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Show EDITORIAL AUTOMOBILES MINES SPORTS REAL ESTATE FINANCIAL Sunday, June 18 1922 Foch Tells Story to King George Famous Dancp'r Weds RiiSsiarTPbe Shoeing tbs' great Frenchman and Englands kin$ chatting on the battlefield in the Arras sector, during the British royal visit there recently. Foch is telling the king about the fierce fighting by forces in that section during the bloody days of the war and the British sovereign seems in. terested. , " . This shows Isadora Duncan with taking a stride Untcr den Linden her young husband in Berlin, He is Sergew Alexandrowich Jesscnm, &young Russian poet. . It ie my first husband, Isadora told her friends, and we are at happy as any couple could be, she added. The noted dancer expects to take her husband to America in October, where sho will dance with tweuty-thro- e Russian children of her Moscow school. 'V nrs J.i V, France Insists Not So Much on German Money as Con tinued Credit Against Her Russia May Receive Little Attention at Next Parley,' By MAXIMILIAN HARDEN. Otbtle to The Salt Iiikt Triimn. fCfcpyrfght, 1922. by Salt iaike Tribune) BERLIN, June 16. Permit, mo dear reader, to put my dispatch today In the form of a Charlie Chaplin scenario entitled By WILLIAM BIRD. Special Cable to The Salt iAke TribUO,, (Copyright, 1922, by Salt PARIS, June 17. Horseback diplomacy is having its Innings in London today, where Premier. Poincare is being entertained by Premier Lloyd George at a polo match. Those who recall that Lloyd f George brought about the downfall M. Briand by taking him to tha golf links jlI Cannes are wondering whether" the equestrian sport may not effect Poin-ca- re In a more or lese dlsastroue manner. Not that the French premier actually will mount a pony that would be too Napoleonic but the very atmosphere of the British sporting fields hss a curiously demoralising effect on distinguished It is easy to fall into.ths foreigners. genial British sporting spirit of give ana and the risk is that before he gets take, safely back to Calais Poincare may give much more than he takes, even counting the 6,000,000 francs London is presenting to her adopted daughter, Vsrdun. .14 1 y 'Oi w jekir'" HI! I f ,7 " ' (V !( C 'v Underwood A Underwood, New York. -- PEDDLER PLAGUE Street Vendors cumulate Large Huisance able-bodi- -- ss French Titles Being Annexed by Many American Women By COUNT DE P ASSY, 'Universal Service Special Correspondent, PARIS. June 17. The marriage of Mias Count Saint Remain and Baron orlnigator of the channel Sally Beecher, niece of former United tunnel project and bliss Fischer,' sister States Ambassador Hugh C. Wallace, to of Countess della Gheradosca, married Count Jean de Luppe, who distinguished Count Jacques d'Aramon. himself as fm aviator during the war, Shortly before he became French to Washington, Jules Jusserand brings to mind the fact that a considermarried one of the Washington Richards able minority ol the titled world of Faria Other famous marla now American. riages Included Anna Gould's alliance with Earl tn the century alliances of Ameri- Count (now Marquis) Bonl de Castellano, can heiresses with French noblemen from whom she afterward obtained a odvll caused much hostile comment both in divorce and married Duke de Talleyrand. Countess Jean tie Kergolay was nee American and french newspapers. The result of these marriages has prac- Carroll, and her sister married Baron de In grange. Countess de Hayve Louis now rule beeu that Americans tically French society, hitherto tho most exclu- was formerly a Miss ODonnell, and Baroness sive in Europe. Amaunry de Lagrange was forOne of the first American women to merly a Sloane. Princess Edmond de marry a Frenchman was Miss Ridgeway, Pollgnac la the daughter of the man who who was wedded with the Marquis de Invented the sewing machine. Her sister, deceased, married Duke Decazea, the Ganpy. .She dledlast year and her mag,-nif- ii now , ent'art collection was .recently au- famous French sportsman. list of American women married to The of in total off Paris, bringing ction, bO. French nobles Is so long that it cannot l,nt n be published In Its entirely, but a few are: TwvS'other early Hanes werethose or The Tf Montgomery Marquise de Chambrun, nee Margaret Countees de Chambrun, sisters, the first with Count Oliver da la Rochefoucauld, and the other with Count nee Long worth; Baroness Seililere, nes was Miss Livermore; Marquise de Breteuil, nee Leon de Bethune. Another, de Breteuil, nee Viscount ' de Pols. Garner; Vlseounteee Heys marriage with Their daughter was Princess de Polx. Grant; Duchess de Ohaulne nee Shonts; nee Lawrence; whose salon at Paris was the scene of Princess Ponlatowska, senior, nee E perry ; many brilliant festivals and much political Princess Poniutowska. nes Princess Aymon de Fsucigny-Luringintrigue shortly after the second empire. About the same time Mias Eymes mar- Foster; Baroness Hottinguer, nee nee of Countess Arthur Gabiiac. ds master the Eassano. Filhlsn; ried Marquis de Garrison; Visstahles of Emperor Napoleon lit.; the Countess de Oasteja. nee nee Lawrence, Phalcn sisters married Count de Ujbrlao countess de MerlemonL Countess Paul dAramon, nee Beil, and respectiveand Count de Narbonne-Larthe late Countess ue Eusannet, who died ly; Miss Curtis married Marquis de the Slidell sisters married while still young, nee Know tea. dErlan-ger-T-famo- Franco-America- Rives-Nlcholl- s; e, I ' Publicist 7 t V f f r Jr f N 4 & ,s ui -- Owing to Lenine Collapse Lake-Tribune- .) ' ' First Act Opens. VF Franco-Amerlc- & v iA. "The Loan. Despite hla short coat and wide trousers, which do not remind one of Wall street, ever body credits him with the financial power of settling Europe's troubles and general disorder. He receives a polite Invitation from a creditor quartet, while a debtor, whose groans can be heard across the ocean, promises by wlrelees to sing nothing henceforth but "Charlie Usher Allpa.' If his undei taking succeeds When he appears for his passport Unrle Sam warns him that this tune he Is not going to a tragic, but to a comic, lunatic asylum, and that, as an Amerhan and the urgently invited savior, he will have to pay (orty times ordinary prices. X France's present position, being founded on In a, German . Spdal iw turn Germany's promises, which are based on the unrealized hypothesis, Is not For favorable. the prescertainly ent we are operating under the Cannes Copyrirfit, agreement, which provides for only gold marks annually, and when Belgium's priority Is deducted there is little left for France. This whole business stilt Is being badly conducted. Take the case of the bankers for instance. Their job Is to sell to the public. They must securities consider whether their wares wtil please their customers. An absolute prerequisite is a guarantee of sufficient annual to meet tho Interest and amorpajments If this condition Is not fultization. filled It Is useless to talk about a loan Yet the bankers were called together before any effort was made to compel Germany to arrange auch annual payments. Naturally the bankers decided a Acloan was impossible. When they sug- Some gested a reduction of the debt they merely meant it's easier to borrow one Sums; billion than ten billions. Faced by these facts, many Frenchmen are despairingly .asking whither are. we ' trending. ?I myGrows. Begginfc . self (Jo tibirkhAf' this pesslmlsmt-WhyBecause, considering the way the reparations matters have been handled for thirty months, it would be more aston- Chicago Tribune-Sal- t Lake Tribune Cable, ishing if any result had been achieved. LONDON, June IT. 'London Is afflicted now with a'plague of peddlers or beggars. Germany Can Pay. The whole thing now must be under- It is hard to say which.. It is perfectly taken anew with certain difficulties that true that they don't beg, but It is also did- - not exist In 1920, but which are by true that they dont offer value for monno means Insurmountable. These differences are of two kinds, ey, and It Is furthermore true that they moral and financial. Undevastated Ger- are never above accepting money from many certainly can pay In full, but the people who don't want their goods and notion that she cannot has spread and . take them. taken foot throughout Germany, making won't Most of new street traders dea p chological obstacle. Moreover, clare that theseare they Probably Germany, by her mad Inflation policy, they are, for It would be hard to find an has caused the mark to fall so low It no In Kngland who man young monhence a longer ia worth- anything, Is not an This claim to have etary obstacle.- however. Is the chief part of their When Germany has been taught by served, stock of it is a few in trade. The rest appropriate action occupatron of the shoe laces, a handful of postcards, or a Ruhr is unnecessary for that that peace little of collar buttons. trayful treaties are wrlous affairs and payments Some of these men do amazingly well. must be made; when marks have been One man told a London magistrate before ot low even at rate a stabilized, very whom he was brought .for obstruction a exchange, and revenues from taxes can few days ago that he was able to earn a be calculated with some certainty, and a day selling shoe laces. Another, When German taxes are made equivalent poundwas a who barrowload of flowpushing to the Frenchman's, then annuities can 8 a day when said he could make be arranged and loans based upon such ers, season was flower Its height. Moat the annuities wonft be difficult. Then, and of these street hawkersat can make about then only, can a reduction of the debt 10 a week without much troubl and a be considered based on an equivalent these of great proportion 'earnings Is reduction of all other war debts. pure charity. In a provincial town near 2 London scores ol thera are fined Truth Will Prevail. every week for illegal trading, and pay For two years the allied policy has It gladly as a sort of license fee. been consistently to place the cab before Some men who start in this way really the horse. Discussions of all sorts cov- make good as traders. The manager of ering allied debt cancellations, loans and a jobbing house in London told me that many others wholly unrealizable have a few months ago a man walked in, threw 10 on the counter, and asked for an astaken place, hut until Germany's resources are definitely utilized for regular sortment of goods suitable for peddling. He said he was tired of work and was payments nothing can, be done. Sooner or latr this condition will be fulfilled. taking to the road. Within a- - fortnight 30 for a new stork If Germany needed a year or two of he was back with 100 a week with respite France would have to have tern- - and he Is now spending and would and Is running a Great this wholesale the help, house, give porarjr Britain the opportunity to show her soil- - pony and cart in the country districts darity with France without risk, and round London. In the London suburbs the ex sold ter this would have a happy effect In America. peddler has developed Into a first-claturnwe rate cannot At any continue nuisance. He drops samples of his wares ing our back! td the truth both In Lon- through the letter box with a note saying don and Paris, because truth finally will he will return for .payment in a day or two. Usually the stuff is worthless trash. prevail, as always.. V ' 50v.rA.K- Failure to Receive 'Money From America Prompts Writer to Essay Comedy. Bankers Mean Business. . .4 Opportunity at Hapd for Entente Workable . Making and Composing Factions. by (Copyright, 1922, by Salt Lake Tribune.) PAitlS, June IT. The big reparations struggle is next on the calendar. The less Germany pays the more becomes her talk about reparations, and It does not seem that France's chances o! collecting are any better than they were eighteen ' months ago. It is unnecessary to repeat the events which have led to the present crisis. ' Germanys reply on Hay 31 promising what the reparations commission demanded was based on the hypothesis o( an international loan. The bankers' commission decided the loan was Impossible unless Germany's debt was reduced, which Prance declines and which the treaties stipulate shall not be done 'excepting by unanimoue vote of the commission. I4 v k rf Meeting of Bankers at Paris Put in Burlesque Form -- 4 '' Germanys Delay in Reparations Payments. Basis for Continued Discussion By ANDRE TARDIEU. 6peeial Wireless Dispatch to The Sait 4 i a, ' OLD DREILID ' I1 The Olympic quivers with pride as she takes the world's favorite aboard and lifts anchor amidst rejoicing. Even the ocean is too respectful to be rough. Three capital sliliie and a submarine fleet with 7777 reporters aboard sail fiom the nearest harbor to meet the salvation steamer. A hotel has .to be rented for thi secretaries! who are crammed with letters anil many tender love missives, but most of them for money which the writers Jokingly call loans. First episode. What won't and can't be repaid Is this film called "Loan." His little mustache twitches and our hero com-p- i fiends the situation at x glance. "These good people who receive me with such kindness have a debtor from whom nothing la to be gotten today or toiconow. and they want me to advance him money e wherewith to pay hla debt. Their touches me, hilt before 1 consent. I tmust examine the condition of this debtor whom 1 am supposed to heal. He questions a near-b- y gentleman, who looks like a clergyman who's left the church for the cotton trade. The latter, hearing the word heal, says: : 't V t vv' ft,; V'-tv; mi si if , . s Business His Mission. !. Copyright, Underwood A Underwood, New York. T Their Fancies to Limit Quick Cure Opposed. x That it tn unfbrtuaater flocking queen. Venice, the queen of the Adriatic, today Is filling with folk who speak the English language, who have ad their lives heard of the remarkable city and who are coming to see If their dreams were justified. The other day the new flag of the city was raised and loud ewere the vivas of the natives. The Americans joined In no shouting, but it was remarkable how many comnients were passed in the American language, and how many pairs of pointed shoes tilled St. Marks square. The season of sunshine had begun, from every direction the tourists were concentrating upon Venice. whereon It is printed. We hope you'll do this, and, with your graat prestige, explain to our friend, ally and principal creditor liow this debtor must he shared; otherwise, if he pavs too much, he will get II, and cheap again, and our trade will suffer more than ever. Second episode The invalid to be only half cured. Two of a quartet ready for any sacrifice the others will agree to. Somebody with waving banner and Jacobin cap, approaches and says, with exaggerated pathos: 'Don't let my dear hyprocritlral friend lead you astray. Thl Mr Albion thinks only of himself and when he speaks of Nazareth and Golgotha, ho really means The Inwtlid Cardiff and Birmingham. must recover, for only .then can he meet Air demands for payments whb.ii aie just Color Pleases. and mild as the Sermon on the Mount, Most everybody found that Venice was and whlrh we will not reduce like disabout the only place In Europe which honest shopkeepers. That Is. of course, Comes up to the Imagination or to one s unless we receive compensation elsewhere. preconceived Ideas. One American woman liked St. Mark's because the colors were soft and not as posteardly pictured; Turn Over. another declared the riot of color, was tho Things that article 233. annex "Dont an eye accustomed to two, says forget thing that pleased the reduction of debt only can fronts. But occur-bgray cities and brown-ston- e uhanimous Don't agreement. all found that it was the uniqueness of waste your time considering a little loan Venice that was its main attraction. bOO paper marks. no use of 600.090, That's "You actually must take a gondola to to me. My neighbor, who Is suffering get to your hotel from the railroad sta- from rupture of neutrality, has a prior tion. exclaimed the new visitor, uttering to mine, end so little would be left at once ther commonest yet most inter- claim You have enough common sense me. to esting observation the station has beard to understand I can't abandon my right a million times. It is only after you have to sanctions which halt the debtor's beesai the hotel a while that you learn breathing for a time, at least. Outside of that you can get almost everywhere on these as as you far little go exceptions land provided you want to take a chance like.' in a labyrinth with Mind alleys bringing looks ut the thermometer. It you,- - to blind waterways. The gondola, is Charlie 100 in the shade. Everything-itopsyhowever, reiryiina. the moat romantic of turvy. V vehicles It is romantic all the way from ever Rear before of the Did its graceful lines to the and borroweranybody making conditions to the lender, the guitar and mandolin playing, the or a bankrupt nation calling a tremendous moonlight and the faint swish, swish of sum a lfttle loan? They want me to the gondolier's oar. send heaps of money to Europe and let the receivers decide whats to he done Americans Enjoy It. with It. All of them have different Ideas, A room on the Grand canal which, by and, besides, the weakest la to have his time to strengthen the way, comes to less than a room liv breath cut off for aseem to have had a a hotel Unter den Linden In Berlin, where Mm. These I people 1 had my fire hose. wish things are supposed to be cheap, but sunstroke. would cover my custard a It Oh. for pie! aren't is a continual Joy. From red sun- retreat." rise to red sunset Venire goes through all dock of On the promenade the George the changes of color the mixing of the homeward ound, he has a primary ones are capable of, and the Washington sudden thought; on of passing dimly seen gontiny lights dolas under your hotel window has Its own enchantment. Certainly for the vis- Finale Filmed. itor from the American inlands this port "Perhaps this whole comedy was Just of the Adriatic is the best sight of all. to show us that we who paid for the war For the American city dweller yenlc with our blood money shall not only be ia the haven of rest If he chooses to v ic tors without compensation, but wa make It so. While It is the city of beauty. meat abandon all of the billions lent to It is the city of silence. There are, thank Europe, and even send more, that the old heaven, still no Jazz bands In Venice and world may begin to get In order again. no ahimpgr dancing. Wero those people so stupid they thought see through their trick? No Xouldn't AD Quiet. doubt If I had granted the loan it would a great laughing success in There are theaters and movie but no have been Europe, but it would have killed me forwild cabarets; and, most important, there ever American pubic. with the are no automobiles, no .street cars clank. The grand young man then puts his ing. not a single horse " to clatter on finger to h!s blow pyer hi melancholy, cobblestones, almost no dogs to bark at comic eves, and decides to launch his new the sunrise and durn few cats to give film, Chaplin and the lawn. If It Is competition concerts at night, because a shown next season don't forget this modof ia a knowledge swimming necessity est collaboration. Jor animals here. And it la quiet. It Is the rest care par excellence for jangled nerves. For those who are not for sightseeing, for mountSues t 60 lire) ing the steps (or elevator-pr- ice of the Campanile, for Inspecting the Doge'e palace or the art gallery, theca la Chlcaie TrlbuaeSalt Lake Tribes Cable. still the quiet colored beauty of the city wander for- hours Itself, where na-can In perfect quiet and peace of an age long Inge have been hurt again by on. of 5 these wild modern writers and today hla gone by. for lawyers have started1 a new lawsuit This time it is against Carl htern-helr- a libel. ARE YOU COINQ TO BUILDT and the communist editor, . Carl Have you consulted your wife, your Pfemffert. Hr. Btenfhetm has written the mechildren, your relative, your friend your business associates, your almanac, your mo res of the Raiser's pet horse, and claims that this horse comreference library your monthly magazine, your trade your pocket-book- , your municated all tho secret Information on life of Berlin, Petrograd and court banker, your lawyer, your doctor, your the architect? i You have, and you are stHl Iondon to him, at spiritistic seances. But Mr. going to build? Then step forward and the kaiser insists on considering take either the fool' cap or the Carnegie Etemheim and hie rlend the editor re- medal We don't know which you spsonible for the insults to his honor contained in the book "Ubus s folk-son- Kaiser Feels Insulted and He for Libel - I rpot - May Concede. Famine Old Turk Shunt American France French critics say that this means that France does not particularly car about actual money from Germany, but Women Saying They Run getting and ' Crop Destruction she only wants to hav a perpetual credit against Germany recognised. did not arouse much Make Chinas Lot Hard. Things or Smash Them. These insuggestions Franc even among th most Floods, expression, If this fellow gets well too quickly he may Injure our trade as he we did before gave him the five-yeChics re Tribune-Sal- t Like Tribune Cable. famine cure while our Christian hearts VENICE, June 17. Cats, though per- bled at the thought. What we want la to mitted, may have no pleasure In looking prevent Ills profiting from paper money, we can't do that by helping him make at a king, but American tourists are and hla money worth more than the paper to look at the Mr. Chaplin. FATAL HUNGER 7 , Anybody who supposes that Poincare is In London merely to make eloquent h speeches about solidarity is badly mistaken. The chief object is to prepare a base for The Hague conference. which at present Is constituted only ot some un ha ppyr lonesome experts, who vaguely wonder why nobody pays any attention to the fact that they are again saving the world. What cramped Uoyd George at Genoa more than anything els was th reparations question, which the Cannes program forbade his discussing, and that's what he particularly desires to talk to Poincare about now. It ia significant that official hints have dropped in Paris luring the week thaL while France will never consent to a reduction in Germany's debt unless granted a proportionate reduction in her own obligations, she would listen attentively to any proposal for th postponement of payment Anglo-Frenc- i conf.-dcnc- Soft, Gentle, Calm, Serene, All Visitors Indulge ' i T Bandits, - , protest By CHARLES DAILEY. Chtesso Tribune Salt Lake Trlbunt Cable Abdul-al-Haml- d, ISINANFU, Shantung, June 17. On who has spent two years amid famine and flood conditions In China knows what Is In store fbr Shantung this year. The normally rich province Is millions In debt, Is overrun with bandits, is struggling to get the Shantung railway tack Into its control, and on top of it all 300, ooo ouls, with all they possess, which is next to nothing, are doomed to destitution and many of them to death when the floods, come down the Yellow river In July, as they alwavs do. in addition, an economic loss of 310,000,000 will result In the destruction of crops, or buildings and In sustaining for a year the thousands that will be homeless. Two months from now and America will hear again the cry for aid for the starving In Chinn, but will respond less eagerly, for China waa warned In time and turned a deaf ear., It Is characteristic of the Chinese (hat they are indlffeient to fate. The Tribune conespondent has seen a man fall from a boat in the' Yangtze! with not one to turn a hand to rescue him. Far up the In the famine region of Chihli, he saw an epileptic boy topple from the skiff his father was about to shove oft from the bank. The parent merely stared at the boy while two Americans, one sn army officer, waded waist deep Into the v water In ember and got him out Never ta a hand before he drowned. raised In a preventive or protective way for a fellow being. It ia fate. It Is as the godahave willed. Puch la China.; So the destiny of 300,000 persons In Shantung province, only 120 miles northeast of Tslnanfu, the capital, and sixty is left to- - (ale. mile It could have been averted, but It ia too late now. Oliver J. Todd, a civil engineer from San Francisco, now building with Red Cross funds and famine labor a roadway In district stricken- last year, reluctantl" hi abandoned hops for these people ana n w Is striving to get Red Cross Aid foi tin erection of dikes around two large towns on the edge of the area that will be flooded. This will be accomplished wti(i funds Tor ratkm wages, donated last Year and: the year The before by sympathetic Americans. dikes will save the, town dwellers, herded like rabbits tn warrens and possessing but little, but the farmer are to lose all. The Yellow river flood last year sent down Its torrents as usual, but the dikes held until most of the people could get out of the wav. When the break came thousands of acres were Inundated. Had the dike been repaired a more serious calamity thla year could have been avoided. But the province had no money and time Peking had neither money nor tke milto listen, what with cabinet crises, itarist and other corruption and factional maneuverings of what yet may prove Pei-ta-h- o, rntd-No- - D-- e civil . d, well-kno- 1 , received-a-packag- of American slanrf while In New York four years go. Continuing. "That Is why a Jugo-SIa- v maid of tender year seems to me to be the ideal as, a harem wife. They are docile stay at home when hubby wishes to gallop shout the wild lands, and they are excellent cooks of pig meats. They are Ideal mav be a little heavy set, but and lamblike." quiet At Hamid blinked twice as another metnher ot the weaker 'sex hove In sight. That's sweetness Itself. I must buv It." he ejaculated, pulling out a pair of "Pretty, eyeglasses. gold-rimm- one. They do grow some lit this country. A coffee drinker at ths of them nice - - next table InPardon,' terrupted the conversation. he said, that's a French girl." , ; Abdul put away his eyeglasses, declaring h must hasten to Paris at the end of th month. He acknowledged that he wants to buy wive with ostrian kronen or Russian ruble so that he tylll get the benefit Of the exchange and collect new members for bis harem at bargain 5 - t prices. ' ' Germany Making Great Progress Trade In Regaining Her Pre-w. ar war. In July the flood will com. A great gap many miles long awaits the torrent area. that will spread out over the vast Th estimated cost of the dike, made by Is 3U,00U an American engineering firm, su(Mex.) without anything but a mere reckoned a at blit price profit, pervising or commissions actually without squeeze to authorities and with labor, at current book charge to prices, without additional of labor.' Philthe Influential recruiters in China not exist not does anthropy il the geneven tn Shantung. In erous contracting. firm passed up the case s hopeless. The doomed area Is tn the delta section. mid-Apr- the centuries ths Yellow river has been washing the mountainsareInto ths tea. The poor people, or owners of the land else they would not be there. China is In a desperate struggle overpopulated. for existence the less fortunate were glad They built to get even this lowland. their mud and brick houses and ! they all Th wheat crops. their planted wavy green now, but cannot be harvested can work until Julv. Before th reaper' the floods will rise. All the seed town last year tn the hope the -dike would be repaired will be wasted. And with It possibly many livsj. Such is China. in so an extension of bitter the moratorium may be looked for, with concessions on Trlbone-B.lLake Tribes. Cable, t probably compensating Chief Great Britains part In Asia Minor. 17. June BELGRADE, As for Russia, she will be less at the aged 71, with young Ideas and front at The Hague than at Genoa, since his pockets stuffed with Turkish pounds, the collapse of, Lenine has caused all to see what policy will be arrived In Belgrade from Constantinople. hands to wait by the committee which now is That event In Itself would not create adopted ' directing Russia's affair any Interest if tt were not for the fact look waa to over STARVING HORDES in Belgrade that Abdul the Jugo-Sia- v beauty field, and, if necesBEWARE OF GIFTS sary, purchase outright a young and pretty maid as an additional feminine ornament for bis harem in Turkey. Clgsurets Shunned, Victim Thinking Abdul mads no bones about the fact They Are Potions Intended for that he would like to garner a fair maid' en from every country of the world to . light his pips for him at night and put on hla slippers, and his first stop was Chins Tribune Balt Lake Tribune Cable. on his way to points east. Belgrade ' RIGA, Latvia, June 17. People la th The harem chieftain, wearing a gorBaltic states are Inclined to look a gift geously red necktie, topped by a fez and horse In the mouth, particularly la the his puffing a perfumed clgaret, takes of clgaret nightly cushioned seat at the Moscow case When flood, famine or pestilence hits cafe and lamps all the beauties who pass, in these countries, the American waiting for a choice morsel before pop- - hard get on ths job right ing the come hither,-chilquestion. relief organizations away and begin caring for th people. ie hasn't found the lucky on yet. he One done Is to hand of first the things acknowledged. A The harem Is my hobby, just as It is out packages of clgaret. On th sld distributed. Yankee brand another mans hobby to study astron- of lettered la sticker red a each package omy. ht declared one night, gazing Gift of the American Red Cros through a ring of smoke at a passing discovered worker relief (he mademoiselle. I'd like to have a wife Recently gift clgaret from every nation gracing my fireside, natives fought shy of these handled them dubiously, even though I am old and have gray They took them refused to smoke them. They hairs ; but there's a lot of life In me yet. gingerly. Gift! Gift! Gift! said one Lett InAbdul 1 not any too strong for an the package of American entry Into his harem. He ex- dignantly. a he chucked into the snow and walked away. it, la this way; Your Americanor clgaret plains, take I gift! dont Me, women want either to run the show developed the fact that gift" bust 1L up.; IC they can't run it or bust Is inquiries as for word a her Every, used poison. It up. they begin to reform IL They e of had would probably Want to oust me as head one who with "gtft" stamped on it thought of my own harem and put a woman In to commit a chance' offered was he being charge. Can you beat it? Ahdul said that he reaped th harvest suicide. Service, Cable. we cannot yst buy' Imneb large quanWe will need an enormous tities. amount of cotton and copper from the United Elates, but bow we are compelled , to buy on a small basis, eimpty putting every cent of profit back Into Industry. But w are making progress. Our factories are practicing every economy in the us of auch ra materials as ran be procured, and we tire able to use large amounts of material th-- t otherwise might be wasted. All of : our production costs are extremely low, because our skilled laborer 'nrt to aomething iike an ConseIt was amid. a day In American v tn n In no meet a trouble we We are encountering eaq quently, a- e e a declared and old our back customer" markets, foreign gal getting adeMost of our firms top speed to keep "these maran embassy official. have not been able to send out trade en- quately supplied. : We are also rebuilding our merct-n- t voys because of tho great difference In th exchange rate, which makes it s marine as rapidly as poeribie so that It most expensive undertaking for us. But may profit by lower freight costs, but baa we have found that most of those who ts a alow process and so much nip-e- y were customer before th war have vo- to be Invested before there Is any adeus. to returned return. quate luntarily srs not But tt may be said that Our greatest difficulty now Is getting raw material , We have a market and a In any way discouraged- -cor-u-abort -' i ws can and on for successfully produce, meeting everything good . but w cannot produce enough, because other nations in fu 4 l t ! a . r - Universal 1 WASHINGTON.. June 17. Germany is making, gigantle strides in regaining her her commercial replost foreign trad resentatives her declar. ' Former customers, throughout the world are again placing orders with Gorman concerns and reestablishing the relations that1 existed Trior to the war. This Is because the customer are accustomed to handling German product prefer the and system of credit, method of packing s the advantage dn exchange- - rates wow-make- if ' i i |