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Show PTHey system needs adjustment. says harden K Allies Take Up Their Task of Regulating fcrmany s Expenditures They Should Look Over Balance Sheet With Unpdeju-diced Unpdeju-diced Eyes, He Asserts IAS HAKDK". MTlO?t Publicist, itch to Tbe Stand -miner ) by Tho Standard-lner' Standard-lner' (IT claJ controllers will rood ir they -Will with unprejudiced of Maximilian Har-many Har-many pianos where .tltuted. It is lm-:o lm-:o establish a gold 3, and the existing the cause of mts-1 mts-1 great hardships, a Berlin hospital. ? very slov. ly He k because of the L from his wounds) J. The allied fin-re fin-re about to assume ting Germany' 8 exceed ex-ceed they must heet with unpre-tangled. unpre-tangled. Inflated I be readjusted so th will be known will turn their at-tlon at-tlon of the armies Tnim-nt officials. ;put of entire coal ned by cinemas, aurants and elec- bKlfions n. irk.- f..r ..h;im-Jjldv. ..h;im-Jjldv. perfumi i soaps, lac-Er lac-Er cigarettes, the waste of Bf'mllk tor r)i x elates, tarta. iFtrtiin and cmdien compel (barl'V for ip anl bread yMfbeer. abolish suj.-rrwoiiP of-the of-the d-Tens- ministry with 3Kg mcn th n ' r- UjKn't regard 'i"- s nee Bias a humil'.T ir.n Kt get wkom, r i t : . Kjth nationalist. se lng the lat-, lat-, Jnent of the Deutsche bank (Kmlth nnd p i; uSkr damage n.i"' JJHjeficlt. With v OOO.OOit Ojflurftal and surplus th bank ''-W ihowed 2,125.000 000.000 Bnover with .78.000 n00 000 In Tho employes number 21,-tvidnnJs 21,-tvidnnJs r-ach 2-1 per cent MO, 000 murk cnpit.il Kre nmazlng fiRures but th-BnslnrsH th-BnslnrsH man will ieri-i -wen'. sup'i -pros,,--rlty Rc-bem Rc-bem Ln pribl marks Hi. .-Brnover .-Brnover of 85.000 000 000 nnd Kf 882.000 000. In 1913 bc-Kv, bc-Kv, the turn v.. r was MO mark an 1 Up- rb (: its BO.OOb.i Tim-. ,b !:'.. of many strong pro1. imTil 'Hal Institution Is much poorer e-war days The unfair flg-Ij. flg-Ij. Mflly he made RokkeepmK in k 1 . i marks . Mould assume -. stablli Mlon twfcirk which does no: s-e;n Vest merchants are compell-Iske compell-Iske deal" whlrh before the B would h.vu avoided like a key buy i mat rlab d in foreitrn iiirr.-n. v.j'.h-iThtest v.j'.h-iThtest idea is hat it nil v. Ill naiks wh-n ar-l it winb-r ?toi k .-" ulat mn even am one domestic ser vants. Today tho market ia deserted People are without money and th? banks nro careful about credits. Money Mon-ey Is tight but if the deficit were to be made up by speeding: up the printing print-ing prcanes the mark would follow the Austrian crown Into the abvss. COLL.APSE PRKDICTED. Complete collapse of the German economic structure now Is prophesied by big business men who heretofore were optimistic If Germany Is obliged oblig-ed to import more foodstuffs this year1 than last the budget, already shaken by forced Increases of salaries, will fall to ruins. As our exports still at p only one-third what they were before the war It is unthinkable that the market mar-ket could be stabilized. As an instance in-stance we are compelled to buy English Eng-lish coal for reparations at a cost of sometimes a billion marks monthly, since we are deprived of our coaL flolds. Industry has Its own special troubles Repinccment machinery costs many times tho reserve fund available for new stock Bank credits aro insufficient. Even the Krupps have been compelled to make arrant-mcnts arrant-mcnts for a siandlntr credit of a billion bil-lion marks which weaker concerns could not afford to do for fear of weakening their shares on the market. Struggling businesses cannot even get a hearing at the banks. As a natural consequence business Is throttled and new buildings and extensions stopi" 1 LABOR DIFFICULTY . So In cities and towns economic apparatus ap-paratus is woarlng out and th- time la approaching when It will be Impossible even to renovato or replace It The principal difficulty so far as labor is I concerned Is the 8-hour law. It Is ap-' ap-' plied Indiscriminately and even time spent In waiting for work and perhaps I drives only two hours but neverth less La relieved eight hours after he reported. re-ported. Employers complain the eli:ht-hout ilaw, needed in mines and at laborious work, should not apply everywhere nor 'should waiting time be counted and I there is a growing number who insist! Germany cannot regain h-r economic ! health until the ten-hour day is rc-.stored. rc-.stored. , In Westphalia and the Rbim-land the number of coal p is ha - in reaised 48 per cent since 1913 yet the yield jof coal lias decreased 22 per cent. The workmen clalni they have been too badly nourished to work long hours and would stubbornlj resist nny effort ef-fort to repeal the existing eight-hour i law. |