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Show 1 ROME, Oct 3 Orders thai the blockade of Fiume be lifted, have been Issued by (lie government and Italian authorities in the vicinitj of Plume Imvc received an order to allow mail and foodstuffs lo pas Into the city, according to the Epora. The military, blockade against the soldiers and civilians entering the city is all that' is being enforced, which says the decision de-cision was taken aftr the government had examined and discussed a pro-te pro-te t l torn fno Flume national council Steamer Heading for Flume VENICE,' Oct. 4. The steamer Prince Hohenlohe. under the inter-1 i allied flags, with a cargo of foodstuffs consicned to Pola from this city has altered its course and Is hcadinc for Flume, according to the newspaper El Tempo. Honor of Powers at Stake. PARIS, Oct. 4 Dr Milenko Yes j ni tcli . premier of Jugo-Slavia, says he! report of the mobilization of the Jugo-Sla Jugo-Sla arm is without foundation, ac-rordm. ac-rordm. in dispatches from Belgrade I to newspapers here. "Our cause is so Just we can defend it without mobilizing one clas3," he Is reported as saying. "The rights, dig- hlty and honor of the great powers are at stake." Clemenceau Calls for Meeting. PARIS, Friday, Oct. 1 Premier Clemenceau has written Colonel E. M House, a member of the American poace delegation urging that a meet-injr meet-injr of the league of nations he held in Washington under the chairmanship chairman-ship of President Wilson earlv in No- ember. The premier s letter which outlines his reason? for the calling of such a meeting, was officially pub llshed today. It was written September Septem-ber 4, 1919, and follows in part: "It seems to me that the first meeting meet-ing of the society of nations in Washington Wash-ington under tho presidency of Mr. Wilson should be urgently called at the earliest possible moment. Owing to the hopes tin? society has caused to be bome and to facilitate the solution solu-tion of international problems faeine all nations, I would suggest the meeting meet-ing be held the first week of the coming com-ing November and would propose the invitation of the greatest possible number of statesman whose names were associated with tho creation of the Solrt of Nations. I'mioubted-i I'mioubted-i i here would be onlv a small amount Of current business to transact, but the program would have this capital advantage: It would put in action the Society, which still exists only on paper. Finally, don't ou think it would be a great adantace for the ex-officio members of the Society of Nations to be enabled to exchange views on the general direction of the line to be pursued? pur-sued? No man Is better qualified thai! President Wilson to remind the peoples peo-ples at the opening of the first assembly as-sembly that the Society of Nations will have prestige and influence in times of peaco onl if it succeeds in maintaining and developing the filing fil-ing of international solidarity from which it was born during the wnr at the call of Mr Wilson. 1 myself shall be happy to second him In this task. ( Signed) "GEORGES CLEMENCEAU." "P S I have written a similar letter let-ter to Premier Lloyd George " ISOVIET GOVERNMENT IS EXPENSIVE BUDAPEST. Friday, Jet. 3 'the city has suddenly become pracnied with large posters summoning the peo pie, regardless of race or cr-cd, tc rally to the monarchy and detnandinc an immediate meeting of the natinnn assembly for the purpose of bringin about a monarchy The government has Just md.de pub He figures showing that the eo.'iet -uU in Hungary cost the country 13 673, (tOO.OOp crowds on |