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1 I 1-Anthony I-'okker, fatous )ut e troops of the Elevenlh United States Cal., to San i-t'ntolsco. 3--Miss 31: to United States Minister .1. Morton I NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Loyd George Starts Campaign and Bonar Law Forms New British Ministry. GERMANY IS TOPPLING AGAIN Threatens Voluntary Bankruptcy and Reparations Body Hurries to Ber lin-Daugherty's Dry Ship Rul ing is Upheld-News From the Near East. By EDWARD W. PICKARD D AVID LLOYD GEORGE, & J-forced out of the British } prime ministership by the atti tude of the Conservative party, seeks re-election to parliament and return to power. He op poses the radical demands of i labor, and advocates the foster. ing of friendly relations with the United States and with Rus- a sia. In this instance especially British politics affects the world at large. Is it your opinion } that Britain would be wise again to put the helm of the * ship of state in Lloyd George's hands? ... ............... . * .. .* ... .................... "....... T OU(;i he has not fulfilled proph ecy by trying to forit a new party, David Lloyd (eorge is making a pret Iy igh t for ret urn to pa rliam ient and to power, lie dleclares hIs ob ject is to secure the domninance of a party or gro()up that w II keep the gov'ernmnent In al midd' e course of safety and1( mfoderatlon. Addcressing ai glttherlng of the NatIonal Ibheral party, he took a tiri stanud agaInst r'e cent radicalntlmands of the Labhor party, and also mnnde it clear t hat one of his chief claims for support was his friendly relatIons 'vithl the Uniteu ,Sta tes. lHe asserted tall reasonable concessIons mlust he' mtade to induce this country to enter the League of Nat ins, whleh would he crIppled with out it. And he saidi Briain must pay her war debt to the UnIted States in full. "WorkIng with thet United States," declaired he, "ought to he one of the chief purposes of the govern tuent. If these two nations would work together, It would be thle surest guarantee for a jlust peace, and a just peace Is the only lasting peace." The ex-premier's quarrel with the Labhor party is In a way international. for that party, In a manifesto lssuied last week, not only demands the crent tion of n "'war dlebt redemtpt Ion fund by a slechil graduated levy on for tunes exceeding ?5.000," but ailso, de clares for thle revisIon or the peae trea ty aind GJermain reparins1, for an interim tional conference to arrange the freed(omt of t he stria its, for inde penltence In Egypt a nd sellf govern A ndrew ilonar L~aw, having beeti elected head of the UJonservativye party. fleceptedl the post of pime inIster and on Tuesday a 'nnoncedl his cabinet. It Is a resipectatble list of names, with quite am nuber from lhe peerauge, but most of the new inuisters are con sidered rather nonentities. The main stay of the eabinet Is Marquis Curzon, secretaryc for foreIgn nlfairs. Lord Cave, the 10r8 chancellor, and Stanley D aidwin, the ebanellor of the excheq ner, are mietn of pr-oved ability. It is taken for granted thait Bonuar Law will make many changes In the min Entry if he is returned to power at the genierni election, which Is set for No vebr15. Hec Isa n nnidate for Ongow, tando Is opposed by a Labor cantidiate and also by Sir Oeorge Pashm, noted economist. The lnst named gentleman fs now in the United States and, addressing' te conventIon of the Americnn .\nnu facturers' F~xport AssocIatIon, gave a lot of ecotnomic advice conicerning pro duction apd trade, lie scolded our government for hoarding gold, and( targed that the tariff barriers and other trade restrictions be removed 4'4 h airplane inventolr imaking his first gli ea ilry making practice imarel of 4!0 rgaret Crowley of Columbus, U., who is the first stele hi the restoration of t oreign exchange. Sir Gcorge ialso t Vints Ainerica to throm open her s loors to unrestricted imiiigration- N in unwelcone suggestion in view of t mr experience with certain classes 1 if immiiigrants in recent years. i BEING refused the cabinet positions the~y dlentmded, the Italian 1Fas-a Listi In conventilon in Naples madiiIe prepara tlou for militant action that threatened to become revolutionary. ''hereupon Premier Facta and his enih inet resigned. Former Premier Glolit ti conferred with Benito Mussolini, chief of the Fascisti, and It was he lieved he would he called on to form a n(ew\ milnistry. ''he Fascisti are now the strongest organizatlion inl Italy and have annonnced that they will assumte c(n1t1rol of the government, legally or othervise. C''i.MANY, whose mark imade a new o(4w record of 2'/ cents i hun dreiil last week, is iigain threatening to go into voluntary bankruit cy by dlefauiltitt In her reparations payinents in iniaterial as well as in cash. (Chan cellor !Wirth, w-hose political life s in great (lalger, lits begun ledgiii g and11i now has adopted the slogan of "First bread, then reparations," and has put the probleiii up to the eahinet. The Soclatlists are alling for imore dras tic mleastires, incluling confiscation of foreign uoniy in the hands otf pri vate persons, aned on the other hiand the hourgeolsie demaid the suppres sion of the decree against specuhition and the agriculturists insist ont higher ollicil purices for (German wheat and corn. The aeled reparations com liiission went to Ierlin to consult with the goveranment. The Biritish commnis siolner, Sir .ohn liradhury, said he would vote to declare (eruniiniy in vol untary default of its agreement if it should refus to ciiry out within a reaisonalle t i te reqluests for anternial re'foirms. TIhiis wvas a conisidherable COni~'csin to thle French dheuinandus. It miaiy lie that lii return France wIll agree to the indelinite post1ponemnent of thle Jsruissehs tinanciial con ference, leaving the ent ire reparations~ matter in thle hand~s oif the commiuissioni. French, Belgian and1( Itallan ex chaznge rat es dropped shia rily last week, going to the lowest pirices oif the year on the New York exchange. F D~ltALa ,1UDGE IIAND in New Yorkh uipheld the rudlng of the at torne'y generial prohibitIg the carry ing of liquors on vessels entering Amnericein waters, and thle cause brought by a iiumber of stenamishiip compantiiies Is niow to go before the Siipiremie count, whieh probably willl not. hand1( dlown a decision for six or eight weeks. Mlean Iiime Secretar oi3(f thle Tr'easury MlellIon has lnfornally instructed his agenits not tb enfor(e the ordler against for - ign vessels whose suipplies of liuor iare sealed when theuy enter ouir poirts. American ships, however, munst obey lie ruling. Thie French governiient has Indieated that it will noit comply with the reuest, preCsenited tinomllinlyv by Amibassador Iierr'iick, thcat It eco operate Ii in eventing Iliuor smuiggiling from the St. P'Jerre et A.liquelon Is hiinds1 off thlit southlerni coa st ofi New foundhliind. Accoirdling to Frnenchi om-I 'lails, the islandelrs tradle Frentch liquor for fond ait Newfoundaiznd and Prnince Edwvard island ports, iand do not t hemnseives sinuggle thme hoc'?e into0 the United States. It is 51aid this liquor t rading is essent ial to thle fishermen of the islands. SAMUEI, 00OM0i1U8, Frank Mforri sonl aiid .lamues O'ConnellI, the e'x. eutive committee for thle nationalI non-pamrtisan camnpa ign of thei .-ivri-I cani Federation cuf Lzair, hauve iszsued a manifesto deoefliiing the present conigress as8 r'ac'tionar i and111( cai lig on the voters to "liut progress in" at the Novemuber elect ion. Thle aupieal says the congress hats performed no Rervice for the peopile, but ha~s ''tried by every trick and deviee to serve pred atory Interests." Its Oct ion In re moving the exce'ss proitsq tax itnd re duicing the surtaxes and cnicerning the soldiers' bonus Ia espueeiaiily con demnned. iCN members of the I. W. WV. are Ion tr'ial in Siicramnento for viola lion of the Califoirnia crIminal ayndl. cahism law, anfd las~t week the State produced a witness who told a star der trials in I nganid. '2--Twho iniile's fromH It)ss Field, Arcadia, goes t I~gypt las priv ate secretary lang story ot' "wobblies" plots during m~ndred other wobbilies were employet Sthea o ine res fro tht.W . o iret enio u topssoie nd posnu cane fods He. als t0( of sabotage plots on raIlroads an nmhares felds ilAcda N AVY DAY wits celebrated throug out the United States on Frida --whieh also was the anniversary c tle birth of CiE.Theodore Roosevei The occasion brought forth many al peals for the maintenance of the eli iency I the n hatvy p dersonnel, wiei according to Itear Admiral Roger: shaiuld tiherw not fewer than 1'.o,00 men. To maintain our ratio und he Washiigton treaty, said the at iiairal, we should build fifteenr wenty cruisers of 10,000 tons each i le ousrse of pthe next few years, b sids hir e submarines. Presidei Nitin in Di lete ea to Secretary Dnl said: "It is well for us to have I ii li that under a program of essel ing nry arinatieits there is a great ieason for mie aintaining thle hiege. ellli iny, fliness, and morat ic n t h lranch of the nat otil defensive s vlee. I know how earnestly the na personne is devoted to this ideal, i want you to be tassure o my he r concut'ilrrence." p illMIFli l'OIN('AIl1E Is to set utivitat ions to the N'ear En peace confereuce, which is to be he in Liausalnnt., Swi tzerihind, but at th writing the (ate of the mneeting is u certaini. Lord Curzton, British forei ii:nister, Insists that the United Stat should partiipate. Italy says th Russia must be plenmitted to sit in t conference and also to sign the treat and France may consent to this view of her improved relations wi lie soviet government, Evacuation Tlhr'ace by the Greek eillians to tirinues mitd considerible disord though the allied forces are dol their best to prevent trouble. T Greeks carry oft' all they can al often destroy the rest of their posrE sains, lncluding erops. The Anerih ied Cross hns announced that it wv care for 800,000 of the refugees, Tl press of Athens complains bitter that the United States is the only r ton that Is giving aid. George yorth Amnereian consul general at Smyina, on his way home to report on the( struiction of that cIty and the at teil ing circumstances, is statement to the orIgin of the contlagrutlon lawaiitedl eagerly as the paiymeint ofi surance may depend~ upton it. Mr. I10 ton gave no ad~Vantce informat'on to hits report, h'et Inl his ennfl"er-ga there was an hndcation tha:~t he' wo'i tell the State depart mem ' ':'t t Smyrna fire was started by loote andt not by Turkish soldiers. EN big t ranslports st iaemne (lit Athet lort of U ladiVOSt ol: Ii:w nesdalty, bearing a all Ite . a 'aino troops thait have bel that city aii mo1(st of thle Ja lunlese clviilins as we Tiheo forces oif thle iFair E~ast era Repu lie--thle Chit a governimelt--at on< eneedte place and( took contr<I The conaunander of thle Red armay saidto hve rderdlte Brit ish ani Amei r1 ietan narinies to lave VI adi vo toIk and all foreign warsidys to it' the harbor. I h coastittion of the Irish Fro AStat e was ad fopted by' ihe pre visiorial parliament Wednelitsday an was takien to London for appiroval b, the new British ('abinlet, wihieh cer tainlv will not he withheld us a changes that could be offensive to th En;iglish governmnent have been lad in the dIraft its approvedl in .Jun b the LIlyd George miniiistry'. Eamiion (1 'Valieru is in D~ublin aigain buit 1s suffer lag from a serious nlervous disoei aind the authorities therefore wvili no maolest him. Hlis condition is so seri Otis thaut a Priest Is in constant at ten dance, O NE' noted Ameriean (died last weel -D.Lyman Abbott, Che vener able editor of Outlook. F'or mani yea -s lie has been protninent as preacher, editor, author and lecturer and he was the assocIate and frie?.d 0: the greatest Americans of his time. BRIEF NEWS NOTES: WHAT HAS OCCURRED DURING th pr WEEK THROUGHOUT COUN. mi TRY AND ABROAD tai cl ce EVENTS OF IMPQRTANCE Cu vit Gathered From All Parts Of The he: Globe And Told In Short wa Paragraphs co l W4 fix Foreign- ' e Re-echo, 25 to 1 shot, won the Qafft- ' bridgeshire stakes at Newmarket, Eng land, and upset the talent. It was no fluke, Re-echo leading all the way and winning by -a length and a half. - The little Welshman, Lloyd George, a invaded London the other day, and the = f most salient feature of international thi importance in his speech was his dec- av laration that Britain and America, sail- $3 ing together, would assure just and last- th ing peace. co Moscow has become so overcrowded that the Soviet government has been making strenuous efforts to relieve the be situation by forcing some iphabitants n to move to nearby towns. The police plan to rid the city of thousands of men and women who might just as well live elsewhere. Troops of the Red army represent- y the Far Eastern republic of . Siberia sti (Chita) are now in complete posses- of ison of Vladivostok. The Japanese Pl garrison evacuated several days since, w, - and turned over to the invading army be an inventory of th'e arms left behind and the keys to the warehousing stor- cc I ing them. Anxiety is felt in Turkish circles ha over reports that the Russians are con- qu centrating in the Caucasus. This move, apparently directed against Eastern Anatolia, is believed to indicate the or Soviet's disapproval of the Mudania th armistice terms and a determination to press Turkey not to attend the general ro Near East peace conference unless Rus sia is admitted. 0 1 It is announced by Mustapha Kemal, 28 head of the Turkish national govern- in . ment, that his regime desires to open h r the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus to n the world. But it regards the district of Mosul, a rich oil region comprising t the northern part of Mesopotamia, as y Turkish tcrritory. ca n The Turkish Nationalist assembly w"' . has agreed to participate in the Near a' East peace conference to be held at w L Iausanne, November 13, according to th word received at Constantinople. The pr 'Turkish peace delegates are to be ap . ointed later. er Four miners were instantly killed and of . two others seriously injured by a cave- sl in in a pit of one of the minse of the ju Asbestos Mines, Ltd., at East 3rough- D ton, Quebec, recently. The cave-in was b caused by rains and frost which loos- A st oned rock in the pit. til i ti is Washington W. P. G. Harding, former governor C of the federal reserve board, will leave m It soon for Cuba to survey the financial l eQ situation wvith a v-iew to assisting in a y, the installaton of a banking system ,~ in somewhat to the American federal re- o ith serve. Mr. H-arding goes to the island yi fon invitation of President Zayas. ils la -first work probably will be a complete or er1 audit of Cuban financial affairs. His ig task is expected to keep him in Ha me vana for six weeks or more. 1d Tractors can be used profitably on 3- many Southern farms, it has been de-t In termined by a canvass of the depart St Ill ment of agriculture, which has just is-a me sued a farmers' bulletin on the sub ly ject. ai- Figures made public by the depart- C nment of commerce recently show that U is exports of food and food products fell e- last month $76,306,253, as against $94,- 0' d- 254,798 the same month the year re ne vious. O inStrong pressure is being brought to Pa n- have President Harding appoint an >r- other Ohioan to succeed William R. S' ans Day, who has resignedl as associate N m justice of the United States s9upreme Id court to take up new duties as um-I wt pire in the settlement of war claims Iin rs with Grmnany. ini Mrs .Rebecca Felton, the "lady from Georgia,'' will appear on the floor of C1 the senate when congress convenes wi I-Iregar-dless of whether she can be sworn wi in or not. Senator Felton has made fo this con cession to the wvomen of the J. country who have been urging that mi she be sworn into office, even though ho but for a (lay or so that the precedlent Lmay be established of having a woman toi United States senator. . y0 dPending receipt in Washington of Af the official invitation for American co Sparticipation in the Lausanne peace conference, official comment as to the Yt American attitude is withheld. There m: is every reason to believe, however, An that the trend of opinion in American me 'government circles does not ruavor pr< American intervention in the confer- eff once beyond the possible appointment no: -of an unofficial observer qualified to the give the conferees the American View- 11ng point on all questions in which the an United States has a direct interest. St Adefrom the inter-est payments onteforeign debt received during tey month of October from Great Br-itain bel the treasury is able to credit sonme thing over live hundred thousand dol - are to the accounts of Belgium and noa France, n Teo Informal coinlmnications from tlje tool five Central American governments in- twi vited by the United States to meet in conference nero in December for dis- ani cussion of arms limitation projects atid jr other matters indicato early acoopt- bot ance of the invitations and appeist, 81i ment of the five dolatiosms Enforcement of the natio~lal #tohi ion law with respect to foreign' ship. g within American territorial' wa a will await a final interpretation of t section of the statute by the su sme court, it was indicated by. ad nistration officials. The interpre ion is expected by government offs. 's late next month hr in December. A1 woman's rights convention to dis. so problems of the national wom. 's party, and questions regarded as al to the progress of women, to, be Id at Seneca Falls, N. Y., next July, ,s decided upon by t'he executive uncil of the party in session at tshington. The place and date were ed to commemorate the 76th anni. Psary of the first woman's rights con. ration in this country , rhe average rate of wages of male m labor for the entire United rtes, October 1, was $28.97 a month :h board, according to the first of regular series of quarterly reports m 1,300 county crop reporters to department of agriculture. The rage rate ,for the year 1921 was .14. By the month without $board average, Ootober 1, was $41.58, nelared wiht $43.32, the average for 1. Day wakes with board, October were $1.57, compared with $1.68 t. wear, and day wages without ird was $2.08 compared with $2.15 1921. omestic- . rhe right of a former convict to hold blic office and the authority of Ite courts to question the eligibility nominees for the legislature to a lce on the general election ballot is recently questioned in arguments fore the Wisconsin supreme court. The ruling made in New Jersey re ntly debarring former President and rs. Wilson from voting in that state s been reversed, and they are now alified to vote. Dr. Lewis E. Mudge of Philadelphia, rated clerk of the Presbyterian gen. al assembly, said at Atlantic City, a other day, that we will soon be 'Ing in an age sans short skirts, lied stocking, snuggle (lancing, hip cket liquor and bobbed hair. Carroll E. Norris, after a search of years for his mother, found her St. Louis, Mo., the other day. He d been told she was dead when he is quite a child, but kept the search nevertheless. Dr. Frank Chapman, speaking in Chi go, the other (lay, says that women io adorn themselves with gewgaws I trinkets simply imitated birds, clih plucked thoir own feathers for e purpose of making themselves look etty. An appeals from the decision of Fed al Judge Hand denying the motion twelve foreign and American steam rip companies for a permanent in nction of the enforcement of the ugherty bone dry ship ruling has en filed by counsel for the Cunard, rchor, French, International Merenn. e Marine and International Naviga )m lines. "What a hell of a place to have a owout!" said a pseudo-nun, near Fort )vington, N. Y. This impious excla ation from one of two women dress as sisters of mercy caused a revenue fleer to examine their automobile bien it stalled on the Canadian side the border. He found bootleg liquor lued at about twenty thousand dol rs, and consequently detained the runs." Cigarettes can now be smokedl with ipunity on the streets of Zion City, inois. Judge Claire C. Edwards of e Lake county circuit 'court has anted a temporary injunction re raining Overseer Voliva from arrest g persons indulging in a smoke. Four persons were killed at Mont-. air, N. J.,when an automobile struck to curb whiile rounding a sharp curve mar Porter Park, throwing the seven !cupants into the street. The steamer Hiherias of the New rleans-Bluefleld Transportation com my is reporledl en route to British onduras with the crew of the Ida Brooks of Pensacola, according to wireless message received in New rleans. Dispatches from Marion, Ill., say $1at vestigation into the Herr inmine kill g last Junae has been renegl. Catherine and Pauline WiYson, two ilcago girls, who, it had been thought, are kidnaped by a young man, wvho is arrested and jailed, have been Ltnd with their brothers at Dover, N. It is also shown that the young in had nothing to wvith their leaving me, and he has been released. Georgia A. Harlow, Fresno, Calif., mnd his wife in company with another imag man, and clubbed her to death. ter listening to the evidence ,the roner's jury exonerated(H-a rlow. Irederal Judge Hand, sitting at New irk, handed down a decision dis ssing the motion of foreign and ierican ship companies for a per ennt injunction restraining federal >hibition agents from putting into act the bone dry ruling of Attor General Daugherty. He extendedI stay temporarily, however, provid that the steamship companies file immediate appeal to the - United tea Supreme court. liberty bonds were quoted in New -k the other day at 99.06, four cents ow par, the first time in two years. n the injunction suit to keep the ne of Earl B. Mayfield, Democratic ninee for United States senator from cas, off the baliot in general elec 1, Mayfield lost on .twelve of the mtyone questions propounded. len of daring as well as of Patience I tact ,are .req .Ired for mrissionary vice, speakers before the American nrd of commissioners for foreign mis Ds of the Congregational church, 1 in Chicago the other.day. Mrs. I. Riersen Winston-Salem N. 0. .-. t fered for about eight months with nervous Indigestion, and had several doctors to see Ime but found no relief until a friend suggested Dr. Pierce's. Medicines. I was not able to sleep at night and could not eat, just lived on sweet milk and bread. I began to. take Dr.,Pierce's Golden Medical Dii. covery. and took one bottle of Dr. Pierce's Favorito Prescription, with wonderful relief. I am now past 40, but feel just as I did at 10. I also. gave the Discovery to my children, and now I am giving it to my grand.. children. ( "You will always find a bottle of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery in my home, and I will yecomme d to anyone suffering from nervousn s. -Mrs. Izie Rierson, 2415 Hege St. You can quickly put yourself in A-1 condition by go ngto your drug gist and obtaining Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, in tablets or liquid1 or write Dr. Pierce President Invalids Hotel, Buffalo. N. V., for free advice. When Baby Frets: from teething, feverishness, cold, colic os stomach and bowel irregularities there is ;othing that will give it quickgrrelief than - DR. THORNTON'S EASY TEETHER A famous Baby's specialist's prescription, successfully used for 15 years. A sweet. powder that children like-takes the place a of castor oil. Contains no opl:toe or harm. ful drugs. Package, 25c, at your druggist. If it fails to help, your money refunded.. 'A A will reduce inflamed, swollen Joints, Sprains, Bruises, Soft Bunches; Heals Botts,Poll Evil,Quittor, 4. 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