Lake Clty. 2—Daughters of NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Senate Ratifies Settlement of Italy’s Debt—Turkey Alarmed by Mussolini. By EDWARD W. PICKARD Y ETTLEMENT of Italy's war debt 7 to the United States arranged by the joint debt finally approved by spite the efforts of number of both ators Borah favor the as commissions, the senate, derable " parties Sen and Reed The vote in of tl funding of the debt was [ tween the Unlted States and each of the powers and sald he saw no diffi { culty in the way of securing the as- sent of each signatory In this Greece already has accepted the Amer- ican way. reservations. ENITO MUSSOLINI and his Ro man empire plans continue to ex- cite and disturb the Old world. The latest story that Italy and Greece have a secret treaty directed against Turkey and that If they are able to carry out thelr plans Italy will of southern the port of will Is made slice Asia nding Greece get a Minor incl that and Constantinople and Selenti and recover Sir tl yrna tose rites ry i y territory Juga. 8 iece of Albania, she want H4 to 33 Reed of the affirmative make ds tion Howell's bated The Italis funding Misson next to recor the 000, ine Interest During S5.000 (6x) After the fixed pay est 1s for ®Ucce sive fourth of 1 nt, three tor tor ot per cent © 2 per cel When the ried out, for G48 (00) 00 received tf 32.407 have tal o (XM) (xX) Is inter cent paid ernment furnished loans Consideration ments with elgiam countries was with every the agreed upon ratified, Dispatches from Paris sald Premier Briand had Informed foreign af. fairs of the French that Ambassador Berenger and Secre- of Treasury Mellon had ngreed principle on plan for funding French debt It was un- derstood the political and commercial debts would be and that beginning and rising to £100,000, While | hegun senate, prospect terms would be the committee sennte tary the in the a merged France would pay annuities at $205.000 (6%) 000, until 62 years have elapsed the “safeguard cla is to be aban- | doned, France's capacity to pay at any time In the future might be revised on ft} of the it sible to collect from Germany. we basis amount was pos- EPRESENTATIVE GORMAN Illinois, who sald he save his colleagues In other states from being defeated on the World court lssne as was Senator McKinley, offered re- ap- the ’ house of wanted to in the house pudiating the Burton proving American World court, passed year ago The would have the house resolution resolution a adhesion to by Gorman of the fn resolution representa. tives express the hope that the United take gary steps to Keep out and stay out of the World court. The resolution vides further that the house Its disapproval of the League of Na tlons and its agency, the World court, and declare that it will not make any nppropriation for dues or other ex- penditures of the United States as an Integral part of thé discredited World court or of the British seven -votes-to- our-one League of Nations" Secretary of State Kellogg, ex- pressing the administration view that no new agreement is necessary to give effect to the conditions and reserva. tions on which the United States is prepared to adhere to the permanent court of International justice, has for: mally declined to send a delegate to ieneva in September to explain those conditions and reservations to the con- ference of the forty-eight signatory powers of the court. He pointed out that the senate reservations provide epecifically that they must be ae wepted by an exchange of notes be the States will immediately neces. pro "express Jf EPERAL om, rs, bis! clergymen, heads of reform ons and various other persons 1 one another In rapid succes. fore the 1 to benefits wrought hy prohl. nities senate n com decry the suggestion the enforcement District Attorney of Chicago was one and he at least arousing the anger of Chi- officials, Making vigorous of lax enforcement of criminal laws In Chicago, he sald it wag safer for a man there to commit t robbery with a gun than to the Volstead act and added and to > law, nited Ed- A witnesses, States win the Olson £YC- ceeded in CARON charges ayligh mi inte in Chicago and that prior to had no chance whatever know," he said. ¥ stills are operating In Chicago, but there are many. It Is safe to as sume, however, that there 18 not a still of importance In any police precinet that Is not known to the police in that inet and that it would not be a very hig job for 5.000 policemen to pull out by the roots every outlaw still in 1023 it se) many do not “how He zaid the citizens of Chicago have not “intestinal fortitude enough themselves with government that will send mur. derers and robbers where they long.” In a to local be fine frenzy of rage Collins, started at once for Washing: ton and in the last hours of the hear they senators thar Mr prevaricator and, in ef- ‘all wet” Tie asserted the men in Chicago who tried hon estly to enforce the Volstead act were Chief Colling and himself, and that Mr. Olson never did act until they forced him to do so. Dr. J. M. Doren, chief chemist for General Andrews, presented figures to show that District Attorney Buckner of New York grossly exaggerated the amount of Industrial alcoho! diverted to illegal uses. Father Curran of Wilkesharre contradicted the test). mony of Father Fasaczun concerning conditions In the anthracite region. Chavies Stelzie denled that organized labor was a unit for modification of the Volstead net. And 8, 1. Striv. Ings, representative of the National Grange, testified the farmers were for strict enforcement, admitting under crose-examination that they would be opposed to repeal of section 20 which permits farmers to make wine and cider for thelr own use These were ing told the Was fn tect, wis only i i i only a few of the more Important of the many witnesses heard. New York's legislature passed a bill for a state referendum on whether congress should modify the enforce ment act to permit the manufacture, intoxicating, as determined in accord ance with the laws of the respective states The United States Clreult Court of Appeals in New York handed down a decision which seriously affects the rum treaties with Great Britain and Norway and may even render them in- The held that the under government an valid decision n within distance of the coast extending ter States be which the ard had been b i vessels joe Is ua lnw fted It Hbel proceed. WAS ren government t Norwegian ves which flew of the French the conference indefinitely to permit rther fnstroc Mean Moroc nt hief of governments as declared In broke ever, be en Vy of { al Pres ontrol but a Js rom Marshal entered tl oa Tients Marshal Wu dec] in Wilh Pel-fu ared himself and f ils forces outside Peking Pub lie bodies are urging that and Chang get together and form a govern- ment, but in Canton It is predicted the two marshals will clash and that complete chaos in northern China will result The Canton government sees In this a chance overthrow illitarism and unite the country on he principles of Dr. Sun Yat-sen has not, writing remal with 1} he to n t AUGHTERS of the American Rev olution, holding thelr thirty-fifth CONEress, addressed President Coolidge, who called es continental were by for regard voting, warning that It threatened the doom of the republic, “The perlious aspect of this situa. sald the President, "lies in its Inslidiousness. With the broadening of popular powers, the direct election of of most of them. ballot box. We are placing our rell ment. But If the people fail to vole » government will be developed which fs not their government." Mra. Alfred Brossean of Connecticut president general of the without opposition. GDEN T. M'CLURG of Chicago, wealthy head of the publishing house that bears his name and one of the country’s leading explorers and yachtsmen, died suddenly of cerebral hemorrhage soon after returning from a ‘rip to Yucatan. During the war | he was a lieutenant commander In the | navy and chief of staff for Captain | Moffett at the Great Lakes station. | Another notable death of the week was that of Sir Squire Bancroft, vet. eran actor-manager who was known as the dean of the English stage. RIAL of Col. A, 8. Willlams of the marines by court-martial itn San Diego on charges of Intoxieation pre. ferred by Gen Smedley Butler is be Hleved tn have resulted 'n his convie tion, though the verdict has not heen made public. The ease attracted wide alleged offense General Butler had Just been the colonel's guest at a party where cocktalls were served. SANITATION SAVES LIVES OF CHILDREN United States Aids Great Work in Santiago. Washington.—Should a fire sweep through a children's hospital In San tiago. Chile, and snuff out the lives of messages of con but far news that year old months’ Less spectacular, more under in a children saved lives of have been one six And United States had im this magic the part modern medicine, The clrcumstances news because of the announcement an in boon the of emerge Into the decision of the United States pub lle heslth service to permit Dr. J. D. Long of its staff to remain in Santi- ago as technical adviser to the Chilean ministry of hygiene. Repaying Medicinal Favors, “It seems only a bit of poetic jus. tlee that the minister the land deserts make the world's gardens grow, bind the sores and wounds of mankind, and to whose in hospitals from New York to Singa- pore—for those the effects nitrates, the jodine and the that Chile exports,” a bulletin nre cocaine BAYR the National Geographle soclety. “Medicine changes in world,” nine, chief in And recent science has wrought powerful geography of the continues, “Qul for ally example, conqu 7 application have heen saved more live the titanic tions since Inst in that “Now Chil What Chile rated one. { dis vided In of health n quarantine regulations put effect censed and compelled to repo miunicable diseases, plants installed in small communities municipal sanitary codes drafted and physical examinations of school hill dren are being gradually provided “Infant mortality In Chile has been approximately one-third the total mor tality. Of those babies that die under one year of age about 80 per cent die under month old report states, a great perhaps 80 to these will proper hospital maternity for mothers, Tat Corps ated, into been physicis sewage disposal Therefore, of per cent prevented the life, of by ion one sa from a0 deaths, be provis fos Leones, henceforth ‘Four cit Santiago San Antonio and Tales, are to have their water supplies ster. lized with Certain cities which have had inadequate water for domestic purposes, including Valpa raiso, are being surveyed for an aug- mented supply. “In the water shortage, many towns suffer from a condition which makes for Chile's prosperity, Northern Chile is the one arid region of the world which doesn’t want more rain. If the climate changed and heavy rains fell periodically the grad. ually dissolve the wnsh away the country's of wealth” jes, chlorine, water would and reservoir nitrate unique ——— ————— AA PEPIN PPPPPLPF LOL VL BOLO Y 5 Clock Gives Up After Running 400 Years East Hendren, Berkshire, Eng~Day In and day out for more than 400 years the church clock of this village has told the correct time, but at last It has been stopped for repairs, much to the inconvenience of villagers. There Is an ancient clock at Windsor Castle which, accord: Ing to history, was given hy Henry VIII to Anne Boleyn on the day they were married in 1533. It Is still going. The old. est public clock now In service with its original’ mechanism is sald by the Horologleal Jour nal to be one In the Rye parish church, which was set up In 1518, PEPER 92 PUPP 000020000000 hd * i 3 OLD NEW ORLEANS IS QUAINT SPOT Perfume and Antique Shops Intrigue Visitors New Orleans.—The Vieux Oarre Old New Orleans Is known every- where as one of the quaintest spots in America, but probably nothing else In this historic quarter so intrigues the stranger as the perfume and antique shops, France, but there also are the larger shops. are scattered throughout the quarter, but most of them are strung along Hoyal street In the antique shops, lovers of old things are in thelr glory, New England and other old sections f thelr treasures, Priceless pleces, many of them hrought Nouvelle Orleans by the first settlers, are on display, and the to i i i 1 | | buying mission or “just looking.” Feminine visitors get a res! thrill from the perfume shops In whieh al luring bottles contain even more al- luring odors. Many of the shops are by descendants of the and they have real family the products they are offer- old ing In one or two of the places, spec attention has been glven to southern perfumes and orange who purchases sure t} magnolia blossome—and the one of those be mt when she hie “old home 1t« wn her bridge party wi to it’ her in W. RIGHTMIRE ber of t Woman Seeks Her Kin; earch Begins at 18 Philadelpi In an effort to Any ing who ma still relatives in this vicinity, Mrs " locate SUrviy J Lewis Thorp of miss Ek Just task for the burean ing which dates ba uinety-eight years Mrs, Thorp 18. 1878 Ramuel his wife and family old England, and or 2, 1828, landed Phil riph Whether Mrs. Thorp ix of the same of branch of letter not she begins landing of her grand America just a fraction century ago. She hat she anxious persons writes that great Crawshaw, on August grandfather, by set =ail from thelr her accompanied home in 1 October in a ahothe hier does stale nor does why her searcl the great jess “ does siate is to lo helrs relatives or 20 that of some the basis of IHinols woman possible be living, apparent long-stand the search asks, the esinte the iy settlement in Wales Can Tilt Hats The tilt of Lord Beatty's copyright L.ondon is the of two England-—-the prince of Wales Beatty himself Kir William persons in 1.ieut, Furse sen who nre to be in hats on inspec ted by the prince June. to put their them straight, “There are only two officers In the whole of the empire” Sir William said, “who are allowed to wear thelr uniform hats on one side of thelr heads, One ig the great Admiral Lord Beatty and the other the prince of Wales, “From the little T know of the prince of Walesa, If he sees anybody mimick. ing him, he will not give them such a nice report as he might otherwise” the speaker added. Needed Reform New York Will Hays Is making progress In ending misleading adver. tising by movie exhibitors, usually due to ignorance as In the following cases he cited: Special children's mat “ee for that great animal pletuare, “Binck Oxen”; “A Doll's House"-—bring the kiddies: “The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse”-—another great cowboy drama, straight SIOUX DEMAND MANY MILLIONS FROM U.S. Tribal Claims Are Based on Treaty Rights. | Plerre, 8. D.—Milllons of dollars | would come to the Bloux of the Da kotas If they can establish all thelr claims against the government in the | action now before the court of i clalms on the showings they make This action started on the demand of the Sioux for coumpensation the lack Hills, a territory allege was taken from them tion of treaty rights and on natures of heads of n few bands of the Sloux, instead of 8 general ngreement. The value they put upon this tract is $156.548,750, wi inter. est from 1876 Go Back to 1851, Besides the claim for Hills the action carries with It which have been made by the Sioux under different treaty regulations, dating back to 1851, with Interest running back that far on some of the claims. The direct claims without interest amount approximately ' §217,000,000 for the general tribal funds and approximately §5,000.000 for various bands, and the charge will more than The government will present { which will wipe out a portion of this | claim, nd just how much ever wiil come to the Indians is a problem These claims are the result of a mand made by the Kloux for Hills section the 2: the to interest double this offsets pay "ie an agreement they to gat were ms they made Claims for Haye claims em Irishman, 125 Years Old, Walks Mile for Pension Londot Yoolat ’ breeding f£ 3} ost i miress 1@ f them ympared to who died venerable At have est « are youn Thomas C a Lond on January 18 1588 at age of two hundred least, this a been inscrit in of St. Leonard's { which was destroyed by Students arn oner, the and record sald to the cht urei fever iB ed parish register Sh fire of longevity say rians come from long lived where the thin is a Ggiscount the 1 pre alcoho eo! modes any p ing, the haceco i that indices for or against food often in p this which old their to tribute | ap birthdays Persons achievements | Y.—Fear, love and a cow figured in the drama of Lawrence {| Hawthorne's escape from Sing Sing prison and his return to serve a sen tence of 38 years, Hawthorne cause he Ossining, N fled from the prison be he him woods another furnished hid in a feared convict The cow while explained with food | for ten The i Cal. he days to Hollywood where he got a job in the "mov. | fox " He fell In love with a girl who ils im, Then returned t prison to complete his term. convict went od he oO To Save Church Burgos, Spain's most beautify) church, the Burgos cathedral, built In 1221, i= falling to pleces, but the gov ernment has voted funds to save it. FRPP P2PPPVFVHIPPPP PGP 0G 300 Clocks to Replace Noon Gun at Rome Rome.-~One of the most ple: turesque Institutions of Rome, dating back several centuries, the firing of a noon gun on top of the Janiculum hill each day, will disappear soon. Governor Cremones! of Rome has decided to institute in its stead a system of 300 electrical Iy controlled clocks through the elty, C000000000000000000000