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Show EDITORIAL AUTOMOBILES MINES FINANCIAL . SPORTS REAL ESTATE PRINCE' OTTO PLAYINb KING ' WOMAN OF MANY SORROWS This ghowa Prince Otto, aon of the late King Charles IV Of Haps burg, in his royal robes. He has been acclaimed king of Hungary by faithful royalists, but it not permitted to rule by the entente, who has banned the house of Hapeburg. The Countess Wanda Lubrenaka. A Paris newspaper baa interviewed. this of the Russian refugee colony, who is known among her rrominent member The Woman of Many Sorrow. Although she managed to transfer the bulk of her large fortune from Moscow to Warsaw and thence to Pans, the has in the last few years lost 'Tractieallv every member of her family her husband, father and five brothers, all officer in the Russian rmy, were killed in the war. One of her children wa scalded to death, another burned alive, another killed In a not, a fourth by the collapse of a building and a fifth by a runaway horse. The countess recently fell down a stairway ana broke both her legs, and it was in connection with this accident that her tragic story became public. 1 - . - v T -- ' 1 The glgantto apparatus set up at Genoa, a here delegate from three dozen states have spent a hundred million marks on their garden party and vanity fair which In feedmight better nave been expended ehtldren of ing the crowd of starving . Europe, is a failure. None of the great economic problems la any nearer solution than before It met, although this, naturally, is not admitted by the delegates who likes or the press choir leaders, to confess that nothing useful Is being accomplished by a corporation to whlcl oneself belongs? Only one person can look back on the last thirty! days with satisfaction. That Is Lloyd George. For him Genoa Is a California wherein he Is grinding out the fi m for his next campaign. In the last as David, who slew , film hs appeared Goliafih with his sling and proclaimed "the kaiser must hang. Germany must pay until all of the losses of the allied haVe been comand associated nations Labor party and pensated." But now theDavid tha Tender the Whig will hear Psalmist, whose only care la world peace and universal happiness. This scene could not have been staged so easily in Greait Britdin, where he would have encountered the real Tories and the opposition of the powerful North-cliff- e prees and the Morning Post. The British empire experiencing the greatest trade crisis in Its history, now that 000 2,000 it suffers it har unemployed, under a frightful burden of taxation; (he unrest In India Is Increasing; the costly effort to establish a British callfate over Mecca and Medina; the call for Zag- lul, England s enemy In Egfpt; in short, , the whole empire is like a wornout dress Which, so socn as mended In on place, breaks out ig another. Such a nation the is not easily persuaded to government which seems to be responsible for all this. But with the whole world as an auditorium; with the worlds press as an orchestra, a director with dynamic can hope for much accomplishments greater effects With a thousand voices from all countries proclaiming their grand master, his native land flattered by his glory will leflect before letting the world favorite g fail. And America, England s creditor, all he frlendlv toward the man who so cleverly acts like a realistic business like Woodrow Wilson, and with white hair flowing, poses a the world eacemaker. - V V ' t 1 v T ''S. x A (.If, 4 la k',v r y v ' V t th proprietors called In th which former proprietor," dooument, look much like , recognizing that their tit e have ceased to ex at merely, getting the vagae promise of "compensation," which depends ftnilly upon the central, or even The local, soviet judgment This is why Belgium reixstia Ta o. A. : ' I v ( - sign the document. Our representative missed their opportunity to raise the Isv sue then. Barthou, at the May I session, announced that he accepted the op nton bf the experts, that .the text of the document did not support the viewpoint of the Belgians. Then, while en route to Paris to confer with Poincare, the tatter teleto reserve France's siggraphed Barrm-nature forty-eighours, but meanwhile stated that he did not- object to sending the memorandum to the Russians, Finally, on May I, the French government overruled Its ehlef delegate and decided to stand by Belg um and not sign. Thus Barthou returns to Genoa to take an opposite position to what be held before be left there. , f f seems frightfully A thousand crowns is the expensive. unit of currency for all practical pur- notes poses. And tne away like pennies at a peep show. ( w nether you begin to wonder anxiously ought not to take the first train tor somewhere else, while a few hundrej thousand ot your mtilion are still ioft. But-- then comes the realisation that, after all, 1000 crowns Is only 13 cents, and a great relief overwhelms you. Chance Slips Away. The rituetlon thus produced 1 extremef For ly complicated I won t any prediction of the outcome. Like most Frenchmen, and I expect most Americana will agree, I believe that the private property Issue la one upon which we must not y eld ai any price First, private property rights must be guaranteed a the-- keystone of modern society. Second, bv defending this principle we have a firm ground whereon to defend ourselves against bOishevlk propaand also to secure world-wid- e ganda ap' proval for our stand. Betting' chief of Swiss the Motto, delegation, 4 declared on May 1 that If France would Belgium, Switzerland would folRepeal of support low. Need I .add (pat a bloc on such a proposal undoubtedly would have attracted other nat on. , Opportunity knock but once, and so the decision should have been made without a fortnights or an hour's hesitation. let the favorable mo- -' Cbteagw Tribune-Sal- t Lakt Triban Ctbla. Hesitating, ment pasa The support that was availLONDON, May fi. Legal reform In Enable vanished. Returning baa gland la always th result of some (par- to theyesterday Belgian viewpoint Carrie much, ticular case of glaring Injustice which leas weight than to have supported it dramatises the weakness of the present from th outset. g law and serves as a starting point for a Alarm Provoked. reform agitation. Such an agitation has Th future of .the conference 4a full of been-- (begun within the last few day It, nocause of the acquittal of a woman on a mvstery. Those who originated tably Lloyd George, have always said charge of betting Baud on the ground that ef the.value decisions would ita lie that under the old law of coverture in the unanimity wherewith they wer she must be presumed to have acted unnow is It obvious that this adopted. der the Influence' of her husband. Is impoealbe. Moreover, the Tha case In itself waa one of consid- unanimity British premier, through dally overture erable dramatic interest. Captain Peel, to the German and the Russians, ha a man of good family, and his wi far wer sketched a policy which provoke disaccused of conspiracy to efrqjtti racing and alarm throughout a large bookmakers They wer well-to-young quietude of Europe. part Finally it grew clearer peopie w ho bad no excuse- of poverty and that the great majority of British opinion to waa It families. belonged prominent doe follow not Lloyd George In hi In court that the woman had an pressure on the allies and neutral Income of )30,QOfi a year. All this being so, how can webelleve si tio question about the facta there substantial San be accomanything The and waa sent- that 1 have guilty reread Trotsky's speech plished? enced-To twelve months Imprloonmen to the Red army I. administering The' woman, an th evidence, was as the oath. There onwasMayneither fraternity much rullty as he, but the Judge waa nor there n. To peace give money credits compelled as th crime had been com- and railway materials to men who spoke In mitted the presence of her husband, It at least Imprudent, but thus far to Instruct the Jury that she must be thus this la the measure onlythat practical presumed to have acted under his influ- has been discussed. ence and must be acquitted. Justice Darling did 0 with evident reuctance, describing this thsorvas a melancholy a. doctrine." , Catch-- H This law is an excellept example of Devices many others which fossilized In the English statute books until someone By BASIC D. WOON, , them up and profits by them. It digs U 1 Norman Universal fisrvlo Staff CerraspendanL generally referred to PARTS, May fi "Rougs, powder, artienactment, but it waa old when the Normans came to England. It waa part of ficial deand d tha taw of Weeaex before the Dane came, vices and other devices and the Xorouuis, with their keen eye should bs made Illegal. for laws that suited the conditions of "Many the bridegroom who ha led a the time, embodied it In their code, ex- blushing bride to church only to find plaining In the Old Norman French, th next morning that her blush, like which Is still part of the English legal most of th rest of her, waa artificial. Le ley entend que la feme tie System, "Cheating men In lov la a universal cm contradir aon Baron." As Justice practice among young girls, who will Darling pointed out, in these day It Is adopt any sort of camouflage to rope In absurd to assume that a woman dare not an eligible male. contradict her husband. "Disillusion Is the commonest sensaMost of tha feminist organizations have tion of ths newly married man. Joined In the demand for a reform of the Every engaged girl should be comlaw. They realize that the doctrine, even pelled by taw to show herself to her fiif U Is favorable ta some women, p'acee ance aa she realty Is, without paint, powwoman as a whole in the position of a der or any artificiality, before she leads chattel. - him to th altar. 1 If husband finds a wife deceived 77-Yehim as to her beauty before marriage It Woman Smoker should bs legitimate ground for divorce.' are made by Pierre These suggestion in to de Goujon in the current Issue of La hi Rh lera, nnbll'hel at Nice de Revue Universal Service Cable. Satirical French weekllee point out that SHEFFIELD. Eng. May (.Inveterate de Goujon was hlmae,f married Let Auaddiction to has proved fa- gust. tal to Ann Kennedy, aged 77, who was found burned to death In' bed at her Girl Travels 12.000 Miles home in Chesterfield lane, near her Her cherished pip was gripped tight to Refuses In her right hand, and a box of matches lay cloae bv. It Is supposed that she fell w asleep while her pipe was still alight Universal Service Cable. , find that this set fir to the bedclothes -- The NOTTINGHAM, Eng, May The old woman, with her "catty." was of a collier living at Blldworth, a familiar figure In the streets of the daughter Mansfield, went out to New Zealand a wav to marry the Rev. tits, 12, nod mile T. Padillson. but on arrival there reJ SOVIET BUYS SILK WORMS. fused to be married She la returning Chlisgo Tribune Foreign News Berries home. RIG. Mav fi Extensive purchases of Mr. Patldlson was formerly of silk worm eggs are now being mad In Blldworth When ah sailed for New Franc bv agents of the soviet govern, Zealand laat October the girl was placed inent according to Information given out under th rare of two women of good by the soviet trade delegation In Riga. position In Nottingham to, b "Improved " I he a considerable purchases will be sent to Grus nla and shs'also and othsr former silk producing districts trousseau at heacquired future huaband mv-ael- Tourists to Capital of Jugo Slavia Are ..Warned to Bring Tents for Sleeping. (3 t , Jugo-Blavl- a, 1 cor-rat- -- cone-shape- -- etar-fleck- ed , " ht Rooms Are Poor. Meetings Held at Milan for Purpose of Pale, cold dawn finds (lie tourist deslfb hires another flacra and perate, , Improving Commercial Relatione w nil or rote 'Him the retail With India and China. second half of the game .begin Having forced the tourist to a state of physical, mental and moral collapse, the hotel Chics so Tribune Salt I.akt Tribune .Cable. are to .talk business. Borne - MJLAN, Mav fi Italian commercial people driverready looks pityingly at th tourassociations are making great effort to- fiacre his rubthumb and forefinger ward establishing profitable trade rela- ist and In the significant sign language together tions with Canada and India. .Two im- of A great light bursts on all tongue. meetings have 'been held here the traveler At the next hotel he slips portant Dr. Alberto Pirelli Illustrated India thrf manager 100 dinar.lomtc and Industrial trade and told the a room. But 100 dinar Is not He assembly that Italv should Improve her much, gets and he doesn t get much of a maritime communications ki order to room It may be under the eaves, it nvail herself of the excellent openings of may be merely a bed in a "corridor. On , the Indian market Of last American arrivals was tonimendatore Rlrclardl dellveied. an fortunate night's enough to be allowed to sleep m Italy Canadian In the bathroom of Belgrade's lead ng hoImportant adiirH tiate. sfatlng that Italian goods are tel This particular hostelrv Is Bewanted by the most Important Commer- lgrade's best because It has a bathroom. cial centers of Canada, nh'Iq Canadian None sif the other have. exporters are anxious to forward tfielr about three days fnr th takes It to Milan. Genoa. Naples and American to learn his lesson. By that products firmn Palermo time he has discovered that It Is necesA big committee. Including the most1 sary to disburn a I' hi dinar tip to be perprominent authorities of finance, com- mitted to rent a fifty dinar room for, merce end Industry, was formed, and a once you get a room, they are really new meet' y e fxsd . cheap , - 1 -- c b. r - cori-ets- nt nituv-pleaded French Editor Decries usband - 11 u hair-wavi- catch-husban- ar Barns I, Death Bed -- Marry ; Then var oD Rusal. "h. YJ " f :tV V rVK - & 4 A is' . H ' v v , . Copyright, Underwood te Underwood, New Yorfc J . forces Dry - ' ("hi y? v ' , J v'- - . ' - TW 9 . v vt i, As A One Most Learn. Are" Declared' to- - ' Be . Fast '.ffainino''Groundin' Europe rd Fraud Cate Starts Demand for Ancient Coverture Act gw I ' ht Copyright, Underwood A Underwood, New York. ni that? At first everything mt lOUO-cro- Moreover, C ' 90c a Month. ' f Mere Promise Given. . By WILLIAM BIRD. (Copyright 1922, by Salt Lake Tribune) on arriving today VIENNA, May In Vienna, you cash a (123 check, you are a millionaire. But only for a moment. Alas! for the wealth bf this world, tt passes quickly. In other words, . easy comdS easy go. . Here you are no longer multiplying ot dividing by 'two or five or rifts , JSut by thousands You stagger-bar- ic when li. taxi driver asks' you for 4300 crowns aa th price of the ride from th slatktl to the hotel. Lets see how many at peace-lovin- t' : V i V When you Com BELGRADE, May to Belgrade, don't wire ahead tor hotel accommodation Bring your own tent. - . . It la th aafer way. Belgrade Is a boom town. Before th war It was a mere cluster of house on the barren, treeless bill that rise from the w Ide, muddy Danube. , Now, as the It la city of capital of 230 000 people. Statesmen, politicians, business court officials, soldiers, lawyers, men, engineers, bartender, hack drivere, have arrived here from and haberdasher all parts of the Balkans to assist In runPremier Pen Pictured. ning the new kingdom, A He alone is being heard. It la monoBut when the American visitor arrive logues, not dialogues, not s conference he discover that these! people have w t b it n conferences ho allow s npbody every available inch bf sleeping be heard but himself and who irowned spec In town. If he hasnt brought his when Dempsey wns cheered by toil peo own tent, he I out of lpck. , - P e In Berlin. into American tourist usually com Why this overwhelming express reception because Jack first conquered Belgrade on the Simplon-Orien- t, , the Frenchman, Oarpentier, which, how- -' The train arrive at 11 11. m , when .11 ever, does not guarantee that he could Belgrade ha gone to bed. But seventy-fiv- e do likewise to Foch. The British prenative hack drivers, wearing astrakmier also It reckoning on the hatred han d hats and bearskin overtoward France caused by the latter's coats, await th tourist outride th eta. Rhine and (t aching ton policies. As ths tlon. assumedly ready to conduct them onlv survivor of tha big four, he Is re- to the hotel ' , , sponsible for the treaty of Versailles, but he treats It like an child, or a Drivers Take Advantage. He knows no reasonable stranger. It Is a nightly game, with the fiacre Frenchman want the Ruhr occupied and There are no hotel rooms vathat Foch advise against it, but bwTtttb driver cant. In Premier If They knoxy'lt. The tourists do as his speech Poincare, yheialn he onlv demanded tlto treatys not. And it usually cost the tourist ridexecution and moral rather than military about three or four hours of fiacre some from, hotel to hotel, and also persuasion used, was conjuring no war ing 300 or 400 dinars, to be fully assured perl s. He prooably thinks England must of this fact. T grateful 0 a who preventThu at II P m. nightly, with the ared France from getting Iron, coni and the gam steel from Lorraine, ths Snare and the rival of the Simplon-Orien- t, Under the wide, purple, Ruhr thereby becoming industrially starts oriental s night of Belgrade str etrorfg. . In Oermanv, David w th hs harp'ls as the lonesome tourist travel In creak-Ift- g hotel to door door. hotel from fiacres popular as David with his sling was There are no rooms. All rooms are He Is considered Germanv hated lord varoom there may be a The fact he declared the full. Possibly protector ' next vt ednesday treaty of Rapallo Unfair and disloyal does cant It Is usually about t a. m. before th not prevent Rathenau from singing him to Some on then the game. the same praises he formerly sang to tourists get go back to the railroad station and sleep , Wilhelm and Ludendorrf on the benches there. Some curl up In the cabs and sleep under a horse Most of them pick out some blanket ITALIAN MERCHANTS cafe and sleep on or under th tables. , SEEK TRADE 1 Lodgings 1 TARDIEU. , ; (Special cable to The Balt Lake Trlbuge.) (Copyright, 19(3. by Balt Lake Tribune) PARIS, May (.French diplomacy hai failed again. Barthbu had the- opporturesolute stand at Genoa nity to take to compel th Russian soviet t guarantee the Integrity of prlvatei property. Other delegates would have supported him. Hs did not do so, , ; I' wrote you last week that the soviet refusal effectively to guarantee private property would kill the Genoa gathering economically. Events a nee then have borne this out. The memorandum to the Russian substituted for the ultimatum originally planned waa drafted without great dtfficu.ty until paragraph seven was .reached. This dealt with the restoration ot prlvat proper Jv. Lloyd George, who Is holding more and more private conver-sont with the soviet delegates, tmakVf opposed any objgatory restitution, which, nsv ertheleas, was th only solution guaranteeing proprietors their rights. r' ' ct - iP - Failure, Writer Declares. , House iRcnt and Railway Fare Next to Negligible; Jf RC (Special cable to The Salt Lake Tribune (Copyright, 1922, by Salt Lake Tribune ) BERLIN', May . The German people are being fed with the same untruth as during the war. They believe that the treaty of Rapatlo, which the bolshevlst a openly call a "mean lor extortion," la huge success for German statesmanship. that the They are being led to think waa a great spring drive on the Riviera" told that not been have victory. They the government must make feaaibi a paymethod of meeting the reparation ment du before May SI if the nation Is not to be given the reputation of a bad debtor. being portrayed to Lloyd George 1 them a the savior of Germany, and they all this la an election do not realise that film preliminary to the British parliaThey are being led to mentary elections think of him as ready for any gener-of at the expense toward Germany osity not suggest France, even though he does our colonies. our and ships returning All Europe, Imagining herself very wise, dislike to be reminded of facta It doe not realise that the thunder and light-- j flutes, ning, the sound of trumpet and for the to which It ha been listening last four week, all form the Introduction to the British election. ORIENTAL Up Opportunity to Clinch Bargain With Russia. a -- , Person With $125 of American Money Rated as Millionaire in Austrian City. v 5 f BY MAXIMILIAN "HARDEN. i Passes Integrity of Private Prop erty Claims Overlooked ' at, Psychological Time. Garden Party and Vanity Fair in Italian Gty "is. Pointed to as a Failure. a at' Genoa Barthou Publicist Regard Premiers Efforts at Genoa as Election Preliminaries. Teuton t ! Even in Beer-lovin- g Germany AntiatcohoUsts1 Are Making Progress and the .Younger Qenera- tion Is Said to Be Extendihg Aid. U . By KARL H. VON BERLIN, May (.The prohibition idea is gaining,, ground in Europ. Of tha' there cannot be the slightest doubt. Even In Germany there are many tjMfw, to .show the' way the wind i blowing, and the antlloohollsts ar no longer sowing their seed on barren soil Dr. Mauryk, president of ths Czechoslovakian republic, and President Hain-Iscthe head of the new German-Au-tria- n state, are being held up to the Germans aa shining examples of abstinence who do not countenance th tary "beer evenings," so popular in German official circles. , A taw also has .been passed by the prohibitgovernment ing the use bf aloohol to all citizens under while the 18, tragically impoverished Austrian . government has appropriated fifty million crowns for hn antlaicohOl camt paign. byer-dovin- h, Czecho-Slovakl- Heavy Tax Assessed. f During the V-a-r WIEOAND, 'Unlvsreal Service Staff Correspondent. , the consumption of al- coholic drinks In Germany fell to a fifth of ita prewar proportions, but since then there has been a strong reaction to Intoxicating beverage Symptoms of the extraordinary rise tine the flood rof slco-- . holism sweeping over the land are to be found In th fact that the various fed eral states have considered it necessary to pass gourmand laws, a prohibitive tax on all wines and liquors; In the alarming increase of drinking-placof all kinds and In the enormous sums accruing from . i , the tax on alcohol. . , According . to the . official statistics, was billions for alcoholic spent Ihlrtj drinks In Geriflany .during 1921. and there la no reason to expect any decrease in consumption for the current year, .The German ' prohibition . party, moreover, finds rich propaganda material In statenerv from ments, coming specialists and heads of state Insane asylums, who report an alarming Increase Id diseases resulting from the excessive pse of alcohol high-pric- ed es ance, Y. Ml something after the fashion of th centers. Forty of these house are In operation throughout Germany, and another lour hundred har been adapted to the epeclal local heeds of the outlying communities. Parallel with this movement Is the inof the People s restaurant, to auguration be operated In the interest of the com, , , munity. , j , Alcohol will be cold at these restaurants, but only in limited and at the discretion of the quantities, manager, who will be chosen for his knowledge of the special locality in which he 4 stationed. All profits accruing from this enterprise will be devoted to popular education. This is a point that will have to be considered In drafting - the Sew law now under discusagainst sion, and it Is to he assumed thstrestau-iant- s of this cnarater '.wilt be granted . , , special concessions , . ,f C. A. social Cases of this nature have more than doubled during the last 'year, aa hav also the cases of criminality and sexual aberrations directly traceable to alcoholic also effects. Germany prohibitionists potnt to the large percentage of foodstuffs which go Into th manufacture of alcoholic beverages, despite th acute shortage In all such commodities statistics along this line showing that during the first quarter - of the present fiscal year about half aa- much barley, eorn, and sugar were consumed - as during ry 7 the entire year of 1920-2- 1 Concerted effort .are being made' both to stem this extravagant waste of foodstuff as well as to correct the Injurious effeots of alcohol upon the youth of the land. But the prohibitionists are divided Into two camps, on advocating radical measures and the other only such as would curtail, but not abolish, the use of alcohol along th lines of ths experiment now being tried In Sweden Thl wing of the prohibition party does not attempt to deny th alimentary prot-ertof alcohol but balances this argument with another based on h unecoIn support of this the nomical thesis quote a statement mad by Dr Gruber, n Munirh medical authority, a who eavs that To feed the body on alcohol would amount to the same thing at to feed a steam boiler on flour!" fis one wav of cot retting the existing svll. Dr. Rclcke, a former Berlin burgomaster. has taken th InlMHuve In esof 'Psopie's Club tablishing a chain Houses," where the masse may meet upon neutral ground for social theatrical and musical perform te Intir-cours- - The German prohibition movement has a strong ally In the coming generation, who, since the dreadful lessons learned during the war. 'have taken a decided attitude toward the question. All along th line, from. the national parties to the the Communists, Jugendverbaende,' corresponding approximately to our Boy Scouts, with all military features eliminated, as well as the Various student leagues, have com out strongly either for total prohibition or for the radical curtailment of the present unrestricted priv. ' ilege. ' t There Is no doubt but that th example of the Lnlted State has been a great stimulus to movement - the In Germany, concrete proof of which t given by the resolution Just introduced In the German relchstag asking tor an official study of prohibition In the United States in order to decide what conclusion for German legislation' may be drawn on the basis of this material.'1 AMERICANS ARE CALM IN ACCIDENT IN PARIS i Diseases Increasing. - Studying Question r 't t if Tram Car Women In Taxi Etruck , by i Pay .Driver , and Proceed r j on Their Way. - J , rttlnos Salt Lake Tribune Cab e. PARIB-, May fi At the loud- report of a bursted and tire the crash of tin and glass, - stopped abruptly itiy conversation, with tire sculptor Delu at th MontCMrsgs parnasse Corner and looked dp to see a little old taxi pinned and tilted on the nose of s big tram car A crowd quickly assembled, as at a theater, and k policeman reached for his notebook and" the' rhauffeur rubbed his ayes as If hs hid Just come out of the ring. For a moment all was still, and then Jh door of tha taxi opened a If by a footman avid out stepped, with head erect and gracious step, a beautifully gowned lady swathed th a magnificent fur coat. 11 th appearance jot emerging With from a cocoon, still another creature, In figure though non the lee slighter elegant, followed the first. Waving a bill toward th chauffeur to nay their far. s If tt wa th most natural event in the wot Id, these two women showed a nonchalance in ths fuel ot what might easily hav been their escape from death that was indeed a pretty sight to watch cab for those Leaving th perched-ove- r who were Interested,' our two ladies quietly d'sappeared into the restaurant with ths same grace andcase of entering a ballroom. The little event might hav slipped more quickly from my mind had I not caught Juat a word or ta-- between them, and these words wer said In an unmistakable American accent. two-deck- er o When thl conception has sank into your consciousness, you begin to expand gloriously. You begin to spend with a lavish hand. Here, you say to yourself. Is the paradise of the dollar. Then thousand, 20.000, even.fi0.0o0, - crown hardly make you bilnk If you proceed long on this basts, Vienna Is scarcely the cheapest place In the world. A little heedlessnes tat selecting your dishes, and your dinner may easily cost you. (3. A little recklessness pbout taxi ana you may be several dollars poorer at th end of th day u transportation alone. Vienna The fact is that price? hrfi the things of strange contrasts Despite is acfor instance, exchange, clothing, New tually dearer than in London or more York. The better hotels charge for rooms than th best hotels ot Venice. But after m few days you discover that there ar always ways of economising In Vienna, and that th careful tourist can make a long stay for comparatively littlfi money. Eating Is Big Item, . . ? ' - Restaurant price vary widely. My first luncheon In Vienna cost me lfi J crown Ales than 23 cents). It consist- ed of k very good beef dlfih pastry ana, large glass of beer, it was not s cheap restaurant, either. Th same evening for dinner I decided to see now much a really expensive meal would corns to, and so. I went to what la well known as th most expensive restaurant The check touted J4,0o9 In Vienna. crowns, or nearly (Si This same meal at the same restaurant, Viennese residents tell me, would not few hav cost over 10,009 ? crown month ago. ", Is It time quite Yet t tbs present in possible to live comfortably anda even to comparative luxury for $1.50 dy 5000. 4000 meals, crowns, Vienna room, and 1000 for tips, makes about $1.40 at the present rate ef exchange. One thing that makes price attractive nowadays Is the governmental regulation of rents. Thu far landlords hav not been permitted to raise rents more the than an Insignificant amount above prewar rate. Hotel and private- houserents annual ar paying holders, as well, that In some cases do not run over $10 a year. One American here has90 two cents s rooms downtown for month and. even eo, he had to beg hl s tbe,;pr-vioulandlady to raise the rent from IJ pries of 12 cents. ' rur-nlsh- ed Rail Fare Cheap. This situation Is destined to change is s few months, s the government relaxing Its control. - That graduallv means that rents will go up and(tbat the price of hotel rooms will foHo Railroad fares In central Europe ar You can go all, practically negligible th wav across Austria for about to $1 In In first second, or $ third clasa. or $2 class. And If you dont mind crowding, third class Is qnlte practicable for short ro Four traveling companions jumps Ilk el v to b mostly Austrian "sportsmen "Sport" In Austria eons'sts primarily n donning a pair of green leather Tvro- looking lean brer'cs a os'r of stockings (bare knees, of course), a shirt I'erlabl with fancy suspenders and a telt hat with s heather In It. An alptneto k Then and knapsack complete the outfit. the sportsman gets Into a thlrd-cls- s . somenH'-travels and eomnar'ment where ha gets out and walks over hill and dal w.th other of hs speclj-a- . sirs i In Mexican Schools Increase Number of Free Breakfasts Lake Tribune Dswd Ire, Tril MEXICO CITY, May fi In the cltv of Mexico and the surround ng federal In-- s d strii t the department of public ruction is now furnishing breakfast to over 15,000 Indigent children dailv. This is an Increase of 400 per cent th free meal furnished laat year, and It la a good Indication of the targe Increase In school attendance of the lower class. Probably not more than half the school children are as yet attending school This Is due to th fact that th education department, though tt has opensu numerous new srhoos, has not been able to f nd butld'ng accommodations and Howteachars for the work In hand ever, the necessary buildings and tea- - Iter are prom.sed within (use next few months. Chic vnr-Ka- o'r America Soon to Procure Share of German Dyes fhlrsse Tribune Rett Lake Tribuae Cable. PARIS. Mav A Shipments of th American share of German daa award ed under the Versatile treaty are to go forward to America aga'n months the German die carl-- l For obatlnatet refused to deliver fi A merit an share on the ground that the United Ftates had lovt this prlrlleae when the Amerl an gov ernno nt wlthdiew the off rial atabus of the Texil'e Allember But iance of America In mld-D- e the pressure of the reparation commission has prevailed Dr K I ward 8 Chapin, who directs th offices of th text le allium e, has bua notified bv the cartel that AiueriuGi orders would bo filled at otue to 7 (3 - - l -- |