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1--Mustapha Kemal Pasha, Tur Onstrating against alleged Polish< 1 for the lower Colorado river basin NE WS RE VIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Arms Conference Receives theF Completed Program for Naval Reduction. "SUB" TONNAGE NOT LIMITED Chita Delegates Reveal Alleged Fran, co-Japanese Secret Alliance-Allied Supreme Council at Cannes-Bit ter Debate Over Irish Treaty in Dail Eireann. By EDWARD W. PICKARD flW TH Its work almt. completed, so far ats it cant be, the armna ment conference at W1ashingtont met in plenary session at the close of thes week and heard at report of the pro. gramn for naval reduction and llimita-" tht is completed by the naval cont. mitt to and Its corps of experts. Thir treaty for a ten:-year naval holiday tc, he entered Iuto by the live principal powers of the world was pres~ented, together with the technical details for carrying it out. As, finally decided upion, the agree ment Is not so drastic In its plan foi reductions as was proposed by the Amnerican delegation, but the fact re mains that It puts ar, end, for a dec ado, to the navy buildinge race that threatened to swamnp the taxpayers o1 severl na tions, andt is e ,!, adm ie l. a ratse twrdwrd ec 1hne reauystr egthe rativelTm Japnsrance aanst Ialyethe Pital of the oer Cpoortionatvey bain, rmasd Cofrnce Reperittes tohil Completednumb roama fopsr. BtaNava constuction3,00-. Chetaselegaftes RHvea Alege Fran cubmarpaiese Secre AliancerAlt lie Suremote vessels, ut Canesr-ma term Dieate guOcver ris fied.t A aysis adligh E crusesan thir us nt toi bexceed urigh inaches.The ratfr asirplaon et car riletr ~soa e 5---22-e2 clnd 0 the meadumr onaeort the p ies tiowers co3pl00. byThe nvssls art lmiteed t onag of 27le100~ each teyfrica tnavad nalr, hid isas .~ sertd,~ rejitedb he ,ivpan'isccess, fuwet oean that she4 ~ he alloeto e. toain ht ~he tadauhnilMutuland Forac'sryitec Out rig.uba rins alnuydeuIar uhpn, thn abote cates t ns rstic idnstmts re- fo roedtoS the Privesrengythn ofAmerica' navyg. bt hetan fact ar. mwin hae lt us rendfo a decag inrr subatines, a it is propostedlin aseat of onl tow00d orld theaoin todihichtosO the oriinlgateu we skedi the alihi ofrassi the t-ont Thge Bimts, anno teed taetd tf rae hangesgreall submrengenet rhey musl the perictdaon ul nasv anyux.r crisrs ths tey wshed, rad ~ita s n agreed Amrcad wIteqal the cBritia spAti is wri31ting ther aphear tonui frttm 500000t o th,eaprovandb th -ofneof ther roorestionl ie lirigte uerpofmentl f ll tubm re aint tomere a pray, and Mre B~ialus amenstrut tnde whleh0- th bannelg of submarond typeraio woansot inmercntentshans becmem umditey efecdv asxilaryn cre t. N APAN i paced ona thegrougat thell eleftese esumesdu theitrrupae ionv~etos anovncaer eSatn is d .it O f.00 toas eac niw knton thx thir n mae note pogesse towart inche-.-erntio for arlanee car naanonut ton'nae fros the tw.o.,.i,,... kish National leader, in civilian garb. 2 >ppr-qsion of their countrymen. S--Propose a project which the Department of the In .meeting of the allied supreme council was opened on Thursday. EBATEO on the Irish treaty was al most overshadowed in Dublin by { the kidnaping, presunably by support era of De Valera, of A. B. Kay, cor respondent of the London Times, and by a hot discussion in the Dali Eireann concerning the freedom of. the press, provoked by an attack on the Free man's Journal because it advocated ratification of the pact. The corte spondents united in a demand that Mr. Kay be released and that a public apology for his kidnaping be made in the Dail Eireann. - The strength of the opposition to the peace treaty in the Dali Eireann when It reassembled after the holidays I bias unexpected. De Valera, Countess Markiewlez and many others denounced the pact bitterly and were not at all abashed by the arguments of its sup porters. On Wednesday De Valera issued a proclamation to the "People I of Ireland" and also circulated copies of the "i)ocument No. 2" shorn of several of its clauses. This latter was I)e Valera's proposed alternative pact, and a fierce debate at once arose over whether it should be considered I as an amendment to the treaty and 1 voted on first, as De Valera wished, or whether a vote should first he taken on the treaty and, if it were unfavor able, then on the alternative. In the course of the row De Valera shouted that he was "going to move this amend ment at my own time and in my own way," and when reminded this was a matter for the chair to decide he hotly retorted : "I am the president here and I am going to make my own rules of procedure iIn my ow1, way and at my own time." The alternative is n.ot vastiy dif ferent fr'om the treaty arranged inl London. It provides that tile legisla ture, executive and~ jludicial lauthlority of Ireland shail be derived solely from the people of Ireland ; thant for the p~ur pose8 of common concern Ireland shail lbe associated with the states, of tile British empire, with rigihts, status 'and(1 privileges In no respect less tihan .those states, and that for the purposes~ of the association Ireland shail recognize his Britannic majesty as head of tile association. Most of the othler termls are similar to those of the treaty. T E O tt of Senator Boles Penrose of PnnslvaIin ot 03113 deepjly gr'ievedl his mniy friends and admnirers. 4It also caused considerable dismay among those wh'lo (d0 not approve of the so-called agricultural bloc in the senate. For Penrose was chairmlan of the senate finance committee and if tile systeml of seniority is adhered to Ils successor in that place of pow~er will lbe Senator McCumlber of North Dakota, one of the chlarter mlemblers of the bloc. Penrose also was recogniizedl as the leader of the coni servative element in the senate', and1( ini tils positionl he is succeeded by Senator WVatson of Indiana. Gov. WV. C. Sproul of Pennsy53lvania was u~rgedl by some Republicans to r'e signl and1 accept alppointmenlt to fill out Penrose's unexpired terml, but tis he declined to (1o. p RSIDENT and Mrs. IHarding re 1vived the custom of hlolding a New Year's receOptionl to tile p~ulic, and1( all oflicial Wash~lington followed suit by keepinig openI house onl Monday. Among the callers at the White House and gu~ests at the diplomatic breakfast was Dr. Karl Lang, thle newly arrivedI Ger mian charge d'affaires. A COtRING to a New York news pa~perl, P'ostmasHter Will Hay13s hlas acc&eptedi tile potsilion of dlirector gen era'tl of the National Association of tile Mtioll letuare Industry which was offeredt him11 some1 time ago. It is salid his c'ontratct ia for three years at a -salary of $hi50,(X)O a year. The as soe'latio 1emb4'ira('es In its membership all the miol ti plicture producers in tile country. * U'iTTING down the estimates of .iby $.i50,000, thle house appropriationis ('omm11itte recommended~i~t tile alpproprla tionl of $91.'.50,I000 for proibit ion en. for'emuetttI ' durhu the netxt flsal yoar. Thin wi lro'vble for tile e'inploymienit of'3103 abot)I ii0imore agents. Mr. I laynles Ids5, lz want el $5. ).00 to Incr'ease thle Isala5les of' aigetits ti keep) them1 honedt, -lh'.t in~ the ennlion~ rnfati.zd 4 , 44 J ",C*L*# f' . 4 .: . Ukrainians of New York city deiu d site of the Boulder Canyon darn tenor has taken up. 'sinanfu railway were still the stick- I i1 noint. .lapan persists in her de- I nad that Chinese borrow the neces airy flunds from .Japanese bankers, t vhich, as has been explained, would < teat a continuation of Japanese con roi of the road's operation. It was t toped, however, that this Shantung c natter would be settled early this week 1 hrough the "goord offices" of Messrs. lughes and Balfour. H-IE delegation from the For Enast ern republic, not being given a nearing by the conf'erene, crtated Ioinethling of a sensation by giving to he preis copies of alleged secret notes tid treaties revealing a mllitary and )optictll alliance between Prance and fapai for the purpose of establishing 1 apanese (lomlinll tion in Siberia and tabilizig 1"rench interests in litussia, end to frustrate America's policy in he Far East. The documents were leciired to be fabricntions, by both he French and the Japanese delega ions, and the United States govern nent stated it has no oflicial infor ua1tion concerning any such agree nent. But it is asserted there are in he files of the State department re torts fron American observers in it eneral way confirming the allegations tf the Chita representatives, and here is talk of a senatorial investi ation into the Siberian situation. Later in the week the ('hita dele Lates produced another documnent, tis time an alleged treaty between the Japanese ariny in Siberia and Rus slan officers connected with SemenoTY, nti-Bolshevist leader, whereby the Japanese agreed to support with arms ind mloney an offensive against the C'h1tn republic. Baron Kato, in re ply, admllitted that at forniler Jlapanese 14hine(t 1paid( Semnenoff a certa4In amutl >f cash to keep him In the led. S ENATOR HIRAM .JOHINSON In an ad4 dress In San1 FralsenlI se't forthi ni considlerable detail is objiections to he Pacific peace t realty agreed to by t he ar nis conference, lHe espeeialliy lislikes Article 2, wihich he thInks a4s .1nd4 as Article 10 of t he League of Na4tions. Senator McNary of Oregon t hiniks the treaty offers a line chance for settling the l'hilippines prolemll flndt when It comels be'fore' thle senate lhe will offer tis reservaltIon: "The Uitted Slates agrees wIthin two years to granlt complllete Independ ence to the people of the PhilippIne Islanlds, provided tile highl contIracting pa11rtles will obl)igatte themel'ves to re sptPt ?)41 theitlal I idependenitIce anti territ orial intiegrIty (of tile Phlilippine' FlhANXCE'S attitude ill thle Waishing toll conlferenlce haid itis reflection Inl I thle conferencee of thle al iedt premliers ill Cannlies, France, for tilt purplose of iliscussing Germanfll re'liprations andlt the economaIc wel fiare of Eu rope gen ('rall y. Lloyd Ge'org.e wenlt thler'e iul- t palretly wilth tile initenltionl of' makinlg thbe impirovE'eent (If leranco4-itish re- 1 lations1 depentudentl (on ltiriland's consen'It to plans1 for1 tile econoi~~c rehabhili itat4)on of Glerinliny a 4d lu tssita. Briand nd1( is stailf wereP& pitleged to malike lFrance's reC(o1ntiuct ion I he 111481 for Ite rebuiliding of Europa', buit tey; found thuat they had lte full support oIf iBelglum11 alone'. In 111an Itervlew Inll t he Londion I )a ily Mall Briand p~ro po~sedI 14 de(fens1i ve i iailance beit weenii Greallt Jrl iin and1( Fran~ice, and1( InI a1 plimlliay talk wvithi Lloyd G eorge' he(' suiggesltd 11hat suchi 41 14n iaiiance Was I tile (only way~ In wleht thle two nn1 1141n1 could( I avoid a coniit roversy over subma411rinles and1 )4 i naa st renigth. It wasil strd1 tile intIshi prem Ier rebuffed t he suggestion)1, and( thiere4 Is good realson i 14) believe t he BritishiI~ puIe wold I has1 maltde conIsiderable coness'imionls, es-t pbelially conlcering Glermanily iand Ambahssador H-1:r-vey ;s present lit tile Cannes confr'i're',, butt (lily in tile enl-Etcity oIf ofFicia Iobse54rver, for the United States lhas no vote andI 1414 taken the posiahi that11 it will eni ler European111 alffairs onlly whlen lIs inlterests dIrectly areP4 involved. Wh'il1e no(t ((l(cocernedI int'e p)11msfor pay - men'1t (If thei4 reparations mone I~iiy or for Statles 1s de('(Oly interes'.ted( in thie pr0ooal ofI ai run-r14 ;Iu for 11he re 1ionstrn etins of Ieatral4~. an etn tiern, 11EWEEK'S.EVENT IMPORTANT NEWS OP STATE, N TION AND THE WORLD BRIEFLY TOLD ROUND ABOUT THE WORL A Condensed Record Of Happenini Of Interest From All Points Of The World Foreign The number of persons killed in t 0xplosion on the Greek torpedo be lestroyer Leon at Piraeus is now g ,n as twenty-one, with forty-two ured. The explosion occurred wh L number of the crew were handling submarine bomb. The allied supreme council has t >roved unanimously the calling of riternational economic conference )> participated in by Germany aI 'ussia. American Ambassador Harvey i ngland, Who is in attendance at t1 neeteing of the allied supremo cot :dl in Cannes, France, says lie w 'jump the fence" when he comes t, which is interpreted to mean th te is merely an onlooker. Marquis Okuma, the "grand c nan of Japan,' was one of the me listinguished men of the island ei )ire from the period of the restoratii mitil the present day. Twice promi if Japan, Okuma was in office whi he famous "twenty-one demand yore made upon China, and it was f, owing the agitation which result rom those demands that his minist 'esigned. He was succeeded rield Marshal Count Terauchi. The director of the American rell administration in Russia, w\ho has be n England, has returned to Russia vay of Riga, optimistic over the tw( y million dollar grain appropriati y the United States congress. The last effort of the dail eirea: n Ireland to bring about an agre nout on the Anglo-Irish treaty fail( )ther efforts will be made. Princess Joachim of Prussia, daub er-in-law of the former emperor, ,ing the ex-kaiser for support, c( ending that the laws of the Hoh ollerns entitles her to support. E tusband suicided in 1920. Count Laszlo Szechnyi has been Pointed Hungarian minister to t United Statec. His wife was formo Miss Gladys M. Vanderbilt of N York City. A bomb was exploded among I crowd listening to a band in the m ket place at Dinkelsbuehl, Bavaria, New Year's Eve, injuring fifty I sons, twenty of them seriously. '1 thrower of the bomb was a youth. Demands by the Russian Soviet g arnment that Finland withdraw all s port of the revolution in Karelia ht been agreed to by the Finnish gove Washington The federal reserve board says ti i decided improvement in Europe ixch-anges has tended to some exti o help the !oreign trade situation, 1 extreme caution in the extension ):nlk credits still continues. Purchase of over three million bm mIs of corn for the relief of the R1 Inn sufferers is announced in Was ngton on authority of the commissi< ri of agriculture of South Dakot. Continued upward movement mnsiness and the graduation resto1 ion of normal conditions are in ated in the comparison of reports rst month with those of the cor1 pondling month of 1920, according he D~ecemb~er review of the econonr ituation is-suedl by the federal reser ourd. Ex-Senator Mar-ion Butler of Nor ~arolina has forwarded Secretaryv Wrr WVocks an offer from capitalim v'hom he represents for the govei iont nitrate plant located at Muis shoals, Ala., and seeks an aipoli aent with tile secretary to talk ov ho matter. Hieromo L. Opie, major of the thuI attionm, 116ith infantr-y, who has he n the limelight for several weel hai-ged wvith having war tonly- sh own Amierican soldliers overseas, I oeared before the investigating CO uittee and vigorously denied the rga t ions . U~nanimnous agreemient .as been i-t stero'l by' the five piowers ui the arn onmeronco upon01 Articles I aend f the original Root re.4olutions (m1 rranged in three articles) regardi ubmla rine warfar-e, with butL I mnor oraitions. These resolutions, prov ng for an invitation to the rest he wvorld to follow the "big five," o race subscription to a restatement nternational law governing rules ubmariinc operation aga inst. mieha 'essels. But by far the niost limpo nt, action wvas unanimous adoption he original Article II, now known article Iii. Fiear thlat man~iy weevils wvill ib11 ate in the weevil-infested territo n Texas and rea ppea r in large nu er-a in the spring, has been1 exprei d in reports to the depa rtmlenit gricul ture-, andl it was said that t m-ionalI agriculta ra confer-en :hich is to meet0 ini Washlingiton so ill give serilous con.aideration to tl ubject. A u~niform,. re-discount irate in; ralI reerve hanki d itrits wot ,Senator iI arris, Demnocr-at, Get The governmnent's attitude on the question of freeing the halt a hundred I members of the I. W. W. still in prison for violations of ' war laws re A- mains unchanged, Attorney General Daugherty said. Practical completion of the report to be submitted by the committee of naval okperts to the navel committee D of the armament conference and agreement of the subcommittee on cis Chinese tariff on. a 5 per cent pffec- gc tive basis were two important devol opments in the conference situation. The agreement for an increase of go Chinese tariff rates to an effective CO 'five per cent was adopted by the nine ac conference powers sitting as a com- ca niitteo on Far Eastern questions. dil he Senator Truman H. Newberry, of Gt at lMichigan. will speak in his own be- fo hal from the floor of the senate when that body decides whether or ca le not he is to retain his seat. P The American proposal to prohibit rei use of submarines against merchant vessels, now the predominant issue of the arms negotiations, has been ac cepted in principle by France, but Ve her delegates have reserved final ap- . proval pending a discussion of the to precise language of the declaration. il Domestic to at Three workmen were killed and six injured, two perhaps mortally, by an Id accidental explosion of powder in the at Shandaken tunnel in the Ashokan roa m. ervoir district, about 35 miles from n here, according to word received in er Kingston. N. Y. en The Eufaula Hardware company, a s" three-story brick building owned by p}. Foy Brothers, Eufa'la, Ala., was com ad pletely destroyed I ' fire, the total ry loss amounting to two hundreal thou. by sand dollars. A federal prohibition agent beset by f hotel guests unaware of his identity en was saved from personal injury when by the orchestra of the Highland hotel, . Springfield, Mass., played "The Star on Spangled Banner." J. D. Smith of Lamar, Miss., was killed and his son, C. D. Smith, seri mi ously injured when the automobile in d. which they were riding was struck by a Southern railway train at Ridge \vay, Tenn. is W. 11. Sproul, a restaurant employe, - vas burned to death and property and merchandise valued at approximately er $90,000 were destr'oyed in a fire which originated in the three-story Nichols building in the business district of ' Dyersbury,, Tenn., and spread to sev rly eral adjacent buildings. ew The United States transport Hender son has arrived at the navy yard at the Portsmouth, N. W1., with 83 naval pris r oners from the Pacific fleet. Officers on reported than 17 prisoners had made er- their escape since tie vessel left San 'he Francisco, ten having jumped over. - board when the ship. was going ov- through the Panama canal and the re up- mainder making their escape at points tve on the Pacific coast where the vessel rn- stopped. John Soffel, piresidlent of the May woodl State bank, in the suburbs of Chicago, was shot and killed, and Lou is S. Sweeney, chief of piolice of the tat ~ uub n rhrBenson, abank an inessenger,. we'-e wounded when five mtbandit s robbed thecm of a $12,000 pay troll for the Mr wood plant of the J of American Can company. It is rep~orted by3 the executive see th- retuary of the Socialist party, headquar-I *s. ters in Chicago, that Eugene V. Delbs' sh- health will not permit him11, at this m. time, to make a sp~eaking tour.5 i. The entire group of sixteen individ- , of uals andu tour "dIruig companies,'' in-| - ra- dicted by the United States grand jury| il- in New York in connection with tile of .sensational rovelations of graft in tles -e- administration or the Volstead act in to Newv Yocrk will probably enter a (10 tic murrer to the indictment. ye It is announiced in New Orleans that the Interstate Cotton Seed Crushers' th lassociation will right any tariff on veg of etablo oils, and will piresent resolu ts tions to tihe senate finance committee 'n- anent name in t he neoar future. It is atnnoun'ced that Blirmiinghamn, it- Alal, will hav ~e another great steel er plant. it will lbe ('a)italizAed at at half r'd nUnifint ion or international stand ards of an iti tox inlS Serumst has beenl he etgun on a larige scatle by the 12eaguo p.of Nationus heal tht comilttee, accordh LIing to detilied pilans received at Now . York rec'en liy. RalIpht Cul Iver I ennettI, doctor of -civil la ws. odotr of laws, biachelor of aart and1( president of t he Metropolitan il Mee of1,aw at over, Del., quail ,fled asq a futlI-fledlged abisent-minded lipofso we e vas arraigned in MWashiingitn IHeight police court otn a id chtarge of assault. F.lIldorado, Ark., is being thioroughly m- liol ced in an effort to locate the fire bu'o ecently3'attemptedl to burn ogtebusiness section of t he town. nt liarri ing an elevont h-hour change rt. Govertnor Sproull will appiioint ex*G v ernor IEdwvin S. Stuart Its UJnitedl as States senattor to suteed the late hoes Penrose it was learned on ro rliable auithoriity. ryA maljoriity of ph~ysicia ns Itt 19 -states, r'eprestinlg all ieet ons of is the country, replying to ani alcohtol ic le of the A mer'ican Medo~icalI asso(ciationtt, ceassert t hatI they di1rl not tega rd beer rand wino a it (c(ssary thea'rapieuatic agents in the practice of tmdi tine. IlThe easte~ witht w~tich tie affairs of he.ott.aurborn Nationtal anid l'ott Dea rborn Tirttst. atn( Satvint' bai wVio r anled by. finantCin;IP ''i ls i lt hie'i. protted at source of< n lideac HE TIME TO TAKE PEPTO-MANGA hen You Feel a Little "Off" it Will Bring You Back to Health. Some people never need ariy medi le at all. They are, as the saying es, "strong as a bull." They are ghty lucky. Most people need a od tonic once in a while. They take Id, or through overwork or soc.ial ivity do not get enough sleep; man t improper food and thus hurt the restion. It is mighty wise to take ide's Pepto-Mangan with the meals e a few weeks and build up. One nnot have too much good health. pto-Mangan gives you plenty of blood, and everybody knows that I blood means feeling good and look r good all the time. Sold by drug it in liquid and tablet form. 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