa Executed s 4 by Conquered Nations While Conquerors Sleep. Refugeei From Revolution Area Reduced to Menial Service in French Capital Alliance With Turkey In--' cluded Thought Possible; United States 'Concerned. Former High Caste Musco vite Serve a - Valetr to Americans in France. Caustic Comment in Berlin Is Directed at . Prime By WILLIAM BIRO. (Copyright. 1922. by Salt Lake Tribune ) PARIS. April- - 22. When there are human beings starving along ths Volga, the voice of reason asks whether it worth wtillo worrying shout - the Zita- -' And yet Hr id easier- for Prince human nature 3npo or 4000 miles away to sympathise with the widowed empress than with the peasant, millions.. Zita. Is real io us; the Russian peasant are only a big round number, an abstraction. And' then, heartless as It may seem to there Is more pity for the high say it who- - falls low than for the low man who simply fails lower. The poor are suffering? Well, they are used to it. But when the rich are thrust down we easily picture their distress and sympathise with it. Zita, they say, Is a charming and delightful lady, while there I nothing either charming or delightful about a mujtk, much less millions of mujlks. Therefore we send food to The mujlks, but we send sympathy the trye charity to Zita. By MAXIMILIAN HARDEN. Special Cable to The Sait Lake Tribune, Copyright, 1928, y Salt Lake Tribune. BERLIN, April feSOne can. well Ima- gin the towering rage of David Lloyd George, . w hen-- The ' Russo --German Irate' agreement wag published si Cfenoa. Uoyd George felt tliat he had the Genoa conference In the palm of Jit band; that he was dealing with a lot of pygmies. , Ldo'd George has been desirous of lees German competition with Brit. ah trade, and that Germany should be the favored nation when the Russian market opes naturally annoys the little Welshman. Lloyd George 1 a, great man for srrtll methods. He still believes his country can be helped by artificial remedies like the last reparations commission note-- detaxation in manding increased Germany, more thug making-Germa- n production from costly and preventing' Germany profiting by the temporary advantage cl exchange depreciation. The prime minister of hla grariouf majesty In Genoa Is ilka a boy wantln to make a eeesaw from a swinging beam, but never getting the right balance because of a lot of clumsy boys climbing on the other end and swinging It violently. Coup - V 1 V ' ANORE TARDIEU. Special Cable to The Salt Lake Tribune. Copyright, 1922. by Salt Lake Tribune. PARIS, April 22. The most Important act in European history Since the armistice has been the publication of the treaty;77- , Tchitchertn and lyithenaU have been able tp bring about the first grouping of '.powers elhce the war.' The treaty," proclaimed by the Russian and German delegate as an economic understanding, Is vitally politleaL Following the war of 1870, the the first to form a similar group, otto von Bismarck, after contreaties solidating his victories, made with. .Austria anclltaly. , Now It is the conquered who are atart-- ! tag groups and taking advantage of their and their extraordinary conquerors apathy, -- Theyve started, not in twos, but threes, for Angora and Turkey are indissolubly united with the soviets, end Hemal's signature may be added to the treaty published at Genoa on April 17. Ths entente powers, divided oa leipor-tant and secondary questions, have de-j-, voted themselves during the last yesrs discusto theoretical and unpractical sions. This Is one reason why ths United States has shown so little interest In the debates and retired Into a systematic iso-- 1 Jation. By ' . Russo-Germ- s' ' Jr e -. '' v k 0 ?. i V.'1 r a ' '.t , x jltJi f - ' A Germans and Kemallsts - have adopted the old way and have made a real alliance. Before compiling a program they have created a very necessary Instrument for Its success. They have united better to defend themselves, or,, 'rather, to free themselves from the conThis Is sequences of ths war peace. serious chiefly because there is nothing enAnglo-Frento them. The opposed tente exists In speeches. No political acts result therefrom. Italy, long accustomed to German alliance, has not recovered her diplomatic position since the war, hence the exnervousness treme but comprehensible which is shown on every occasion. There remain, an ths one hand, France and Belgium, whose have only undertaken the minimum of preventive measures, and on ths other hand the little .entente, which, dismayed by the lack of organisaitself tion in - Europe, . has established alone, not asking advice, but ready for any urgent needn Regarding Great Britain, Lloyd George Imagines, especially during the last few months,- - that he Is leading the world. This la not the case. He never has conUnemployfronted more difficulties. colonial ment, commercial stagnation, troubles and the like are ths greatest in the history of the British empire. They Look Ahead. It Is true that Germany, Russia And circumstances, Turkey are in straitened to look beyond but they are wise enough for their present troubles and to wrork disare victors the future. While the are the mere vanquished forms, cussing endeavoring to group their forces. Their methods will be Judged by the results. Ths United States, by refusing to go to Genoa, avoided mortification and derision that have been inflicted upon the conference originators, but sooner or lawill oblige her ter to participate In the politics which now ere commencing to take shape. alliance, The' perhaps. Is the beginning oftothat alliance, ths Rhine Pacific, from the stretching tire - dangers of which Colonel B M. House pointed out to the peace conference here in 1919. When this - alliance - be takes"TlBflniteShapr the danger will-than scarcely Ides for the United States It will be for France and Belgium. It can be anticipated that these Impressions ofInthe latest events In Genoa will result my being reproached for looking too far anticipating trouble and but I prefer that ahead. This may be so, late. too to coming XK. (J v5y' 3 w, f wjLjntikS itWAilsn. Copyright, Underwood - Underwood, New York. Hugo Stinnes Is Being Pictured As Trade Octopus of the World ch , f v - v- - r German-Luxembou- rg . Siemens-Schucke- WAIL FAR PAWNBROKER AFFLUENT k of Grand Jewelry dot-Sa- ra earn-onl- v.C ' -- .n. Wrath of Lloyd George. Of Minister and at France.. ff- vx- - - v si v i a js Sill Paris 4a full of Zitas, In the shape of RSbslan nobles who emigrated after the revolution. They have been existing most of the months, from proceeds of their Jewelry; but the Jewelry Is pretty well gone now end a lot of them have gone to work. Why shouldnt they? Let them find out how It feels to earn an honest dollar, says the cold voice of reason. And yet there is a. good deal that is pathetic about It Here is a princess, Ten years ago, gentle but for instance. democratic reader, she would not have teen you or me had we prostrated ourselves at her feet. Today she has a and she establishment dressmaking would be happy to have you come and call in her and buy a dress. A real princess, mind you, and she would take-lot of trouble to please. She would take down model after model and try them on you with her own hands. And you would sea that her royal lingers are rough and harsh from sewing, like any dressmaker's, and you would pity her. . Premier Grilled. a - ' ( last, when he had no more diamonds te sell, he offered hla services. An American artist who lives In the country hae a Russian colonel as gardener and man of all work. Another American has a Russian noble ae valet. He Is really a wonderful valet, said It 4s surprising how well the American. he knows his Job. Quite extraordinary: But the poor fellow Is Inclined to be morose. I dont know what to do to distract him. The other evening after dinner he seemed unusually gloomy, so I suggested that he take the evening off and take the cook to the movies. But he didn't seem to cere to do It. I thought it would be a pleasant change for him, cheer him up, you know. Strange, eh? Russian Is Entertainer. Henry Russell, the opera impresario, has discovered the musical talent In a number of Russians and Is working hard to prepare them for the stage. Hie prise pupil is Prince , Obolensky, whose rich basso may yet restore the shattered fortune of- himself) the princess end their live children, now In Paris. The prince made his debut ths other evening at a charity entertainment given by a group of Russians under Mr. Russell's direction. In a private theater, lent for the occasion hy a member of the old French noblHty, the stag was set to represent a Moscow or St, Petersburg An Evening at salon of tho old days. Home With the Russian was announced and the curtain went up disposing a score of princes, princesses, generals, counts drinking tea and smoking. Ths "host requested Count Michael Tolstoy, eon of the great novelist, to play the piano. Then Prinne Obolensky sang a plaintive gypsy song and others gathered around him Bird tomed In the chorus. Madame wife of the reneral, who also was on the state, contributed a vibrant cintralto and later sang solos alternately with the prince. . Splri-dowltc- h, Imagination Brings Hope. It was gypsy music Trlbasc-Ssl- rank as tho most euccessfUl submarine treasure-seekin- g expedition ever inaugurated Is now on. the point of leaving Portsmouth dockyards to resume opbly erations. This particular venture is managed by the British admiralty and the treasury Jointly, and Us business is to recover the gold bullion which went to the bottom in the liner Laurentle when she was torpedoed in Lough Swllly during the war. 5,000.000 4,000,000 or Already eome north of the gold has been salved. There 2.000,000 or 3,000,000 more yet remain of It lying at the bottom of the sea, and the salvage ship Racer is going out to search for thl "balance."' Modern methods of submarine treasure hunting are very different from those that used to be in vogue. It is no longer necessary to use hand pumps to furnish diver wlth air while From the ships they are "below. plant, which keeps up 100 divers are "fed. ths pressure, pounds As the air goes down to them It passes through the ordinary hand pumps, and by the scale on these the attendants can te.l whether the divers ar being correctly supplied. Should anything go wrong with the automatic teed, the manual pumps can be started up In a second. While he Is working under water the diver keetts In touch with those In the ship by means of a telephone, the cable of which is also his life line. Nor does he have to do the laborious tasks nhlch used to fail upon h'.m. dropped Wreckage is lifted by a grab down from the ship. similarly, for clearing away sand in-or mud, submerged pumps a wonderful vention ar lowered from the ship to the wreck, and all the diver has to do is to watch them at work. If pumps cannot be used, the diver employs In their place a hose pipe. A powerful Jet of water Is projected down thie from the ship and the diver plays hla boss on ths wreck much after th fashion In whtch a fireman plays a hose h on a burning building. 80 far has Invention progressed that It s now possible-for a IUer to use a naked acetylene flame for cutting through under water, Instead of having wreckage to hack ft away with hand tools. And If conditions belqw make It necessary the diver can even fce furnished with electric light to work by. Usually he remains under water half ' t ness today In thevclty of London, .the world' greatest business center. Is bankruptcy. Since the beginning of 122 all records have been broken for fa Harm and chartered account ntk are sitting up nights figuring out liabilities and assets, while .there is a waiting list at the bankruptcy court, which is usually on of the leant overworked f- British,' legal Institutions. About 1160 failures have been reported since January I nivd the total liabilities run into many millions. - In some cases assets are ridiculously small, aa in the case of one shoe manufacturer who paid h of a penny on the pound. On the whole, however, these failures are not regarded as a bad thing for Industry. They are part of the postwar shaking down process. During and after the war all sorts of people, taking advantage of easy money and high profits, went into business, aboi'4 which - thev knew nothing. Now hey are being squeezed out by the Iron economic laws An Interesting feature Is the larga number f furmers who sre going bankThis Is du to the rush among rupt. farmers shout a year ago to become their own landlords They bought their farms at high prices from the landlords, who were glad to get out of unprofitable and are now finding out that agricultural finance M not' us easy . aa it looked. v In many cases farms ar being left on the hands of banks wntch have advanced money on mortgage and whose managers dont know what to do with them. Many merchants have been genuinely hit by the heavy fnlL In values of cum, modules which left them with stocks purchased at high prices and aalable only at a lose.' This condition la said to be In responsible for recent heavy drop prices and Increases sre predicted when this liquidation of stocks is finished. one-fift- an hour at a stretch.' AH such "scrap as ship's plating is hoisted to the surface by crane. But "treasure for example, gold bullion, which is cast tnto short bars is In lifted buckets munched full ef always holes m that the water pan run out ... -la, addition to tho. plant, a powerful alternating current Installation, a chamber through which divers are passed hen their Blood has become aerated after a long "dip, end various other special 'plants." a salvage workshop. ship carries a and- the Russian end the audience was not only thrilled, but deeply touched, as It realized that these exiles wery not, after, the first7 five months, giving a play, hut. harking back In imagination to other days and other times. In thought and feeling they were again, indeed, at home' and the audience was forgotten. Yet probably ten years ago they did not stag gypsy songs nor Russian songs at an, but western musio French. German, Italian. It Is only when Russia Is far away that they have began to discover her. . Another prince, Poutiatin. played the and another general's wife. guitar, Madam Poiowtsoff, danced a Rusa.aa dance. They may all go back to Russia some f day, but Certainly not on the seme terms (Universal Service Cable.) as before the war; nor, probably, would One to. feels want know Rusthey they PARIS. April 23. Los Angees, the French UfetSnd manners in the films at sia better now. At any rate, they are ; home. helping to make the rest of the world film center of the world. Is to have a M. Rene Navarre, who .'has achjefed know Russia better and realize that rival. $ group of French capitalists is distinction, in the hero parts of many not all one vast dreariness. backing the enterprise now going forward French pictures. Is the active head of the new to Inaugurate a great motion picture city enterprise on thes Kivlera. For three year been Cruise near Nice. The new city will be known the past such a proposition, end with this as ths cinema capital of Europe. idea in view has. visited end inspected Cover Greet Interest is being shown by mem- most of the possible cities In Franc. bers of ths theatrics) world and promoters Since deciding upon Nice, M. Xevarr Universal Service Cable. of the picture Industry In Europe In this has laid down plans for the new dlty along 22. A - boot - cruise new oenler on the Riviera. PARIS, That this In- the generbus lines laid down by the lots April around the world will be begun this terest will likewise extend to American Angeles founders of this Industry. Everymonth by five minion dollars worth of movie folks Is predicted by the fact that thin used In the the fltm production, choice wines and brandies, under the last summer more than thirty companies from scenery to clothing, will be manucommend of elghtv experts in ths art of film maker v.stted France. factured within ths city rates. . of drinking gracefully Aa a result of this derision, there will From picturesque Normandy Tne ship will Include Iq, it itinerary Riviera they gathered 'material forta(n new bs mvailab's mors than 1500 dressmakers, all of the ports of Europe end America pictures for the folks back home. The scsnlo painters, carpenters and blackexcept those of the United States, plana American film stare were particularly smiths and other members of the hug are now being perfected to anchor the enthusiastic about the ecenery and the staff of workers to supply every need revessel autsida the three-ml'- e limit off charm of the country about Nice, and it quired by tho big undertaking. New York, Boston and Atlantic City, is believed that this summer will record Built to Inoludo the very latest devices while on the way to Vera. Crus. A stop even a greater number of companies for the mak.ng of a movie, workshop w.lt he made off Galveston. seeking inspiration and new backgrounds and studio are now nearing completion. .Nothing will be sold on the boots ship. for the romances of fimlend to be found They will compare favorably with the Samples of choice burgundies clarets, throughout the historic end picturesque splendid studios of the original movie city .and liquors wilt be province of France.- cognacs In horn AnseieA WUh this new Interest shown The chief studio wl.l measure 600 feet given away to advertise the excellence being tar-t- h of French liquid products. In In length. America of There will be other studios producers picture It Is hoped thereby to create a sentiFrance and French scenery and life, the for us as walk equpped with terraces ment In favor of high-clawhich t not American to is and other vis alcoho'.u; features of old French archiab,e publlo products and defeat the further encroachEurope during the summer months will tecture, thus adding to tho beautiful and ment of prohibition on the revenues of tho thus have an opportunity to enjoy a trip romantic atmoaphero that will furnish ths wlno trade. for tho flm drama. through France atd an acquaintance with backgroua - c, well-fitt- French Capitalists Plan to Build Big Motion Picture City Near Nice i4a Planned Entire World Liquor to eaux-de-v- . , ' , , The plan of repeating the Washing! conference of last winter in Europe this spring was his Idea. Because he Is accused of having yielded Britains naval supremacy, as well as British rule over Ireland and Egypt, and because he is accused of granting autonomy to the dominions, thus depriving the empire ot its leaves like an artichoke, and because be is accused of furthering Bolshevist agitation through 'Intercourse with the Russians, Lloyd George wanted to introduce a few bolshevlsts at Genoa and show his adversaries that hi plan of export revival was a success. This revival was to end all unemployment, the victims of which are costing the etat more than Is being paid In wot pensions. An International conference, however;, is not Ilk a Charlie Chaplin sketch, played almost alone, or with dumb figures. The Welsh wizard waa unable to find a partner anything Ilk hi match at Genoa. -' Uoyd Georg at Genqa has feit biroseif a world champion competing with themassert Begtaneri who could only selves successfully In large number. . French Interests Different. V M., Barthou of France, author of book on Mlrabeau, has had no experion ence In International negotiation large scale. Yet he represents the only other great power which compares wan England In Europe today. Desplto her trestle with Belgium and Poland and her good relations with the little entente, France has different Interests from the other conference members. She wants to recover as quickly as possible the eighty to ninety billion francs advanced to her people on account of expected German reparations, the need oL which la upsetting her budget. and France, however, is needs few Imports, while her export which she ha a mainly are luxuries, in virtual monopoly. With a small population, eh does not fear unemployment or other consequences forced by big Ger- man exports. England, however, wants to se Germany's exports virtually stopped by ' a. : high cost of production. It ts quit evident now that ths Genoa, conference was held at this, time bo-- 1 cause the Russian question could . b postponed no longer. Leninas cruelly frank confession at the last Communist congress are mors Important than any. nerin may say thing the learn e ( i do at Genoa. The Russian premier said., well-drill- Tribuos-SS- the-cour- e c Since - Beginning of Year ' Submarine Treasure "Seek N Russ Down and Out. All Records Have Been ing Expedition of British If you buy any diamond In Paris' be In sure the Jeweler Tentacles of Germany's Voracious. Captain of Rue tode gola toFalx,a famous Broken in City of London Admiralty Is Successful. A gent In uniform will help you out of your taxi and hold an umbrella over you if it is raining. He Industry Are Said to Be Stretched in Every Is a former general In the Russian wmy. Chics gir taka Tribune CsM. 1st Triban Tabls. He saved some Jewels from the wreck thlposu Direction and'Virtually Cover the Globed 7 and LONDON, April 22'The one big busiLONDON, April 22. What will probasold them to this same Jeweler. At By KARL H. VON WIEGAND, . ' Universal Service Staff Correspondent. althese figures revealing an unprecedented BERLIN, April 22. Hugo Stlnnea Is Forty-si- x thousand workways represented in the socialistic and depreciation. men employed by the Bochum works, communistic press as a hug capitalistic with are a total payroll of 669,000,000 mark centipede, stretching out hla tentacles la as against 38,000,000 marks in the tame every direction and gathering Into hla re- period before the war. Any statement with wages, however, can only be lentless grasp enterprises, great and dealing view of the interpreted as relative small, and welding them Into one gigan- daily rise In the prices Jn qf all commoditic trust, bearing the Imprint of the su- ties and the corresponding increase In perman, Stinnes. wages. This conception Is borne out by an inThe gigantic Kelaenktrchen coal mine teresting survey of the Stinnes interests report a 10 per cent increase in producprinted hs current number of the Metal tion in the last fisral year; 8,200,000 tons Workers Journal, which gives the num- of coal and 1,960,000 tons of cokes, in ths ber of these enterprises at 1240, but this production of which 66,000 men were emestimate cannot be taken as conclusive ployed, is compared with the prewar profor the reason that the tentacles of the duction of 10,350,000 tons of coal and centipede seem to-- grow - longer and 2.430,000 tons of cokes', employing 63,000 7 workmen. These mines are now valued stronger every day.This survey covers the period from Oc- at 117,000.000 paper marks, against tober 1, 1920, to October 20, 1921. and gold marks in the year 1913, goes back to the genesis of the Stinnes a drastic picture of the .tremendousagain detrust, which began with a fusion of In- valuation of all industrial enterprises in terests between the powerful Germany. Mining and Smslltng work of Bochum end the Gelsenkirchen mines, Wields Great Power. to whtch was added the Bochum Mining and Oast Steel works, ths three forming theProduction in the Bochum minea-fo- r period covered by the report amountthe. Rhlne-Elb- e union. ed to 1,632,000 tons of coal and 3,700,000 ' tons of cokes, with an employment roll Another Large Fusion. It Is pointed ou that averaging 6166, This was followed by the fusion of the the capacity of the individual workman Rhine-Eib- o rt group with the has decreased as a result of the failure group of Berlin end Nurem- of the wage increase to meet the relentberg, the entire concern being given the less nee In the cost of living. name of the The capitalistic power and of the union. Shortly thereafter, this trust Stinnes trust can obviously scope not be corabsorbed the of of the shares estimated thia majority rectly EMITTED by incomplete stateLOUD the Austrian-Alpin- e Mining company of ment of its combined activities, but it one Each Vienna. of serve of the units to this give a partial picture of the BY COMMUNIST DAILY hug trust is In turn affiliated with a enormous power which thie one mmmm V chain of smaller enterprises, partially or of German Industry holds In his captain Sale of Gorman Patents to Americans wholly under the control of the Stinnes to say nothing of the newspaper hands, trust, trust. the hotel trust extending as far an Rusand Others Call Forth Bitter , The total valuation bf the mines, foun- sia, where 8tlnnes is said to be negotidries and mills comprising the big ating for the purchase of the two leading Comment Bochum concern, the mother enterprise hotels of Moscow, and the network of of the Stinnes trust,-wr- a at railway and shipping-interestestimated bv which Lake Trlbens Cable. Gileses Trlbon-Bl- t 219,000,009 gold marks in 1914; the presthe St nnes trust is acqurlng n firm foot' BERLIN, April 22. The news contained ent valuation Is 140.000,000 paper marks. hold in foreign countries from in a Chicago Tribune dispatch Washington that an American company ms purchased all the rights to the AMERICANS LITERALLY LONDON Bchuette.Lang patents for the construction of modern airships has provoked ths OCCUPYING PALESTINE FROM customary volume of newspaper comment sales ' as the bargain regardingof Germany Thousands of Tourists Are Flocking Many Bay They Will Cease Business counter the world. The comment In some quarters was so to 'Holy Land, but Their . Uhless Permitted to Increase bitter that ths company has been forced Interest Charges. Btay Is Short to Issue a statement declaring that the reports as to the extent of the reported are exaggerated undoubtedly 'negotiations April 22. (By the Associated Chicago Tribune gait Lake Tribune Cab!. 'and that Herr Schuette will deliver a JAFFA.American LONDON, April 22. British pawnbroktourists are literally reassuring report upon his return from Press.) America. Two ers complain that their business is no oocupylng Palestine ' this season. Sale of this kind to foreign capital, thousand of them have already visited longer profitable and are applying to parthunders the Red Flag, the Communist JOOO more are the and excountry expected liament for permission to Increase their are the rule rather than the dally, charge. If it Is not granted, most of ,, ception. , The Badische Soda and Anllln to arrive. Fabrlk hue sold a new process for the It Is estimated that Palestinians will them," they say, will have to go out of manufacture of nitrogen to the French as a result 'benefit . , financially by a sum business. , V Ixmcheur concern, anil Siemens Is selling f not less than $60(1,000. Pawnbroking In England, contrary to German patents to a Chinese electrotechnical company. belief, never was a gold mine. Every employee In the government cf general An expert broker who had a good workSuch patent sales represent nothing Palestine from Sir Herbert the Samuel, a clearance sale of short of ing knowledge of values might make a complete German work and German high commissioner, down td (he humblest decent living at It, but no more, and the Germany. technique are sold down the river at railway porter is making it his special h. c. L resulting from the war has wiped fancy prices, with the consequence that business to profit there was. Pawnthe Americana Spe- out whatever the brokers declare, is the only German industry lags behind English and cial trains arplease run for convenience, broking, was which American more from day to day. not allowed to advance trade ar over homes turned for their private accommodation because of the acarcity prices during the war, although It sufilk fered all from largely Inothers of hotels end even privet cars ar pieced Duchess Son creased costs In such items as rent, at their disposal. Government agents ar also detailed to wage printing, etc. Missing?, Under the pawnbrokers act of 1372. see that ho undue advantage ie taken- - of are allowed ' to welcome visitors, no that r,.. rn'ng British pawnbrokers these .Universal Service Cable. home they will carry with them only charge a halfpenny a month on every 2 PARIS. April 22. The Jewels off the Word of praise. 2 They may also shillings lent up to Grand Duchess Vladimir, who died re. 1 he short stay of the Americans In the charge a halfpenny for the ticket. For krcntly at Cannes, which were reported Holy Land is the only fault that the na- this they have to value, wrap, pack end store have in turned the take and with Paris in the tives find stolen, goods up their guests. They feel responsibility It is estimated that possession of Urand Duke Boris, her that five or six days Is Insufficient time for their safety. on. In which to see ail the historical plaice. very pledge now taken by a pawnbroker Prince Boris has sold tom of the To prove their ipolnt they cite an In- co;a him 3 pence halfpenny and thl Jewels for a sum exceeding a million cident that occurred last year while a the broker declare, means a loss that hewhich he bought with private companyOnof tourists was vtsaiiTg In Nax.i-ret- redeemed be made up by the sale of unmansion in Parts. American was heard to shK pledges. Other heirs of the grand duchess are an accompanying friend ike name of the Eighty percent of the, loans made are Dukes Grand the Cyrllle and Andr and plsrs they were In, the friend quickly for sums less then 10 shillings More Hi Nicholas of Greece. Tile looked at a sihedule he was cat r inn. than half of these are for 6 shillings or Princes latter has Just become engaged to Crown then at his Match and replied' "It la less, and 75 per cent of the total numnow 10 o'clock so it must be Naxareth, ' ber are redeemed within the first month. Trine Fredcrb k Hugkpn of Denmark. - ' - Faria Exiles'. Refuge. a Alliance Formed. Hat :V'- X 1 - The Russians, XV Recent Trade Bargain by Russia and Her Ally Stirs s" i an S' he-ha- .... le ss Y -- , i ....... Lenine Is Frank. "Communist pride muet not prevent utr from realising that we do not know how to govern. 80m features of out.admtn-tetratlo- n are unbearable. Every clerk of a larga firm understands economies' and trade better than some men we have selected for appointment. The Communists who fought bravely at the front amt risked thetr lives a hundred times for the revolution, together with the Hunpeasants, will send us to the garian devil unlee' we soon begin to provide them with the necessities of life, s well as ths capitalists have done in the past. Thl extraordinary frankness followed this previous sentence: At Genoa we are not Communists, but tradesmen, needing trade- with otheet Countries and trying to get tho beet bargains, like all the other. some inkling Did not this address give long agreement of the , world? before It was sprung upon the been have looking for The bolshevlsts a bargain. Apparently Germany was the Anything first party willing to trade like qual terms. . , - Russo-Germ- PERSISTENCY IS SHOWN IN DEFIANCE OF LAW Chicago Trlbnn.-S.l- t Lsk Tribune Coble. PARIS. April 31. Ths two reverend gentlemen, M. Blesslngeros and John ta Vld, who last year presented themselves, at the American Church of the Hoiy Trinity In the guise of Chaldean priest d seeking charity on behalf of oppress' Turks In Asia, ami who Just recently h Jail sentence, show ended an open a remarkable incorrigibility in their Their and persistent defiance of the law. Malick and real names ar John Posh Sleeve Frekio. With the termination of their prison sentence, the twe ex convicts were given autheir freedom after promising thecounthe thorities that they would lu'e rewarded this try never to return. They their leniency by deliberately breaking they were .4 to promises as soon get Into new clothes. The surprise of the polio authorities Malick and may well be imagined when Breklos were reiwrted still to be InPtuia. U were dispatched Instantly Detectives the given address, which was that ofdea on the Avenue hotel fashionable Champ Ely see. There In a glided sn.oti were Malick and Breklos, ant pastors, shepherdprlesta and Protest ladiea in the aj tf, ing comely, young the od shimmy. the tVnt police lnstctor They told the the steps in prison and they had learned found that giving dancing lesson pais. This tiro, however, Malick ami RrekiO were safely seen over the frontier by th ' police. , . eight-mont- -- fox-tr- , |