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Show vO'- - WEATHER" UTAH Rain tonight or Thursday; warmer tonight in extreme southwest portion; cooler In west portion Thursday i Fifty-fir- Year st AH V-- 0 I An . to I I i l 1 It Information on bow hortioriltnral adileer ployed to &stst In making Ogtleri a mono braBUfel city. Slake ums of him! LAST EDITION 1 u.u P. M, 4 nn 0) LraUJ 0) Q) M JV fre yoar home ground t41bc.tlfy em48t. The city has f kh - L OGDEN CITY, ; UTAH WEDNESDAY EVENING, APRIL 20, 1921r No. 100 Will T M Wy U XI ;l niiACTirr ogden help F I 5 Nude Woman Battles .lI.gl Flames in Ogden Jail MENWAY HELD SUICIDE prevailed at the city jail shortly after noon GREAT excitement when fire broke out and raged furiously in the cell oc- (7N cupied by Mrs. Ethel Barrow's. With her bedding on fire, her extra clothing burning and the kimono, which was her only article of attire, ablaze, the woman: screamed tb be released from the inferno. But she had been screaming for drugs all morning and these cries of fear and alarm went as unheeded below stairs as her pre' vious outcry. , Then S. P. Kimball, desk sergeant, started up the stairs to give some tobacco to a man prisoner. He saw the smoke and another sight.. For at this moment the woman had stripped the burning kimono from her form. Kimball rescued the woman and the fire department extinguished the fire. The woman, who is said to be a drug addict, said she went to sleep while smoking a cigaret. . Cut Down Preventable Losses Before Cutting Wages, Plea to Board INEFFICIENCY LISTED Long Statement Presented" in Which Remedy is Set . Forth v v 5 nr3 -- mm n li en f n FT ii YOUTH'S LAS1 AGRICULTURIST HQ ORS TRACED BATTLESHIPS URGED TO FIGHT m INFLOW WILL MUST HIT SWAMP WEAR GA S " C H I C A G O, April 20. , Wastes amounting to a billion dollars annual-- " ly were laid-tmanagerial inefficiency on American railroads in a detailed exhibit placed before the Railroad Labor Board today as part of union la- i bor's fight against a reduction of-, wages. Recoverable wastes were es- mated hv thi pmnlnvpa . at J578.500.tlAAA A n AO W , vAn.AMl 4 v4-- n fV E?fe HSI'IILL MEDICAL that eiljle of estimation, would equal amount. It was declared. The employes point out alleged .wastes in the present railroad administrations and maintain that if those deficiencies and defaults in manage and repaired, ment were redressed there would ; remain no reason for attempting to reduce wages. As a method of correcting wasteful methods and Increasing" the efficiency of employes, efthe fort between management and , workers and added that this could best be obtained through the medium of uniform agreements reachexhibit-advocate- m Sgbhs OF "Oscar Jason Hemenway. the deceased, came to his death from a gunshot fired by his own hands." This verdict was given In the council chambers of the city hall yesterday,a Inquest by following a coroner's made up of John Tipton, Walter Jury LOS ANGELES, Calif.. April. 20. K. Paul and J. M.fForrlstall. who had Inspectors of the California state medTestimony of ten witnesses, ical board today were investigating been with the deceased on the day the circumstances the to his death, or who, had otherdeath here April 5 of. surrounding Miss Marie Vance prior wise been connected in some way with whose body was. exhumed by the cor- the discovery and identification of oner in Chicago yesterday at the ' re- the body, was taken. at the Utah quest of her father. Dr. William W. James Jones, a waiter VAnce of Glencoe, Ills. street and near Twenty-fift- h afe, The death certificate issued by Dr. Washington avenue, wu the only witB. E- Ryder, attending physician, gave ness whose testimony, indicated that diphtheria as the cause- of death. In Hemenway contemplated self deatruc- a statement the physician said he hadtion. a "necessary operation ' upWAITEIVS TfrSTlMOXY performedVance on two weeks before her Miss.' eald thn Jlrnenway had ben Jones ; death.- of Father Lead Struggle Looms Over En- Suspicions V tente Demand for Trans;to Exhuming Body of Girl Dying in West fer to Precious Reserve ed by collective . bargaining. Recoverable and easily estimated wastes were divided by the exhibit unBERLIX, April 20. (By the Asso- der nine heads having to do largely elated Press.) While the German with construction and care of locomo- cabinet has not yet indicated the natives a'nd' shop machinery, cost acture of its reply to the reparation comcounting and labor turnover. The wastes which the unions said mission's demand that' the , German could not be estimated in terms of to some money included a variety of subjects gold reserve be transferred zone. President defective train equip point in the occupied ranging from ment and - tracks through allegations Havenstein of the Reichsbank and the of incompetent and extravagant man financial writers summarily reject the agement; . laid was In the last class emphasis proposition. upon publicity and advertising and on tliat take the the gold ground what.! the unions, thought were un- is; They not only property tf a private bank, exnecessary Jegal expenses. Such but that ita Tempval from, ' Berlin unserv der it. was claimed-liav- e .the' '"conditions' named would rependitures, "ed to, increase and have been charged sult in the collapse of German curwrongfully to operating costs. at home and .abroad- It was also charged .that much of rency WOULD WORK IIAVOO; the defective equipment which the assert as The that such a proare experts road the using managements of III. urgumeui lor uic uccu ui ucicasu ceeding would work havoc with Ger-- , wage costs, could have been avoided man- economic interests and. promptlyif the roads had declared less liberal result In an advance of all commodldividends and used a proper propor-- ; ties to fabulous prices. "The impossible is Impossible, that ition of their earnings to establish refunds. all there la to it," said Herr Havenis placements " IO WASTFS T X mTI.ATTAV stein. g The following tabulation, represents The Norddeutsche Allgemeine those wastes estimated by the unions' owned by Hugo Stinnes says that witnesses and rfor which authorities once the gold reserve is outside the confines of the Reichsbank's vaults explanations as set forth in the body and placed under entente control in ..of the exhibit: the occupied zone its ultimate seizure "1. Modernizing locomotives. would then become a simple matter. Gross reparable deficiencies in the This newspaper estimates the voltractive power of the railways is ume of German currency held abroad pointed out and it is shown that at 20,000,000.000 marks, and that for-the by systematic application to imeign demands on Germany of all kinds locomotives of demonstrated total 95,000,000,000 marks. The value 0 provements such as superheaters, of the present gold reserve of brick arches, mechanical stokers as repreis marks computed and feed water heaters, there senting 18 per cent of Germany's curwould result an annual saving of rent issue. at least $272,000,000. CONFERENCE ARRANGED. "2. :Locomotive operation. The PARIS, April 20. British and coal the of railways' magnitude French military leaders, including bill is considered and certain of Marshal Foh, will confer at Hythe, the larger wastes calculated, and England, next Sunday with Premiers it is concluded that by use of bet-- , Briand and Lloyd George, it is said ter methods of coal purchase, coal inspection, careful receipt by newspapers here. The conversations, it is declared, will relat tq and efficient firing of the locomotives an annual saving could be ) military penalties to be placed on Ger- -effected of at least $50,000,000-"many in case she refuses to make repS arations payments due on May-Shop organization Improve Premier Briand, it Is declared by ments. The sad and almost inthe Echo de Paris, will insist that the credible inadequacy and British flag fly with the French triequipment of the railway defenseless the is color over the Ruhr district. reviewed, shops wastes considered, and it is conHOPE FOR SETTLE3IENT. LONDON, April 20. The Daily Tel- servatively estimated that byan--a-, . proper shop organization an of repa egraph. discussing the week-ennuat saving could be effected rations meeting of Mr. Lloyd George at least $17,000.000. and M. Briand, says: "4. Power plant fuel saving. "The premiers may be able to find ' The obsolete and wasteful condi- -' time to exchange views on other toption.of .the power plants in the ics, one of which is the .unfortunate railway' shops is considered and it misunderstanding regarding Tap. in this field th is estimated "The supreme council will have to possible savin of fuel would, by a way out that: will satisfy Amfind itself amount to an annual total erica's mandatory," continues ' , of $10,000,000. "The Japanese naturally think "5. Water consumption sav, the supreme council ought to that ings. The railroads' 'expenditure own its but they stand decisions, by in maintenance of way and struc-- r no inducement . to drift into a have ture is reviewed, the necessary serious quarrel with the Undted States wastes noted, and it is estimated this fragment of' rock and can d over4 that easily attainable savings in eastern seas. in the ' the consumption of water alone-FRANCE WITH TJ. S- would amount annually to $12. with no. direct Interest in . I - - - . , - - - tody ' -- -- xncinrxiKif:" - In sur- oh Sunday "thrc the-Utah-vai- , ,. . Zei-tun- i ; . j ,rnn". . r 1,090,-000,00- : ? , . - , 1 out-of-da- te -- J tht d. the-paper- . , 600,000. . - of supply savings.' The expenditure"" of the railways-, for supplies has been inquired in- to and the avoidable losses surveyed, and it is estimated that the-' wastes and abuses amount annual. ly to not less than $75,000,000. "7. Shop cost accounting savings. . 'Attention has been given to the matter of uniform railroad statistics and the use of efficient methods of cost accounting only,1 an annual saving would be feasible $o,the amount of $10,900,000. "8LAbor turnover savings. The .industrial losses due to unnecessary labor turnover and to inadequate training of personnel has been reviewed, and itis estimated that the avoidable wastes incident to labor turnover alone amounts to more than $40,000,000. "9. Loss and damage savings. into the Inquiry has been made loss and amount of the annual damage account of the railways, and into the preventable causes of such losses, and it is estimated! tha$ an annual saving might be-. effected to the amount of $90,ce -- . con-sider-t- f -- - " . ; 000,000. T"Total . . : " -- . - " . -- by-mo- vle ' - - - . I It will be noted that the avoidable wastes here listed are but partially represented in the accompanying money estimates. (Continued on Page Two.) j 4 Sacramento Man Calls' for Absolute Exclusion of Japanese Immigrants -- CRITICIZE AGREEMENT S. Held Foolish for Consenting to So Called TJ. Pact 1 he - WASHINGTON. April 20. Farmers from all parts of tha United States, meeting her today under the auspices of th National Farmers union, de- -l elded to take their fight for a reduction In freight rates direct to President Harding. This decision was reached after spokesmen for the farmer had conferred with members of the Interstate commerc commission to urge lower rates. The delegates apparently were disxatlafled with the outcome of lhla conference. Unable to market their own products, the farmers, spokesmen aald before th oommllon, are "virtually on a buyers strike. WOULD IIELP filTUATION. Commissioner MtChord naked. 'National Secretary Davta of the union whether with chean fr!rht rats far- - toxic and tear shells, smoke screens, toxic smoke ctouds and Invliible toxic fumes. said Professor Lewis. "We also may consider In this connection parallel defensive measures nuch as a gas mask for a whole battJeahlp- "An entire ship, however, be protected from gaes might and smokes by a gigantic gas mask cannLster or series of cannlstem over the ship's ventilating system. "Future battles will not be to the strong, but to the superior intelligence. r-piercing WASHINGTON. April Senator 0. and representatives from 11 far western states perfected an . org anJialion today with a view to finding a com- mon ground upon which they can work to solve the qutstion of Japanese immigration. United efforts by the state in dealing with the Japanese Immigration' problem was urged by Senator Johnson, of California, In addressing the conference which .was call! by the California deJegntlon. SWAMP WRITE RACE. V. R McCUtchr "of ?crmente. Cal., told the conf r renf' that unless the- Japmne immtgnvtlonproblem raji olre3 hy the abo!yte exclusion of the Japanese they would "inevlfa-bl- r white race. He trttnp. the had established birth they rate per thousand three ttrcea aj grai a that of the whites mnd that if further immigration were prohibited for 100 years there would be more Japanese than whites In California. CONTROL RICH LANDS. USS 1GE0RGE 2 - - ihrrrrpnt lrncii'W'ra crruld maret'TJielr products at profit "Posjrlbly not,- - Mr. Davis ' reptled. "but a freight rate reduction would be one factor and it would be foolish to reject any plan that would reduce the farmers' loss simply because It does not solve thHr whole problem. M AN Y FA RM ICRS . PRi:KENT. Farmers from various sections of "The Japanese today control the country affiliated with the Nation of all the rich irrtrted Undi al Farmers union gathered here to of Calif id. omU." Mr. McClatchy to a conference three days day for "They win not and cannot make Amdiscuss variou affecting Sharp Floor Board Slices erican problem cUliers, their welfare. The meeting was called Under the S. Barrett, president of the gentleman i by Charles Man's Business Through agreement, Mr. McCUtchy added, union- there ha been no upentlon or reIn opening the conference, Mr. Bar Left Heel striction of Immigration. rett urged the creation of a Joint con"We have done the extraordinary into committee to Inquire gressional "of i: and suirgest remedial measures for.the George Huas. proprietor of th Cen- thing." onhe,conllnued. of our eoverelgnpajwlng situation. Hehts of tral Carriage works on Hudson avenue, Japan agricultural MONEY AND CREDIT DENIED. suffered the low of part of his left determining who and how many may be "Monet and credit have been denied jfoot at noon today when, his automo- - come In. The agreement should rarmers despite tne tact mat more tile crashed against, telephone post abro rated. Why shouM we l money was available in iszo than in at Twenty-fourt- h street and Jefferson surrender a supreme prerogative ofMr. Barrett said, any previous year," avenue after a coliUlon wllh another this character which la to our. man!Dr. J. Dwlghl fest detriment and ultimately will be adding: automobile our ondolngr"It Is a notorious fact also that ag Harding. operated by JOIINM5N CHAIRMAN. ricultural organizations have not been Hues was driving south on Jefferson afforded, have joot been affected by venue. 'Dr. Harding was anvtng east l Pnator Johnson, Republican. Callthe transportation systems of thei on Twenty-fourtstreet. The accl - fern la. web made chairman of It country the facilities given corpora- dent occurred at the exact center of organization and directed to appoint tions to distribute the products of the the intersection. Motorcycle Offler C. an executive committee composed pi farm." E. Lelaer reported, and the Husa car, one senator and one representative Mr. Barrett urged Immediate en struck broad Ride by the other car, was from each of the eleven state. Caliactment of enabling Oregon. Washington, Idaho. for a distance of, nearly 50 fornia. lams" in "a generous sptrlt and with- carried Utah. Arizona. New Mexico, Nevada, on a into pole feet, telephone crashing corner out nullifying reservations," Oklahoma Texa. and Colorado. Intersecof the th southeast ' or Senator Johnson announced that he tion. PUNISH COMMUNISTS appoint the executive commitThe pole, which bore a street light, would tee at an early date and begin efThe was its from foundation. moved FOR BLAST ATTEMPT light was shattered, and th crah forts to unite other slates with th,e work. He added that the problem was caused a short in the fire alarm sys- one of mutual interest demanding Imbox aarm so that a, call from the BERLIN. April 10. Eleven Com- tem, mediate attention. was sent station. on into the the munists convicted of having made the STATES ' pole SLICED IS IlKLL recent attempt to blow up the Victory Within th lat three months, Mr. The Impact of the collision. Officer monument in the Konlgsplat were Lelser said. ?vtral slates had floorMcClatchy, the reported. sprung ahown & desire to cooperate with Calitoday sentenced to long terms of im- boards In One Hubs automobile. the The in enacting prisonment In the penitentiary. land bilU aluminum edged, cut fornia evidence implicated Max Holtz. on of the boards, to slmllar in Calithat eJlced recently Mr. Huas passed ahoe and of the alleged leaders of the Com- through flesh and bone, In fornia,and he Idaho, Oregon cutting nearly added, land bill had been munist uprising in. middle Germany, through Jn Husa proposed off. Mr. all of heel who was arrested In Berlin. April 15. the on but action fbem legislatures, hosto Huss the Herr Talhelmer. editor of the Rote Dr, Harding rushed had been postponed Indefinitely beFahene- (red flag), the organ of the pital. cause of the telegrams from WashIs scene considered The of crash the Communists, has been placed under automo-bllLst- a ington staying that such action by tUr officers and careful traffic by arrestttes would embarrs-s- s the federal to be the most dangerous Interoo section In town. Both Jefferson ave- government. In the house today BepresenUtlf HAYS ANXIOUS TO etrec are nue and wenty-fourth Democrat, CaUforcIa. Droryor- Raker, time faat easy by HUMANIZE SERVICE paved making on both streets. The ed an amendment to the constitucornsr has such a bad name that a tion providing that no child "hereafn United Htates of certain group of Weber college stu- ter born in theshall WASHINGTON. April JO. Definite dents be citito eHgibl parentage on noon of hour the apend part In the United steps towardInformation of a welfare fcutes unlei the corner with th desire to be close zenship' estabthe postofflce both parents are eligible to become department an as accident such of observers Just lishment will be taken by Postmaster took place today. citizens of th United States. General Hays tomorrow at a conferoo . officials Police recog. ence here with the presidents and nlzed thedepartment and pothe traffic danger secretaries of the various postal em- liceman has stationed there with FRENCH YOUNG MEN been of The unions. the purpose ployes' to warning driver. BETTER PHYSICALLY meeting, it was announced, will be to a view Observers declare that cutting cordraw out views of the employes a to ners is a common practice and few means for development of the new dedown for the intersection. Th PAR partment along the "hamanlring slow April ja P.eports show general practice seeroa to be to race that theIF,rnilitsry c'.a.s of lines" Mr. Hays has outlined. tali el '.the other fellow across. to the colors Apr:l. ).a viewdurtr.g - OO ed 210.009 men, which is more than HARDING TO SPEAK TS per cent of youths 2C yers of it ON PAPER'S HOLIDAY YOUTHFUL SOPRANO who are subject to military rervtce. SETS HIGH RECORD Thti th first time that such a high percentage of ejfectivrs hare WASHINGTON. April tO. Presiand rewpepers attribute It 13 In the us of alcohol, the MINNEAPOLIS. Minn.. April !0. a dent Harding ha anaccepted an Invitadecreae address in - New Appearing in her first recital last spread of port in France and imtion to deliver York City an May 23 at an anniver- night. Edna La Vern Priede, Min proved living conditions en French of the New Yorle neapolis eoprano. etAbr.ihed what ia j tarma. sary celebration o Commercial, one of the oldest news-pap- eald to be a record for coloratura in the country. when" she reached "b" flat! singing" oo . night and Mondayhe'morning CHICAGO, April 20. Mystery wanted two occaaiona On first the the death' of Miss Marie a glass of water, rounding in while the and cafe, Vance. . daughter of Dr. William W. complained that he, had a splitting CorVance, of Glencoe, Tuesday, Ied The last time that he came oner Hoffman' to exhume her body. headache. care was about 2:45 o'clock to the on in Los Miss Vance died Angeles was He morning. Monday Aprif 5th, a week before she wan sup-to under thei influence ofapparently either liquor posed to have been married, there or drug, Jones said. He borrowed 12 f u wealthy Calif ornian. Jones and insisted that the latter The body brought to Chicago for from Lake his coat a security. He was or burial was' exhumed at the request wmie in tne care, can ea the girl's father who aald hev,.believed for Sv cupand He drank the cof- coffee. of mMKir, nr.rr,in ..ih counter with lunch set the at and had been concealed. The first exam fee, time to ination indicated, according to Mr. his head in his hands. From was Jones time he prevailed groaned. Hoffman, that the father's suspicions upon by Hemenway to take the coat. were correct. PLANS TO END IT WEEK TO GET FACTS, "It will be a week," said Coroner As he was about to leave, HemenHoffman, "before we can determine way aald. "Jonaey, I never will pay you whether the cause of death was corthat $2.00. I'm going to end it." Jones Los Angeles au- said - that Hemenway drew an autorectly given by theI. can thorities. However, say there are matic pistol part way out of his pocket. some sinister and mysterious elements it was the stuff in him "I that will have to be cleared up before ratherthought himself that was talking, than I am satisfied that the truth has been and I didn't pay much attention to reached." him," Jones said. "He had shown me Miss Vance's fiance, according to the gun in & similar manner on two her father, had built a bungalow in different occasions." which he and his prospective bride he tried to get HemJones said were to reside. It was ready for oc- enway to go that hotel and get Into to the cupancy when, on the eve of the wed- bed. that he promised Hemenway ding, he is said to have vanished. Miss would Just take a ride to the end of Vance became ill and died a few days Twenty-fift- h street. and would then ' later. to bed. He left the cafe. return and go The body arrived at Chicago In a DRIVER'S STORY TAXI was not sealed copper casket which a taxi Wilkenaon. Claude the of because presumption knew Hemenway, said he driver, who opened of a happened to contagious be that the girl had died driving past the Utah cafe as Hemdisease. oo enway emerged from the door. Hemenway walked aa though he was very PLEBISCITE FOUND sick, and had difficulty in entering his Wilkenaon said. Wilkenaon, so HARDLY NECESSARY car, far as has been determined, was the last man who saw. Hemenway alive, 20. of USE OF DRUGS STOCKHOLM, April League who . have been J. J. nations delegates Domet, Hemenway's room mate, studying questions relative to the fu- was one of the first witnesses. He said ture status of the Aland islands have that Hemenway had been ill for sev decided that a plebiscite should not eral days and had complained of fever be arranged for the inhabitants of tha and of pains In his head. In answer archipelago, says the Geneva corres- to County Attorney David Wilson's pondent of the Dagens Nyheter of question, "Did. the deceased us this city.. drugs?" Domet answered that he had The league's delegates are said by never seen Hemenway use drugs. In the correspondent to have agreed that answer to another question, he said only in recent years has there been he had seen white crystals in Hemenany movement for union of the Aland. way's possessions but could not say Islands .with Sweden, and even now whether or not they had been drugs. here is said to be only a minority When James Jonea, the waiter, was among the Swedes which Is outspoken testifying, he said that Hemenwa told In a desire for a union with Sweden. him that he had been using drugs. On the other hand, the delegates are Dr. Roy Wl'son described the cause said to consider it necessary that cer- of Hemenway's death as "a "France, the matter and in. strong, sympathy tain guarantees "be- given the popu- ragged gunshot wound." He saidlarge. that with President Harding's attack on the lation of the islands on the language the body had been dead for several Is forecast hours when found, and that th uistol league of nations, will throw her and trade questions," and It weight on the side of the western re- that" they will draw the attention of had either been held very close, or at a distance. There were no powdef public. We shall probably use our In- the league's council to what they a future. coloniza- bums, danger-ofluence with Japan, and a satisfacnor was the hair about the tion of Finnish immigrants in the wound scorched. tory solution may be 'expected. The paper further disclaims any island. READ FTNDS BODY no British desire to use" the Mesopotamia J. G. Read, who was the first witness . of mandate to the the PANAMA THREATENS detriment. called, described the nndlng of Hem . United States. body.. He said he had depart oo WAR ON COSTA RICA enway'a ed from Ogden aoout i:jo o'clock for the mouth of the canyon, where he had an appointment with some sheep MOVIE FRAUD PLOT SAN JUAN. Costa Rica. April 20. men. Near the bottom or the dugway, UNCOVERED IN EAST Panama continues to make warlike and on the right side of the road, a preparations along the Costa PJcan car was parked. "1 first thought that frontier, it is reported here. The Costa the car had been abandoned but as CLEVELAND7 O.. 4pril 20. An In- Rican government, it is asserted,, is I drove past, I aaw a roan seated on vestigation started by. threats, com- ready ""to, enter into negotiations with the right clde of the rear seat. I drove Panama, for the purpose ,of reaching on. transacted my business at the SanK plaints and protests received film exchanges in the United States a satisfactory solution of the boundary the man tarium. &nd returned. asSeeing has resulted in the discovery, of a plot dispute' 'between the two countries. n was when same in the position. OOto defraud theatre managers through- j 'i I passed some 20 minutes before, I out South America and Mexico of FRANCE PAYS HONOR went over to the car to wake him up. hundreds of thousands of dollars, poWhen I opened the rear door of the lice and pestof f ice lofficials announcTO DEAD AMERICAN car I found that he was dead. Two . ed today. , men in a truck chanced to be passing Two Spaniards and an Argentinian, and I called to tnem. iney came over held, pending investigation of thefts CHERBOURG. France. Anrll 20. to the car. It was about acven o'clock. of a large number of valuable films, An impressive ceremony took place I Immediately notlfiM th aherlff. are charged with using the mails to ere yesterday in nonor or 2800 AmeriHHOT THROUGH HEAD . defraud. can" soldiers whose bodies have been Sheriff Richard ItPincock said that Numerous checks from South. Am- assembled and are waiting transpor- upon wa found that his arrival. erican and Mexican theatre managers tation to the United States. Patriotic Hemenway had been shot through the in. payment for films which it ts al- societies saluted the caskets and battalion of marines rendered honors. leged were not shipped, were seized. (Continued on Page Twt.) - 3 j for the protection of battleships at sea against an enemy's poisonous fumes by the Installation of a faa mafk" for a adwhole ship was outlined in dress to officers and student of th military academy here today by Professor W. Iee Lewis, head of of the chemistry department Northwestern university and Inventor of the deadly gas "lewisite." perfected Just at the world war closed. "We fare the possibility In the naval warfare of the future of to Farmers Quiet Sunday POLVT, N. T.. April 20. armo- : . WEST Young Woman Says Salt 'President of Union Says Discrimination Is Shown Laker Was Unusually BRIDE-ELEC- T RACE IS CLAIM IN KEXT WAR d on "6.-Servi- FOR FAIR DEAL Waiter Testifies Hemeriway Battle for Lower Freight Rates Carried to PresiTold Him He Planned to End it All dent Harding STORY RELIEF TELLS GIRL IS. WANTED PRHO DEATH . -- -- CY WITNESSES -- de-clar- TIM CRASH WITH DOCTOR er.f-elth- ao-call- ed th ed - - h "co-operati- ve -- - anti-alie- n ... - -T- auto-mobllis- ta for-eig- been-cure- I er , above high GREAT CHURCH IN "c oo ' ' - MONTREAL BURNED NATIONAL ATHEM BILL INTRODUCED Fire of MONTREAL, orlKia destroyed the Church of April 20. NATIONS TO PREVENT' RETURN OF CHARLES VIENNA, April : 0. Guarantee to a return Hungarian against throne of former L:r.rcr Charle t ? tin-kno- " the Nativity hero during the nisht. make the btar bpangled,' banner The los wtl41 estimated at JF0O.Q0O. The church was a rer reduction of the me notw iy cathedral la Florence. Italy. LInthlcum of Maryland. 'i'U-sca- y uepre-emauT.- wj the j Juf6.su,u; at Ptlgrade r.j to CjM-ho.?;ovak- nudapeux tuvfrrmn says the Sojtli t m ; v. bv r.u- lh f o : a |