9 is VfiT TV n IS COO Entered t Portland (Oregon) ui liA J O.OU.J Postoffiee cp Beond-Cles MMter PORTLAND, OREGON, FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1921 PRICE FIVE CENTS L 2 SUBMARINES SEND TARIFF IS KILLED BUSINESS IS AT WAR WITH SHRILL SINGERS DOWXTOWX MUSIC STUDIOS FACE EXCLUSIOX. REPEAL OF WAR ACTS EDITOR SAYS FORD'S MEN KIDNAPED HIM WRITER WHO DISAPPEARED APPROVED BYWILSON RUSH CALL FOR AID QUITS, E 1 f' PRESIDENT SIGXS RESOLUTIOX KIIXIXG MAXY STATUTES. OXE IS REPORTED ASHORE FEB. 13 IS IX TOROXTO. AXD OTHER IX DISTRESS. MONET TEUTONS FURTHER GERMAN HON LOOMS ON REG WAITS BYWILSON S VETO 1 'J Books Are Balanced After Eight Eventful Years. HARDING SET FOR INAUGURAL Capita! Quiet and Politicians Mourn "Old Times." PRESIDENT TO TAKE RIDE JTation's Outgoing Chief Executive Insists on 'Witnessing Entire Ceremony of Day. WASHINGTON. I. C, March 3. After eight eventful years in author ity, the democratic administration of rVoodrow Wilson closed up Its books today and rested to await the termin ation of its tenure at noon tomorrow. While the final balance was being Tuck by the outgoing officials. War ren G. Harding, republican president elect, came to Washington, gave his approval to the simple inaugural preparations, completed formally his cabinet and finished his part of the Inaugural preliminaries by going to the White House for. a call of cour tesy on Mr. Wilson. In contrast to the usual holiday turmoil of Inauguration eve, the streets of the capital reflected only In a mild degree the complete rearrange ment about to be made in the na tional government. Capitol Dome Lighted. Flags and bunting were hung out In recognition of the pending event and tonight the dome of the capltol building was illuminated for the first time since the celebration of the armistice. In accordance with Mr. Harding's desire, tomorrow's inaugural cere monies will be far ttie simplest of re cent years. Four troops of cavalry will escort .the president and president-elect to the capitol, but no pa rade will be permitted and there will be little of the panoply of former in augurals. Just -what 'part President Wilson will play in the day's programme -remained in doubt. Although his health makes it difficult for him to move about, he has prevailed upon his fam ily and medical advisers to permit him to follow the custom of riding down Pennsylvania avenue with his successor. He hopes to . witness the ntire ceremony. Wilson Insists oa Ride. Dr. 'cary T. Grayson, White House physician, is understood to have urged that Mr. Wilson's part be limited to the ride to the capitoL In this stand he is said to have had the backing of Mrs. Wilson but not of the president. The result was that the inaugural of ficials prepared several alternating plans. Mr. Harding called at the White House late today after the president elect had conferred with Senator Knox and several other party leaders. Mr. and Mrs. Harding were received by Mr. and Mrs. Wilson In the green room and after tea the four remained 20 minutes chatting largely of the household affairs of the executive mansion. The spec'al train which brought the Hardings from Marion arrived at 1 P. M. and was met by a crowd of . p- M. and w V'Vj several hundr ' chief executiv '," J of the land dred who cheered the next ve and the next first lady of the land as they climbed Into a White House automobile. They drove to the New Willard hotel. A few knots .of people chetred them down Pennsylvania avenui. Callrra Crowd Hotel. At the hotel a stream of calleis. Including many members of the re publican national committee, now in session here, poured In to pay their respects. One conference was with James J. Lavis oi r.uuurs, election as secretary of labor Mr. I Waraing naa uniiuuiiicu iui many today. Later inauguration plans and the legislative situation confronting congress in its closing hours were discussed by Mr. Harding with Senator Knox, Harry M. Daugherty, who is to be attorney-general; John W. Weeks, selected for secretary of war, and Senator Lodge of Massachu setts, republican leader of the senate. At 4 o'clock the president-elect and Mrs. Harding made a short call of sympathy on Mrs. Champ Clark. Correpoadents Invited In. Just before his call at the White House Mr. Harding received the Washington correspondents, telling them he had made the Davis appoint ment not because he had any news to give, but because he wanted to begin his friendship with them while he still was nothing more than a member of their own profession. H assured them they always would be welcome at the executive mansion and declared that all he asked in his relationship with them was an appli cation of the golden rule on both sides. Tonight the president-elect and Mrs. Harding were entertained at a private dinner given by Carmi Thomp son of Cleveland, former treasurer of he United States and an official of he republican speakers' bureau dur ing the last campaign. The guests included Governor Davis, Senator Willis, Harry M. Daugherty and a score of others from Ohio. Besides the selection of Mr. Davis (.Concluded on Tag 4, Column I ) Coast Guard Cotter Stands Along . side 0-8; Trouble With 0-7 Is Xot Known. . NEW TORK, March S. Two sub marines, 0-7 and 0-8, reported by wireless tonight that they were in need of Assistance. The 0-8 Is ashore between Penlkese and Gull islands In Buzzard's bay, and the 0-7 Is In distress about three miles east of Race Rock, Wilderness Point, In Long- Island sound. Her trouble Is not known. The 0-8 had gone ashore about one mile from the Cuttyhunk coastguard station, the message said. A' coast guard cutter was standing alongside and she was expected to float at mid night. The message indicated the submarine was In no immediate dan cer. A message from the 0-7, which was picked up by amateur wireless opera tors, read: "How long will it take for assistance? We need help at once." The message was addressed to the navy-yard here and was relayed to the destroyer Gresham, anchored at Tompkinsville,- Staten Island. Race Rock, near which the 0-7 was reported in distress, is on the north east side of The Race, the main en trance from eastward in Long Island sound. The Race is marked by light houses on Race Rock and Little Gull island, between which it has a width of three and a half miles. A wireless message to the 0-7, picked up here, said eagle boat No. 33, from New London, Conn., was go ing to her assistance. The 0-7 re plied in a message that no additional help would be needed. This was taken to Indicate that neither the submarine nor her crew was in immediate danger. 14 SACKS OF MAIL STOLEN Two Men Handcuff Driver of Truck and Clerk Escapes. LOS ANGELES, Cal.. March 3. Fourteen sacks of registered mail were reported to have been stolen when a United States mail wagon was held up here tonight. The wagon, in charge of a driver and a postal clerk, was being driven from the main postoffice to the Santa Fe railroad station. At a railroad crossing two men rushed from .an automobile standing at the curb, jumped to the drivers' seat and hand cuffed the driver and clerk togeth er. They then tumblad,. the mail sacks into their automobile andidrove away. OIL PROFITS $40,973,484 Standard Company Makes 2 0 Per Cent on Actual Investment. CHICAGO, March 3. A net profit of 340,973,484 after deducting income taxes, or 20 per cent on actual invest ment, was earned by the Standard Oil company of Indiana for 1920, ac cording to the annuel report 'submit ted today. Without Income tax deduc tions, earnings were 361.377,803. A reserve of 320,404,319 is made to meet estimated income taxes for 1920. As against the capital and surplus January 1. 1920. of 1135,117,256, the company reports capital and surplus December 31, 1920, of 3203.869,123. FRENCH EX-MINISTER DIES Promoter of Dreyfus Prosecution in 189 1 Passes Away. PARIS, March 3. General Auguste Mercier, former French minister of war, died today. As war minister he Instituted proceedings agaityst Cap tain Dreyfus before the council of war in 1894, which condemned Dreyfus to life-long penal servitude and public degradation. The sentence afterward was Re versed and Captain Dreyfus was ex onerated on retrial. STORAGE BILUS PUSHED Prospect for Passage of Measure Reported Improved. WASHINGTON. D. C. March 3 prospect8 for enactment of the coid storage regulations bill Increased today, the senate conferees yielding on provisions which the house opposed. ' The principal change was to pro vide that products may be held in coid storage for a "free period of 30 days without being labeled." WOUNDED AGENT MAY LIVE Bullet Removed From Prohibition Officer Shot Jn Fight. EL PASO, Tex., March 3. Ernest W. Walker, prohibition officer who was wounded yesterday when officers and smugglers fought a two-hour battle on the bank of the Rio Grande a mile from the heart of the city, has a chance to live, according to physi c'ans who operated on him today. A bullet was removed from Walk er's abdomen. WORKERS MEET MARCH 9 Packing House Employes to Con sider Working Contracts. OMAHA, March 3. Packing com pany employes from every packing house center in the United States are expected to attend a conference to be held here next .Wednesday. At this conference the reported plan of the packers to discontinue working contracts with their work men will be d'scussed. House. Move to Override President Fails. VOTE RESULTS 201 TO 132 Message Terms Interest in : Revenues Slight. SHORT WAY OUT DENIED Executive Declares Legislation on Which He Used Ax Could Xot Have Helped Out Farmers. WASHINGTON, D. C, March 3. The Fordney emergency tariff bill was vetoed late- today by President Wilson. Efforts to override the. veto failed in the houee early this morning and the measure, originally designed to aid the farmers, thereby met its death. The vote on the motion to pass the measure over the president's veto was 201 for and 132 against. This was 21 votes less than tht necessary two-thirds. The veto was called up and voUd on without discussion.. ioere-u little expectation among republicans that they could round up . the two thirds vote necessary to override the veto, and it was for this reason that some leaders i had urged Chairman Fordney of the way and means com m'ittee to let it "lie on the table with out action. "The situation In which many of the farmers find themselves cannot be remedied by a measure of , this sort," the president said. , Short Wif Out Denied. . ' "There Is no short way out of ex isting conditions, and measures of this sort can only have the effect of rais ing false hopes among tbera." The president said the measure "has only slight interesfso far as its pros pective revenue yields are. concerned," and ' declared that the rates estab lished in the bill "either equal or exceed those established under the Payne-Aldrich , act, in which the principle, of protection reached ta high-water mark and the enactment of which was followed by an effec tive exhibition of protest on the part of the majority of the American peo ple." Veta Mnn Is Seat. The text of President Wilson's veto of the Fordney emergency tariff bill follows: " The house of representatives: I re turn without m- approval house bill 15275. an . act imposing temporary duties jn certain agricultural prod uces to meet nreent emergencies, to (Concluded en Page 3. Coiumn 1.) AND THEN 1 v ... ;m( Musicians Are Up In. Arms and Ready to Fight Ordinance at Hearing Wednesday. Music may have charms to soothe the savage breast, as an olden poet phrased it, but not even the strains of "Deep River" will quell the dissen sion that Is certain to arise over recently-proposed city ordinance re specting musical studios of the down town district and seeking to .impose restrictions on the range and velocity of melodies made there. Arrayed in opposition are the sev eral hundred musicians of the city and the building .owners' association. which advocates the ordinance. Vocal or instrumental, the sentiment of the former is that a legitimate profession shall not be hampered. . Two stories or ten, the fixed opin ion of the latter is that the musical product should be impounded. There are certain penetrating notes that but this anticipates the origin of the ordinance which would seal all stu dios with double windows, whether spring. is calling or winter is blowing a gale. . .. "So far as we have been able to learn" said Joseph A. Flnley, chair man of the Musicians' club of Port land, "the proposed ordinance Is the result of a rather unusual incident. Adjoining the Northwestern bank building, as you know, is- the Bush & Lane building, where there are a number of studios. It Is probable that vocal lessons in these studios are sometimes wafted to the tenants of the office building, just as the noises of the .street are borne. "There was, so we are told, a rather important business 'deal on In an of fice of the Northwestern bank build ing. It involved the exchange of a large sum, and the purchaser was about to sign on the dotted line when a singer across the way struck a high note and held it. He frowned, wavered and resumed the discussion, -laying aside the pen. A few moments later he was again ready to sign, when the same note rose to the ninth story and drifted in. The current version s that he grabbed his hat and rushed out, never returning, Naturaiiy mis incident, if it has been correctly re lated, inspired the present attack. 'I see," continued Mr. Fjnley, -tnat they have fixed a oU-ipot oisiance limit. They know very little about vocal music Yes, they know less than our Rover does. I can summon a vocalist or two whose high notes will lift their hair at 100 paces. The proposed ordinance, which wil be made a special order of business at next Wednesday's session of the city council, provides that any room where vocal or Instrumental music lessons are given, if within 60 reet of any hotel, apartment house or office build ing, shall be required to install double windows, with an air space between, ard that these shall be closed while the student woos the muse. Consider ation of the ordinance will also be made a special o.der of business at the meeting Of the Musicians' .club next Monday, when plans will be (Concluded on Pae 2. Column 1.) THERE WILL BE HARDER WORK ; Four Sleasures, Among Them One Saving National Park Water From Exploitation, Signed. WASHINGTON, D. C, March S. President Wilson has signed the res olution to repeal virtually all the war laws. The announcement came from the White House tonight The president also approved today four additional appropriation meas ures the Indian, legislative, execu tive and judicial; agricultural and fortification bills. The army bill was the only appropriation measure before him. The president also disposed tt a number of miscellaneous legislative measures, 'including the bill to ex tend for 25 years the oil leases held by the Osage Indians; the bill- ex tending the time permitted foreign ers to file patents in the United States, and the amendment to the waterpower act, exempting national parks from water leases and privi leges. The war law repeal resolution re peals practically all of the laws en acted during the war as strictly emergency measures. The acts re pealed Include the Lever food and fuel control act, and the espionage act of 1917. The trading with the enemy and liberty bond acts, and the statute creating the war finance cor poration, are exempted. Other measures before the president in addition to the army bill Include the measure to restrict Immigration and the bill appropriating S18,000,p00 for hospitalization of former serv ice men. - STANFIELD JN CAPITAL Senator-Elect Introduced in Both .Houses of Congress. THE OREGONIAN NEWS BUREAU, Washington, D. C, March 3. Senator-elect Robert N. Stanfield, ac companied by his secretary, E. J. Adams of Eugene, Or' reached Wash ington today and passed the after noon In the senate and house, meeting his future colleagues In congress. He was Introduced In the senate by Senator McNary, while in the house Representatives McArthur and Hawley took turns in presenting their new senator. His office, as matters .ap pear now, will probably be Imme diately adjacent to the suite now oc cupied by Senator McNary in the senate office building. ' SACKS FOUtfD, CASH GONE First Clew In Connection With $50,000 Robbery Discovered. OAKLAND. Cal., March 3. -The first tangible clew which federal and local investigators have found In connec tion with the 350,000 robbery of a United States mail truck Tuesday night came with the finding today of the six stolen sacks. All of the first-class mail contents of the sacks was intact, but the regis tered mail had been taken. TO DO. . . . , 4 State of Treasury Acute; Indemnity Issue Grave. HARDING TO ACT QUICKLY France Firm for Helpless Ger many; Foe Reviving. SPRING INVASION LOOMS -Many Relieve Thrust by Paris Will Xot Be Attempted, AVhile Mil itarists Predict War. BT MARK SULLIVAN". (Copyright by the' New York Evening Post, inc., ruDiisnea oy Arrangement.) WASHINGTON, D. C, March 3 (Special.) The two questions which President Harding and his cabinet are going to take up under the pressure of immediate urgency and without the breathing spell of a day, are the effect on us of the London confer ence, now sitting, and the state of the treasury, which is more acute than the public realizes. I have been at pains to consult nearly, all the men in America who have authoritative information on what is likely to be the outcome of the London conference,' and while the opinion of some is sensationally alarmist, the net of their beliefs Is that the outcome will not entail an immediate Invasion of Germany by France. It is not ftie amount of the repara tions that constitutes the crisis for America. It is not primarily for the purpose of collecting money that the invasion of Germany is wished for by many of the French leaders and prob ably the bulk of the French people. Helpless Germany, France's Aim. Every economist and business man knows that as a matter of dollars and cents the Invasion would be unprof itable. The Invasion would cost two dollars for every dollar the invaders can collect. What moves ...France primarily is the wish to make Ger many helpless. As it was explained to me by one of the most thoughtful American authorities, "the crjjx of the matter is that France no longer has seourity against a revivified Ger many and until she has it she will not be inclined to let Germany begin to recuperate." 'That and not money Is the heart of the situation. The same American went on to say, "In this I am in full sympathy with France. England and the United States should guarantee France against future attack. If Briand fails at London and Poincalre succeeds him, the French I think, will take immediate military action." This last, of course, raises the broader and more permanent ques tion of a league of nations or -association of nations. But the thing of immediate concern is the conse quences to the United States and to the world of an invasion of Germany by the French. The effect on Amer ican business of an action designed not to "let Germany begin to recup erate" is obvious. Invasion in Spring Likely. Those of the American authorities whom I have consulted, whose con nections are military, tend to believe that the invasion will take place and will be initiated as early in the spring as the roads are good enough for ac tion. The other question that has the quality of an emergency demand on the energies of the new administra tion is the plain business of paying the country's bills. Thoughtful per sons in contact with this branch of the government's business are of the belief that on the fifteenth of this month, when the tax returns for last year are in. It will become apparent that the country's revenues will be but little more than two-thirds of what they were last year and will be about the same fraction short of enough to pay the current bills of this year. It if expected that the returns from the excess profits tax will fall below what they were last year. Some go so far as to predict that the returns from the excess profits tax will fall close to zero. lacome Tax Also May Drop. The corporations have the privi lege of deducting from their profits all of that enormous depreciation in tie value of their stock on hand which took place just before the end of the tax year. The same authori ties believe that for the same and other reasons the income tax returns will be seriously curtailed. These are the two outstanding problems which, the new administra tion will have to, take up at the open ing of business tomorrow morning. The list .' other problems, which are of enormous importance but of less pressing emergency, is, of course, ex tremely large. Xo War, Japanese Are Told. HONOLULU, T. H., March 3. (Spe cial.) There will be no war between the United States and Japan, accord ing to a statement made by C. Tada, consul-general from Japan to Hawaii, at a meeting of the Japanese students of the University of Hawaii in con nection with a talk on the dual na- tlonality problem. , Head of Hebrew Publication As serts He Was Captured and Carried Over Border. TORONTO, March 3. Henry Pot ter, editor of a Philadelphia Hebrew paper, which has been attacking Henry Ford for alleged anti-Semitism, and who recently was reported to have disappeared while seeking to interview the manufacturer, arrived at police headquarters here today 'with a story of having been kidnaped by three men on Mr. Ford's estate near Detroit. To' the police and newspaper men he said that on the night of February 13, after two attempts to see Mr. Ford, he visited his estate and was seized by them; that he wa driven away In an automobile and threat ened with death after making sev eral attempts to escape; that he was taken from Detroit across the border Into Windsor; that he was Informed he was being taken to Cochrane, "never to go back to the states again," and that finally he escaped from his captors at West Toronto station. At the time of Potter's reported disappearance Mr. Ford was first to order a search made for him, fear ing he might have fallen through the ice on a pond on his estate. The search was discontinued after it was reported that friends had received telegrams from Potter several days after he dropped out of sight. SALMON DEAL DENOUNCED Prosecution of Dealers Who Bilked Government Urged. i WASHINGTON. V. C. March 3 Jlecommendat'cnr that the depart ment of justice Institute criminal pro ceedings against dealers who in 1918 sold the war department 5.000,000 cans of salmon held by government experts to be unfit for human con sumption are contained in a majority report filed today by the house war Investigating committee. The demo cratic members of the committee pre sented a dissenting report. The majority report condemned the war department fr:r falling to take steps looking to the prosecution of the dealers, condemned the latter for selling the salmon, attacked the con tract covering the sale and also rec ommended that the department of Justice determine as to the possibility of recovering an additional sum un ite r the contract. CHECK ARTIST ARRESTED Gordon Xclson, 2 3, Caught at Klamath Falls, Confesses. KLAMATH FALLS. Or., March 3. (Special.) Gordon Nelson, 23, who registered at a local hotel from Hono lulu, was arrested this morning on request of Oakland police, who charge him with passing 1800 worth of bogus checks. In Nelson's baggage offi cers said they found 81800 worth of forged checks ready for passage here. Nelson is said to have confessed to the Oakland charge and agreed to waive extradition. , INDEX OF TODAY'S NEWS The Weather. YESTERDAY'S Maximum temperature, 55 decrees; minimum, 40 decrees. TODAY'S Fair; westerly winds. Foreign. Germans face further occupation unless acceding to reparation demands, rase 1. Editor of Hebrew publication says ho was kidnaped on iienry r ord s estate. Face 1. National. Wilson regime quits and awaits last hour. Page 1. Tariff is killed by Wilson's veto. Page 1. Navy bill doomed; congress kills scores of measures In closing Hours, rage z. London Indemnity conference and state of United States treasury shaping Lnlleo States crisis. Page 1. ' Harding promises newspsoer correspond ents plenty or news, rage House of representatives pay unusual trib ute to Champ Clam, rage 4. Wilson, with Colby, will practice law after retiring as president. rage 4. President Wilson signs congressional reso lution repealing many war laws. Page 1 Domestic. Plight of refugees In Poland described as pitiful, rage 10. Corsets will survive all dress reforms Page 8. Train dispatchers" strike II spreading. Page Two submarines send out rush call for aid. Page 1. Pacific Northwest. Fred P. Kendall appointed to fish com mission. Page S. State Institution buildings to cost 1380,000 to be erected this year. Page S. School code falls by 21 to 19 vote. Page 7. Idaho legislature In jam as time to ad journ approaches. Page 7. Sports. Tiger training camp series to start Mon day. Page 14. Multnomah athletes beat Washington In dual meet. Page 14. Commercial and Marino. Large quantity of Portland stored wool will be shippea 10 ausiiuc seaooaro. Page 23. Chicago wheat strong and higher owing to ultimatum In Germany. Page 23. Stock trading and price changes narrow. Page -23. Cut In rates declared aid to lumber In dustry. Page 22. , Six thousand tons of wheat booked for Europe. Page 22. Portland and Vicinity. Republicans anxiously await distribution of Oregon ieaerai paironnse. rage 0. Sleuth In Hedderly killing on trial Mon day. Page 12. " Six persons In every 10 morons, says Dr. Vlets. Page 13- Chamberlain leaves senate todsy after 12 years of service there for Oregon. Pago 8. 1 Europe and railroads big gloom factors in financial world, says A. L, Wills. Page 1J. City council hears row about sewer, rage 1. Few boys and girls now drive to school In sutos, say principals. Page 22. William F. McKenney elected exalted ruler of Portland lodge of Elks. Page . Business men declare war on thrill down town singers. Page 4 Ultimatum on Indemnity Expires Monday. NEW TAX IS THREATENED Customs' Boundary Along Rhine Also Considered. PERIOD TO PAY N0t CUT Lloyd Georje nolds Counlcr Pro posals Are in Defiance of Treaty's Fundamentals, LONDON, March 3. (By the Asso ciated Press.) Germany today re ceived until Monday noon to accept the fundamental conditions laid down by the supreme allied council at Paris. The German delegates were informed by the allied representatives that if Germany does not accept these termsthe allies will take Im mediate steps. The first will be the occupation by allied troops of the cities of Dulsberg and Duesseldorf and Ruhrort, Second, each allied country will place such a tax on German merchan dise as It may deem proper. Third, a customs' boundary along the Rhine, under allied control, will Le established. Agreement Attempt Expected. The British version of Dr. Simons' reply to Mr. Lloyd George Indicated that the Germans would make an at tempt to reach an agreement. lie was quoted as saying that the Ger mans would examine the premier's speech, that their intention had been mistaken and that 'no occasion would arise for employment of the measures outlined by the allies. . According to the German text of Dr. Simons' speech, howevef; he protested against "sanctions (penalties) with out legal foundation." This, of course, is based on the treaty, which pro vides that penalties cannot be en forced until after May 1, but Ignores the allies' contention that the Ger mans have failed to comply with the conditions of the treaty. Dr. Simons is in close consultation with the other members of his dele gation and the Berlin cabinet. The belief prevailed that new proposals will be made. French Highly Pleated. The British prime minister's pre sentation of the allies' case greatly pleased the French. He drew a paral lel between German action now and at at Frankfort In 1871, when the treaty was baBed on the assumption that France was in the wrong and gener ally demanded not only reparation but payment by France of the whole coat of the war. "Until Germany accepts the position that she is responsible for the late war and interprets her obligations ac cordingly," said Mr. Lloyd George, "these'eonferences will be futile." (Armaa Delegates Klgld. He insisted, however, that the allies were not going so far in the matter of payment as the Germans went in 1871. The German delegates sat very rigid and gave no expression to their feel ings throughout the speech.- Dr. hi mona was extremely pale. It is noted that the towns to be oc cupied In case the Germans refuse to come to terms face the territory occu pied by the Anglo-Belgians, so that th armies will be the first to move, should the necessity exist. Period Not to Be Itednced. The German delegation was in formed the allies would not reduce the period of 42 years allotted for the payment of the total amount of repa rations by Germany. Germany's counter-propoals, which were submitted to the allies on Tues day, were not susceptible of exami ' nation. Premier Lloyd George told Dr. Walter Simons, head of the Ger man delegation, in substance, after today's session of the conference had assembled. Mr. Lloyd George said the attitude taken by the German empire regard ing reparations was, in addition, a grave violation of the obligation of Germany toward the allies. He re minded the German representatives that their government 'had not ful filled the treaty of Versailles relative tc coal deliveries, disarmament, the payment of 20,000,000,000 marks in gold and the punishment of German otficers and soldiers accused of crimes during the war. Advantages Held Lost. Germany, added the British prime minister, in refusing to' accept the concessions proposed by the allies with regard to reparations, had by the same act renounced the advan tages granted her at the previous,' conference with the allies. After Mr. Lloyd George had fin ished. Dr. Simons, for the Germans, said the intentions of thet German government bad been quite misunder stood. The German delegation, he said, would reply at noon Monday, 'In our opinion," added the Ger man foreign minister, "no occasion will arise for the action threatened by the allied powers." Dr. Simons said the Germane would examine the Britisn prime minister's speech and the allied documents most carefully. It was noticed during the Hritinh (Conoludti on Tags 4, Column 3 ) 5