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Show EDITORIAL AUTOMOBILES. SPORTS REAL ESTATE MINES FINANCIAL PRINCESS ANASTASIA OF GREECE SOON TO VISIT UNITED STATES YOUNG CALIFORNIA WOMAN ADOPTED BY COUNTESS OF FRENCH NOBILITY This show Princess Anastasia of Greece, formerly Mrs. William B. Leeds, with her famous emerald necklace and diamond headdress, from a recent portrait by A. de Lazzloo. The princess will shortly pay a visit to the United States an' visit friends at Newport, B. L A recent photo study of Mrs. Claudia Windsor Tartoue of California, wife of the noted portrait painter, 1'icrre Tartoue, with whom she has been in litiadopted by, gation since a few months after their marriage, who has been ide Toeque-villeMme. de Toequevilte, widow of Vieomte Augustin Itene Clerel who was au officer of the Legion of Honor and whose estate included Mme. de house in Paris anjl the Chateau de Tourlaville near Cherbourg. Tocquev ille, in explaining her purpose in adopting Mrs. Tartoue, said that had she would own little girl have been lived, the latter was about the age her and. that she knew Tartoue m Prance before the latter married the young in the with her troubles the boa with latter woman, and painter. sympathized f V A i v 4' ' ' ' Thousands of Unemployed Find Worjf on Account of Troubles on This Side. V a , 1 V , W x - i Versailles in r Restoration ft I. V; ' A 4' ( ' Wales Awakened. South Wales three weeks ago was In an unprecedented slump. One town of 16 OoO population, for Instance, had 14.006 starving along on unemployment benefits. Exports were half of the prewar average and there were no orders. According to operators' reports, the Industry was not earning enough to cover the although the wage rate was lower than before the war. The miradle,' as some mine owners have described the sudden and enormous orders from across the Atlantic, worked a complete change overnight. The "demoralizing despondency" of July, to quote cne expert, gave way To a "vivifying It" Is not yet known Just cheerfulnesi how much coal America Is going to buy, but enough hag already been ordered to absorb all the collieries can produce up to the end of August, and not a few companies which yesterday were frantically orders so as to begging for avoid the huge expense Involved In suspending operations have withdrawn from the market. Nobody seems very excited over the difficulties American authorities are hav"All ing with English booze smugglers. says the Daily Express, "Is no this, doubt very awkard for American prohibition enforcement officers, who are set on the hopeless task of guarding thousands of miles of thinly populated coast line. But we really do not see what we can do about It. The pussyfooters have undertaken to deny the natural human appetite for drink of more than 100,000,000 people who have plenty of money to pay for what thev want. With such unanims. ity one wonders who can be the day-to-d- pussy-footer- The Express continues, more magnanimously: When they (the smugglers) are caught we do not .complain; but we could not, even If we chose, tell colonial governments that, while their people may drink what they like on shore, they shall not put anything to drink In a ship and sail the seas therein." AMERICANS MAY BUY HOUSE AT SAINT DIE Building Where Name America Said to Have Originated Will Be Preserved. V Vi r y V J F VVv V. 1 y! fi X, )? FW?V? C' t s t 1 JJrA m v ' ' ' ' V o 'w v fv w PI H s ' j V T - S ; 4 tfl'X yT y c & 'ir: ,.,X .y o - 5 I Underwood, New York. written In a peculiar style that only those educated Into It can understand. Talk of closed corporations' The Imperial and dishonest association of tax gatherers in Persia certainly Is one. Taxes Never Change. The village mustawfi maintains the taxation record of his village, with the amounts due from individuals set opposite their names in his little book The village returns are kept bv the district mustawfi, the district returns bv the provincial, and those of the country by the chiefs In Teheran. They are all Collectors Make No Ac- written in little books, usually unbound, and kept always on the' person of the tax gatherer. No changes itk the tax demands have been made In generations. Villages which fifty years ago contained a thouRemain in sand houses and which now boast a hundred are supposed to pav the amount of taxes they formerly did. The mustawfi does his best to collect all the revenues due under the old schedules By JOHN CLAYTON. Chicago Tribune Foreign News Service. and the population la reduced to abject poverty. TEHERAN, Aug. 12. Of all antiques In this antiquated land perhaps the most Collectors Wax Rich. venerable Is the Perslon system of taxOther villages which boasted only a ation and tax collection. No one knows few hundred souls have grown to be large towrns today, hut the returns to the province are still what they were on what basis taxes actually are levied. when the village was small. Needless Back In biblical times (he kings of all to say, the tax gatherer collects a tithe the Persians collected 10 per cent on of all crops, but the difference between the collections and the amount due goes crops, kine, sheep and camels. The Into his own pockets. In these villages amounts every village was supposed to the mustawfi waxes immensely rich pay were noted In little books placed In collections are in money, Where the hands of tax gathers, and It la safe some smallthe portion finally reaches Teto sav that almost no revision in the heran, but whej-taxes are paid In tax schedule haB been made since that kind, or none of this produce ever little dav. Is sold for the government. All the If you would understand how the name proceeds from It goes Into the became anathema and of various government officials. pockets the tvplflration of all that is oppressive in political dishonesty during the early days of New Testament history, consider his workings in Persia. The crops everv year amount to millions of toSchools mans, of which 10 per cent is supposed to revert to the government. But of the amounts gathenrd it is safe to estimate Chlc.ro Tribune Belt Lake Tribune Cable. that only a small part reaches the cenPARIS, Aug. 12. The Interest shown tral government. The rest goes to vaAmerican college and secondary rious individuals through whose- hands by school teachers in the means offered by moneys and collections In .kind must France to improve their knowledge ot pass. the language, customs, literature and art of the country is shown in the greatly Jobs Remain in Family. increased number of American professors For generations past the collection of and teachers who are registered at the Sorbonne for the summer work of that dues has been In the hands of a pecuInstitution, which has started upon Its liar class of robbers known as Thev maintain their positions three months' course. There are 230 Americans registered at from generation to generation, the berth being recognized as the hereditary right the Sorbonne, practically all of whom of the family and passing from father are taking the July course In early Of to eldest son. Perhaps some of them French civilization. this number, re engaged in more than HO persons date back to the days of Darius. These mustawfls keep all the taxation teaching, either In universities or high records of the villages, districts and pro- schools. Not all are remaining In Paris, visions, and another group known as however, for equally attractive courses chief mustawfls handle the books at the are offered In French provincial uniministry of finance. These records are versities. counting and Wax Rich; Jobs Families. American Instructors Attend French - mus-tawfi- s. Deep Clustery Surrounds Purchase e, e, By ! Gfll Things Go Wrong. - Copyright. Underwood . Witt-ls-ba- eh y Ate - t ,'l r - "P ; basil woon. Universal Service Cable. PARIS, Aug. 12. Mystery surrounds lier If it was true he had purchased the reported purchase of the gambling Deauville, ha said: There was no question of obtaining concession at Deauville; greatest gam- a full Interest, which cannot be obtained because the owners of the shares are bling resort on eartfi. Four men figure In the various re- widely scattered. Is it a fact that you have purchased ports. They are: all of Cornuchet's Interest?" Eugene Cornuchet, founder of Maxlme, Is not. It is true, however, that 1 It original bolder of the Cannes and Deau- am Interested In the future of Deauville casinos and a large owner in Monte ville. Carlo. Started life as a dishwasher. to Cornuchet refused Interviewed, Henri Letelller, Europe's greatest but Andre" who a few beyears ago was lover, proprietor of Le Journal, re- proprietor of a email Paris ported new owner of Cannes casino, own- and who is now said to be restaurant or er of champagne dance dubs, mentioned Rothschild admitted that1 he hadsecond acin the Peggy Joyce divorce' case and a considerable interest" in ' the reported lately os Peggy's latest fiance, quired Normandy resort where during August said to be the wealthiest man in France. more money is spent per minute than operAndre, pseudonym under whichHauss-manelse In the world. anywhere n ates the owner of the Bbulevard Joel, visiting Deauville In his Solly of club In Paris, where hundreds laughed when the question was thousands are tost and won by Ameri- yacht,to him. cans and other foreigners At baccarat put"I've already got a strong interest In nightly. South Afri- Deauville,"in he said, if the money I've Solly Joel, the casino there counts." can diamond merchant and multimillion- dropped The mystery remains The only true aire race horse owner; .twice winner of fact of the situation teems to be that The man with the mortthe derby. Deauville or most of the shares in it gage on the crown Jewels. have been sold for the biggest sum of Cornuchet Is alleged to hare sold his Interests for the sum of two hundred any similar deal recorded. dollars million francs forty million Gambling Is one of the businesses in g and an Income for life of $60,000. profit. Europe which show a The queetlon agitating Paris Is the The turnover et Deauville last year exname of the buver. ceeded a million francs a night and When Universal Service asked Letel- - the gambling totals were much higher. ' world-famo- sure-thin- Through the Inflexible personlf'ratlon of her particular rights, Bavaria auflered less under Wilhelm's theatricals than otner parts of the empire. LVsptte this, Ludtho revo.ut.on broke out there. wig 111 accepted the title of king of Bavaria while his cousin Otto was still alive and could not be robbed of his crown. elevation was reLudwig s premature garded by the clergy ias an 'outrage the s monarchy fundamental Wea. against The old gentleman wua not liked because was he Alter stingy and undecorelive. talk liiH, Influenced by the and submarine prom.ses, iic made tcirlb.e mistakes In his pubt.c speeches. Lis senile, rabid chauvimam was only effectual at court, in tho academy and the universltlca Then came tho lime of hunger. Coal was scarce. BaVaria young men, foolhardy, tough soldiers, had thrown themselves Into the thickest oi the f ght and had lost heavily, and were beglnn ng to take notice that their tremendous sacrifices were In vain. The beer became dearer, .then thinner, scarcer. Food proliteering added to the he proletariat became general misery. furious at the inadequacy of the Administration and aoon was ready for the of the existing immed ate destruction Viewpoint. rfei1' gions of War-tor- n AsRe- State. BY ANDRE TARD1EU. (Special cable to The Salt Lake Tribune.) (Copyright. 1922, by Salt Lake Tribune.) PARIS, Aug. 12. The result ft the London conference cannot be forecast, because the British and French viewpoints are so widely opposed. Lloyd George's Idea was to grant Germany a long moratorium, white Po ncare proposed to exact forfe ts from Germany In return for such moratorium. The great outstanding feature, alas, fs the paralj-l- s which affects hit European politics. We succeeded in making war, but in making a peace It would seem all of our powers ot action have been exhausted. ..v, Look at the subjects which have been dlrcussed in London. Lloyd George de& Underwood New York. Underwood. Copyright, bates French finances ana uses Inexact figures.- By ths way. th s reminds me of the- Paris peace conference when the British premier reproached President Wilson because the United States did not have enough men killed in the war. Then when the guarantees were taken The Installup, what waa discovered? ment of 26 per vent on foreign bils produced by German experts, which wee levied by the London conference in May, 1921, never was executed. How is it possible to take such demands seriously when they range from retrospective quarrels to measures already adopted, but not already put into execution? re-g.- ? of Gambfino Resort at Deauviffe PARIS, Aug. 12. That Amerigo Vespucci's name should have suggested the appellation of the new continent discovered by Christopher Columbus was a historical blunder that has been conse grated by ttme, but It is none the less a matter of Interest especially to Amer leans to preserve the landmarks that commemorate the event, namely, the house at Saint-Di- e (Vosges), where the name America" was first used and which Is soon to be put up at auction. Mrs. Robert Bscqn, widow ' o P the American ambassador, who attended the fetes at the- - baptismal home" In 1911 and is desirous ,of presenting the home to the town of Sakit-Difinds It Impossible to comply- - with the Incidental tax of 2$ per rent of the sale price, and the present tenant wishes to use his privilege of refusal. So that the question remains open whether the house Is to become a museum or to continue to serve as a residence. About lulo the tow, plaster covered building In the main street of Salnt-Dlnear one of the most ancient, cloistered churches In France, Waldese Muller and his companions directed a geographical society, printing their own maps. One of these was the first map showing the newly discovered continent as "America. Copies of this map, changed to . meet discoveries affecting subsequent the initial conception of the coast line, are now In the possession 'of the Salnt-D- ie municipal authorities. The building bears a tablet relating the origin of the - name America' and proclaiming Salnt- Die as the marraine de TAmerique. BY MAXIMILIAN. HARDEN. (Special cable to The Salt Lake Tribune.) (Cop right, 1022, by Salt Lake Tribune.) BERLIN, Aug 13 In the constitution and documents, the empire created a Versailles was called the eternal conThe "eternity" lasted forty-eigfederacy." years. In 1010 the national assembly created the new Helclia confederacy. Vvill this last longer than the other, or even as long? For weeks negotlat ons havj been going on between the German lepubiuun government and Bavaria uke lust between eirungt is Even during me of the k inr. Bavaria did not al'uw her particular righte to be touch d. German stamps and uniforms wo.e not used The stiff Prussians founded the home of arts, rough peaeant cathollcBtn arid best, beer, too, democratic and undisciplined. Classes were less Bharply separated tliun in nqrth Germany. Perhaps the prince would drink beei with the Sitiet, coachman-or Tradesman, and the people lived in a happy comradeship w.i i the dv nasty, whicn since the days of the mad King Iaidwlg's extravagances had abandoned state ceremony. on Appreciate American sistance in Devastated s'- - ht Miners Reciprocate. V ,j ;.c Monarchy . y M'i strise-smltte- Last year American miners Increased production during the national coal strike here, and the British miners have not Moreover, wages have been forgotten. so near the starvation line and there has been so much unemployment that a job looks like a job. are urging International Extremists solidarity and there may be incidents of sympathetic action on this side before the coal shortage is entirely relieved. The official organ of the Communists, who have a certain strength in, South Wales, accepts the report that 'miners officials have declared the attempt to remove the American shortage with British coal may be futile. Newcastle reports that the whole of the available supply Is fully .booked up to the end of August. There are numerous inquiries from the United States for rates. Conuigent supplies tinental countries are getting into the scramble. Brices jumped two shillings and ships that were seeking charter at less than eight shillings a ton are now being hartereil at twelve and a half shillings. Miners are generally working full time. Glasgow tells a similar story. So far the miners have not objected to "scabbing," ' Germany is buying heavily .(to to fulril her reparations obligations France and Italy) and the demand promises to exceed the supply, thanks to tbs trouble In the states. of gether - 4 Population of the Country i $ -- s Be- Aim of Large Part of the v . 1871 Lloyd George and Poincare i ' Fail in Efforts to Get To- at all Down. ginning to A H. MATSON. (Copyright, 1922, by Salt Lake Tribune.) LONDON, Aug. 12. The British coal Industry L' doing well, thank you. A few weeks ago it was a very sick industry. The thousands of unemployed were get ting by with half rations, and those still iu jobs were getting wages of a tower alire than tnose of before purchasing the war. Lines of coal cars were filed away on sidings. Shipping rates were down almost to the prewar le els, but bottoms went begging. "Demand was drying up in nearly all normal markets, and losses In many cases were so heavy as to foretell an Irretrievable financial disn aster. Then came orders from America. That noise you heard in the east was loud cheers in Cardiff and Glasgow and Newcastle. There was talk of the miners refusing to "scab" on the American strikers. William htraker, general secretary of the Northumberland miners federation, said he considered it unlikely that the federation would take ady official action against for obthe export of coal to America vious reasons. Formed v r Confederacy r Radicals Urge Men to Keep Away From Pits but They ' Want to Make a Living. By NORMAN . , , SPECTACLE Women Praised. Government Afraid to Dis- American Conditions in Land of the 4f Truth, as well as traditional sympathy. Is responsible for the warm welcome acAre Mystery Even solve Reichstag, as Na- corded to the French good will determi, Soviet nation that comes under American to visit the devastated regions. Our to Inhabitants of Riga. tionalists May Come In. people realize that these American , . au-pc- es women, coming without any preconceived opinions and only asking to understand, wl.l do more than any international conference toward bringing about an apChicago Tribune 8alt Lake Tribune Cable. By MAXIMILIAN HARDEN. proach of the minds and hearts across RIGA, Aug. 12 The American doctor Special Cable to. The Salt Lake Tribune. the ocean. Therefore we give them the smiled as he jabbed the sringe needle (Copyright, 1922, by Salt lake Tribune ) heartiest Welcome. into his victim a arm. The 12. German The repubBERLIN, eight of France Is a lesson. We Aug. non li(ti) ftflO germs typhoid There are 2. working courageously and only ask lic faces a midsummer-crisiThe gov- are and he es'd. to be sted to cont'nue. But we must He Jabbed again, adding, There are ernment Is afiald to dissolve the reichs- -' not beass crushed by the weight of victory. 2,000.00(1 oOU more cholera, catarrh end tag and appeal to the people for fear The 1S2 Americans belonging to the comNow you're all set, but of pneumonia know what a state of total decourse this does not prevent ou from that more Nationalists would be returned. mittee struction the war left the towns In the gct'.ing typhus ' Every citizen, considering the govern- battlefield area in. American aid, . American who enter Huh. is usually go ment's 'timidity, feels unsafe. The Ham amounting to $23,000,000, has greatly enin perambulating bcieriol"gi. l French activity. a carry- btiig banker. Max Warburg, whose broth-o- r --couraged They start for J'MMe counted on the official cooperaa regiis a partner in the American banking tion of the allies for this effort. We ing enough gi ms to state. ment. And loi inM u taitow w only on our disappointment flrn) of Kuhn, Loeb A Co., a superla- cannot d.sslmilate phase of get 111 g Into Kuwti ' over being deprived of 1L This makes us who M a mem-tEisner Wins Laurels. German, tively palrktle thw ltueehsn , federated Entering got of the first G or meal pence delegation all the more sensitive toward signs of r, socialist republic Is not an easy muter. d The socialist, Kurt and sympathy such as tnose started a movement for the rejection interest accused of treason and just liberated First, and all Imsairtant, on must of the treaty, has been so threatened which the American women now are evl- from prison, swept the amient dynasty cure the permission of (lie soviet govthat the police have ordered him not to denclng. from the thicne like a child shaking dead ernment to enter This leave his house. France Discouraged. Moscow and awaiting the anleaves trom the trees. Through his InAnother banker well known in the Unitg swer. Then It of a governtiecc-- e ry to have an fluences, the It 'a certain that the Impoverished colonial Herr former ed Mule. Dcnberg, ment desirous of doing good and striving American pasHiast amendment to Include after repeated - world can onlv recover through combined for purity aga n was heard. It was Russia. Till nrci Aotales cabling Wash- minister, has decided, action. GruneIndeed, It is discouraging to see In to sell his house the menace, cheered and acclaimed for three months ington. and walling also. aid section, which has received a sinis- governments incapable of agreeing on the unOma the Huesdan and American perby all classes. Consequently, the for-ybest way. Six months ago at Gqnoa, mission Is received, the question of buy- ter reputation through the murder of L practical, literary, tubercular Eisner oyd George wanted to help Russia and Rathenau and the attack upon myself. waa for the moment that he was a Jew, ing a kit for the trip arises ready to make an important financial born m Berlin, and so m tne opinion of list found by the police have effort In this direction. The soviet g atcertain people unfitted to be the suc- still Baltic, is the last way the murder Berlin haa shown how completely useless titude with false passports cessor of the house of Witteisbach. But station on the road to Moscow. Many fiel from all waa when he entered parliament to announce Americans entering Russia make their under police protectant. Btressemann, th's French must ask themselves why The his resignation he was shot by Count final arrangements here. Everyone gets the Monarchist leader, who favored unthey have been excluded from the BritArco, eon of a rich Prussian Jewess, who the necery inoculations against ty- restricted submarine warfare and annexaish effort along this I n?. nevertheless boasted of hav.ng delivered phoid, Influenza and cholera. tion of Belgium, urgently requests 1 po- Is itgovernment's the fault of Is it Bavaria from Jewish rule. Eisner, who buys a three days' supply of Everyone food and lice protection because he saw persons the fault of those Lloyd George?France? representing during 100 daya of wiser rule had not a small gasoline for there are outside his window. However It we cannot hide our may be, himshed a drop of blood, was given a magSU11 more dumbfounding. Stinne no dining cars on the train that rune disappointment and even sadness at seenificent funetal by a grateful people warmest who was the .nationalist to from here self, Moscow, and the although so much influence shown to the conThen muddle-heade- d fanatics attempted American a comfortable sleeping car. throughout the war and even recently ing aggressor who will not pay and to stir up the fury of the people aifd he must gets and cook his own food demonstrated hie unchanged opinions by quered so carry much rigor to the devastated victor create a soviet rule like Russia. Count during the three-da- y and Hindenburg ships baptizing Tirplts, trip. claiming his due. In the moral history Arco became a national hero, hia photoThen there arises the question of un- Ludondorff, this fearless and nerveless of France and Europe, the London conInsistent ference la not graphs were Bold by thousands and hia underwear by g The cootie man has been persuaded a happy date. prison became a place of pilgrimage. Bo Is a big menace in Russia today. All warnings to leave his home at many Russian and Prussian Jews were American circles are divided Into two with hie entire and, Ruhr, in the soviet movement that the bitterschools of thought on this question. One-ha- family, move to an isolated private houae ness always increased against them. claim that It Is advisable to wear in Berlin. Perhaps the fact that he has Henceforth Bavaria became lor Germany silk underwear Legs so that the adventurous French blood, ha opposed any rapid reswhat Vendee was for France after the cootie will slip, skid, fall and toration of the monarchy, favor an ecorevolution of 1780. nomic entente with France, wants Inter- Universal Service Cable. break his neck. The other half assert that the proper national peace for business reasons and PARIS. Aug. 12. Announcement by a Bavaria Obstinate. thing to do Is to wear heavy woolen un- wont supply money for a counterrevolu- prominent French dally that a big prize In thU German Vendee numbers of derwear, so that the cootie will get all tion and a war of revenge, le the reason le to be offered for the owner of the But It is useless to most beautiful legs In the world has Prussian officers are working with the tangled up. become discouraged and he is threatened. with Ludendorff at starve to death. There are no statistics seek motive. Millions of Germans are elicited a chorus of ridicule and some nobility their head, inciting against the Berlin available to show which school of thought persuaded that every republican and Jew dismay from prominent French beauties Is a pacifist and a traitor. government and using war methods to is correct. "It Is well known that Mlstlnguett, the persuade the politically ignqrant that Again the schools divide on the quesThirty or forty thousand yonng men. actress, has the loveliest legs on earth, tion of what kit to bring Into Russia. former officers, students and high school says Baron de Waleffe, famous essayist, only Jews are ruling in Berlin and is threatening there. So Ba- Some Americans, believing that condi-ton- s boys, have pledged themselves in a secret but presumably professionals are to be In Moscow are little different from organization varia refuses to obey the republic, furthroughout the countrv barred. nishing an asylum for criminals, and de-- f those in any large city, go in with prac- blindly to carry out whatever they are "In this rase It would seem that such ee the government. The French Ventically what they would wear In Chi- ordered to do. They are pledged not to a contest would be tn the worst of taste, dee was conquered after years of civil cago, London or Paris. Others, believallow themselves to fall alive Into police since the prize would almost certainly war, but It Is very doubtful whether the ing that Russia Is a cold, desolate and hands, as witness the suicide of the two depart for America, where girls are Reichs troops, led by former imperial ofn land, buy an equipment men suspected of the slaying of Rath- taught to take care of their legs as well ficers, would fight against the German that would stock a polar expedlt.on. Here enau. as their complexions." Vendee. cm the campaign of assasis no way of knowing which there in again The question Is, how tong this condi- viewpoint is right. mursination they are told they are not tion can continue. Bavaria knows resThe truth of the matter Is that even derers. but ere In reality executioners of the monarchists are marking every demotoration of the monarchy Is impossible, here, on the very doorstep of Russia, no judgments of the secret people e court." cratic leader for death, the government yet it refuses to be governed from Ber- one know accurately Just what condiIn such an preparations must Issues only paper menaces of laws that lin. - a Temporary separation of Bavaria tions prevail Inside the Russian frontier be made to-atmosphere general election. While cannot be enforced without coercing Bafrom the Reich would be bearable, but varia with a coal blockade, which It la it probably would be the signal for the afraid to put Into force. founding of an autonomous Rhine repubThat today is Germany's crisis, which lic and the separation of Hanover and must be understood by the world. It Is Eakt Prussia, cajsing the dissolution of a crisis for all humanity if the infecin founded the everlasting confederacy tious military monarchists are to be 1871. The bl nd French chauvinists, royn fought with other weapons than alists and clergy who desire this separation forget that a disintegrated Germany speeches and paper threats. me The two youths ordered to Slav would be Incapable of paying the smallfirst squandered 350.000 marks on drinkest reparations. The republic Is condemned to death ing and women, then received their orders and acted when this money was unless a new spirit can be created By KARL H., VON WIEGAND. Universal Service Cable. gone. Yet thousands of people throughout changing hundreds of expensive govern-mentGermany are inclined to excuse wthem beparliaments and state officials into 12. Many an AmeriVIENNA, woman Viennese know Aug. will but the you cause a un'ted state firmly and honestly supposedly acted for hat they can heiress will be interested to hear rather go without food than without an thoughttheypatriotic Their armotives. governed. frock. were, as a matter of fact, that her Viennese counterpart would attractive rangements As for the women of the middle and The Intermediary businesslike. merely have to order two or three frocks foreign classes. It is a mystery to us entirely who received the order from Munich teletailors how they manage to dress re- graphed them: to exhaust the family fortune. to Spas The price of women's gowns and spectably at all. In fact, however, their "If everything Is In order you ean have clothes are still almost as attractive and more at your disposal. Otherwise, not, dresses in Vienna varies from one Service Cable. tasteful as before. While they cannot as we are Universal embarrassed. Get demillion afford to use good material, the way through withfinancially eix the and crowns, 12. Is. "Elevatoritis" it and we can breathe again. Aug. PARIS, it to needs Is a their s adapt they stores to famous time three French sell a the cotton Americans I striking consider skirt partment present simple seAding illustration of the Invincible taste--anafter Rathenaua assassination particuspas in increasing numbers yearly, ac- for 120,000 crowns. resourcefulness of woman.1 Viennese the faGood These to were iuck. to Professor Tomas glssenon, favorable. amazing figures given cording Tailors In Vienna complain that the larly me by the manager of one of Viennas mous French nerve specialist, The principal. Ankermann, was a corpe His diagnosis has been born out by mode salons. We stood in the spacious almost prohibitive pgice of the raw ma- student lieutenant who had received the the latest prospectus Horn dressmaking establishment, which opens terial thev need is constantly farcing Iron Cross, first class, married, but who, a resort In the Pyrenees, where into the Kaertnerstrasse. Vlenha s Fifth up the retail prices of their output. nevertheless, both before and after the The Austrian Import tax single receipt of the morder wage, made a liv"elevatoritis" is mentioned as one of the avenue, and while I was listening to the Is of for crepe yard womgeorgette, of dozens of example. curable fashionable diseases explanations by special properties ing chiefly as a procurer of prostitutes. about S000 crowns. The .womens tailors The en most of them evidently Viennese the water. police supposed he had lived among of Austrian the capital import the crepe this class In Berlin, but nevertheless im"Elevatoritis is akin to motorltle, from thronged about the counters critically de Switzerand silk from taffeta Inchine, of been for have a which Americans crepe georgette. piece suffering eyeing mediately after the deed he went to the National the price of taffeta or or- land, while the cloth comes from Ger- headquarters of the German many years," said Professor Sissenon. quiring Intotailor-madOn the other e hand, however, party and asked for one Drvander, son-o- f many. a la Burberry." It Is usually a cause for nervous dis- dering a is still their business In export flourishing. I looked who court live at the in the manager orders very high questionlngly chaplain.' Finding persons Imperial Do not forget that the income of Germany Is the principal buyer of he crudely told Count Torek, I him buildings or who habitually use elevawomens frocks, but great quanti- have out, killed Harden and must get Just tors mounting and descending at high the merchant classes Is considerable, he explained. rates of epeed. High government clerks ties are sold to American, Dutch and away quickly. I have come for the necTorek himself informed essary money Kidneys and nasal passages suffer as now are paid several million crowns Scandinavian firms. Is true that tho cost of well as the heart from use of eleva- per year. It Our women hava lost their husbands, ths police of this. Amcng the other connorisen and Mueldner, and a are fiancee llsemann has and tors. the enormously, war." fathers living during spirators a fixed Income however In the hotel at Viennese playwright told me blood relations of the two gentlemen hu-l- i body with be eleIs In a position to save In bitter sarcasm, but they have not In favor of the two Wilhelms of Dwrn great it may frequented by nervous patients, the 1 vator haa been suppressed. and Wleringen. any considerate port of hia revenue, lost their love of stylish clothes." Pan-Germ- s. ." 1 . Im.i-Ujel- Hu, ty Ers-ne- noble-minde- er c 1 heart-beatfn- nt cook-tov- e, typhus-carryin- French Paper Offering Prize for Pretty lf man-eati- and-prles- ts, famine-stricke- can-vln- g Vienna Women Find it Easy to Spend Fortune on Gowns high-flow- sr Elevatoritis Is Sending Many Americans to '' d Bagnors-de-Blgorr- e, ona len-ne- se Bagnore-de-BIgorr- e. well-kno- f I |