South Bend News-Times, Volume 36, Number 231, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 19 August 1919 — Page 1
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Wi: T 1 1 1 1. In. liana : '".': i ' ? r,rd T - I . : tr i! and i. :). I a w it M Ii i.i ii : AFTERNOON EDITION ÖUTH END NEWS-TIME VOL. XXXVI, NO. 231. rA Y AM NffillT KIM. LIIASPI) wnti: t?;m:;k.I'!Iic skuvick. SOUTH BEND, INDIANA, TUESDAY, AUGUST 19, 1919. a NTwsrAri:n fok Tim home WITH AM. IHK LO A L MIWs. TRICE THREE CENTS
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BANDITS GET RANSOM, FREE
YANK FLYERS I American Lieutenants Cross Border; Money for Release Easily Raised. fir FniiM Vt(: FL PAS'. Tfxas, Autr. 13. Lieuts. If. O. Peterson and Paul H. Davis, .vet fro by Mexican bandits on payment of Jln.cno ransom, arrived on the American side nf the border early today, according to reports i from Marfa. Tea apt. Matlack of I'nited State cavalry. th eighth carried the random money to the bandits' c.impj rt.:rnin with Pnvi.s while reterhon preceded them. The ransom money. raided ly private s'jbscriptlin in the vicinity of Marfa. reached Candelaria, Tox.. opposite the f)anlits' hiding place last nicht, rapt. Matlack. In rharqo of a small S'jurM of cavalrymen csrortinc Vlr I'res't V. M. Cennell of the Mnrfa bink with th money, was rejected to tarry th ransom across the border- Siirnal licrht had been agreed upon. Matlack cio?ed alone. The aviators' story of their experiences ince crashin? down durinc a pitrol flight Aue:. 10 is expected to tc-ar out the belief that ?liy wer takn prisoner by a rov1 n r Mexican band on the American side f the r.U IJend district. Mesraires from boti men had stated they v.ere ininrsred. Tli donors of the rrnoni will he reimbursed l-y tb T'nited States government, according to word here from M-j. f'.en. Joseph Difknian. commanding th southern d.partTiient. i:ri xt in;vn .or.MrATs.
T!v l'fitr-.l Pn s : nirn in. i ne immi.v was puncfi WASHINGTON. AtiT. 10. Inter-j ahor and the coroner was ivurori. sr in the Mexican situation grouinpjA skeptical rcjtorter s'led the out of'th- kiIn:pinr of two I'nited t 'tniml'T in vster.v." The "human
State,- armv aviators by bandits cent t ed iti a promised development from th' wir Jej irtnifnt to.l.iy Sec'y of W ar Pa ker h is promised l t.. i: a statement "as soon a it safe t( do so." Th state department to.l.iy was a.viitinc: a reply from Carranza to itv not ilemandin? "immediate adeuate action." n the reply to thin note, may liire th- futwre action of thi nmn - irv toward Carranza and the present Mexu-an ri:no. l-ouowim,- arrmumeuier.i o urs- , r-iTeh of the not yester.b.y the ! lie tiep.ji ipi'iii i ii en Mcpi ui.u . i...en.iKa. a t .-ru. incau uoeiei . ; . . . t . . M . 1 . IV.is , mr held for an.-um ne.ir Mexico 'i:y. Word w.h also reejed at the dmrtment of robburies by Mexican bandits of cmp:o;.es of Americ an firms in Mexico. The Mexican government will pro nr.sum money demanded by bandits who captured Lieuts. lie I 'avis a'i'i i'e;, rson. i gr.acio Moni. - 'as. M'': to. lay. an amb iss .'.or. said here Although I have J;ad no advN es i
I'roru ;:.y overrtei.t concerning thejiiu inmates of a house of protitu--.ar.s'-m." said Kcni!i.i. "I know thej tion. Ilnw.inl Townley, Orand ItapMextcan povcrr-.mcrtt will r.o; p. rnut ' 'c. Mich.; I'dward Kheider. Ft. the families f the viators to ;ro- j W.iync, and James Smith. Denton vide the mor.cv if it. b-fttus m-ces-' Harbor, were charged with associats,:ty to pay it." : it-C All were released on J-'.i
ti:as i:xnxrs climax. rr.it. d Pre: X-J A I "ST IN, Tox., hating an eir'v c As;.' i::ti 1 tV Antl.-i- " iii Me- ; an s.fiition Gov. lere I spot ding of Hohv y today orrecruittr.c of th Texas national guard to full strength of ! men. Adj. Gen. Harley w.. ordered to proceed t o re.-ruiting ev.ters through the sT.it' to hurry . ecruitir.g". Texas ci: ard c"p,s:s: of two brigades of c.i:i!:y t'.tel or." brigade of infantry. PERSHING DECORATES KING IMMANUELS TOMB P. v mite 1 rre : " BOM F.. Ave 1 ) Aft- r :-.t Th- Quirin. ii .--terdav . .et of the kmc, (Ter.. Air. the . !V:h:ni: w ht re h e rr.bs of the i r. " : e 1 ard if ed the I'.ir.theor I a aths it t! i 1 Ce Kir.es Victo t r Humbert. Th.e Pepo'o notr.ano. Tribute to rrsh.r. saithe C-iited States and in pair.g 1 to. lav th.it It.', lv were :r.d hv t s of :mh;- -o:uv,b-' Thro:. - h the I t i IIa u r.'s the Arr.r i;-. have f ' u.-.c:Tv .: r d ! i ad:: i five the It.4'.:.tn i:.tion. the .. frien immi1 1 .irret r..-rgy i-t r desh ; r Th
cl&revi.
TheUghterSideHXPECT FIGHT
ItLDWOOI) ITY, Calif.. Auk. 1ft. Mr. IuU lidon un tlu rik'lu i : to-day la aiik Iht taby. Th lniind Mini for lUori" ullcinj; hispanked Um luird. Conn I ili.ii"lif i if lwrvlu" CJIICACO, I!l. Dr. Guy C.nwrti U poms hack to old Dobl-in for three month?. He was prohibited by court from driving an automobile for th.it period borau1 of intoxication while be-hin-i the wheel. CLEVELAND, ). Women romplalfwit that Cliarlix ILnlc-IiftV was always on the outside looking; In through their windows. Now lie-' on tin inside of a cell looking- out. N F W YORK Victory is crumbling. That is. the victory arch on I 'ft h av. i.s. A couple f horses cracked under the rain vesterday. N'lAV YOIIK seventeen years ago, Partolman adih l of the Now Yrk IHdior wished ii tramp good luck und tMi!lii Iiim a suit. Votcrday the tramp rdo up in an automobile aiul invltcl film to California Ni;V YORK Mrs. Anita Comfort Brooks wants back her cat. which rayed away. 7Th.p cat was a present from Kins Edward. MIIiVl'Ki:i:. Wis Mr. Katie KikIv ciiNTinc'l a plcasiuit siirprLs' uhon slio lot Ikt liUNhand into her darkciuil rcMim. Ills kiscs and cinhrntt's crc unusually ardent. Then slie H.s'0eTel curly lock. Her IiulanI was hahL Jacob C;of)ik, a rtKujM r, ot .si inoiitlw. MHAVArhlKi: It cost N'essin Hiken jr to recover a 50 cent handkerchief which hi.s wife had accidentally dropped into another Hiito. Hiken caught that car. He was' pinched for .peedST. P.M'Ij. .Minn. It was murder the oIco on tin piioiie assured IIk' police. Tlie iK)llce thought so too, when they Ms:rcd into the 'murky waters of the Miislppi and saw n "human form" lliKitina: with .1 . ... rr I . l. ..ii form" was a wax model G ! Th IoIicc whlJ have formcd the ilutu of raiding at least one house ((f iM.f.in nearlv cvrry rf.st,,(1 (,1.nt pcry0ns n nicht, ara midniirht iv.it t - thi i v. ij im- i ihiiiiiiil, nuuc run iv : v. i ,j ;, v p.-jlpp, H01.. W. Colfax 1 I V l2 Umax V !;llt, Monday night. yojr Women and three men were i,IOui,'tu in- The P.uls-er woman was not taken to the station on account tlf the fact that she was ill. but she will be arraigned with the others in J city court this morning, Names Ghcn Police. - I'orotnv Howe. Aurora. III.: Pura Marshall. Houston. Tex.; Margaret Graham. Toledo, o., and Anna Mil-;!-, Chicaco. were cliare.1 with bej bond?. j Th r.iid was m:Mle by h t of off icet s under command detail of r.i- , ;rol or-t Koberts. BULGARIANS DEMAND ? ABDICATION OF KING ! ! lonpon.' Aug in. suncuinaryj 'lisordcrs in Sofia. Bulgarian capital.; I ' ii si u n c : s in were reported today in a dispatch to the I'aily Mail from Copenhagen. Tl :s patch ated demonstrators: ; sad tritheied in front of the palace,; demanding abdication of King Boris; .and st.C hvhme r.t of a republic. The rioters were dispersed. Later French troops were inolved in tne efforts to maintain order. HUNGARY AGAIN TO BE M0NACHY. SAYS REPORT r.v i t ite i r-o : K '.MF. Auer. 13- A dispatch to the popo'o Komtr.o from Trieste repori.-d tod ty that the issuance of a de. .-" H:;n;ü) restoring the mor.arcr.v in appeal t-.a t.-w Ki f.n,fnar,. It was .C.so reported th;it efforts w ere eii'.c made to form a union between Hungary. H' Serbia. The rriere ridicv. s the report. imani.t Delia md S rra
I n&i not ti
UN n. b. L. I BEGIN TODAY Hearings on Packer Bills Are Suspended Until Wednesday. Iy I'nitC'1 rres: . WASHINGTON. Aup. 19 Action ! on legislation to reduce the cost of living is expected today when the senate agriculture committee plans; to vo'e on Atty. Gen. Palmer's re- , quest for broadening of the food ; control act. Hearings on the Kenyon and Kendrick packer bills were suspended until tomorrow, when packers will appear. "I doubt very much whether the amendments will be reported out by the committee," Chairman Gronna .'aid today. "A majority seem opposed to them. It i.s possible, however, that they may bo modiried by exempting farm organizations from proposed penalties." The omendments would extend the food control act to cover clothing and would add a heavy penalty for profiteering. Farmers contended their organizations? miglit be held liable under conspiracy clauses of the acL The house agricultural committee also plans to" change radically Palmer's suggestions for amendment to the food control act. Chairman Haugen today will submit amendments to the food control act which will provide for the proclamation of fair prices of all necessities by th president, with adequate power to severely punish all who sell above these figures. The amendments have been framed after conference.- with department of justice oftlcials. The amendments exempt farmers. farm organizations and firms with! annual sales less than $100.000. "If you can regulate the big fellows and tell vne people what fair prices are, there won't be much chance for the little fellows to profiteer," he said. Atty. Gen. Palmer or Asst. Atty. j Gen. Ames will be called before the committee today to give their opinion on some details of the plan. ALLEGED GIRL ENSLAVER MAY GET LIFE SENTENCE Special t Tb Ncws-Timrn : LA P OUT!:. Ind.. Aug. 19. Anhv ' nounccment was made Mond.iy State Atty. Kunkle thnt he w ould demand penalty or Uto imprison - merit for John Johnson. years for John Johnson
old, who is being held in .tail here ; ni,,.t ;iV j,jjCi nntii peace and milipendinsr investigation regarding" his . t ., f v policy are definitely deter-
actions in the enslavement of Anna - - - - lill. 1 years old. who had him ar - ested a few days .ago on a statutory i T 1 . . i . . Hill r charge. Johnson, according to the Hill's girl complaint, kept her in slaverv for five ears. FIFTY THOUSAND i n pi c, . D , Chicago Stores and Post offices Swamped With Eager Purchasers. Hi I'r.Itfd Press: CHICAGO, Aug 19. On the f.rst dav of I'ncle Sam's bargain s.ile of! ; army lood more thr.n 0.0 CO Chi - e at 1 cagoar.s made purchases, wh least that many were turned away, accorvlmg to estimates today by of - nciais in'j iimtTtnii-n r' r. m ,-1 where sales were made. tores Karly tod.i v as occurred vester - : day long lines be tan to form at the entrances of the stores. P.efore a. m. several thousand persons 1 were already waiting for the doors to ope l. ( At the pot oilers clerks were svvam:ea wun oruers irom c;;;zens. i . . t . i Nn or.rr.ntp of the nu::i 'ir was forth, oming today, hut othVials ex ! - r .1 1 . ' presse! a iear uui if j'-uinirni store sales might exhaust supplies before service applicants for po-t otüce could be satisfied.
ARMY
President Asks for Speedy Settlement of Peace Pact
J Hy Pnlte-l Press: ' WASHINGTON. Aug. 19 The text of the president's address before th senate foreign relations oommfttee follows: I am sincerely plad that the committee should have responded in j this way to my intimation that I ! would like to be of service to it. I welcome the opportunity for a frank and full Interchange of views. I hope, too, that this conference will serve to expedite your consideration of the treaty of peace. I hej? that you will pardon and indulge me I again urge that practically the whole task of brinirinj? the country back to normal conditions of life and industry waits upon the decision of the senate with regards to thf terms of the peace. I venture thus again to urge my advice that the action of, the senate with regard to the treaty be taken at the earliest practicable moment because the problems with which we are fac to face In the readjustment of our national life are of the most pressing; and critical character, will require for tlieir proper solution the most intimate and disinterested cooperation of all parties and all interests and cannot be postponed without manifest peril to our people and to all the national advantages we hold most dear. May I mention a few of the matters which cannot be handled with intelligence until the country knows the character of the peace it is to have? I do so only by a very few examples. SAYS MINKS A HI-: NOT AT FVLIi SPKKI). The copper mines of Arizona, Montana and Alaska, for example, are being kept open and in operation at a great cost and loss, in part upon borrowed money; the zinc mines of "Missouri. Tennessee and Wisconsin are being operated at (about one-half their capacity; tne lend if Idaho. Illinois and Missouri reaches only a portion of its former market; there is an immediate need for cotton belting and also for lubricatin oil which cannot be met all because the channels of trade are barred by war, when there is no war. The same is true of raw cotton of which the central empires alone formerly purchased nearly I.OOO.OCO hales. And these are only examples. There if hardly a single raw material, a single important foodstuff or a singl class of manufactured poods which is not in the fsame case. Our full, normal, profitable production waits on peace. Our military plans, of course, wait upon it. We cannot intelligently or wisely decide how large a naval or military force we shall maintain or ! what our policy with regard to mili tary training is to be until we have peaco. not only, but also until we know how peace is to be sustained, whether by the arms of single nations, r by the concert of all the great peoples And there is more) than that of difficulty involved. The j vast surplus properties of the arm-. ics include, not food and clothing j . m JS merely, whose sale win aiiecx nor-, final production, but Kreit minufac- , I turin-r stablishments also. which i should be restored to their former; : ,,?os -reat stores of machine tools j qii rtsj nf merchandise which ! I n, ine.l Hv the same token there
;i:ioie'i. ii -..iiin ...... jYoi . fan i,P no properly studied national, budget until then. ! waj t . .. . . . . . I I!
The nations that ratify the treaty, ! such n. Great Britain. Belgium and i Franc, will be in a poitln to liy their jd.-tn for controlling the markets of central Kurope without com - I petition from u.-. ! eptly act. We if we do not pres - have no consulnr laments. no trade representatives there to look after our Interests. i PUODl CTIGN AWAITS roMiN; or ii:acii Then., are large areas of I whnip future will lie uncertain and estlonable until their peopl" Know . . the final settlements of peace and the forces A'hich are to administer . . . .
and sustain it. Without determinate j nc Service commissioner i.ewis .mx-pori-rt: our nroduction cinnot pro-; on. TrfilfiC was restored after mid-
I ceed with intelligence or confidence.
I There can be no stabilization ofj To Ioc Collusion, 'wages because there can be no set-, It was stated today that District tied conditions of employment, i Atty. Swann will not abandon hi? ! There can be no easy or normal in-jp)ans to present to a grand jury to-
r'dustrial credits because there can be no confident ,or permanent revival -.' Kinr ; jdut I will not weary you with ! ohvious examples. I only will Ten - j ture to repeat that eery element oi ; normil life amongst us depends up- ' rt n j r .nwqlfs tne ratlT.caiion 'the treaty of peace: and also that 'we (anno; afford to lose a single
summer's day by not dornst all that i tion or treet ear hmpioye.. tnat we rati to mitleate the winter's suf-i "summary action will be taken by ftrmg. which, unless we f.nd meanjhis irdy unless 400 carmen emto prvert it, may prove iisastrous : p'.oyei by surface line subsidiaries to a larg portion of the world and j of the Ir.terborough are re-employ-may at its worst. I ring upon Eu-'ed. Friiiger alleges these men were
rope unmr.RM,? -ve. ...v... . conditions even more terriDie Than those wrougnt o nit- -u i- - ; self. ' X - Y : . T r-.-. i kd to believe. . .vnwui.t, ioi t stands tn the way of the rattnea te tion of the treaty excert certain j doubts with regard to the meanin?'
and implication of certain articles of the covenant of the League of Nations: and I must frankly say that J am unable to understand why puch doubts should be entertained. You will recall that when I had the pleasure of a conference with your committee and with the committee of tha house of representatives on foreign affairs at the white house in March last, the questions nowmost frequently asked about the League of Nations were all canvassed, with 'a view to their immediate clarification. The covenant of the League was then in its first draft anu subject to revision. It was pointed out that noVxpress recognition wap given to the Monroe doctrine, that it was not expressly ' provided that the League should have no authority to act' or to express a judgment on matters of domestic policy, that the right to withdraw from the League was not expressly reeocnized and that the constitutional right of congress to determine ill Questions of peace and war was not sufficiently safeguarded. On my return to Paris all these matters v.ere taken up again by the commission on the league of Na
tions and every suggestion Cnited States was accepted NOTHING INCONSISTENT IN COVENANT DRAFT. Tho view of the United of the States with regard to the questions I have mentioned, had ih fact, already been accepted by the commission and there was supposed to be nothing inconsistent with them in the draft of the covenant first adopted the draft which was the subject of our discussion in March but no objection was made to saying explicitly in the ext what all had supposed to be explicit in it. Thr-re was absolutely no doubt as to the meaning of any one of the resulting provisions of the covenant in the minds of vno who participated in drafting them, and I respectfury submit that there is nothing vague or i doubtful in their wording. The Monroe doctrine Is expressly mentioned as an understanding which is in no way to be impaired or interfered with by anything contained ?n the covenant and the expression "regional understandings like the Monroe doctrine" was used, not because any one of the conferees thought there was any comparable agreement anywhere else in existence or In contemplation, but only heraus it was thought bes to avoid the pppearance of dealing In such (CONTI NTT I'D ON PAOE SEVEN) ES TO IRK Subway and Elevated Lines Operate As Usual Hylan Charges Crookedness. Itr I'nited Pres : NEW YORK. Auer. 19. New York'.H si-bway and elevated railays were operatlnpr as usual today j following a two-day strike that j caused th worst traffic congestion ; in the city s history. The strike was settled on the basig I of an immediate 23 percent wage ini crease for employes and arbitration j of th'.'ir demand for an adrlit'onal j i percent. Other questions at issue i between the company an i its emj plover also will be arbitrated, j Members of the striking brotherFurope ' hood. r.r. organization fostered by . the Interboro -h Co., last night aca f I cepteu tne terms wmcn naa nern; ; negotiated at a meeting of leaders! : of hoth sides brought about by Pub-; , II . i I . J 1 nii,'i;t. , morrow evidence purporting to show1 collu-ion between the company and i Ü3 employes in the strike. Mayor J Hylan has charged the company 1 with corspiracy to forc e higher - iarts Further transportation trouble for i,.x'w irN was iorecas; loaay uy me ; declaration of Louis Fridigcr. couni sei for the Amalgamated Associaoisonargea tor joining nis union. Is affiliated with organized labor and not Ir.terborough connected with the Brotherhood- The - j Amalgamated union w.s pledger: not to strik'e while the Brotherhood rr.en w ere out.
1
IAYL1GHT SAVING SiPEAL BY HOUSE DESPITE WILSON
hy Inlted Treu: . WASHINGTON, Aug. 19.The repeal of the daylight sav- i ings law was today passed by ; the house over the veto of Pres't I Wilson. The vote to override thej veto was 223 to 101. i EEW KILLED E Bodies of Twelve Victims of Colorado Disaster Already Recovered. By t'nited Pr.-m : TRINIDAD, Colo.. Aug. K. Eighteen miners were killed hv Monday's explosion in the Oakview coal shaft near Li Veta, it was definitely established todav. The l-Oilies of 12 have been taken j out. 1 ne remaining six dead have been ir.cated and are expected to be brought out today. At first 40 miners were believed hopelessly entombed, but it was later found many had escaped the deadly fumes. GEN. GOMEZ TELLS OIL MEN THAT CARRAfJZA'S TROOPS ARE RELIABLE By Tiilted Tres: MEXICO CITY. Aue. 10 Gen. Arnulfo Gomez, commander of the federal force at Tampico. today indignantly denied the charges of foreign oil companies reardinp; the danger of attack if Mexican escorts were provided. He declared there was no truth in the charges that Carranza's troops were unreliable. The party of bandits held responsible for the attacks and robbery recently committed on four launches of prominent petroleum companies and also suspected of beinpr guilty of robbing the launrh from th American cruiser Cheyen ne, were captured near Tampico j Sunday. One of them confessed he j had participated In both attacks. j One of the assailants of c.eornre McDonald also was captured. Mc- j Donald was reported killed, but ha' arrived at Tampico safely. ! The bandits have been promised a ä quick trial. PREDICT SUBSTANTIAL RAISE IN SHOE PRICES! BOSTON, Aug. 1?. An advance; of $2 or $.1 a pair in the retail price: of shoes next sprir.tr was predicted ' today by a witness b fore the coun-j try crand jury which is investitrat- i lng shoe prlrs. j A staple shoe of one manufacturer which before the war cost him S3. 30 now i:i listed at 50 at thfactory. The average profit of the shoe retailer was placed at five to seven percent and of the manufacturer two to three percent. t ..n .her witness said that sprcula-! tion m hides? hv New York brokers-! had tended to increase the pric materinlly Witness apred. the district attorney said, that the packers did not control the price of hidrs but were important factors in the market. WILL WITHDRAW FROM SOCIALISTS; SAYS THEY WANT TOO MUCH MONEY Itv I'nited Pre : MILWAUKEE. Wis. Ausr 1?. Ulsf. Atty. v mirea . ..mti re sign from the sociilin party fdiy as a result of an attempt by the ex - ecutlve board of the party's our.ty irn.rl rmnilMto tn ri n V r Vi i ri t V 20 pr cent, of his saliry Jl r,r,,i - - Into the party's campaisri. fund. PLAN TO ORGANIZE NEW LABOR PARTY CHICAGO. Aup. 19. A national labor party will be formed at a corver.tlon here in November as a result of step? taken Monday at a conference of labor orzanization representatives of several state?. Ttoe new party will represent the 5.000, COO members of organized labor in th United States and will have th? cooperation of non-partisan leagues and farmer organizations in various states, said Robert M. P-ck. editor of tie orTicJal newspaper of the Illinois labor party.
GUI NO
Ann
OTP ADCC DOflQ
ÄWÄ IS RATI
In
Long Statement to Senate Committe President Savs There Is Only One Course for America.
Ii Y I,. C. M( AKTIN, Ry I'nited Press: WASHINGTON. Aug. 1?. -t'rgini ! that the senate expedite the ratification of the peace tieaty, I'res't' Wilson today opined his conference with members of the er.ate foreign ' relations committee at the white i hoUSe long statement ' by making a in which he said: That the readjustment of our tion.tl life to normal conditions soluttdv depends on getting i"! a th treaty out of the way. That until it is o it of the way the mines, lactorie.s and business of the n ill . il ,1 Hi.-ni I ,1 II in . 1 11 U Mil It 1)111, WO .IliO "'111' . I tions that have ratified the t !e;i I will get the jump on th Ir;ted States in a trade way. : lhat the only o!-Mcie wii:'h . i -! pears te. stand in the wav -i imt mediate i n t itica t ion is douM .ilmut the meaning r,f certain provisions ofj the Iüizue of Nations. No "Doubtful I'rm i-ion.' That there is no doubt in minus of those who wrote the t hf j eo'. e- I nant that the so-ealled diubtful j provisions mean exactly what thej I'nited States senate wants them to ! mean. I The president discussed the effect1 of reservations on article Iv, the Monroe doctrine. withdrawal and '
domestic questions, lie declared there . r .-"Tvatmii" a- ;Ucan be no objection to pnssin.' n res- ! 'in-many conid . ; -m
olution interpreting these rfvision.s interpreting thes. from the American point of view. f -fr but '.his resolution, h- added, musi be kept from the subject of ratitica tion. If !t is made a part of th" rat ification. the president said, it will force the I'nited States to uo to 12 CENT SUM 5L "Request'' For Reduction May be Made "Stronger' Declares Administrator. "There is no rc;se for ;,r taiier selling sucar for raore 11 cents, when wholesalers, s teen found, are s !hng at froto l"i-i; cents." lie. hired Col re,f i a It has , 1 0 '. A. Carlisle, countv food ad mini.- ra tT. ! when he learned that several grocers in St. .Io-eph county were main- ' raining th- 1- c.-nt prie. d-spif-: his request of Mor.dav to the effect j that all rtni!' ts should adopt th.e uniform pri--- r f II nts a pound ! for supra r. When asked wl.eth The 'il'P' ;' in the to groct form of was to ? a K e n reo t or ;i e Hi -t r. . ' , Carlisle r 1 I, "It w.':s giv n o:.t ;: a rrque.-.:. but if th.e pr t preen ntiii'iis to pr- ail. it w ill ur.dcih; edly he niade vtror.Lr. r. "When the sutuir que-.':.an :s s-t lied h' w n: o:i. "I th:i: ttin'i more sett ,ect , ' , d w.r.s ;r. rch' ' staples." j lNedolh-o Sale No more r:e irom tr." loo 1 1 I Titv rr..ol. ra;iil.ih'i. hv the p;y U fr .a nr. for sale through the 'o uit r f-t-jOw.f. wa anriOun''! i noon t " :. A. ' iir,i, .iy-,-:.ir,'. pesin:a ! n-.-n'i"! 1 r. e s u r r , i -." or ffr.. ' a r. - i and ' berries ;s rapidly dimir.is. . i! r-'' ep.t a 1 Iia: tv. o, .aSU H.ir0 l..t i ' , s;i i 1. i i M than 1 1 1 pounds of fi' stuffs ware cor.ta ir.e j in the local allotment. f this. ir.d. are that little wi'l rf ma :n at 1 of this week. :or. . - d Many of thare "cl i h" or rders : r. r : h : - : ! rs. re 1 pur h.'sse thoritie. consider. i money foi Nell :r: a r. i n '.--fh . e .. ur.tr a . : i ö Ti e r r. f (nlv to "on.urnerGoovhs from the army food will md fe sold to retailor tau rant k--p-rs or to hot.;. a: orders of any gated. local the too is a rmake vure tha ioM. ;ze w;.. t e j a . H .er. de rr '.er t ot i.e. I'e w
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