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Show ' THK WEATHER. unsettled; possibly occasional tight snows. Tuesday, fair, warmer. Local Settlement Prices. II 1H Monday. .... lsd Copper (cathodes) ....No Unnecessary spending ij Thats usually extravagance. sinful. "Hair yourself through War Savings Stamps. 15.26 quotation VOL. XCVIII, NO. 112. iSALT FEBRUARY :i, vm. SIKES 11IH HUE HOTEL HOME OF THE BRITOtf , jnQRMER EMPRESS ZITA of Austria, who, it is said, will be mode defendant in a suit for divorce, based upon the famous Sixtus letter. S PAGES 12 YANKEE- - QUARTERS IN PARIS GLOOMY IN CONTRAST WITI III FIVE CENTS ' t TURKS RECITED! BALKED OF PREY t-- cr v For Want of Recreation Pugilism Is Taken Sidelights on Social Phase of Peace Conference in Capital. SEMITE (New By PERCY HAMMOND. York Ttines-hLag- o Tribune Cable, Cop right.) Feb. 2 Night life at the and American peace In Paris is not the same 10 oclock comes tS CTiDonz gloomy fover la desolation, with only a melancholy dougfiboy or two hanging around on guard anu perhaps a litLon- tle group ofIf Washington correspondents wondering "Hurley will let them go home. Most of the lights are out; the restaurants are dark, and a French bellhop, wearing three medals on his thin chest, is sweeping dust Into a corner. It is almost as gay as the Rockefeller sarcophagus. At the Majestic hotel, where the British have their center, there are lights An orchestra plays eery laughter. Man- and evening until late in the great white and gold rotunda, and there is song and dancing. Mr. Balfour looks on genially from a deep armchair, his long legs crossed comfortably, and so 'does Lord Reading and Lord Robert Cecil. The belle of these halls seems to he the daughter of Uuyd George. She Is By Universal Service. a lively girl, who dances well. paustng LONDON, Feb. 3. (Monday.) now and then to speak to her father, Tbo workers on fire London subwho talks with Mr., Barnes, the labor way systems went on strike this representative. They have soloists from morning. They threaten to tie up the opera and other musical diversions. all electric services also if troops Every one Is in formal dress. It is said are sent to interfere with their that there hasnt been a white shirt In the Crlllon since the Americans took It walkout. over; but, of course, there has, since the president and Mr. Lansing are among By HENRY M. HYDE. In Paris. There Tribune Cable, the best dressed sneir (New Tork are only six women with the American Copyright.) The British have scores of delegation. Feb. 2. This Is a fateful them. LONDON, wek for Great Britain. Before neat Sunday the tidal waves of labor strikes in Pugilism. and' Bolshevist demonstrations which have swept over Belfast and Glasgow Pugilism is found to be an efficient are expected to reach London. On what solace for the American soldier exiled in Pari a Several welfare organisations happens here In the metropolis may de- present a series of international bouts pend. If not the security of the empire, every night or so at the Palais de Glace and the Salle Wag ram. two enormous at least the fate of the government. It would be difficult to ex- halls which are always on these occaaggerate the Importance of the crista the sions filled with doughbbys. The French fighters are usually minor country faces. or young amateurs, asIf the single strike of the Amalgamated professionals Society of Engineers now definitely ealled pirants for glory and cauliflower ear for Thursday 1( not prevented, more than The Americans and British are mere sol- 00,002 workman, - prwaefitf-nthirty trades, will lay down their tools In (.ondon alone. Since the members of this great society are skilled mechanics and tradesmen, their strike would almost paralyze the industry of the metropolis. These men have just been granted a Now they deweek. mand that the hours be cut to forty. And that is only one of the almost Innumerable strikes which Imminently threaten. The electrical trades unions promise to cut off the electric light and power un- Guns of less their demands are granted. Tomorwill be buying row prudlnt householder Many tip all the candles in London. PARIS, Threatened Extension of Labor Troubles to don Is Causing Alarm in Government Circles. Fate of Lloyd George Cabinet Rests on ner in Which Problem of Unrest Is Dealt With Times-Chlca- Yankees Find Real Recreation Lloyd-Geor- distinct MAY STOP LAKE CITY," MONDAY MOliNlXd. ' p; Armenian Refugee Woman Thousands Saved Vrom Describes Atrocities Starvation as Result of Com-milte- by Moslems. if.crs. most of L.cru great glLtu P1 fisticuffs. Last night at the Salle Wagram the Knights of Columbus presented a fl.mb.e scries of twenty French and Ameru an matches in two rings. Tne gong whbh closed a round in one ring started a round In the other, and there was action They went at each other last evening like bear-atsand as much blood was possibly as there was at Bunker of railway station masters and clerks meet to decide wien they will strike. If they stop work the movement of trains all over the inlands would be seriously Incommoded, If not prevented. This week also the government has promised to answer the demand of the national union of coal miners that they be granted a working day with JO per cent increase in wages. They also demand that full wages be pTld to all demobilized and unemployed miners and tE.at the government proceed to nationalWhat a nationise all the coal mines. wide stride of coal miners would mean to British Industry needs no dlacusslon. workers, shipbuilders, muTransport nicipal employees, railroad men, av workers and men of a dozen other t:aies ail are preparing new demands or pressing fpr an immediate decision on de-- : amis already made. Practically all the working classes of the Islands are In a state of more or less tumultuous unrest. It is impossible to keep track of them, h r most of them are acting without the consrtit of their trade union leaders, hanging their demands almost from day Fervlce. Feb. COPENHAGEN, By Universal 2. A re- volt engineered by former soldiers has broken out ln Petrograd, fugitives arriving here from that city via Helsingfors report. The streets are filled with corpses and heavy fighting is under way. six-ho- to day. GOVERNMENT FACES CRISIS THIS WEEK. Tnat the government recognizes this to be a critical week is clear. Lloyd George "ill come home from Paris before Saturday to take active command of thw situation. .Sperlal meetings of parliamentary committees, of the trade union congress and of the labor party have also been called. And on Tuesday the first new parliament In eight years will meet o swear ln new members and hear the kings speech from the throne. The policy In dealing with what may easilv become a real menace to the security of Great Britain Is not yet fully clear. Rut It seems to be now recognized that the disorders and rlota in and Glasgow, and to some extent chew here, are not trade union strikes at all, but a real Bolshevist attempt to overthrow civilised society and reproduce m Great Britain the conditions now (n Russia. The leader in Glasgow is Emmanuel jtplpwell, a Polish or Rus-ia- n Jew. while Simon Greenspohn, radial chief In Belfast. Is a man of the eamg nationality. Meanwhile, a third Russian 'mtssary Is traveling through the mining country of Wales, attracting crowds by aying the fiddle and openly preaching Btusnevlat doctrines and defying the government to stop him. -- Bel-la- st T thousands OF TR00FS four into Glasgow. In situation STOCKHOLM, Feb. . Petrograd has been bombarded by Kronstadt artillery and many people have been killed, ac cording to travelers, who are, quoted to this effect by the Finnish papers. Serious disorders are prevalent in Petrograd. The about at the The great fortress of Kronstadt lies twenty miles west of Petrograd, head of the Gulf of Finland. Bolshevik forces were reported on January 23, last, in a dispatch from Helsingfors, to be evacuating Petrograd and removing all their stores. The Bolshevik war minister, Trotzky, was said to be transferring his headquarters to N lzsh.nl- - Novgorod. VIENNA, Saturday, Feb. 1. The adtroops into the vance of Bolshevik Ukraine has compelled the Ukrainian government to move the seat of its government. According to advices received from here the government has moved Kiev' to Winnltza, in Pololla, southwest of Kiev. 30 VLADIVOSTOK, Thursday, Jan. The Cossacks (Bv the Associated Pres.. ) commander of under General Kalmikoff, and the Ussuri river front, have mutinied shot an officer. The Cossacksthesurrendered .American their arms and horses to they requestedno troops, whose protection would thev that declared men The longer serve under Kaimikoff. ' ' 1. Feb Saturday, ARCHANGEL. c- t, While Press.) (Associated hm'rikursk the succeeded In capturing are and Tares vo sectors, the Bolshevlkl on any impression still unable to make allied the on lines the American and or the secDvina sector near Tulgas. f t' ond time wHhln a week a night was repulsed by the by the enemy there Scotch. the and Americans early FriThe latest attack occurred stormed the upper day The Bolshevlkj severe resistance but met-w- ith Tulsa however, from the American patrol.-whartillery a clean their giving Iweeo of the village. The Americans wounded kTuVd twenty of the Bolshevtki, The fwlnty .nd took seven prisoners. sector the Tareseo without ail fed miles touthwsnl twelve moved eiuvninterlnsr the enemy. e indications are that the Bowie-rlkhr-on not following the ft but are moving iin of ot thelwm. m an effort a In handling the idesperate nasgow, Bonar Law, acting for the prewith constant communtpatlon Paris, fallowed the old .rule of letting things go without up fo c,rttn definite point, thedlrectiOT wa passed, and when .keu that ' rimne! viort .he strikers point answered Ms refusal lo tn- Jroln of tbs two rivers. (f Vtinued on Page Two.) mier and m chief in In rtret, ,t i h "ofetlie i of Tragic Herbert C. Hoover Issues Only Scenes Tells Graphic Statement Bearing on Relief Work Abroad. Story. Eye-witne- ' .7 ,v.y ss ' i V L'v'f vj. i . PROPOSALS J JQ'--i Aspirations of Great Nations and Allied Friends in Territorial Division C 1 a i ming Attention. v ' f1 "? bene-Lce- o Desires the Various Countries Are Out- s Wh-ingto- "Star-Spangle- t, Jugo-Slav- e started Aid for Other Peoples. devastating the smaller suitor, plunderTufkirh polite came ing and murdering. to our village of Ohm idigazak and By CHARLES H. GRASTY. o Tribune (New York Cable, Copyright.) . PARIS, Feb. 2. From good English sources, favorable to a league of nations, information comes that the feace conference now is facing its crucial test., "JV are at the parting of the ways," said one informant. "One road leads to settlement in accordance with the Wilsonian doctrine of abstract Justice, and the other to dealtng with the situation fairly, but in accordance with ing conditions and separate national interests and susceptibilities. "The question of the German colonies has brought the Wilson plan down to a practical concrete basis for the first time. Lloyd George bravely went to the mat with Premier Hughes of Australia on this question, and apparently the Wilson plan has stood its first trying out ' successfully. 'But this is only one test, and the fate of the real league of nations, the complete scheme of which President Wilson brought over in hie satchel, and which remained has practically unchanged throughout all the conversation and con-- t suitation, Is still to be fought out. "Tile president ha carefully ajrotded friction and ha played his cards with consummate skill. In a sense. It is Wilson against the field. Only Wilson among all Hie leaders brings earnest cong to the viction plan of the league of nations. He alone Insists upon the uncompromising application of the ruie of right. While listening to all opinions, and conducting s'l discussions In a spirit of deference, and with every he baa not appearance of receptivity, budged from his main ground. a "He la out to gain stupendous reform In world methods, and nothing less will satisfy him. There la nobody in the conference who sincerely wants to go the whole distance with him. He stands alone. But he is strong In himself and HI In the power of his great country. He ideas are definite and clean cut. possesses the highest gift of mind and Is to no his end There energy, speech. patience and wisdom. He has the crusaders spirit, with courteous manners; and, finally, he baa boldness. He will risk ad to gain all. Hu' h a man will go far. "W e shall soon see whether the heads of other governments can make the individual sacrifices .necessary to carrying out the Wilsonian program. It is a proposition, e which la asking a great deal of the politicians. F.vervbodv moat give up a whole lot. must America sha re. sacrifice In this Times-Chicag- pre-exi- st epoch-makin- old-lin- Glass Denounces False Eeport. 2. Secretary Feb. WASHINGTON. Glass issued a statement- - tonight . denouncing a false a rumor reaching the effect that a fifth Liberty treasury to the because a loan would be unnecessary mistake in calculation had been made by officials and that from IlS.Ono.Ooo.lMiO to J.ooo.OuO.voO had been returned to the! junction point , treasury. Arn'" 1 i unded up all buj seven men. These seven escaped Into Russia The men captured were marched off to the Turkish detachment in the village. was taken along with the My husband rest and later t marched to another village. Finally my husband sent a note by a boy for me to come and Fee him You and the children w ill not be harmed, he said. Me realized but I am doomed, that he wo Id be murdered and that him. as the Turks money cotlld not wore determined to be t id of all able- to sene who refm-cbodied Armenia!, in the Turkish ain 'Ve t,ii fe 40.oo tun there, en route from Rotterdam etng transshipped for the poles and 20,000 ton In Rotterdam oi ac . Never Saw Him Again. awattlnx reshlptncnt to the Finn and other UusMan liberated populations. The polish relief committee is sending a gift of TlkiO ton to the Foie. We have einen the armistice delivered into Rotterdam 300.000 ton of food for the Belgians and the liberated French people with the support of our treasury In Belgium snd Franc Had this new appropriation been we should 1m c sold out these of food to those-- who could pav frmmcy and been ompe!led to allow Ue others to starve dnnnlstraUons are leing eshtfellhef to Cu proper distribution in ad alien territories. pai-ci- i 1 He wai never saw hirn agafn. taken with other prisoners to Harpoot. Gas-rightin- g few day later. His aunt afterward told' me that she saw him bound, as was the cuatorn, but she was not allowed to speak to him. He and the others were on their way td an execution of cruelty. Wc had seen these so many times there was no mistaking the Inevitable result. I uw men taken from our ilHage and marched in pairs to the banks of the river. They were bound up securely and ranged up tn a long line along the Dank of the river. They were then dm on Into the water at the points of bawmets and the sabers and as they rose again surface of the water they weie beaten senseless a'jd thn left to drown. Mi EW YORK. 1I - Tits Whitsgodfather and his brother were among them, their request that they might die Kt.ir linct (Vlilo arrivrd h.r Toeven cruel the by granted together being Old men were killed In their il;) trom Brp.it, l.rlniflng 3114 Turks. beds In the village. They brought even Aiiifrlmn offirers and mrn from fh prleat, and a soldier slashed hi head On txiard Hip O'.rr.aa. was kicked around the it off and Hip of iwrsonriPl was tinstreets by these brutes in Turkish uniform. I cannot bgm to describe J all the FihT g)s Mginint. the only have revolting scenes line this that gjs troops ernpkfd by toe itnesssd. du lorArv force, Te reniaiiKier of 'Kurds waylaid and mbbi'd us on mir way to 9k jjmghborlng village, where we t rx passenger list was made u) of women and our children were ordered from all part of the country. rounded up. Mobs came and looted the John R. CHock of Sn Majer th-- r of value village, taking everything of the gas regiment, wanted. Soldiers mingled in this robber band. jrUqjIns' story of the told a orkanlxatloris sctHlties, tiom the time Unspeakable Atrocities. ith the British it went Into I was taken to the house of Turk orees In January. ISIS, until the war Someand placed under hie protection The reql'nertt, ite said, fought one asked who that woman wa and I Vnded. forward and was assured that no xui reealvely on exery. American front, cam harm would befall me. There I was kept suffered casualties of half its enlisted priaoner. but It was better for arid returned wHh M Armenian worm?) were massacred. My strength of 15"0 men. husband a cousin escaped y putting on eighty of Its members wearing the Croix Turkish costume. de Guerre; twenty wearing the Distill An entire village population of woami with twehe men waa marched around for a week, suished lined up and driven bite a river bed. of It officers recommended for distinbut the water was not 'deep chough to guished service medals. to drown theqv and the poor wretches, The- gas troops, Msjor Carlook said, those not murdered, were showed to rehltterest fighting at Cbateau-Thlerr- y turn home, end I know thev later met St Mihlel. sod In the Argonne the same death of their companion. forest,' working continually for forty days 'Mothers were tom from their famllie and lfttl children were seized and1 their at the battle of the Argonne. soldier these out dashed by brains guards, a Casualties. but for the fact that I recognized Fifty Per as an American both my children and I would "It ts not generally known awajVrom have met the same fate. We seel, met a Turkish officer while mi the the firing line.-- ' he said, did.that gW otfen-shevery war from Armenia to Constantinople in roents, leading, as theyto were suhjected greater troubles had become f12. When-mmost acute. I uianced to meet him stain danger than any other troops. This Is that hj per cent of and he confirmed my story, so that f home out hv the fact was given ,th protection of theTurMh our regiment, befit officers and men, are rttsusiucs uur Mcrificua mere meU rewarded. (Continued on Eage Three.) of lined; Problem Shows Many Mixed Phases. President at Opera Appears Interested. IN UNITED KINGDOM. On Monday tSe union f Congresss Action. L 'i.: ci m.i (t'hiffcgn Tr hure Spe jir 2 Keh I'OKTLANi, Mp Feb Herbert C Hoover, JKIS, Hill. Anifruan f ol annunlsl rutor, issued the "Watch me kill a frog," whispered Ionian who Ahum I m tod.iv on the one of the American contestants, as he America n anibaavuior to Tuikej, asm it a following HaU-inwaited for lug battle, with & chin sl la the only living to the results uf the bv the tnches long They carried him out feet atrocities of the Turks I nlted Stairs of the appropriafctfaiiu! the Ar(ongrerotf first after the second round. to relieve the food The American soldier has shown good menians. excepting the Turks theniM Ive. tion of d.strss in Europe sportsmanship at these contests, though was found in tin c.ty today.. Mu It breaks his heart to have a FrenchMrs. George Iar Argantan, of :7 "The passage will lilt the load of fear man win. IT cheers a lrtorious frog from the hearts of millions of people in acuuc. as he does the more frequently victorious It 1st little appreciated In the Her first huelmnd, Robert Argantan. Europe American. an Armenian by birth, but a naturallad I nited state how fully and completely of American cltixen, and a resident of this the daily uneleBs carries the progress reHiili a measure aa this to the most country for twenty eare, was murdered, people now liberated from the site sa a, and her little son was drowned mote of Teuton yoke On one side of me. In the first ro a in river. According to the startling 'It must be remembered that President lat night, was an American consul gen- story told by Mis. Arganian today, she ilson h dedal a Lion of the prime purposes eral, Mr. Tnack&ra; on the other was witnessed the brutal murder of the ArLieutenant Kilkenny of Chicago, Genera) menians, who had been bound together, of the American people in for these Dawes' aide. They seemed happy enough led to the river, fced at the points of tieedom and ha directed all their hopes topeoples The impresario for the Knights of ColumUr to bayonets water, and as leap into bus was Charles McCarthy, who, when the bodies came to the surface they were ward the tnited' titate and today they will see one more Mep toward the desired you were in knickerbockers, was a matt pounded with club.!, s.ashsd with knheti crd. nee idol at Hooley's in "One of the and then left to dftown. Before her first marriage, Mrs. A Bravest. No Question of Sacrifice. Mr. Wilson at the opera was a benign was Miss Kthel Marston o Gray, There Is no question of the sacrifice and gracious spectator. He sat through the daughter of Mr. and Mrs Andrew It will tall for from the American people much interested Jackson Marston, and before going to to provide this relief "Castor et Pollux" as appropriation as it apparently as if he were at Keith's, and Turkey was employed aa a wailpMs in comes now in a period when we have so Site married her present he went back of the scenes to felicitate local hotels. many diffh ultic and problems for our the artists who had given him such dire husband, George Bar Argaman. in May own people to solve in the rehabilitation of him went of with Mrs. Wilson last year pleasure. our normal national life. The audience, which was ftfty-ftft- y "Tie usual relief for the newly liberated Turks. Conscripted by back turned its French and American, people will not be delayed even by the husband d My was born in and the Armenia, on the "Marseillaise'' came to thib country wHn a. child and period required to ship foodstuffs from Banner" to stare at the presiI ii ted Htatr under this appropriahad lived here eighteen sear, when we the As he arose be dent through glasses. tion hf(UM the war, navy ami state dehind the flowers decking the rail of his were married in 1909. He was a nat' partments and the Amerban navy have box he seemed indeed a pillar of state uralised American citisen and was a baralready provided food under the old war ber. In t 1913. we went November, de was engraven deep In whose front The now proposition enables legislation. Into kok some after But later Turkey liberation and public care. imperty os to extend the work of gl viug credits arterests. one Within week after our during the performance he developed a rival he was conscripted into the Turatnh to these countries for which there Is no rigid smile. "Castor and Pollux" is not so good army. He protested that he wag an legislation. "he have at sea or discharging in the vaudevllls as some otlver operas, though American citizen. We were a long wa of Trieste 70,CH0 ton of f'od for the from an American consulate and the port the Serbians and the CzechoTurks refused to release htr?v until we (Continued on Fife Three.) slovaks. tv bzvi 30.900 tone of food &0 in fhem paid pounds English money. either arrived at or in progress fo the He was not molested again until the fall Flack sea for Rumania. The Armenian of 1914, when he was taken for the secrelief committee ha 70 tuns en route ond time and forced to buy his freefor Armenians and Syrians as a gift and dom. we arc placing Ih.ftou tonr in Conlanll-nop- ! weh us went with until Things early as a rcsc-vfor them hi June of 1915. Then the Turks Kronstadt Turned One Man Among Peace Leaders Who Jnsists on on Petrograd; the Rule of Right. Reported Killed. TRAFFIC d 0 Feh. J. (By tha Asx:lled The delegates of the five great powers are now In a position to compare dearly their own aspirations and tho of all their silled friends and to sea tha difference that must he reconciled. Tha maximum of hopes, often overlapping, has been told freely and It remains for tits peace conference to adjust them into a r.ARIft, Press.) whole. The desires of the several countries as presented may bo compressed thus Fiance: France wants, first of all, of Reportunconditionally, and tits right to dlacus and ultimately' to fix ths French frnntlun In their relation, to the Rhino, to Plan which may require the creation of buffer sUtrs. One of these would be the PalatiFrom Consort nate and another Rhenish Prussia. Franco also desires to annex the basin of tho Farre river, which might be caller) a 2. Former L. Jan. PRAtil Bohemia, 1u Emperor Charlea of Aufrtrta, according France will Insist that, so far as tho the lager TagebUtt, 1h aliout to begin left liank of tha Rhine further to tho north ZUa action against the former Kinpre U concerned, the conference should forbid for divorce. Color ia lent to the rt)iprt, military works of any kind barracks, the paper any, by the fact that the ex bridgeheads, forth and fortresses In that nt from prteen Uvingr apart, mjrceMEt gone. The feeling ts that tb people ln The monarch. the depoeed fory gtu hstdllng that zone should bs fres to deetdo here. In high circle erahy credited for themselves whether they wish to Join The empress go! into the limelight Let France, form an Independent steto, or re year by reason of her lc.te, addressed to turn to Germany The ITInco Fixtus, advocating peace. empresfi is charged bv tin p,in Ge?mnn FRENCH t.avl'A RATION element with secrttJy favoring the allme BILL IS INCOMPLETE. to the evt ut of hampering Germany, for The French bill for reparation la hot yet whose impei lai matter the entertain'd no raMh'Mfon of fhe prince complete, but It has been announced ta high regard Hixtus letter created a furore in court the chamber of deputlea that It will ba in Germany and about 66, 000,(00, 000 franco. ami military club Austria, ami put the emperor, rimries, The French government does not ask who was at the lime making efforts to terminate the wm without affronting the for a protectorate In Sirin In the ordinary sense because It considers that the popukaiser, in a decidedly embarrassing posiMed sharply to tion. The empress was lation there is too advanced to make a account for her indincretion, and U assumed that at, estrangement between protectorate necessary, but France, on acthe Auatrian ruler and hit consort whs count of her traditional Interests tn that due to the Prince hixtus letter and it country, feels that she should be ealled development. The 1rager Tagblift that tho upon to exercise some sort of guardianHlxtua letter will form tb basis lor the ship or guidance until Syria should ba ' The turner cmeror divorce action to govern herself. was married to princes 7. iij in 111. The fully able delega-tlo- n Britain's Great Britain: Great of ar Is the Bourbon Italian, prince nnd Parma family, lu m c it was charged believes that a society of nations is eretlv she was desirable and obtainable and that it musk hy her enemies tlm in to cause Italian aid the tiie giving woild war. The imperial touple have be ratal)! Ihed by the present peace confive rbjhhen, four bo, s and a girl. ference. She advances no contlnlntal purpose other than those of a permanent and just peace under the principle of and that there shall be freedom of transit by railroads and waterways, w'hlctt la Great Britain a general definition of freedom of commerca In times of pc' r. Alsace-Lorrai- Austria Charles ed ne Separation Zita. 1 '( Famous Regiment Home From Service Against Hun on Many Bloody Fields Abroad ' MANDATORY POWERS FOR GREAT, BRITAIN. Great Britain will take mandatory power over tho German islands south of the T equator for Australia and over German Southwest Afrl a for the Union of fcouth She will also have the mandate Africa. ovir German East Africa and soma parts of Arabia and she has particular claims Great In tins respect over Mesopotamia. Britain will enter a pool with the other eahowt-ve(or Irijrmd fiom !iiturol allies lu tae matter of Indemnities, and from othei soup that our se, ,ay reparation for air raid damages work was plntlne hai" with the eutrnv and shipping losses. liaiv: Italy asks for the Trentlno as In rtsultp and h, tin- di atruotion ol as the Brenner p.i. Including the nioralr. Had our two caa nut trie id a and' (f fsoutinru Tyrol, Trieste, Istria, three Battalion wlilrh w e e trnrinq I. m ,.ilp 1,1,11V. Zaia Fcbenico, t'n larger part of Avlona and its .a lm.it Ian Irianda. I , hls to erttrr ths roiifut curiii th hinterland, a protctoiate over Albania, end of the war, I bcluve, vguM l.a of the (sands in the Aegean been hastened. which were taken from Turkey during the ' Iircc nui'ptls Tupolltan war and the province of Adah Mt.hr PRilO'k France'imd HngiaMl should take terri-ttf of ras attti'k by tlic American kuh In Asia Minor. forces, the cylinder niethI, the proNEUTRALIZE-DALMATIAHit' h stoke and muitai. WOULD jector Tbc cjlinder weiiins.j mTsjuI ISLANDS. and carried fium pounds." be Paul, la that Ihe ontentlon ItaM.'iii The .i seven! to cf y liquid sixty an Is and sut h part of the is, .cV fcom 'mu to Wc would turn loos coast as aie not assigned ta Italy n of these on frnt Bfinultancouv xiiiiH lie ncutrshzed. Fra nee and England extend theii Phould Tuev w'eie uei evclueively for trench oh'iital posessiona In Afros, ltH dewarfare sires to enlarge her possession in Eritre and Tripoli. Broke Up Hun Nests. Rumania: Territorial contention la Fie til In mobile warfare and aHack'ng Balkan are complicated and present to emproblems. Rumania desires raniccntrations of enwniv troops we of that portion of Russian ployed tne prolectota. e.jed lrually central her the Hessdiabia by given which hulled 'emle, under tiie cancelled trestv of containing tiilrty pounds of gas, ug.thn-- t power Bucharest and now in her the enemv. o desires Southern Ikvbrudia were Rumania stoke mortal 'The four-lti'by ftulgsri after the secused chiefly to break up mactmn g.m a ced-- d to her Of Peesara nests. We had these timed ijo that thev ond Italkan war. possession and the rxibrndja commands the woukt burst over a machine g'uq nest and hi the Danube. To the westward shower ga or thermite, whn h la molten mouth of wants to annex the Hapsburc Rumania metal, over the gun crew." Bukowlna and Transylvam- -. of C. formerly: Brent, Episcopal provinces Major , part of the rich agribishop of the Philippine.-- and chief chap- and a consnlecahle lain with the American expeditionary cultural district of Banal. here that the Rumania ssplrat'on ll force, was among the ofllcers arriving on the Celtic. The nmrnl victory of tne conflict with those of herbia. which a tfunl with tin soldiers against temptation, he declared, that under her war agreements i was as complete as was them vntory entente Serbia should have a large- port.o a sectionolder of for- as wed l anat of enemv. against theseen them In war and to mer sdioluing old Serb,. plat." "I Jjsve lie said, "and not lung 'an tw mod In Tro.) (Contiaued oa Ta toelf iwor lltkt wou.d be exli at agent." Commander Tells Gripping Story of roops Bravery; Loses Fifty Per Cent of Strength in Battles; Praised by Bishop. N is ftrst-lian- ' - did-lhe- Ont e. !r I ud ol four-inc- 1 Dal-mai- dtf-flv- ln trixix-pouu- t a'.-- h ' xiisfna-Hunrar- v i |