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Show i Foreign News Fashions ; -- f MAGAZINE SECTION iLLIOMU. OGDEN CITY. UTAH SUNDAY MORNING, DECEMBER 11, 1921. .- - MAGIC SENNETT, YOU MAY USE THIS PLOT FREE! droxxer. A ny jnivroN SOVIET OUSTS IDLERS! Told to Foreign Hangers-oPay Their Way or Leave the Country i n Dec. 10. (By The STOCKHOLM, Associated Press.) Maxim Gorky, Russian novelist and formerly head of the Russian relief commission; told The ' Associated Press correspondent when he passed through this city on his way to Berlin that he believed the (deaths from ' starvation in Russia would aggregate 35,000,000. He heartily praised the support.; which the American, people were giv- lriff to the starving people of Russia,! ouz said tne oniy way out or in 'situation would be through the establishment Of international relief founded on the American plan, broad, efficient, complete and well controlled. He doubted, however, whether the necessary relief would arrive in time to avert disaster. NATIONS HANG BACK. He expressed the opinion that Mr. imper-jfei Hoover's relief was somewhat because and lacked organization," taken ; sufficient safeguards weTe not to prevent the stealing of the food by gangs or soviet officials, from the time the commodities arrived in Petrograd until they are consumed. M. Gorky said Mr. Hoover had placed too much confidence in the soviet. He deplored the passivity of France and excused Germany for not coming to the support of Russia. Sweden's contribution to the famine he thought was but a drop in the ocean. On the question of Russian interior MRS. PETER politics, Gorky said "unrest is as common as 'dinner is. here, but nobody NEA Service. takes any notice. Quite recently there LONDON,DyDec. 10. Peter de Sivers was. a fierce riot In Petrograd which was only quelled after much blood- was in .love.' He could think of nothing else. shed." WELCOME WORN OUT. That L, nothing but "the, wedding MOSCOW, Dec 10 (By a Staff date. On that day he of The Associated at St. Correspondent who have John's church with appeared his best man. The Press.) Foreign hangers-o- n words and organ boomed out the wedding march, nothing but sympathetic ,Miss Mitchellne tdoffer The. promises of world revolution are Olive the soviet government growing Portous, walked down theaisle, less and less welcome here since the leaning on her father's arm. , . establishment of free trade .and the the breathed of capitalistic standards to guests, enraptured. resumption . But the vicar paused to ask de Siva considerable degree. The era "of free hotels, free auto- ers a' question. The groom faltered. had mobiles, free opera" and free railway Much whispering. ' No, he hadn't fares', is over. Government ' guest the bans published.The vicar couldn't proceed." But he houses have become hotels where forcurrency at eigners pay in foreign rates comparable to those of really good hotels in New 'York, London or Paris. r SCRAMBLE BEGINS. "'ln consequence there. is a general i i . ? ser-'lo- us ; ' ' V SHAKES LISBON Dramatic Incidents Attend Funerals of Three" Statesmen . St f . f MANY FLEE TO. SPAIN - ., Further Signs of Unrest Are Noted in Portuguese Capital j I.ImO. AAm . I ct 1 - ; ; , suggested de Sivers could get a special license from the Archbishop of Canterbury's faculty office, if he hurried. The gueets were asked to wait. The hrlde-to-b- e ditto. father-in-laGroom and prospective rushed off for the license. More complications. It couldn't be granted without a special paper from. th Swedish consul, .because-dSivers was a Swede. More rushing. But when' de Sivers got his Swedish credentials, it was three minutes too late. for. the faculty office had closed. Title for drama: "A race for a wife, or lost by three minutes." Fadeout: They were married the next day. . i ! - "Ah-aa-ah-aah- . w bride-to-be- !" - ; . MRS. ITIEDA HANSEN ; . " ; OERHY ' - quarters scrambling for cheaper as among the strange- International posortment of philosophers, poets, lttical scientists, professors and near- -' professors who were attracted to Russia by the free signs and hoped to attach their, particular "ism" to the - HAS .soviet government. Hindus, Turks, Chinese, apanese, Export Business Booming French Public Realizes ExAfghans, Persians, Kurds, Syrians, cessive Prices May and Some , Factories GerEgyptians, Siamese, Frenchmen, are Americans Kill Industry mans, British and Work Overtime among the strange aggregation which in reconciling Is having difficulty somewhat exotic views' with the sud PARIS, Dec. 10. It is not only COLOGNE. Dec. 10. Germany at or other foreigners who den decision of the soviet government ;the present time has fewer tnai it neeas money ' ana must tsti, it ployed than any period within the last find that the tourist or visitor is excessive prices in France, by having Russians and, foreigners 14years, according to labor officials. charged Rondet-Salnt. a alike pay their way. In the mining industry, the building .Maurice an article in the French has the chemical writer, trade and the DREAM SILVTTERED. industry of Renaissance in which he. points out It's a rough end to a pleasant dream. number of vacancies exceeds that of "how dangerous "estampage" la to Professional proletarian don't like it 'the unemployed. The total number 1 was touring, and what eventual loss it In- on October than Bolshevists, persons unemployed better any parlor volves. Manv of the visitors are finding sud- - 189.407 The word "estampage" is a diction den reasons for their return home,Germany's export business is boom-an- d word for punching holes in metal to the due ary the for influx of present, the partly foreign sympathiz- ing In France for of the mark, and in and is as much slang , ers is declining. (low rate exchange as "skinand such-lik- e Cloth merchants, foreign engineers many parts Of the country factories ning" a client is in English. and food sellers are now coming.'are said to be working overtime.' REGAIN CHINESE lilADL. OUTCRY RAISED. 'l here is far more interest now in! Germans "The hotel industry." he writes, than LONDON, Dec. 10. The feeding and clothing Russians lilliter-acare gradually returning to .China and "has undoubtedly suffered from the there is in liquidating politica are of Discussions sonl culture picking up the threads of their for increased cost of living, still it must for the pres be admitted that a number of those makins wav for lectures on agncul- - mer business; not trading under their own names, but in directing it, if not all. have taken adture and plans for getting more Amer-,eican farm machinery. Isadora uun ipartnershio with Chinese, says a reor vantage of the difficulties - of the times to look upon the unhappy Incan and her Moscow school of esthetic port on the commercial situation H. Fox. commercial dividual who has been misled Into enby,H. dancing are attracting far less atten- China, counselor tff the British legation in tering their establishments as some tion than the wood shortage. Peking. thing that can be carved and sweated PLAIN WORDS USED. German needles, and at mercy, from whom the utmost must paints, dyes Colonel Lynch, the former member sundries are begin- be squeezed without swashing the drugs and of the British parliament and world-famo- metals, to appear on' the Shanghai marfor his espousal of the Boer ning ket the There was a great outcry last year: report goes on, and.it Is statcause In South Africa and for his supfor orders ed several that the exigencies of hotel keep-- , important lecagainst recently port of Irish freedom, equiparid ers electric owners of villas offered for and plant machinery tured in Moscow on a brand new phil- ment booked been have by but rent, recently money was then more easy seems But the Moscow public osophy. German now firms. than and the season passed fairly to be fed up on philosophy and didn't There is no doubt, the. report says, well. This year many villas have show any great enthusiasm. by the failed to hi taken and the season The glamor is gone from Moscow to that the Germans, .assisted pro- would have been disastrous but for the of their cheapness a very considerable extent and Com- comparative share receive the will ducts, English who .came to take advantage tadually are alike munists and . held Iff China's foreign trade be- of the exchange. they lanmeans in the and ways talking of be will the but fore war, the process y RAPACITY SCORED. world folks the .every-daguage slow, as they have lost valuable conIn certain resorts over. nections; the business organizations where the natives seek to Pyrenees, oo live the had so laboriously, Ijuilt up have on whole they in year gained tlje" profits sufhave been and shattered, they to six all and weeks, posts sign eight GRADUALLY HUNTING fered a serious loss of prestige in the similar indications were ' removed, so of the Chinese. a guide became necessary for alREVIVING IN FRANCE es'esRIGA. Latvia: Dec. 10 Russian ln- - that most every excursion. - M. Rondet-Saislowly but surely in'--reviving. dustry is soviet , s adds: Mos- the government Bays one two or 10. for Dec. is gradPARIS, Except special re- Hunting 1 ' In has fallen off France. In the touring markedly ually being revived rVdPatChv,A8 more 100,000,000 ,th, year ..mo wwksaiwt forest of Rambouillet a few days ago, 'states of cotton MasvkB have-beeshipped pounds is reached to stabilize prices at there was seen for the first time since this Tashkend and As aingfair the from year the war one of the most ancient cus- trakhan cotton fields traveling for pleasure up the Volgo will be figure, abandoned and, one of the eletoms of France. The hounds of. the to plants. manufacturing oo ments which contained the greatest dowager duchess of Uzes assembled at , , La Cells, the hunting grounds of the promise f orgeneral prosperity will be killed by the bourbons. Six priests blessed the SOVIET GOVERNMENT of some and the rapacity, ofincapacity hounds, while huntsmen blew music on others," CUTS ALLOWANCES V their horns, and the hunting Beason T " . was officially opened. A large number of huntsmen were present. MOSCOW.' Dec. 10. The council of RADICAL LABOR TO The ceremony was held on the anCONFER MEXICO niversary of St. Hubert, the apostle people's commissars has published a of the Ardennes and patron saint of decree annulling the former practice field."" It was at the same' of paying all unemployed or disabled the hunting the forest that St. Hubert son workers both in money and food. MEXICO CITT.vDec.' 10. --The first point In duke of Aquitaine, saved his those work- International American Labor conof the By the only father from being gored to" death. ers In industries t or three years past gress with avowed radical tendencies Since then the clergy of the district will receive an allowance- which, for will be held in Mexico City next May have assembled each year to bless the the f irstclass, will be full minimum 1. according to an announcement by one-hahounds in memory of the courageous pay and, for the second-ra?- s, Rafael Qulntero. act of the so,int. of the minimum pay. ipeter Svonlch.- continental dlplo- In 1814 there were 11,800 hounds, The government is. not making any.matic representative of soviet Ruia 12,000 huntsmen and 285 packs in unemployment allowance for the thou- - In America, Is now In Mexico France. These figures were greatly sands of government' employes now making preliminary arrangements City for reduced by the war. the convention being discharged. , J . well-know- n j I over-chargi- ng y. " nt - us . - non-Communi- sts . in-th- e nt a K? V f - ; , - . 7" IN - new-decre- t e, - - , lf - . ' d 2,00m I years hn j k i a 17.-000.0- oo OLD MASTERS BURN BRECHIN. Scotland. Dec 10.KIn-nalr- d castle, home of Lord Fouthesk, which was recently destroyed by fire, was an historic fourteenth century structure and one of the finest examples of medlveal Oothic and Italian architecture in Great Britain. There was a famous picture gallery of 170 old masters, many of which were burned. The library, only a small part of which has been saved, consisted of 10,000 volumes, comprising costly mlAJs and some very valuable early Shakespeare editions. Some of the furniture destroyed dated from the early Scottish kings. The loss Is estimated at 1.000,000 oo wKAirirr. 'wrrrm slayf. TOKIO, Dec. lO.I.'Kuluda. Japan- ese Jumber king, will marry Miss X. OtV Chinese slave girl. He rescued her from a, band of wandering strels. 1 ... OYAUSTS OF i ex-Irem- AVfiRlAMLY ed by ITesldent Alemlda and many high political personalities. All commerce closed la slen of public sympathy, and no theatre opened its doors that night. LONDON. Dec. 10. (By The Many significant and violent speech Associated Pre. ) Scientists e were made bv well known persons the Darwinian theory that Africa in the cemetery. Lieutenant Agatao may have been the original home Lanca. a naval officer much admired of the human race received parfor bravery In action, said in his tial corroboration from the dis"I swear j speech over Granlo's coffin: covery Just made In northern iRupprecht Claims Right toJder i wm your that corpse, Khodesla of a fowlllzcd skull mv uniform until 'never wear' again which Rives a new orientation to Throne Which He Twice your murderers are punished." the early history of primitive man'. ritr-v-i mczzlkd The skull, which is CQinplcle .navi. Renounced.. A nether well known naval officer. JAW. ... ii. focthe.loaerman rembles" that iaicuetro. said he j commanaer i Teste of the ape did not come there In his ur.tform on iplthecanlhropus rrectusK discovered In Java In which the Cross of War was pinned, n.v'T"1 . of fj" li92, which has been regarded as aoclated Press1 lt as wJth tlooJ. thejW.u wa ,n the mot primitive human ukull ii e V. . officers who belong to pollt thr kuown until now. The Java skull, seal parties oooosed to Granjo anl stratlon by.the Rhenish Hundfchau. a (even some who took part in Die rer- however, lacked a face. In this Democratic respect, the Bhodeslan fos.Hl reveals a type curiously similar to wolu iron:"-- , T?' xrrt,Cl"-h.f.the- nol wear ihelr unSformgthatYhe; what Is known as the Gibraltar unt saj;s j,. lh, pomp and usury displayed H iHr obskull. and the punished Tortnguwe seiules of the late king surpassed aJl nurrH of Moreover, a collar bone, a leg arrangements of a similar affair even A great number of naral and army lon and part of a hip bone reduring the best days of Germany's officers, of hleh standlr.e. have sent In lieved to belong to the skull have monarchies. also been unearthed, and these their realgnatlons. but the press is forKXTRUJti: LVXLRV SHOWN. bidden to refer to this. may enable anatomists to reconpre-wRecalling struct the main parts of the RKSIUNS l. HORROR days In Prussia, the. writer asserts The former minister cf financsa, whole Rhodesi.m skeleton. was Jess devoted to that: "The pomp The ncene of Ihe discovery was Granlo's oolitical adver-eairthe deceaaed king than to the deceased Cunha tolral. the "Bone Cave" of the Broken whom nremler came In idea of athe kingdom. The raonarch- - his hour of neesj, the Hill mine, already famous for the and who. in attempt. ivs ci me utrmin siairs. pjacca com jjnir to save his life was wounded by beauty of its stalactites and stalDuuexs. was oerecna grata to the iwo agmites and for the remarkable within the service of their party Idea revolutionaries. Now his horror at fact that the lime of which they which alms at the restoration of were orlrlnally what has happened If so great that he has composed monarchy in Germany. ha given up all him Important post, been largely replaced by phos"At a moment when millions of Ger- announced his Intention of of zinc and lead. phateswas enough to eat, a dis- political life and has eon abandoning to live 1m It the commercial value of mans ofhave rfol was indulged in at the province luxury these formations that led to the play Munich which can hardly be deA great many people, politicians and transformation of this cave into scribed. The entire management of industrial one of the strangest mines ever and financial men, hate the obsequies was so brilliant that the taken refute in Soaln. worked. official members of the republican of ur.rtst continued to be The floor consisted of a mass cf Signs bavarian government mere the 'dumin this citv for some fossilized remains of elephants. mies at this monarchist demonstra- the revolut Sonarv outbreak.weeks after Hons, leopards, rhlnoceri. hippotion. IIIIUUI potami. antelopes, birds, bats and was not aware of the "Whoever For at least two weeks after tfcst small mammals. Hundreds of tons character of the entire demonstration, occurrence, manileaut Jon ere mad of these animal remains had been reallxed its monarchist tendenclen by by revolutionaries who demanded no was man trace of but removed, the proclamation of I'rlnce Kupprccht. the rovfrnmr.t nut Into operation the discovered until a depth of f 9 feet the former crown prince of liavarla. revolutionary Posters ap- below water level was reached, program. The prince is1 not satisfied peered on the walls cf buildlnss call-In- g when the bone described were with the state of affairs in Germany. upon the oeoole to rise and rebel found surrounded by soft friable Uut no one will blame him for thai acaln.it those who were alleged to b Jead conglomerate.as all his hopes have been frustrated. "driving them to starvation" and dein a manding that the rovernment resign if "Ilupprecht showed courage mainGENERALS "BECOME he it did not. know how to govera. 'king's speech to all. wherein One demonstration was made ou:. tained that he succeeded to the 'rights SCHOOL BOYS AGAIN of his father. thereby meaning his side lh ministry cf the interior wtifn claim to the Uavarian throne. Of; a revolutionary officer. Major o In he has twice that course, a delivered In Correla, forgotten 10. Dec. trainspeech CODLENZ. Winter yearn he haa renounced all his which he declared that "should the ing plans for the American forces In three successor to as the throne. revolutionary procram not be strict!as announced recently at . rights is the Germany It n ert f is A n si t In Pnhlant i"a I duty of'U members of fulfilled. I and all true republicans wiu Z again selxe our arms to bring abouL at least three hours daily military for which the revolt of Oc officers nd men in addl rclses for the Bavarian people aftalrwt the tober If was made. tlon to the opening of schools for in- Incite other federal, states. If today a BaAnother orator d!Uered a speech la struction. crown pre- which he attacked profiteering the to mervarian pretender consist of will drills, Training fundasumes the to chants and against agitate capitalists. and walks rides. marches, tactical of the nation, he is our Foreign warships remained in the terrain execlses, map problems, lec - mental baeLs r harbor l" for some weeks following tho ture conferences and schools for of , Defmi;v ZX TW th revolt. rnc.n 1 officers and at the dismemberment of?"f? fleers, oo Germany by selected enlisted men to liavarla from separate In Is attempting a course of instruction On, ABANDONED HOPES school of languages for the study of the nation." either French or German. SHOWN IN PAINTINGS z NEWS DISTRIBUTED is not an uncommon sight In to see majors and colonels and BY WIRELESS 'PHONE PARIS, Dec. 10. generals, too. sometimes, with school Copies of the masbooks in their hands, when going to of the Louvre made by unterpieces offices. and from billets to their Many -known or. A 10. wireless Dec. and long TARI3. artists struggling an American. w!i" cached the Rhine news service will soon be dis- stored In the basement of the museum without knowing more than two or the Hlffel Tower la are. to be sold. three words of German, has learned tributed from Most of the copies have been in news will consist of imporThe Paris. os over to say by", enough they "get for more than SO years, abanevents in storage financial tant and political those of while others particularly here, doned and FYance th the end throughout world, forgotten by those who. Oerman descent, now speak the langnews from foreign countries being painted them. fome tell stories of uage fluently. ambitious beginners and discouraged The training program, which la to picked up by goverment wireless. It will be possible for banks and endlnga. Many copies are but half continue until Mnrch SI next Includes chemical warfare service designed to 'newspapers with recelvlny stations to finished while still others are but teach proficiency In the miso of gaa' receive tnis oiuciai news service iree. dabs of paint, Announcement of this has been made Many American names sppear In masks and in giving gas alarms. oq by General Ferrle, chief of the French the corners of these, pictures of stuI who have long since left Farta military v. irelers service. He adds that dents LOW STANDARD OF A majority of the names are imposservice between Parts and sible to read but a few have been disLIVING IS REVEALED telephone London so that any Paris subscriber covered o( men and women recognised; In the world of art today. For obvious can talk with person in London by reasons Tower. the youthful efforts of these of the Eiffel 10. way Idea Dec. of Or.N'EVA, Sm Cw" are not to be exposed wtth the names the misery and primltlvenees of agriapparent. cultural labor conditions In some parts DEER HUNTING GOOD The lovers of art have been Invited of Europe was given the International come "and see the unique pictures to Women of SCOTLAND IN HELLS Federation Working during to buy them at tb!r own prices and ItalIts recent congress here, by the o that the basement may be cleared ian delegate. Klgnora Casantelli- Kh Indicated the low standard of IJNDOX Dec. 10 What has teen for another batch of abandoned g as a one of seasons of the beet program suggesting by living oo Improvement four recommendations: on record In Scotland t hsa now con- nFXOMi:S MIN'ISTTTR-That agricultural laborers must no eluded. It is estimated hat 6.000 stars t Dec. 16 Peel s'een In stables, that each worker hve been hot In the area nrrth t I)NION', been mlEliter of trar.spors f to H'r Kr!c Ge ! 1e. should be aired and rooms heated If. months. Amowr the monarchs of the glen the British mbitndcf at Wsnhingtn. ncffMO'. and that men and women! were no salary attached to U.e sixteen stags each weighing over There must hve separate quarters under,1 210 pounds each. O. tc sanitary conditions. AT OBSEQUIES i i nnfd 'ln d uti;; . aabre-rattlin- ...... .. v n-- ar , g y. . . I m . J vi-de- nt radical Mnxni thi ex-cro- ; - Raluw-tla.n- - V 1 1 s as I s fe xHth.TtTA?tn. "d. . vra non-commlsslo- Vtl Cob-len- It . tele-phon- ic - ALONG WITH CASTLE pounds-- . swears vi:ngfinct: The troors and naval contingent were all sent back to the barracka. Although no official honom were by his family, the funenl permitted of the Granjo was attend- Jr"" probably would be amazed at the met- amorphosls. After all these centuries, modern-- ' ism. in the form of a twentieth century!' harbor, is about to make Its commer- clal encroachment upon this banklr.Kj' seashore, whose name was Joppa when Jonah knew it. SYNDIC ATI-- IS FOHMKI For some years, and particularly) since the British occupation, a harhor: for Palestine has been talked of, but; only now is thLi drem of eay In-- ; and ejcreAa to and from the Krens cradle of Christianity about to be! realized. An Italian banklnr eyndlcate. having BAtlafled itself that Rreat commercial possibilities are wrapped up In new-ol- d offered to adPalestine,-hvance the neceaaary capital, subject to adequate governmental guarantees and the actual work la expected soon to begin. The plana as drawn call for the exa um not to exceed penditure of be to retired with Interest within SO years. The harbor is to be located directly opposite the section of the old city of Bible times, making the pronent custom house a central point from which the extension will be made northward It is to comprise and southward three sections, one devoted entirely to freight and passenger ships, one to shipbuilding and repairing and one to fUhlng. CHASING PROSPERITY Lack of proper harbor facilities has been one of the greatest impediments to commercial development of Palestine, an. consequently, the Inhabitants are looking with keen anticipation upon the time when large ships can dock easily on Palestine's shores. When the weather la stormy and the sea rough, it is now practically Impossible for boats to come even within three miles, of land, where even in mild weatner an snip nave to oe loaded and unloaded with the aid of small, obsolete craft. Thus It is estimated at least $1,000,000 a year can be saved on the loading and unloading item alone, to say nothing of the inevitable effect better shipping facilities will have on the cost of living, which Is now excessively high. Commensurate wjth harbor Improvement, the city of Jaffa itself, is making plans to come out of its lethargy and reap rich rewards. Independent commercial interests already are Iaylns miles of waterplans to develop tofour build store rooms, front. Intending restaurants, hotels and private homes for the benefit of traders and tourist. - SKULL FOUND IN DEPTHS OF AFRICAN MINE s-- y : FEW SOLE MEN HOT EL RAPACTY n ! .JAFFA. Palestine.. Dec, 10. If the prophet Pres.) Jonah should return within the next few months to this little atavistic port, vnvup - 'coffin.' Capitalists n al-Jo- w J Port Prophet Left Will Be! Modernized by Italian whence he set sail some sricini: ! I nsrn nn his t em nsf . ler Antonio Granjo. Commander Car-lo- s Mala and Vice Admiral Machado doa panto, refused to accept the government' effer of national honors and insisted upon burying their dead at their own ezpne. ) HE COM E BACK e AMocUtto I , DE SI VERS. By 1 !! JONAH SHOULD I TjmiivriiNs The widow of Vice Admiral Rar.toa heard that the had disre garded her w;hes and had lined the streets with troops to pay honor to his body as his funraral procession passed. In a passion of indignation and de- tspstr. she threw herself before her husband's coffin and refused to it to leave thej house oo long mm there was one sailor or soldier left in the street where he would paas"Tell the prime minister. she,ried, "that if he does not recall the troops si will commit suicide on my husbands i SURPRSE FOR f. j i - Dec, Press) Dramatic incidents attended the funerals cf the three republican statesmen who were asarinated In the recent revolutionary uprkHnc. Th reiatlvrs cf the virtlm. former Preni- - i - ' .' t girl bride may brlnr n entirely new deal in the ecclesiastical case which has caused Archdeacon John Wakeford of Lin coln cathedral to lose his place. 'The archdeacon went to Peterborough twice on business. It wu charged he registered at a local hotel with a woman other than his wife. Wakeford denied the charges, saying he had never been accompanied by a woman in the hotel and had never written on the register "John Wakeford and wife." He said, the words "and wife" had been added by some one else. He maintained that the only woman that he talked to In Peterborough was a young one whom he saw only on two occaslonn when he was In Peterbor ough cathedral. Jie explains! some, of the paintings and architecture to her a they walked about the church. "Who was the youne. woman?" asked the Church of Kngland eccletried the siastical court, which charges. Dr. Wakeford responded nf did not iknow; he had talked to her Just as one would to any stranger Interested In n splendid piece of church architecture. He had never seen her since. 8o the case boiled down' to a test of his ability to produce the young woman. He failed. The decision went and the higher courts susagainst him verdict.tained the Now Mrs. Freda Hansen. 19. has come forward as "the girl In the church." She said she did not appear sooner, because her husband and herself felt sure the serious charge against the archdeacon would fall to the ground und they did not want to become Involved in the case. "But now," she says. "I am ready to make whatever sacrifice Is necessary, in the name of Justice." Gorky Says Starvation Will Cause Death of 35,000,-- ; 000 Persons OF ASSASSINS Dec. 10. LONDON, ( ERRIBLE DEED "GIRL IN CHURCH" COMES TQ RESCUE OF ARCHDFACON min- f ef-for- -- 1 deer-slalkln- r-- srrtfl tuc'l 1 4 lr.t tr'r ta , |