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IS \ Id Id ut lh,. Il. en as. In. he t. Ill; of ons use vell oW 'tnd tho I In Speech at Lille Asserts Devo- tion to Socialists and People Who Saved Him Evening Post Fo)'eig1t Service ·Copur-igltt. 1D25. by N. Y. BVE:tdao ~oatJ Iutt. Paris, March 2.-The grooming of Call· 1a ux for his re-entry into French political affairs continues with lmaUated persist- 2,000,000 ISlovak!!, S,oOG,OOO Gerr.Jans a.lld something over 600,000 each Qr Magyars, Russlaps and Poles. It is ad- ministered as th\!lu~1! it were· a. nat,on. That Is to say', It has IJ. centralized na- tional Government, a natilmal language, which every child Is requh,'ed to learn, and an almost exclusively nationa.! clergy. Bllt actually Czec.ho Slovakia is a state Qf nationalities, in the S\ame sense that the old. AustrQ.Hungarlan Empire was. The lation, and one-fouph ot the tl)tal popula- tion Is German. Tflese 3,500,000 Germans consist. of 3,000,000 \border\ Germans and 500,000 \Island\ Germans. It is the Germans on the border who are Important. The ,Czech part of Czecho Slovakia Is sur- rounded on three sides by Germany and German Austria, an open frontier, without natUral defenses, and Inside this frontier, on Czecho ISlovak territory, Is a deep border of German population. The problem of the German minorities is much more serious than that of the eDce. Slovaks, for obvfaus reasons. Tbe SlovakS Early In the autumn, political forecasters may be discontented, but they are say, Joseph Call1aulC will again be in potentially better orr In the Czech state office, and dominant. than they could be anywhere else, and none ma;n mark was a billion to the C.zech eurrep.c,M. was the higlilest in Central Europe. Bill as Germany strengtll- ens economically the Pan·German ieelmg grows, There is ,el y little open ag}tatlon, and the German population is by no means politically united. Th~ ha.ve Agr\rlans Cljrlstian Socialists, 'Democrats, COmmu- nists and German Nationalists. All these parties are German, and they are all In the Opposition, along with Slovaks and Mal>- yars, but only 8 per cent are ojlenly sepa- ra,tist. But, although, -the mass Is not openly separatist, It is certamly not reCon· ciled to being part of the Czech state. It learns the Czech language and takes Czecbs Into Its business firms as partners be- cause, the situation being wha.bJt Is, It Is politic to do so; but most of them probably cherish the hope expressed to me by one Yesterday the Industrial city of L!I1e did of their Immediate neighbors I. more honor to the former Premier and Finance closely related to them In race and Minister at the LllIe Thealre. lIf. Cllil- I language. Hungary's rule aiso accustomed laux is tourlOg the north ot France. 1 them to domination. The Germans, on the In Ulie Caillaux represented himself I other hand, are accustome« to be the .. s standing for candor and efficiency In I rulers In Bohemia, and th~ Czech yoke public finance, ~hloh he· announced as I galls them the more. A'nd within reach or his platform at his \coming Ollt\ banquet I hand is a great I>ow.r, a POllet to wli>ch in ParIs recently, Alluding to his re-entry by race, language and history they belong' I of the most \pro·Czech· German leaders: \We n;ust Simply walt for the ultimate snake·up In Central Europe ., I -- - . I i TH~; I;!llemm~ of lhe l'zechs Is lhat, in- : aS1nuth as Germany and Austria I I are Czecho Slovakia·s best marl,ets, they into politics, M. CaUlaux Eald he would I TI ----- remain a Model·ate Lett man, and h; I IE complaints of the German mi· would not forlret that, whlIe his own part \. norlties are bitter, yet thek chief dis- can;'ot deshe the continued chaos and bankruptcy of these countries, but must worlt for their rehablhtntion, though con scious that this rehabilitation may bring problem. In connection with the German minorities. bad abandoned him, the socialists and the I content Is over small matters, which, people had saved him. nevertheless, act as goads to their sensl- ConceJ:nlng finances, he said It was not I !lveness. They complain bitterly about the in his power to caUBe mlracle'l{ and that school system. As a. matter of fact. their t he science of finance Wd.. made merely I discontent In this regltrd is !>ased rather ot order, economy, method and charact~r, on fears fa,· the future than on any edu- The Czecho Slovak economic Rnd Ilnan· dal problems are not light The offiees of the state are over·staffed. chleHy be- cause the natillIi1H liberators. the Czechish legionaries, had to be taken care at, The necessity for finding posts for Utem was also accountable in part fOl\ the unfortu- nate administration poll~y pursued In Slovakia. To Retll'e In His Favor M. Caillauoo;'s return to Parilamenta,·y· life may be regarded as imminent. M. Delmague, one of the Deputies for the Sarthe Department, has ot'l'ered to retir\ . in his favm·, and, to rurBlsh the tIVO vacancies necessary under the eJectoral Jaw before any by-election can take place. Deputy MOlltlgny of tim same department is prepared tu retire with Dalmague and re-otrer himself to the voters as the col- league of Cnlllaux. Whlle expressing his thanks to these two DepUties, M. Caillaux is understood to have intimated that he cannot give hi. decision until after the municipal elec- tions May 3. to whlC'b importance Is at- tached this year, as they will give evidence whether the Left bloc sWl retains the confidence of the electors. In the anticipatorY vision or many French poople the manUe ot the French Premiership already has been r\emoved from the somewhat modest shoulders of ill. Herriot and ,. nO\V Buspen~d above those of Call1uux-a more forceful and \tronger man. In lbelr opinion, for a troubled hou,· and the present desperate financial sit utltlon. Not only do Cail- laux's friend. look upon him as the gainer in an early readjustment of the Left's political macllinery, but so also do many bitter antagonists or the Right. Premier Herriol's Intimate friends could scarcely be expected to view the situation from the same angte, but any Jlolltlcian's frlendll are generaify to be numbered according 10 his prospects, and 111. Herriot at the moment Is not wearing the ermine of any .peelal glory. . Ready for Another Leader Since M. Clemenceau retired at the end ()t 1919 there have been five Premiers of France. 'Vlth the coming of each, France has been mid that thi\ was tM man wM ~ould put things right. A halo was placed upon his head, and Its brilliance was maln- tained by constant be .. ms of the ~pot1igh t from frhlndly sections of tile fourth ea· tat~unUr it came the turn of the next prospect. One might have thought the French people would have become skeptical after 50 many dillappointnients. but there. Is nDt n trace 'of that. A large portion ot the lIubllc is perfectly ready tn think that salvation Ues In camaux, just as It 'con· fidently believed the mllIennium was at hand with his predecessors. SurroundeQ by the glamour that accompanies· being a \martyr M. Ca.l11aux has seen his chances grow until now not only he but his friends and his enemies as weI!, con·' sldt!r him In the process of an actual return ~o 'Power. ---.,------- , KING AT BRANTING FUNERAL Hundreds of Thousands 11'1 Stockholm Streets Mourn for Minister BU A\ Prell Stockholm, March a ,-Flags were at balf-mast throughout Sweden, Denmark and Norway In honor of Hjalmar Brant- lng, former Prime Minister of !lweden, who died last weel, Under gray skies, yesterday afternoon, a great funeral procession moved lrom M. Brantlng's house In the suburbs through Stockholm toward the o;ix-hundred-yeur- cld churcb, Stor Kyrkan, where fUfieral services were conducted Hundreds of thousands ot persons lined the route ot the cortege, bare-beaded and silent King Gustave and t1J.e royal family, member)! at the Dlploma.tio Corps and Ira \ Mor- rllt, formel' Un!~ States Minister to • Sweden, were present, cational criSIS in t·he present, When the Czecho Slovak State was· tounded there were insufftclent Czech schools, and due to t he fact that the birth rate had fallen during the wal' there were more than enough German schOOls. 'rhe Czechs, therefore: closed those classes In the Ger- man schools where the attendance was small, and started a big bnilding pr<;>gram for Czech ~chools. No new German schools have been bUllt and the German popula- tion has watched the Czech bullding pro- _~ram with apprehenSion, foreseeing the time when their schools,.YIill be over- crowded and there will be no encourage- ment for expansion. The Germans are absoiutely convinced that theIrs is a su- perior cultUre and are bitterly jealous of the C~echs. Certain technical Institutions also are on AustrIan territory. as the peace treaty drew the boundary line, and no Ger- man scho.ols of this kind have been built In Czecho Slovakia. FOr thE'S. technical students, therefore-though their number Is limited-there Is a real educatIonal hardship. The language has also been a cause for bltter discontent. In the smaller purely German towns all street signs and nil of- Ilclal notiees, such as timetables in rail· COURTIERS TO BARE GABY'S lifE HISTORY Ex-King Manuel's Household Called in Parentage Issue Over Famous Actress The military problem I, also acute. This little counn\y maintains a standing army of 150,000 men-an Immense burden on a population of 13.000.000 people. M. Benes wants to reduce .t1;ls force and has be.,... one of the liveliest supporters at the Geneva protocol and all movements for the mutual reduction of armaments. But seldom has a state existed where the problem of defense was more serious. The ezech part borders all 1·=(1 em Gel'many -Slovakia has one long frontier on Irre· dentist Hungary, and the other on not· too-stable Poland. One must Indeed be a trusting paCifist to advise Czecho Slovaltia to disarm without very adequate guaran· tees of safety. The Czech people have great courage. optimism and vitality, Their energ;', their w1ll to work and the peculiar ab1lity of their two chief leaders have won them the confidence of the west. They wlil need all their advantages to wrestle with the prob· lems that the next years will bring them. DOROTHY THOMPSON, BERLIN OFFERS PARIS PACT OF GUARANTEES Proposal for Reciprocal Security Reported Also Sent to Other Atlies KNOWN AS \HEDDY\ TO MANY WID.Eij THAN CUNO'S PLAN BJJ oIhsoctated Prl'BIl Paris, March, 2.-Rehable French reo Evening Post Foreign Service I ropVNJlht. 1925. by N r. Et·enirr..g P08t, Inc-. Budapest, March 2.-Was Gaby Deslys, ports were heard today -that propo~a.!s the world famous music hall star, Ga.brlpUe ~ looklng to a pact of reciprocal guarantees :Leone Gayre, the name on the death cel\- and Srt\U Ity b t G d F oM ·IIes' W = r e ween ermanyan ranca tlfleate- Issued· -at . tH'Sei as aft.. were received \bY Prellliel lferriot tram tire Gabrielle Kerr, a Marseilles .Jewess? Or German Foreign Secretary, Dr. Strese- was she H~dwlg Navratil, a Hungarian of mann, ten days ago, CZech ol\igll1? The proposals, described as more gen- Complications around tllese questions are eral In scope than those made 'by Dr. developing furiously smee a Hungarian Wilhelm Cuno when he was Cllancellor In working man, claiming to be her father, 1922, are s'lld to have been communicated announced his Intention or suing her es- simultaneously to the other Allies. Pre- tate. The Navratil familY, In Hatvan, mler Herrlot informed Dr. Siresemann that Hungary, now adds furth~r details to those he reserved his reply to the German com- recently publlshed. munlcatlon pending consultation with the The Navratil Allies. swered by the ~tatement: \Gaby's Desljrs' name is Gabrielle Eliza- beth Leone Gayre and I know her family, She wu certainly not your daughter.\ But the old ,man Navratil states he has letters supporting his eMe anrl that when Gaby made a film WIth Harry Pilcher it w~ shown In Hatvan, and all the neigh- bors recognized her as Heddy. The daugh- ter of the Gayres. he claims, .tlll IIYes, To act as witnesses for their eMe, the Navratils say, they Intend to calI Promi- nent persons, Inciuding courtiers of tormer King Manuel of Portugal, Who knew Gabys' me story. '- Besides aU this a well Imown Vienna man steps forward to say he knew Gaby Intlmatety and abe Wag neither a Gay .. \ 110r a NavrlJ.tiI, but a Marseilles Jewess named ,Gabrielle Kerr. LINER DAMAGED IN S'rORM lion between Germany's on the Rhine and the frontiers to the east with Poland and C2echo Slovakia, .('oes not mention the possibility of reo c~)Urse to wat' after the plebiscite a.\n1l sug· gests that disputes should be settled by arbitration. The French opposed Dr. Cuno'e proposals because no mention was made of guar· antees with regard to Germany's eastern frontiers. The new proposals. It is learned, have been the \ubject of earnest conv,~rsations the last week between the Allied Chan· cellerles. Ratly to~ Put· F-orwtro Lutb&r, or Even Von Seekt, for Presidency -Marx May Be Rival Funeral Oration Wednesday to Delivere_d in Square to Accom- modate Throng Expected Evenmg Post Foreign Service CoPtlnoht. 1925. by N. Y. EfJcmng }lOBt, \}IIC Berlin, March 2.-Germany mournel;! yesterday fol' her 2,000,000 deaC\ of the World War, as well as her first President. By a tragic coincidence the ftrst gen- erally ooserved memorial for the war dead fell on the day when the body of the Presi- dent lay In simple state In his worl(rOOIIl in the executive mansion. The same fiags, draped In black or float- Ing at Itali·staff, did duty for the soldier dead and the en Ihan chief magistrate who also£lve 1!ls Ilfe at the DOst of duty. Ebe, t s to have presided at the chief ('elebration thf.' memorial day in the Relchstag. His empty chair, swatiled III crepe and bearmg a memorial wreath or ftowers~ served as a mute Iemlnder of his Intended part In the ceremonies. Many Germans who could not bring themselves to display mourning for a Sodal!st President of republican Germany hUllg from their windows draped colors fOr the soldiers and sailors who died under the standard of Impel'ial Germany. Ebert Seen In New Light Even those devoted Monarchists who d.- cline to recognize any common German brotherhood with Ih ... Socialists 0'· adm!t any sympathy for the deceased chief or the republ1c might have experienced :t. change of senUment had they r .. ad the revelations by Foreign Minister Strese· mann that Ebert's Initiative restored \Deutschland Ceber Alles\ as the anthem of the republic and that he was sympJ.· thetically inclined toward the movement to restore the cherished black, white and red colors of the monarchy, at least for foreign use. The Communist organ, the Red Flag, cites in black faced type the verdict prn. nouneed in the National Assembly 'In the day Ebert was Inaugurated President: \That the German revolution did not follow the e .. ample of the Rus.lan; that it did not lead, as In Russia, through bloody rhaos to the complete dissolution of law and order and to the destruction of all political and business life are due chlefiy to the services of the man to· day called the head of the commonwealth.\ An, ther column of angry ·Indlctment bids Communist workmen remember Ebert's '·ote for war credits, b1s services In checking the munition workers' strike during the war, his fight against Commu· rust riSings after the ArmiStice and his. successru I efforts to install a. democratic reptlbl1a instead ot the Russian Soviet system and a. Bolshevist dictatorship. Dr. Strpsemann, In his eulogy, strives to convlncp his OWn followers that Ebert was a patriotic state8Illan of high ablUtles and to dissipate the conservative legend that he used the great powers or his onlee to favor his own party and hamper the ac- tivities of C'.a.blnets erected on a non-Social- Ist or anti-Socialist basis. Ebert Luther\s Sponsor It was Ebert, he (tecIar{:s, who selected Wilhelm ('uno, the most nationalistic Chan· cellor In the history of the rePllbile. and who asked and accepted Dr. Stresemann'g advice to appoint Luther ChanceUor when the tailure of Marx's efforts to reorganize tlle Cabinet became evident. The funeral servicEs here Wednesday will, so far as can be ucertained, be of a strkUy official and secular ·character. Religious services, 1£ any, will be reserved ~ tire bm1l!:t at Heidelberg. The Berlin ceremony wllJ be far more stately and ornate than would have pleased the plain Ebert. The Hrst service, for the hIgh official and diplomatic world, will be held in the recep- tion hall of the executive mansion. The body thEm wllJ be taken to the Reiehsta.g, where Chancellor Luther will deliver a funeral oration from the step. or the building, which faces the VD...t Kmgs' Square the only place Ih Berlin large enough to accommodatj! the crowds ex- pected to attend. heavy military escort of honor to the Pots- dam station, where It will lie in state be- fore depa-rture on a special train to Heidel_ berg, where Ebert wru. born. Few flags Mark Death Evening Poat F~reign Sel'1lice ('oPJlfipllt, 192:'j. by l-t. 1. Eve-fling Post, Jnc. Lollllon, March 2 -I,ngland's birth rate for 1924 was the lowest ever reo corded during peace times, but in the same year there was an Increase in marriages. The birth I·ate has shown a g,·adual diminishing In the last few years until last yea1:- If stood at 18.8 a thousand, However, the natural Increase in the population by the eXcess of births over deaths amounted to 257,000, as agalnat a five·year average Increase or 336,000. The reasons for the decrease may oe attributed to bad housing conditions high taxation. In Engla:ml does not present ~o serious a problem as in the Continental coun- trleB, for the reas6n that normally j;;ng· land has tWIce as many Inhabitants as she ean feed. ' Inently mentioned as 'Ebert·s successo<, along With forme I' Chal1cellor Marx:. Then there alia General von Seecl{t and ex· Chaneel1m' Cuno. The Junkers no doubt will belld their energies toward Luther's eJectlon, fo,· despite his \non.partlsanship he would amply serve· their Interests until such time as they could present a. man of more pronounced monarchlstlc taBtes~ Von Seeckt for the present seems to be out of the question because or hIs military posillon. Whether the forthcommg plebIscite will elect a r .. puoUcan or not Is difficult to predict. But the Nationalists already· are laylnll\ their nets-and they have con· ftdenc~. Today·s lack of response to lhe official invitation to show respect to the dead Presi<ient was due %Wt only to Indifference, but to a desire to demonstrate that 11. large ·sectlon of the nation accepted neither Eba,·t as President, nor the republle. Extreme reactionary organs Uke the Pan. German Deutsche Zeltung and the Kreuz Zeltung show fiat disre ect. The I)eutsche Zeitung starts its obltuar by saying that eveIl' in the presence of d th it cannot speal, a friendly word for t tlrst Presi- dent. ~Iu('h PI'aise in Press Liberal papers, on the other hand, find that Ebert's cool and common senlie - pa- u·lotlsm, gra.I.> ot the situation and reali- zation of his responslblUty to the nation as a whole gave him the nece~S[!'l'y ele- ments of great, if not genial, statesman- ship. The Deutsch .. Allgemeine Zeitung, the arch-representative of capitalism, gives Ebert an obituary which any successtul statesman in: a happier Germany would be prcmu to· des!!l'Ve.. TIlis Stlnnes organ declares all Germany shOUld mourn at the bier of a good Germnn, 01 a renl statesman whom Germany-so poor In pOlitical Intell1gence~ould not afford 10 lase, and of a politician Who, with every occasion to become a demagogue, was free of the slightest taint ot dema- goguen·. It says that the investigation of scandals affecting SoclaUst leaders proved Ebert·s Integrity and patriotism beyond all doubt and laments that death has tal,en a man destined to the g,·eat mission of making tho Soclallst party an element of order and stablllty In the German state. Chancellor Luther and Foreign :r.l1nister Stresemann both are flatly arrayed agaln.t Ebert's party, but both are familIar with his activities as President. 'They Iseued statements filled with high culogy of the dead Executive-statements which I have reason to beileve came from the heart and were not mere Up service. 300 MISSING IN CAJU BLAST Eight Know!' Dead, \sland Broken Up, Rio de Janeiro Reports B1/ Auootatel1 Pre!!' Enemies of De Valera in Own Party Await Sigl'l~1 to Lead Country ItltO. Battle ~. ULSTER AN!) FREE STATE SOLDIERS FACE 250 Meetings in Nine Districts Prepara.tion for Election- Feeling Intense \ Eveni?111 Post Foreign Ser'vic~ f\OP1Jri!].ltt. 1026. by N. 1'. ElIsnlnn Po,t~ (nc. '\ondon ~[\rch 2.-Reports reachIng here today from two sources in Il'eland indicate that tlouble Is brewlllg along the rrontie~whcre It would only require an \incident\ (),. two to set things going agaIn. This Information Is based on reports that arms are being smuggled In by a certain section oC republicans, who do not favor Eamonn De \\alera as a. leader; who are ultrn-extrpme In thel,· Ideas, and WllO are wl1ling to start a fight in hopes or gaining their ends. \Nhere they are getting the runds for the purchase of arms Is un- I{Down. If a body ot extremists could equip themselves lor fighting, It seems they CGuld not seleet a better place that the border Une, and no better time than nOw. \\ The sO\tth or Ireland Is primarily inter- ested In .the corning eleotion In nine con· stlttlencleB wllose representatives in the Dall Elreann have eithet· resigned or died. Something of tile spirit or the campaign may be gained from the fact t h ... t tOd_ay 250 meetings were. held in these nlae districts, yet the election will not take plaoe until Mal'cll 16, Thlls far there has been no violence rluring the campalgning, but naturally tMngs are beIng said tllat do not help smooth tbe existing dlt'ferences. Aiong the borde, of approximately 300 miles, tile 'C1>lter constabulary, which would be the nucleus for UI~H! army, and the Freo State soldie,·s' are encamped. In their training quarters on either side of the line tlley have been glaring at each other (or months. If tile Free ,state out- Ilt should start anything with the Ulster contingent, the whole border WQ~lg be in arms at once. But it Is q u\stionable \hat would hap- pen if the republicans made a sally Into UlsteI'ter\\ltor\Y. They might be driven back Into the l .... ee State ,by the UI.tentes and then t,eated a. guerr11las by the Free State arm,.. Tile dUllgor lies in the possl\:)l1lty that armed activity on the part of the republl. cans might load to a melee Iretween the Free States and the Uisterites: and should that come, nnythlng might happen because botll sides un thoroughly PI ep~red. I \DEATH RAY\ SOLD IN AMERICA Matt:Nwl !>aYI Invention England Re· fUled Wal SnllPped Up t-lere Southall1]lloll .. Eng\ Mircll 2.-H. Grin dell Mattbew8. Inventol' or the \death ray, ' just ba.cl~ from the United States on the Aquitanta, sars; \England ltn.s definitely lost tIle chance of obtalnlnl!\ t he 'death ral·.' America snapped It 1.fp. ,I had boen there only a week when I roncluded negotiations for its sale. Blit I gave England flrsl chance.\ Matthews pliu' to return to America In six weeks Il'1th all data 011 his invention. • BELGIAN PREMIER TO VfSIT U. S. BilellO,. AJres. Ma.rGH 2.-A dlspatc-ll r~41\l\ nio de Janeiro says the known oaBualties in Friday's explosion on Cn.ju Island are dght dead and 6QO Injured, b\lt th\t ~OO Theunls Flal1l to Come Here After persons have not been accounted for, Parliament Is Dissolved [ ' Tho explosion caused a partial dlslnte- Brussels. ~rarc~ 2 - The newspaper gration Of CllJu Island, from which a Metropole Bays toelay It learns that Pro· number of Islets, once a portion of the mier Tlleunl>! Is planning to visit America. main Island, are now separn.ted, Immediately after the dissolution or Parlia heaps on nearby Cenception Island is expected about_ March 15. I fire, causlngturther damage, - All The PrelIlier's journey will be of 11. on Concepcion ;t\e razed by the explosion. strictly private ,na.ture.· • >< TURN TO THE RIGHT BULCAR AGENTS SEllE RULE REACHES -ROME -RID MUNrTlONS 'CACHE FORMER TRIAL HAD FAILED BALK AM SOVIET P.LOT BARED • There Is perhaps real mourning for Ebert In the working guarters of Bprlin (even this is not general), but the better- Evening Post Foreign Service PaI\ls March 2.-Ln Mat1n·s correspon- class residentinl districts and the business (oPl/rlllhi, 102o, by N. Y. E ••• lou 1'0.', IRe. dont at Sofia reports that the Bulgarian center of the metropolis show that In- Rome, March \2.-Rome today definitely secret service llllS discovered In the reglon -IlI .... tttt'lde is proverbially the vice of a pl.O.- has deserted the left-hand trafflc system . near the Jugc> Slav border, between Kus- perolls and well-to-4o bourgeoise. thnt has been in vogue for centuries, and t d t th Ig \t I -, n ith tGl1dil and 13r\\nlk, various stores ~m9 I saw In a t0l.\r through tho residential urne 0 e l' ,., n accorua ce w a .' -_. quarter scarcely 0. score ot flags put out Fascist ordinance. and munlt!C>ns and has Mized 1200 rlftes, in response to the Govarnment's ,,,,horta. Traffic proceeded with n surprising lacl( 150,000 cal'tridges and 200 pounda ot eoo;- tion to display mourning. Only two flags of Incident and pedestrians noted little dir. ploslves. were hung through the length 01 Fried. ference, Inasmuc\l liS Roman jehUS tol- At Kustendii the polloe arrested sev- ricltstrasse, thf' principal retall huslness low their Qwn Incl1natlons In piloting their entsen Communists alleged to have Indl- str~et,.. One a' these.. was the Stan!. and craft through the crowded streets, most ot rect relationa with revolutionary organ- Stripes, on the building or the Am'lrkmn wh1ch' are ·devold of pavements. Izatlona, At Phlllppopolis and Varna se- Ineurance Compll.ny. Many or lhe busl· The old hack horses appeared entirely cret executi .... committees were discovered. ness Inetitutions wltlch lowered t.holr fiags indit'l'erent, while the walking public stern· ~everll.l per .. on~ arrested and quantities 0' to halt·staff, such as the Deutsche Banlt Iy adhered to the rule or the survival or documents so[zed. Prelident Roo.evelt Docks at Cherbourg After Weltherlng Ocean Gale and several other big banks, refused to the fittest. \ltevela made by the arrested Com- use the Federal colors, but dlspla)'ed the It Is recalled that the first English-born munlstH Elstabllsh beyond all doubt, says ..... black and white of HohelJ-zollern Prussia, MaYl)r or Rome, Nath·an, tried the same the CGrrespondent, that there is close col- Landlords and Tenants Meet for Peace The monarchists see In Ebert's death a plan twelve years ago, but right· hand lab oration between the Agrarian eztrom- The ~ecrecy surrounding the ..del1very ot the new proposals, however, was well guarded until 'j?remier Herrlot made his statement before the Senate Foreign Reln.. tions Committee Friday that Ger\many would repeat the proposals of her former ChancellOr, Cuno, for gUaranteeing peace on the Rhine, but thus far had. made no proposals concerning her other frontiers -Poland, Czecho Slovakia and Austria: 2.-The has ar· Jalapa, Mexl~o, March 2.-Landlords anJ po\sib111ty if not II. probability, 01 recoup· tra1flc was abandoned on account ot tho ists and Communist organizations directed tenants of Vera Cruz State are meeting in Ing their political fortunes, WIth a pro· wine carts. by a Balltan 'Communist International\ ment has completed pians to supe.-alrplane base near ct,er:bollr:lIr;·· miles from the nearest pOint on Hsh coast and only 150 miles frGll1 «on, according to Information the Chronicle w,ll publish toda,\. It wili ,be built with the idea European war cannot came ..•......... years, but with PI'ovislollS to errcctive against inventions that expected to develop durIng that According h the DRIly monster !jghtlng machines, caJ,r.;fil,,,: of gas bombs, which .clenttsls can kill orr most of London's ,po'PU,la.!:11 Wlthin a few hours, wUI be ..\\., .... \ grouml, protected by ste!!>l enlblJLttllen~~.iI~,':1J that can resist any air attack, More t han that, the F'rentlh ,·llIted the dltrlculty, \0 during the wal'. of having field t()rn up by shel1~. ,by catapult system whereby ml~cllII1I'S. be shot from theIr One ques.!lon asked, howe~erJ concile her air service on the war could not come within while at the same time ntra During Opera SeasDn EV4ffiill.l1 Post Foreign Sei'!iiCIl CoPVrlght, I9l1G, bl! 11_ Y. 81J<,.lnJl , •• t; London, March Z.-As SOon al!I Walter compl~te5 his AmerIcan ments he will come to Leadonl 11:l;~~~~~1 Into shape tlle orchelltra ot the a a rtl.ts, tor ttle opera lIea!c>n, to Covent Garden· In May. The announcement tha.t London I have opera at the famous old spring came as a surprIse. '£he tions may be attrlbnted to the I syndicate working In co·operation old grand opera syndicate and eBli1~:ta1 to the generosity at S. C01.frtJand, interested In music, A8 planned Italian and German operall will b~ It I. stated that Walter .....,itl condUct the German productions. Toulouse P.ap'~r Hear~ Agalnlt American 'Plung~r' Wlitll,il •••• , alleged Ca~llno drawn. Orleam, Franee, March fa ure, a canalboat rested on a. murder charge, according to the pQJiC'e, to known to have. by coolies. --~---;- Convalescent, Premier Will Daya Resting at t.,orn,ti!ill:< Rome, March . .2,-Th, snys tt3day that Premier- ,l'dllS~<iiAri.i ing the advice of his physician, Taormina lior ten da.ys <\\U'ing of convalescepce from his re,;eI't,-;'i;!:J.( !nJluenza. The reopening of the' newslla.Il\lr bas· betn :March 20, WVlh:~i:l:e:nt~h~~e~e~~~::;~ wlll not !Ie\ ::---;;.~;:tti;~, .. ~~; Atlolf this City, the capital, in an effort to nego- Nationa.list Cabinet In power and with the The drivel'S of theM gaily adorn~d char· allied with /a central body In Vicnna, tlate an agrecment whereby all their dls- So~lalist Party virtually leaderless, they lots of Hacchue habitually sleep and let th\ Tile correspondent believes tlU:LI the po'\ putes would be solved by law,' feel that their chances of grasping the· hOrBell go by Instinct. ~ lice discoveries are likely to paralyze to ~~~§~~:;~~=~~t~~~~~;~~~!:~~;::~~~~:~~~~~!~~JD~i:8~P;U:~:s~l:n~t~h:e~p~u~t~s~o:m~e~t~~:e~S;h~a~.:eJ;r~e~b~s~·~O:f~g~o:v~c~rn~m~e:n~t~a:~~e~x:c~.~n:e;n~L~~~~~~h~~~~~~b~~~~gr~~Mt~M~~cl~~. ~ b~e==c=h=a=n=g=e=d='=S=O=I=h6===la=w==w:as~~r:e:v:ok::ed~,~ ____ ==v=e=rs=i=v=e==.el=e=no=c=n=t=s=,====~====~~~~==~==~====~~~~~~~~~~~