1—Machine gun detachment textile workers. 2—Vice Admiral with the rank of admiral, 3 ou i behind cotton bales at NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Germany Enters the League of Nations and Spain By EDWARD W. PICKARD it. The seventh assembly the Jeague, In Geneva, voted the German republic a member unanimously, and ‘also approved the designation of Ger many to a permanent seat In the league council. Forty-eight nations participated In the voting and the ap- 'plause when the result was announced was long and loud. of In the effort to conciliate Spain and Poland, who had demanded permanent the create three semi-permanent seats, en larging ouncil to that extent. M Loudon of Holland and Doctor Nan if Norway ure, charging tha seats, i to league leaders planned both criticized this am-roller tg Doctor Nansen at a statement of Switzerland were employed. pressed Doctor Motta the nonpermanent ship were not surprise council augmented, might be ¥ however, election speakers, league crisis mu SUDDOSH suppos delegation arrived » last action was tal + ' 1100 and ORE Spain M immediately Important iY than the and mutiny in the artillery corps. of certain garrisons, supported their batteries, refused to obey orders and were quickly placed under arrest, The king hurried from San Sebastian to Madrid and at the request of Dile- tator de Rivera signed an edict dis golving the artillery and de- creeing n state of slege throughout the country. Gen. Fabriciano Haro ¥y Porto, chief of the artillery section of the ministry of war, was relieved of his post. There was no bloodshed ex- cept at Pamplona, where two of the mutineers were killed and two wound- ed. At the bottom of the revolt was the recent order doing away with the seniority rule in promotions. Despite strict censorship, the news leaked out of Madrid that the king bad persuaded Primo de Rivera that lenient treat- ment of the offenders would be the wisest course. the league row was of a Officers by discovery suppression corps F FOUR Republican senators who sought renomination In last week's primaries three were suc- cessful and one was turned down by the voters of Hs party. The man who failed was Senator Ir sine L. Lenroot of Wisconsin, and he was beaten by Gov. John J Blaine. The contest was a tangle of La Follettelsm and Volsteadism. In the gubernatorial race {t appeared that the so-called Madison ring trolled by La Follette received a hard blow in the nomination of Fred R. Zimmerman over the “ring's"” candi date, Attorney General Herman L. Ekern. Returns would Indicate that the Republican nominees for the other state offices are the members of the La Follette-Progressive ticket. They are: Lieutenant governor, Henry I. Huber; treasurer, Solomon Levitan; attorney general, John W. Reynolds, and secretary of state, Theodore Dam- mann. Up George H. cCon- Senator World in New Hampshire, Moses, foe of the the fight put up by former Governor Bass. His Democratic opponent will be Robert C. Murchie of Concord, who the nomination Albert W. Noone of Peterboro. The Republicans refused to shatter a forty-eight-year- old tradition John G. Wi nant was defeated for renomination bj Huntley N. ulding of Rochester gince the adopted, sent a governor ba won over and Gov, Spa I 78, when wns 18 two-year ¥ gubernatorial term New Hampsh am Nevada senator Tasker IL. ourt ns ire Republicans advocs rts, mayor cratic race for the senator nation Raymon d T. Baker, under Woodrow Wilson as +11 i I vy ¥ es rank L. Smith of the them senate he their the unseat when are excessive presented, on expenditures In primaries. “Wets" found tion in the Upshaw (Dem. degree of satis defeat of Representa Ga.) for renomi- This feeling, however, ie fact that they fs member, as Lester J. Steele, opponent, also is classi CALERA MS indicating that understanding in Europea: tals was tha + Coolidge admini 1 a vast devel fon led the position In He military program President this and declared himself aviation or that might opposed nations. So determined is the Presl- dent to avoid giving other powers any the ment United States that this govern- will not build auxiliary war- on the basis of the 5-5-3 ratio established for capital ships of Great Britain, the United States, and Japan by the Washington treaty limiting na- val armaments. Under this pdlicy the American navy may continud below parity with the British and less than two-fifths stronger than the Japanese, The President holds that American naval eraft in every class not covered by the Washington treaty shall be built with an eye single to the defense needs of the United States. We are not to bulld cruisers, submarines, alr craft, and other auxiliaries to give the United States as many of these craft as Great Britain possesses and two- fifths more than Japan either has built or building. We are to consider only the number of ships we need for defense and to build accordingly. If that number falls below the treaty ratio, we are not to worry. ITHOUT great hope of its suc Wim the Catholic episcopate of Mexico presented to the congress its bill asking for reforms in the Inws governing the church, and it was lm- R. 1., where police fought striking the Pacific battle fleet for study by the and deputles, who are anx get the religious question out of the way. The bill was also sent to mediately taken up senators ious to for consideration, since a majority of the states must assent to any changes in the constitution. The petition car rying the bill, after explaining the Catholle church has no desire within its own proper sphere, de- church In so far as its civil state is cers near Raymondsvlile, Texas, for gathering arms, presumably to be car- ried Mexico, the piace cached. fed Into agreed to lead the where the The recede the fMcers to weapons were prisoners officers y had gone about ordered t ARRY attorn M. DAUGHERTY, general of the Thomas TE British appear to ing seriously entangle i iting fig! that Is going Yangste river factions, in bad Cantonese on between the nd they have been gett h both bolshevik forces and the troops from the north. row with the latter started at Wanhslen when General Yang-sen, of Marshal Wu-Pel-fu, tried to British ships. British gun- rescue but were forts and suf The Engl sald to Wanhsien practically in f the con- the two boats went the by the land casualties, to HE fered several sh guns, however, are have lal 1 he city of ruing, At Hankow, center o fli the northern and south- the British and French landed bluejackets and helped the lo volunteers barricades along the bund. But a report to London says the British party from the cruiser Carlisle was attacked by the and cut pleces, Meanwhile Wu's forces there lapsed when the Canton troops cap tured the of Hanyang. After the latter occupled Hankow and Wuchang, General Wu fled to Honan. At Shameen, the foreign residential t between rn Chinese, cal to construct Inte Cantonese to col: nearby city and it Now the Can minister wharf tonese government foreign demanding the immediate withdrawal of British marines from the jetties near Shameen: the cessation of Brit ish interference with river traffic, and retirement of British gunboats to their usual anchorages. NE of the worst train wrecks of recent times occurred when a Denver & Rilo Grande passenger train gtruck a boulder in the mountainous country near Leadville, Col, and dived downward Into the Arkansas river, The engine, baggage cars, two coaches and one sleeper piled up In eight feet of water. The casualties were 27 dend and scores of Injured. In Chicago a Northwestern train telescoped the rear coaches of anoth- er that was loaded with returning La- bor day excursionists, and five persons were killed and more than fifty were hurt, re] me Tf LAO I / 72 J 0 144 By ELMO SCOTT WATSON NYTHING disastrous pen you on Friday, Au- gust 137 If it didn't you are superstitious, can take heart, probably safe for to time to come, of this year is the month which had in it supposedly acme of and It ‘out year. November, 1 Jo 4 J nl Only occur again uck next Nature 3, hi lay, 1st missed there won't thirteenth, How It & Started er fear still many persot nfortable who become they people 14 if thirteen me such affair, have the these tsi tare te ¢ % vom td tuitous in history of this nation Consider facts in relation thirteen: There onles, The American stripes on it and had thirteen stars, During the War of 1812 a combined were thirteen original col has thirteen time it lag at one also As to Friday— Now as to th! and 8 evil i bad 1400 1402 a ceria Rodrigo de fans g allor. rus! the west, Maria Friday, October i Cabot proceeds me throw m 0 GO. fresh New uch fons { the worl That 1406, continent, March 6, this commission and it Was Was a On Friday, September 11, 1000, % Fort McHenry near Baltimore, Md. Had the attack been successful, United States would have been “cut and England might have won the war then and there. But, if you remember the Incident, “at the dawn's early light,” an American prisoner on lously toward Fort McHenry and saw our flag was still Francis Scott Key sat himself down and wrote “The Star-Spangled Ban- ner,” That was on September 13, 1818-—two thirteens in that date, you cal organs, mendous orchestra are mostly from three families of the great Orthoptera | the Half Moon, rounded the tip of an and salled up the river bears his name. All of to of the most remarkable For that {gland was later named Manhattan, and the Dutch bought it from the In- dians for the munificent sum of £24. If you happen to own some real es- tate that particular island don't offer it for sale at $24 a square Some one might take you up island which which led one on on it quick! History does not record whether or from their belief in guch-like. Individually, But collectively, that Is, aside witches and they may have been. 8 Appearar ans tnas Frida) Some Lucky Fridays. } aanr cad 1% ¥ 151 nf 1 * is General first real- and the one decisive les of the world. looked was his usually that treason was dis- i vardia ICKY nd a iL) surrender of if the st « for independence It isn’t until you come down to tho time of the World wae, however, that history presents indisputable evidence that Friday, the thirteenth, is not at all a double jinx for these United Rtates, There's a man named John J. Pershing who is sald to have had a great deal to do with ending the war. A superstitious person wouldn't have given John J. much chance for living very long, not to mention be coming internationally famous. For he was born on Friday, the thir | teenth ! Remember 8t. Mihiel and the battle | that an American army fought there? | It took place on Friday, the thirteenth. | Enough?! Do you still believe that | Friday is usually an unlucky day, that thirteen is certain to be an unlucky | number, and that Friday, the thir teenth, is the double-distilled essence of catastrophe? Truggie ns almost true violinists, their fore- wing constituting the violln and the and grooved as somewhat to resemble a minute file, and by placing this and the erickets, the sound is produced by rubbing or rapidly vibrating the upper pair of wings against the lower pair. Some of the grasshoppers we might speak of several species, to Cut Coal new possibilities in sunlight as a | means of heating the home, and are | experimenting with the feasibility of building glass roofs, By providing houses with glass | roofs, properly insulated, it is believed that great quantities of fuel can be { saved during the winter months, Doubters of the theory are referred to the sunny bay window of the av. | erage house on a winter day, where | the sun works without scientific as sistance, —-— Jonah originated the fish story. = xX