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Show 1 OF DISASTER t HADE BY GREY i brmer Foreign Secretary! Declares Br tain Made i Grave Mistake jjplKS FULLY ARMED I Hcalists Got Guns and fells to Last Two Years From Greeks mfSTANTINOPE 5epi 21, I By i "spoclniij Pn i 1 . neral Hair- I ton of the British armj is hc gen- ' officer In chief command of the L forces ha Issued n nkjue Ihlch he declares that responsible ' t,r i ..I, -. .men c ol vlolal Ipm fceneutr.il zone . Ill :all call upon' aethers of sui lo itlous KllE, S( I'1 -1 - ' Ry Tin A -I Press) The Cat holh p irty ' kfi a resolution declaring that feantini-r'!' -' ould be gi en to I lie ETwlth sufficient Hinterland to . Ir Its polllii al military and eco- J k life. tBLBOUKVK. Australia. Sept. 2lJ ie federal labor party of Australia! tabled the British labor party an-I ttlBK the opposition of the Aus-1 Ebbor organization to war with-hc with-hc consent of the Australian po 1 ONO'iN. kepi IB) s.o- ! Press.l to eomo unless Great 1 ' r 1 1 i i a Hfur.i e act .Mj..; l- onnt knion. former J3Wft affair,-. In a letter i he Times dfaounc ,i British govern- pt's attitude mounced IDrday. i i .Mir." I'T' permanent, Mom of the Dardanelles a tor-I Mmlstal the "n Dly to whicli had JKb the withdraw ol the 1 r. rn Kr from B THY To ( 1,1 W vl A I 1 Hrhlle the i I Br tn-J- rln! I rrangi a i" Bftrer.c- to n thi slate bs-jjBtn bs-jjBtn Turkei and pre- I fi 'u tlx Near I. bl'-s of 1 tilitle Ht to Ml re'.i 1 1 . force of British. Sc9s is Lh key Hfllon in tin outliern shore of the i if .on TjBf' tae-T IBr ov defeat of the BtLs are . one. rated JmrA om Ismtd and Batlrntiv Mnc I ' word from Bftii.na Ivemal dvanve j PLENT1 Ol Gl SS JBhi K'" illsts dl- '. : 1; a dri' i rield B tin jBi'ili n for two . jthth.v raptured from I ic Greeks, theli nstantino- is i the Titrl - in V In tin desin to I .J A- tiiat tin- irmn Ur- ,. i,,. ii fci; t ; , , .-igrrU Hi, Jk WW 01 HOPE rjv , ii in Wm ' ' 1 ei Bmvrna between RT'ha Kcmal Basha and General J. French hit,-;, commissioner, to i Yussuf Kemal Bey, th na-ji-'t forelm mlnistci has been BWjJ Bummoned from Angora The m!'"?K "' 1 ' K. ioal B. polnts '"lii-it.. ,.ii. the -ons'--B(Bt a-lav ralsi-M Ijopes that the B'l3h .nl irk i ,i Inline rlnrf ;it B will retarded until the Brillsu Bf. ," ments ran arri.-. mf1 flchi'.n- breaks oul before that 'K? i,11'" Hafet ol the comoarativelv B1 BrltL i, force al Chanak will Bo an anxious one here, Marshal J it (iiiotid ., saylnK that the CUc,n 's absolutely untenable, cx-jB?1' cx-jB?1' held b ;i erj considerable B' while Field .Marshal IJlumer tftn born 'n.Mxrtim; Hip British JEr1- ls sahj to have sent a nms-V nms-V Whicli Prlmt! Minlsl. r Lloyd jJYRf fornriHinl. ,i to i to cabinet 'K in"'""' ! 'lat he has ereat con-jfc, con-jfc, f" i . -ii ll - i,i i ! ... i . 1 1 1 a ho- BArr?n ?'"u'' """ Brlitadler General rnneien dn,l i:..,r A.lmiral lirock. QlS TBI s i N "fl L.P'alon hr-r.. f,,, the moment la 1 A n lh" 5lrenKtli of the Brit- 1 Wc?01 rrro 'n the Dordanolles, I ' ls con'.i ier- , si! f 1 1 i. nl alone i fait atn ,,(jS;,ll,1e attack bv the IH ii'0'0"1' ,r" available of the burn- L 1 f'andeiia on the Bouthern I kL . - .i of Marmora, as .m-I .m-I K," 1,1 ' ffleial I i.i . h In les gjwdav nlehl I PrJ'nL' l'' "'" Tlincs thc Rus I Kvtl!n''.'' government sees in. the '''r i;.,M i tu.it Ion Opportn-I Opportn-I ith,"' :'C "01 !! to t . r4 'nsitructril her r-pies. ntatlves '' "Illlll,,, , ,,,, ,,;,,. U ,, , GRAVE WARNING OF DISASTER MADE BY GREY (Continued from Pace One) abroad to nlaeate hostility by temporary tem-porary concessions. GREEKS' WIIJj START ATHENS. Seot. 21 (Bv the Associated Asso-ciated Press.) With thousand Of refUS-eefl arriving dally from Asia Minor Mi-nor and an insufficient wheat suddv at home. Greece Is confronted with a food problem so grae that International Interna-tional help, quickly given, may alone save, thousands from starvation. Already some 200,000 refugees are here Three days' supply of wh-at has been purchased In Egypt and Greek banks have agreed to turn over to the government about 100 000 In foreign exchange to finance fur-e fur-e . purchases of wheat abroad This will insure a supply for a fortnight, nltv to obtain recognition from the powers. Russia proposes, the newspaper news-paper says, to act tho part o mediator medi-ator between the Turks and Greeks, honing thereby to establish the popularity popu-larity of the soviet republic among the peoples of Mohammedan Asia and, compel th- entente powers to revise their attuuae towuin after which it Is hoped wheat ma be available from Thrace, and perhaps the United States. Meanwhile everybody here la eating eat-ing bread made from unrefined wheat ' Soul- estimates dace the number of refugees likely to b- sent to Greece at 600.000. American refugee are Bleeping In boats at Piraeus and on the floors of the Y M. C. A. her.- Th.-y hav no clothing. having lost everything. Queen Sophie sent knives and forks for the use of Americans to whom she is grateful because of the assistance assist-ance rendered to the Greeks during the Smyrna tragedy. According to information received in official circle- French naval units occupied Mudanla. on the sea of Marmora Mar-mora and insisted upon the surrender of several regiment of Greek troops -who were trying to gain the sou for embarkation homeward after their defeat de-feat by tho Turks. Tho report has caused extreme anxiety anx-iety in Greek circle. Mudanla is within the neutral zone of the Dardanelles. Dar-danelles. ALLIES IN HURRY. PARIS, S.'pt. 1 1 By the Associated Associ-ated Press, i The allied powers are agreed upon the quick summoning of a peace conference to settle tTie Turkish problem. but tho delicate question as to the basis of negotiations negotia-tions acceptable to the Aneora government gov-ernment Is still to be answered It wan principally to sound out the Kemallsta on this source that the entente en-tente statesmen adiourned their conversations con-versations until Friday and today ef forts were golnK forward to obtain the Turkish views. in agreeing to summon around tho peace table the eight nations principally princi-pally Inter, sted in the Near East and the status of the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus, Premier Polncare. Lord Curaon and Count Sforza consider they did a full day's work. The peace conference Is expected to open within three weeks, probably at Rome or Venice, with delegates present from France, Italy, Japan. Turkey, Greece, Rumania and Jugo- IiALGH CAUSES WAR. AH Fethl Bey. a Kemallst envoy to western European governments, Is the man who gae the signal for the attack at-tack upon Greece, according to semiofficial semi-official Information received in Paris. Fethl Bey was In London endeavoring to seo Lloyd George to propose a peace. He was refused an audience and was referred to the chief of the bureau of Near Eastern affairs. The British foreign office Is descrlled by the Kemallst envoy as having laughed laugh-ed when he suggested that p.-ace could be arranged quickly, the Ke-mallsts Ke-mallsts would turn the Greeks out of Asia Minor. ' , The Kmallst diplomat then rose and told the British officials soberly: "I am sorry that you have laughed. Turkey has lost two millions of her people In war and there are too many orphans for us to Join In the laughing at the idea of another war. I feel v cry sad." . , , Fethl Bey then sent his cipher message mes-sage to Mustapha Kemal Pasha saying say-ing that nothing could be done with the British government toward peace und that the offensive need wait no longer, for he had exhausted every ef-. fort. READY TO .FIGHT. NEW YORK. Sept. 21 In a cablegram cable-gram to Premier Lloyd George at London, Lon-don, members of the l'an-lonian league, composed of Americans and Groeks originating from western Asia Minor offerod to Join any Brltinh expeditionary ex-peditionary force that might be formed form-ed against the Turks. The organization organiza-tion addressed a telegram to Senator Lodge urging that he use his position as Republican leader to avert further catastrophe in the Near Eamt LEAGUE PLAN FAVORED. GEN EN A. Sept 21 (By the Associated Asso-ciated Press. ) All the British dominions domin-ions are declared by their representatives representa-tives In the league of nations assembly assem-bly here to be favorable to submission submis-sion of the Turko-Greek affair to the league of nations. The dominion delegations sent a joint telegram to Prime Minister Lloyd George urging submission of the question ques-tion to the league and it la declared that they will be disposed to retain their complete liberty of action if the British government refuses to listen lis-ten to their republic. ' |