THE MOKXIXG OirEGOKIAX, TTJEST3AT, STTSTC 33, '1918. G ! STORY OF SALDNIGA IVIOST ROMAWTIC ON E Much History Stranger Than Fiction Made There.- CITY DOMINATED BY JEWS Present Population Largely Repre sents Migration From Spain in Fifteenth Centnrjr. Ceprrtht tT the New Turk Herald Com-pur- Published bv Arrangement.) BY WILLIAM T. ELUS. SALONICA. This l the East of ro mance. Proud Olympus hoary head yonder has looked upon stranger scenes ami events than ever J-iomer sans;. Beneath his brow have inarched most of the conquering hosts of all history, from the days of the young Macedonian creamer. Alexander the Great, to the present encampment of the allied hosts here. The changes have been no more wonderful than the persistencies. Fiction has few stories stranger than that of the Salonica Jews and their cult. There hare been Jews here since before the Christian era. The Apostle Paul found them here, as well ae the Greeks. His chronicler. Dr. Luke, tells how "The Jews which believed not. moved with envy, took unto them cer tain lewd fellows of the baser sort and gathered a company, and set all the city In an uproar" which has been a continuing characteristic of Salonica throughout the centuries. It was these same Thessalonica Jews who followed Paul to Berea and stirred up tbe peo ple, thus causing the great apostle to go to Athens. Salonlca'a present Jewish population represents a migration from Spain. At the time when Columbus was discover ing America, his royal patrons, Fer dinand and Isabella, were driving out the Jews of the nation. We do not commonly associate this king and queen, whose names are forever linked with the voyage of Columbus, with the Spanish Inquisition and Its cruelties: but history cannot be unwritten. The ravages or the Inquisition msde Spain unendurable for the Jews; and it was In the vers year 1493 that a large num ber came to this beautiful harbor to find a haven for themselves and to Im part new vitality to the old city. Kxilea Fiad Opportunity. These Jewish exiles were rich and educated, and commercially efficient. They spread the tidings of tolerance and opportunity for the Turk has ever been more tolerant of the Jew than have certain Christian nations. Scarce ly a ship anchored in the sheltered waters of Salonica harbor for the next 240 years that did not bring Jewish Immigrants from Spain and elsewhere. As a result Salonica la and long has been a predominantly Jewish city. Jews have constituted a majority of the population. Not only have they done the business of the place, but they have furnished the artisans and labor era. Among the eighty or ninety thou sand Jews now In Salonica there axe thousands who bend their backs to I the burdens of stevedores and coolies. Nowhere else on earth have I seen Jews doing heavy manual labor. Here, like the Turkish or Kurdish hamals. they wear reed saddles on their backs and carry two or three hundred pounds. There is no kind of heavy and hard work that they do not do. Doubtless the stranger Is first impressed with the stately rabbis, in their fur-lined gaberdines: and with the women, whose hair hangs down their backs, enclosed in a green embroidered bag, usually decorated near the end with a large, square design In sewn pearls. But the real sight of sights, the wonder of wonders, is the poor, patient, indus trious Jewish workingman. He Is tbe answer to the common criticism of Zionism that Jews will not work ae laborers, farmers and mechanics. Other Kleaveate Sahaaerfced. Therein Is the explanation of how thj Jews oame to submerge all the other cosmopolitan elements of the city Greeks, Turks, Bulgers. Italians and the general Levantine assortment of peoples. The Jews followed all callings, and hence were dependent upon no other group or race. To this day there are some so.000 Jews in Salonica, more than half the civilian population. Some are rich and cultured, but many are very poor. A representative of the American joint committee for Jewish relief, htin Goldman. Is now here seek ing the amelioration of the lot of these poor. Many of them will emigrate as soon as possible, and to America if that is permitted. Of all the phases and lncHents of the life of the Salonica Jews, the most in teresting Is represented by the presence of from 15.000 to 0.000 Deunmehs. or Jewish Moslems. Kver since the year lift these people have been a com munity apart, living their own life, never Irrter-marrying with other religi ons, and looked upon with suspicion by Jew. Moslem and Christian. They have wielded power out of all proportion to their numbers, and amid them was born the Turkish revolution that overthrew Adbul llamld. In all the history of religious move ments there Is no parallel for this story, with the loyalty of the followers de spite tbe disloyalty of the founder. The sect bad Its beginning In l5i. when a Smyrna rabbi, a certain Sabbatai Cert, arose and proclaimed himself to be the long expected Mesatah of the Jews. A man of force and leadership, as well as mystical visionary. Sabbatai soon set his world astir. He added to his Jew la beliefs and claims a strain of mysti cism and of asceticism, such as has al ways made a strong appeal to the pro pine of the Mediterranean region. He espoused the Cabbala cult and imparted the mysteries thereof to his disciples. " leuUk" Wakes Coaverra. Everywhere he went and he toured the region which had been the whole world of the Bible Sabbatai made con verts, especially among the Jews. Greeks and others, especially a group of mystics in Poland, were added to the rapidly growing religion. This "les atah" trained a corns of able dlclples S. Genuine tf w ,"-j'VV)BuUer M ' .ftL-n i ui mm i " who carried his claim afar. "Wherever Sabbatai himself went there were out' breaks of religious frensy, and the Sa lonica Jews in particular went wild over him not the rabble only, but the educated and highly placed. For an ascetic and mystic Sabbatai had the most sweeping wordly ambi tions. He claimed earthly dominions and called himself "King of Kings." He distributed fiefs and baronies and kingdoms among his followers like a sovereign of the middle ages. He even spoke openly of the dethronement of the sultan a feat which his followers actually accomplished more than two centuries later. Naturally, the sultan would not brook this and Sabbatai was thrown into nrisnn. after more than a decade of Increasingly successful propoganda. The xeal of his followers was oniy nun.--cned by the persecution. So formidable had the movement become that the leader was summoned before the sultan personally and examined. There he was given the choice between recanta tion and death. Except he should Abandon all his claims and -adopt the Mohammedan faith he would lose his Sabbatai was not of martyr stuff. He Dreferred to wear his head, even with a turban on It. So he made the profes sion that 'There is no god but allah, and Mohammed Is his prophet." This. however, did not disrupt the body of believers. So complete and lanaticai was their faith in Sabbatai that they assumed he had some tfbcp laid design in his recantation, so they followed him In this also and became, outwardly, Moslems. 5ee1s Loyalty I hakes. No outsider really knows the real be liefs of the "Maminlm." or "true be lievers." as they call themselves; or -Deunmeha." or converts," as they are designated by the--Turks. Outwardly they conform to Mohammedan rites. Secretly they hold the Jewish faith and practice cabalistic rites and the asceticism of Sabbatai. For 250 years they have kept aloof from the rest of the world- and remained loyal to the Messiah" who betrayed them. Out of the ranks of these Moslem Jews have come men of power in the commercial and political world. They are a prosperous, progressive people. The men have widely adopted Free Masonry and out of their lodges and other secret meetings grew the Turk ish revolution which overthrew Sultan Abdul Haraid in 1908. As is generally understood, the committee of union and progress is a secret organixation, whose real leaders have ever remained In the background, hidden and unknown. This is a direct Inheritance from the secret sect of the Deunmeha. for the union and progress leaders were mem bers of this mysterious cult. Salonica Jews led the Turkish revolution. Now that Enver and Talaat and Djemal and the other Turkish leaders are in exile the real power behind them remains safe and unpunished, because unknown to the public. With this corner of the earth again in a ferment and awaiting new and better leadership, one wonders whether the virile Jews of Salonica will again have tbe man for the hour. -SLAV PACT REPORTED GERMANS AXD BOLSHKVIKI DE CLARED IX HARMONY. Hard-and-Fast Offensive and De fensive Alliunce Said to Have Just Been Concluded. (Xew York World Service. Published by Arrangement. ) LONDON. April 21. (Special cable.) "I learn from well-informed sources that a formal treaty was signed between Germany and the Rus sion bolshevik! last week," says the Warsaw correspondent of the Daily Telegraph. "The actual agreement is not yet known in public circles, but from private and well-informed sources I know it Includes the following main points: "1. The boisnevig government snaii apply a milder policy toward Russian industry, toward munitions and arms factories in particular. (The second clause Is missing). "3. The Germans shall set in order the Russian railway system. "4. The Germans will send military instructors to the Russian army. "5. Russia undertakes to send every year an agreed amount of provisions to Germany. "t. Russia binds herself not to en ter into any negotiations with the en tente. "7. In case of need, for the next !0 years, that is. until 1940, Russia will provide Germany with military assistance. The last paragraph deals witn guar antees that the treaty shall remain in force even in the event or the bolsne- vlkl being replaced by some other gov ernment. It is said that this last clause is very satisfactory to Lermany. RECLAMATIONJEN SHIFTED Oregon Engineer Becomes Manager of Idaho Irrigation Project. BOISE. Idaho. April 21. (Special.) Important changes have taken place in the reclamation service headquarters in Boise. l. W. Cole, maanger of the Boise project, the largest Irrigation project In the United States, has been succeeded by J. B. Bond of Klamath Kails. Or., who was In charge of the Malheur project in Oregon and is a prominent reclamation service engineer. C. C. Fisher, assistant manager, has been assigned work on a new project and has severed his connection with the Boise project. C. E. MacClain. for mer watermaster. has been made su perintendent of irrigation. DRAFT EVADED 19 MONTHS. California Vonth I Arrested Work ing in Lumber- Mill. EUREKA. Cal.. April 11. Trailed for 19 months through the fastnesses of northern California by officers who sought him for alleged draft eva sion. Louis Jackson. 23 .of Bayslde, near here, was captured at a lumber mill in Crescent City. Del Norte county, Sat urday and la in jail here today. Jackson's father is accused by the sheriffs officers here of having secret ly supplied his son with food while he was dodging the officers. Court Upholds Forest Protection. WASHINGTON. April II. Constitu tionality of the North Carolina act of 1913, designed to protect watersheds from fire by requiring the burning or removal of remains of trees cut for commercial purposes within 400 feet of watersheds, was upheld today by the supreme court. California to Spend $40,000,000. SACRAMENTO. Cal.. April 21. The assembly of the California legislature today adopted. 60 to 1. a proposed con stitutional amendment providing for a third Issue of California state highway bonds in the sum of t40.000.000. It had already passed the senate. Brlti.-h Censorship Modified. WASHINGTON. April 21. Modifica tion of British censorship regulations to permit the use of private codes in cablegrams passing through London from tbe United States to South America was announced today by the navy department I? Monarchistic Party Said to Be Secretly Active. SOCIALIST SCENTS DANGER 'Monster of Militarism in Coarse of Creation In Form of Volunteer Army" Causes Apprehension. BT CYRIL BROWN. (Copyright by the New York World. Pub lished by Arrangement.) BERLIN. April 21. (Via Copenhagen, special cable.) "A monarchists counter-revolution Is Inevitably coming and la coming soon," accroding to Emil Barth. formerly people's commissioner In the first revolutionary government and brilliant Independent socialist lead er. Herr Barth believes the new mon ster of militarism in course of creation, in the form of a volunteer army, under the auspices of the Ebert-Scheidemann-Noske government, will some day turn on that government and rend it. "The situation in Germany Is really very simple." he said today. "There la a small minority of monarchists who hold the power, a government which has the semblance of power, and a great mass of suffering, starving people. Ninety-five per cent of the people are enduring privations. A small majority has real power, because It controls the army, which is a tool In the hands of the monarchists. All the officers are monarchists. Social Democrats Sold." "The monarchists are only biding a favorable opportunity, after the sign ing of peace, to start a counter-revolution with the army and try to re store the Hohensollerns. The so-called social democratic party has sold itself body and soul to the militarists and capitalists. Soldiers In the volunteer army get five to six times- the regular rations of civilians. "Counter-revolution is sure unless the entente does two things. It must forbid the feeding of Imported or do mestic foodstuffs to the army in ex cess of rations given to the people, and it must prohibit all officers ot tne oio army from getting jobs on the home police force, or whatever otner armea force the treaty will permit Germany to maintain. "So long as the "army can fill its stomach with from five to six times the civilian ration, volunteers will flock to the colors, manipulation will continue and the army will be loyal to Its mon archistic officer!-. Contmaalam Held laevitable "This counter-revolution will prob ably come before a further revolution which will permanently establish com munism. Communism will be the in evitable consequence of a monarchistic counter-revolution. "Communism and real socialism alone will enable us to pay our debts, to pay the demands for reparation. I strongly favor frank admission of Germany's blame for the war; not admitting that we were solely to blame, but mostly to blame. I believe we should make a quick peace, on the basis of full atone ment and reparation for crimes com mitted by the old militaristic caste. "We cannot meet such charges under the present system of government Germany would need to raise 27.000. 000.000 marks annually before provid ing for reparation payments, or three times the total wages paid in Germany In 1913. which was 9,000,000,000 marks, not counting the wages of agricultural labor. Obviously it cannot be done. Way Oat Is Indicated. "The only way Germany can con tinue o exist and to pay France and Belgium will be by the adoption of thoroughgoing and drastic socialism or communism, thereby, on the one hand, reviving working enthusiasm and the consequent productivity of our now hungering and apathetic masses, and. on the other hand, reducing the war tax burden by the automatic wip ing out of the war debt by the ex propriation of all capital." Herr Barth's counter - revolution prophecy is peculiarly interesting in view of the sensational reports that have been secretly circulating in po litical circles that monarchists and militarists have .planned a coup for the near future, which, at the start, is to take the form of a grand scale of military action against Russian bol shevism. with the alleged approval and possible support of English officers close to General con Ludendorff. . . Colonel Bauer of the great German general etaff. General Ludendorfrs former chief of operations. Is credited with lively interest in the projected enterprise, in which he may appear as a principal actor. Bauer's Acta Significant. Such a report naturally cannot ba confirmed, but Colonel Bauer was one of the officers who went- to Cologne. One of the unconfirmed reports is that while there he conferred with Marshal Haig on a plan of action against bol shevism. Rumor, which is dealing free ly with motives, attributes his activi ties to the alleged preliminary plans in a programme for the eventual restora tion of monarchy. From radical sources the World and The Oregonian correspondent is in formed that the new German volunteer army, although ostensibly less than 300.000 strong, has already an enroll ment of more than 7 50.000. The lure of liberal ratlona has brought volun teers so fast, it is said, that several of the recruiting bureaus have been swamped and have been forced to close their doora temporarily In order to catch up with their work. Obituary. WASHINGTON, April 21. Dr. George Ferdinand Becker, aged 72, prom inent geologist and connected with the United States geological survey since 1S7. la dead at his home here. He was a member of mining and scientific so cieties and for four years taught min ing engineering at tne university oi California. clal.) Mrs. Celta Gurdane. pioneer Pendleton resiaenu uica m ncr iivm? . I .... . .l.h, after an i 1 1 ,1 P S 1 of acre ii - - several months. Mrs. Gurdane was 78 years old and naa Deen a resiueni ui the county for the past 35 years. Her v, .. Jnhn Gurdane." and four chiidren survive her. Newspaper Men In Army en Tour. ...-.t i - v-U' 1 nril 91 (Bv the Asso ciated Press.') A party of 50 American a n h isn enlisted men. all former newspaper men who are now I serving In tne American arnu. nnntu here today by a special train. ini ... 4- tinrln varimtfl batlefields and bridgeheads as the guests of the American expeditionary iorces. Secretary Daniels Sees Cologne. COLOGNE. April 21. (By tne Asso ciated Freti.) Secretary of the Navy Li Hung Chang Li Hung Chang declined to go to the races be cause he said it was already established that one horse could run faster than another. Why should a man look at machine made clothes when he can be hand - tailored for the same money ? . Washington at Sixth Daniels and his party arrived here to day by boat from the Coblenz bridge head, where the secretary had- been the guest of Major-General Le Jeune, commander of the American second division. After several hours In Co logne the party proceeded to Liege. The secretary will spend a day in Brus. sels before going on to England. Soldier Visits Relatives. After spending a 21-day furlough visiting friends and relatives in Port land, Private Moe Shulman will leave tonight for Camp Lewis. He enlisted In the engineers at Vancouver, Wash., in January, 1918, and was immediately sent to Camp Humphreys, Va. Just be fore he left Camp Humphreys on his furlough he was transferred to Camp Lewis. A tri-weekly train service on the Southern Pacific between Nogales and Guaymas, Sonora, has recently been converted into a daily, except Sunday. Many Eyes go for years without the need of glasses others, due to a refractive error need giasse,s early in life. . More- than twenty years' experU ence. and the use of scientific In struments, .enables me to determine the exact refractive error of the eyes and r e 1 1 e v e your Imperfect vision with rerfect-Fitting Glasses. EYESIGHT SPECIALIST. SOT Morgan Building, Washington at Broadway. "WlaWH'Sl rtf m ril I Boy Cuticura Soap Whea Yoa Buy A Safely Razor And double razor efficiency. Ho mug. no slimy soap, no germs, no waste, no irritation even when shaved twice daily. After shaving touch spots of dandruff or irritation, if any. with Cuticura Ointment. Then bathe and shampoo with same cake of soap. One soap tor all uses. Rinse with tepid or cold water, dry gently and dust on a few grains of Cuticura Talcum and note how soft and velvety your skin. Absolutely nothing like the Cuticura Tno for every-day toilet uses. Soap to cleanse and punfy. Ointment to soothe and heal, Talcum to powder and perfume. 2Sc each. Sample each free by mail. Address: Cuti cura. Dept. 5 F, Boston." A Good Sound Iiivestmeiit Liberty Bonds Are a Good Investment and Should Be Kept; Also Advise You to Buy as Many as You Can of The New Victory Bonds! We do not accept Liberty Bonds or W. S. S. for our stock, as we only "want to do business with those investors who can afford to risk money. " We do not want any answers from people who think that any in vestment that pays more than 6 per cent is unsafe they wouldn't buy gold dollars at 50 cents each! The Man We Are Talking To is the man who has $100 or more, and is willing to buy, and will buy into a Real Opportunity that will pay Real Liberal. Returns on his investment. WE WANT MEN who are willing to investigate and willing to take a chance. We have 10 acres in old, proven oil fields, five miles west of Burk buraett; 25 acres 4 miles southeast of Burkburnett; 20 acres 10 miles east of Burkburnett, in Clay county, and 360 acres 6 miles southeast of Petrolia, in Clay county, close to two 4000-foot tests. We contract to drill one deep well on each of these leases; and believe we shall strike oil in either one of them. Remember! This Is Not a One-Well Proposition We are not depending on one well alone! We are bound to strike oil; yet do not guarantee it. Remember! Our leases are located in different, proven oilfields; and that we are drilling four wells. The Organizers of This Company are well-known men of Wichita Falls, and each of them is a man of unquestionable integrity. Mr. W. M. Frank, cashier of the National Bank of Commerce, is our Trustee. Mr. H. F. Wurtz, who is an experienced oil operator and is handling; the organization of this Company, is our Secretary and Treasurer. Mr. Overton McDowell, manager of the Grain Department of the Wichita Mill & Elevator Company, is our President. Drilling of Well No. 1 Will Start About May 15th Fill in the coupon below! Come in with us! The Burkburnett & Petrolia Co. Room 11, No. 822 Scott Avenue, Wichita Falls, Texas. References: National Bank of Commerce, Wichita Falls, Texas; or any bank or busi ness house in Wichita Falls. Make all checks payable to W. M. Frank, Trustee. National Bank of Com merce, Witchita Falls, Texas, Depositary. 1 Date THE BURKBURNETT PETROLIA CO- Room 11, No. 822 Scott Ave. Wichita Falls, Texas. GENTLEMEN: I hereby subscribe for shares of Common Law Trust; capitalized at J300.000; par value J100, fully paid and non-assessable, and enclose herewith $ payment in full. non-assessable, and enclose herewith $ payment in full. 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