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Show , thb weather. Sunday, partly cloijdy, mild temperature; Monday, rain ar snow and coldar. , Almost any project that is caiTjin u"t ran bn put through with a Tribune Want Al. Local Sattiament Prlcaa. Mlver Lead Copper St 24 IJ '5 (vathode.-- 0Ja 18 VOId. 300, NO. 159. SALT LAKE CITY, SUNDAY MORNING, MARCH 21, 1920. my - ' FIVE CENTS 82 PAGES m n rra 4Jo GERMAN GENERAL STRIKE IS REPORTED AS ENDED French Give Pussyfoot Scant Help CONFEREES 2000 KILLED Exile Kaiser Acts Oddly; Nerves Going 20. (By Press.) The week: of Strain following the events in Germany has apparently made a great Impression upon the mental and physical condition of the former German emperor. Hie nervousness and sleeplessness are lucres? in lng. He behaves In a manner, whidh seems utterly strange to his fdiron ts. Where formerly he drank only Archives Is light wines at meal time, tbd former monarch now calls for wfho during the Intervale of his wood sawing. Hie nervous habit of straddling chairs has Increased The exile's anxiety is heightened by the illness of his wife, who Or a long time has Is been a suffers with mild attacks of heart disease. These recurred in frequently this week. The only 'outing of the former kalserln ete spent in the sunshine in where she lies In a She la under the March 20. After a WASHINGTON, car of Dr. Poerstner, months troublous sojourn In the eight a long time her personal with Germany was the treaty senate, back In th keeping of President Wilson tonight, with a not appended saying that AMERONQEN, .March TO Situation Believed to Be Revolving Slowly in Favor of Ebert Government, London Says. Allies Prepared to Ad vance Troops if Order Is Not Restored Within Period. Limited a PARIS, March 20. (Havaa.) Gustav Nooks, who tendered his resignation as minister of defense to President Ebert of Germany yes- terday, has decided to remain In' office, the Social Democrat ar Democratic members 6t the national assembly having given xilm t a voto of confidence. PARIS, March 20. The situation has so improved In Bsrtm, according to news to the German delegation, that the Ebert government is returning to the Capital, an agreement with thv Independent Socialists having .been reached. " The general strike has ended, but the situation in the Ruhr district It woje. All towns there are held by oomm uniats, and the proclamation of a soviet government is expected Sunday or Monday, the advices say. Copenhagen. PARIS, March 20. Ten thousand armed workmen are concentrated e at (twenty miles northwest of Lelpsic) and the reichswehr staff is negotiating with them, says a Havas dispatch from Bolshevist elements Stuttgart. among the workmen, however, are making a settlement difficult. Halle-on-Saal- LONDON, March SO. The SOI Burial of Document State Department Possible; White House Silent. Resolution to Declare War Status at End House; Pyented Leaders Defer Action. Sden, general off, ac- cording to Berlin advice received bere The government, it it this afternoon. elated, has accepted the workers de concessions mands, including Socialists, --which will to be made public shortly. Two thousand persons have been killed fo date In the fighting Incident to the German revolutionary movement and disturbances of the ngat week, it is estimated in Berlin, according to the Exchange Telegrapjt correspondent in that city. ;, There are any indications, according to a dlspatn from Cologne today, that the allies are preparing to advance their concentryftlo.t of tioops at Strasabueg and Mts farther into Germany if the country does not quiet down soon, the at Exchange Telegraph correspondent Amsterdam reports. Conditions In Germany are expected to yet much worse before they Improve, In ihe opinion of Britinu foreign office based on latest dispatches. offl-c.a- ls, Confidence Expressed. ' Th gflUals express confidence, ever, that soma sort of ceptral government will ultimately prevail. It would appear this belief Is based mors On desire than on Information forwarded by British representatives in Cermanv. These teh of the lnereaslng representatives number of towns being taken over by newlv organised soviets. Fond I expected to be the deciding factor, and the Kbert government ha requested the all'es to maintain their present system of supplying foodstuffs, which have become inadequate. With the aupply virtually suspended, many towns are beginning to feel the pinch. For tn present tho allies have not changed their attitude that, so far as It has gone, the chaos is entirely an internal affair of Germany, but it Is slated that It would Itkelv erase to be an Internal affair should the monarchists or red gain the upper hand The belief is expressed by officials that neither would be discarry oi t t..e Versailles agree-den- t, posed to wbl-would necesslisi the exertion of power by the aii.es tv lore how- e. The German national axemoly will continue It sessions at Stuttgart until condition, at Berlin are normal, sava a (Continued. on Pago i, Column 2) -- J? ratification bad been refqeed. What the presidents next move would be remained conjectural. White House officials declined to comment. Th general feeling of officials elsewhere about th capttol, - however, was that Mr. Wilson probably would let the treaty He on his desk while the bitter controversy It has raised Is fought out in the political campaign. Th treaty was taken back to tbs White House early in th day by a bevy of officials and messenger from the senate, an order adopted last in puruance-tLloyd night after a fourth vote on ratifications. had failed to muster the necessary Class .War, It was delivered to Secretary Tumulty, who receipted for It in the name Declare. pf the president. Scarcely had the bulky document passed when physically out of the capitol LONDON, March 20. Keen resent- some of the senators who worked for ment is felt by moderate labor leaders ratification began a movement to recall over the attack made upon the Labor it and try once more on party by Premier Lloyd George when However, tht prediction or leAuors he launched proposals for a Liberal-Unioni- both sides was that ro proposal for anever would take coalition on Thursday. They other reconsideration ' . declare the premier was preaching serioua form. class war" im outlining his reasons Ran Slowed Up. for the new political alignment. The unsettled state of senate opinion, Arthur Henderson, leader of the La- nevertheless, had the effect of slowing bor party in' the house of commons, has up the plans of the Republican leaders for passage of a declaration of peace, and issued a ijfatoment saying: It waa decided, after many conferences, "Labor accepts the challenge of Mr. that the resolution for that purpose We ara arranging to probably would not be urged befote late Lloyd George. next week. Previously the purpose had appea)not only to organized workers, been to tiring It UP Monday and Press it but to every sympathizer. The Labor for early action In making this decision, the majorltv party aims to raise a fund to enable it managers in the senate are understood in part by undets fight the cdalition and proposes to to have been Influenced termined factor in tne house, which also 'ask for subscriptions totaling $2,000,000 would have to act on a peace resolution in anticipation of an early election." and whose leaders balked at a similer Most of the last December. The Manchester Guardian, probably proposal members of tne house foreign ranking hands the whose in indeaffairs committee, of Britains weightiest exponent resolution would fall, were out of pendent liberalism, professes a good peace assoinformed not their had deal of sympathy with Premier Lloyd town and of their attitude George in bis political plans. It says ciates During the day the senate wasa not in that ne ia by nature and sympathy a session, but the question of peace Liberal, but has got into the wrong box. declaration was raised in the house by The problem, for him is how to get Representative Tinkham, Republican, introduced a declaraout. The Guardian thinks the premier's Massachuaet.e, who Wltn-oml referred It a had resolution tory denunciations of labor in his address debate to the foreign affairs comto coalition Liberals Thursday are not mittee. to be taken as much more than a George Preaching Moderate o Leaders ut rhetorical exercise. Follows Knox Plan. The Daily News, which has long been In Its general provision it follows the bitter toward the premier, considers "if resolution Knox. Republican. a new party is produced by fusion, it Pennsylvania,of Senator which is backed by the Rewill owe little to Premier Lloyd publican senate leaden. Both provide for repeal of the declaration of war. for George. with settlement Germany and for The Times considers the speech real- certain declaration of International policy. ly meant "Help me fight laWr, which a Until some affirmative action Is taken is socialism," which, the newspaper by congress or the president to end the is doctrine poor, false and war Btatua legally, the technical position says, "a dangerous." of the country remains, officials sav. Just The Telegraph Insists that the coali- what it wts the day the armistice Was 'Var legislation continues In tion must be maintained, as no party signed. force, and. under the war department has a clear majority. of the situation, the presiiterpretation hi It also supports the premier's atti- dent war powers as retains tude toward the Labor party. to keen American troops in whatever posts In Germany he tuinke necessary to enforce the armistice term. MEXICANS PROTEST The president has expressed emphatic a technical peace disapproval CARRANZA MONEY status by anyof securing method except raiifl-atiof the treaty. Senator generally do not WASHINGTON, March 20. Work- believe he has altered that position, and mens societies in Mexico have peti- the Republican senate leaders confidently pass a peace resolutioned President Carranza for imme- expect that If they tion he will veto It. Tney hope, however, diate withdrawal of the "vales secure enough Ixmocratic support to the latest issue of paper to repass It in both house by the necessary fibf because money, hardships its circumajority. lation brings upon laboring men, acReturned. from to advices Document Mexico to cording City duy. The currency situation wag said Senate officials who have had phy steal to be growing more serious daily. custody of tlie treaty since July 16. when The workers complained that there President fiVilron himself carried it Into was difficulty in getting ebange from the senate chamber, lost no time today in to the merchants for the currency, dealers obevtng the mandate to return It several White House. Accompanied by wishing to avoid giving metallic secreA. Sanderson, messengers, George They also said the vale had al- tary of the senete, took It to the executive 75 cent in ready depreciated per value, offices bright end early this morning end resulting in a corresponding increase in hud to wait nearly an hour before Mr. Tumulty appeared do receipt for it. the cost of living. The big volume, wrapped in brown paBecause of lack of fractional curand Itpund up wltn red tape, at first rency. it was stated, employers fre- per wss taken Into the ofnee of Rudolph quently combine wages in vales for a Forster, executive clerk of the W h.te group of men, leaving them to find House, but Mr. Sanderson Ueciined to a receipt signed by rhange to distribute among themselves. leave it until heto hod fiVhen tne president. the secretary The worker suggest that the governwent a tain arrived Mr Tumulty more a ment mint copper coins, Iding with the ptepluent. heAlmost for an that thev appreciate the fact that sil- eiapsed before he returned to find hour tne ver Is too high in price to make ruvb on Column 4, advisable. X.) Fags (Continued coinage on two-thir- currency. 1 Commission Appointed by Wilson Suggests Joint Organization of Employers and Labor. Sixteen Frank Penalties Are Imposed at Once; Appeals to Be Taken; Michiganders Seat Is Not Vacated. Codefendants Also Found Guilty of Criminal Conspiracy Elections. State in of Acceptance Principle of Collective Bargaining Is Among the Recommendations. WASHINGTON. Mych 20. Joint orm and of management ganization as a means of preventing ployee and of securing coopera live effort throughout American industry la proposed by the lndustifial conference appointed by President Wilson in s report to the president, made pubUa here today. The conferees in their report s at that they have modified the tentative plan of machinery to adjust disputes in general Industry by conference, conciliation, inquiry and arbitration, announced by the conference on December 19, DU, and that they have endeavored to develop methods of prevention rather then adjustment of labor difficulties. modified plan, devised since .the .Th conference reconvened last January 12. ft is Said, makes machinery available for collective iiargainlng with only InciTn dental apd limited arbitration. plan has been extended to cover disputes affecing public utilities other than steam railroads, and also to government and other public employees. the In addition, the report analyze of Industrial relations development women child in Industry, hours of labor, and labor, housing, wage, prof thrift agencies. Inflation and high cost of living, agriculture, unemployment and a publio employment clearing house. Tragedjr in Chicago Revealed on Recovery of Womans Corpse. , 20.-E-- g, - 1 olhes-senato- (Continued on Fags rs (Continued on Page 2, Column 1.) 4. Column 3.) fr lias a efficient and system plcte of records and knows positivel' the facts regarding the circulation of his paper And when every publisher is willing to give these facts to advertisers without dissimulation It will be because every publisher is a member of the Audit Bureau, of Circulations. But all publishers have not an efficient system of records and all are not guileless. To protect themselves against unfair competition and to inform advertisers in regard to their business methods, above board publishers join the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Ad- vrtisers know that no unfair publication can . qualify for membership. Every straightforward paper may belong to the Audit Bureau of Circulations. t Most of them do belong. The Tribune is one of them. WUEW EiVEIvI Cl 7EDV PUBLISHER com-wn- -- V N . en GRAND RAPID8. Midi., March 20 Truman IL Newberry, Junior United States senator from Michigan, was today convicted by a Jury of having conspired criminally in ISIS to violate- - tne election laws. He woe sentenced by Judge Clarence W. Sessions to two years Imprisonment and fined $10,000, released os bond pending an appeal, and at once Issued a statement declaring bis intention to retain his eat in ths senate unless that body decides otherwise or tn supreme court upholds his conviction. Sharing the fat of ths senator were his brother, John 3. Newberry, and AC' teen campaign managers. Including Frederick Cody. New York, and Paul H. King. Detroit Both theee men received the iimfPketlTence-'Vlttheir chief. Charles A. Floyd. Detroit, was also sentenced' to two years in ths penitentiary, but he was fined only half a much a Newberry. The brother was fined $10,0ji and was on of four who were not sentenced to Leavenworth. Th lightest e. sentence went to George S. Ladd of Mass., and he was fined 100'.. , -- (Chicago Tribune Special Service March .20. Old Lake CHICAGO, Michigau is beginning to give up some 8fthe secrets held in its bosom all winter. The body of as unidentified girl was discovered in the frozen sand at the Oak street bathing C. C. beach. At first there was a belief it might be 'the body, of Miss Jeanne de Charge. Kay, tha heiress who disappeared from Hull bouse Christmas week and of whom not the aligbtest trace has sines ' W AS HINgVx March beea found. Examination shows that W. H. King, in a letter to Chairman Cumthis is not the remains of Miss de Kay. mings of the Democratic national comIt is rocalled that an unknown girl mittee. strongly urgea the establishment walked out over the ice hummocks last at gait Lake City of intermoimtaln headwinter until sho came to an open apace, quarters of tne Democratic committee Causes of Industrial Unrest. and the appointment of C. C. Richarda of The causes of Industrial unrest are set when she plunged in, her body disapas regional director in charge. forth Salt as including the rise in the cost pearing under the ice. Two policemen Tne senator's idea is to establish at of living, unrestrained speculation, specHalt Ink a Democratic headquarters tacular instance of excessive profits, ex- witnessed this deliberate suicide, and from which can be directed the presidenof it was and mleus accumulation near the spot where the body tial campaign In Utah and other moun- cessive wealth, inequality and readjustment of tain and intermountain states. ws found today. of ideas release and wage schedules, If this suggestion is carried out, Mr. emotions by the war, social- revolution, A few weeks ago another woman Richards would I ecome the representatheories imported frbm Europe, th tive of Chairman Cummings in the direc- arv free speech is restricted, the walked rapidly out over the ice until belief that tion of the Democratic campaign In th of employment, fear of un- she came to an mountain states, and under him would intermlttency unnecessarily airhole, when she high infant work the state chairmen of the states . employment,In industrial centers, lose of plunged in. Lifesavers searched tbe Included in Ida district, The senator mortality contact large industrial unit urges the selection of Mr. Richarda be- - pergonal culmination of a growing be spot with grappling hooks, but could cause of his political experience snu hie an(j of both employer and not recover her body. .The body fqund the on lief part peculiar fitness for the position in view. employees that a readjustment is necesjs evidently that of one of these He advises the selection of Salt I a lie City to a wholesome continuity of their tody women. as headquarters because of its central lo- sary effort." united cation and its accessibility, being the The body was that of a woman about Industrial problems vary not only with hub of the lntermountain territory. each Industrv, the report says, but in 20. It had evidently been in the ice "Therefore the pack for several wetxts and in the sand establishment. each 'Mr. Richards said last night that the place to begin battle with misquite as long. There, were no corsets, the establishment of such headquarters In strategic Is within industrial understanding hat or coat, indicating that it was that Salt Lake would mean the concentrating plant itself. Primarily, the settlement of a person who had run hastily from here of the campaign direction over the must come from the bottom, not from a house near the scene of the suicide. slates of Utah, Colorado, Wyoming, Mon- the top - The conference, in exprrseing In life she must have been a beautiful tana. Nevada and Arizona. lour years Its approval of employee representaago the regional headquarters for the tion. says it 1 not a field for legislagirl, evidently from a family of refinedistrict were located at Denver. tion. because th form which such repment. The district thereabouts is inSenator King and from resentation should take may vary in habited by wealthy people. weatern-atsxte- a, together with other lead- every piant. For this reason tothe recomers of tbe partv, are understood to have mendation la directed solely managers decided that Halt lake is the geographiand employees. LEMP HEIRESS KILLS If the Joint organization of manage- cal center of the district and with a Sana- - Senator King Asks National Committee to Place Richards in Local two-third- . LONDON, March 20. Dr. Wolfgang Eapp, who headed the revolutionary movement in Berlin, la reported to be at Hamburg, in an Exchange Telegraph dispatch from strike in Germany has been called 1 March 20. William E. Johnson has inaugurated a, prohibition campaign In this country. He addressed a Paris audience for the first time on prohibition this evening, under the auspices of the Blue Cross society. This society advocates absolute prohibition, as pompared with the Antialcoholic League of Prance and a newly organized gToup of sixty deputies of the French chamber, who repudiate the "heavier" alcoholic drinks but advocate wines and beer. He fipoko to rather a small audience, composed for the most part Of women, and his words were received silently and without enthusiasm or criticism. Mr. Johnson has just returned from six weeks in northern Africa, 400 miles south of Constantine, Algeria, where he was ordered by his physicians after his nervous breakdown In London. PARIS, HERSELF WITH PISTOL ST. LOUIS. Mo., March 20. Mrs. Elsa Leinp Wright, one of the heirs to the $10,000,000 estate of her father, William A. Leinp, St. Louis brewer, and whose remarriage thirteen days ago tn New York to the husband she had divorced created a stir in social circles, ended her life here today by shooting herself through the heart as she lay ia bed. The tragedy oeeurred in her home. No. 13 Horten place. A verdict of zuicide was rendered at the luquert late todav, although the coroners jury did not hear the testimony. . After viewing the body, the jurors signed a verdict blank, upon which the verdict was later written by Deputy Coroner Dever, who declared the procedure was not unusual. RECEIVE DETAILS OF MURDER OF FOLEY WASHINGTON. March 20 Details of the killing of Daniel S. Foley, an American, at Dos Naranjos. Mexico, were received today In a report from Consul Dsw-ao- n at Tampico, where the body, showing sixty-thre- e machete wounds, was brought for burial. Kolev was employed as an oil well driller bv an American oil company operating in the Mexican field. He had trouble with a Mexican employe who attacked him with a knife, th report said, and Foley shot and killed hie assailant. The Mexican's friend then attacked Foley. who was surrounded and hacked to death. His fumlly live in Houston. Tex., wnere t.ie first word of the incident was received. h Etur-brldg- Passes Into History. The trial passed Into history with gcat velocity, Tlie jury was ready with it verdict at 11.1! a re. Less than half an hour later they had been dlacharged by ' of t.ie the court, after freeing sixty-eigeighty-fl- v There was a defendants. brief respits for luncheon and then U e senator and his sixteen associates ve-- e brought lnio court again. News of tne convictions had been spread around the city and the room was Jammed. Ordered to stand before the bar. th men ranged themselves In a crescen, the senator on the left and hie brother next. The stir of ranging the men before fl.e bar died away to absolute stillness. In quiet tones Judge Sessions asked if afiy of the men wished to say anything before sentence was pronounced. They stood mute. Then th court, in even voice, formula of senread the tence. Truman TT. Newberry, in your case If Is the Judgment of the court that you be confined in the penitentiary at Leavenworth for the full time and period of two said the years and be fined flli.060, judge. No one stirred a the audience cangbS the words that showed the Judge had addressed against the principal defenuset this heaviest sentence allowed by the U . ht time-honor- Received in Silence. There was a deep breath or two as the same measure of Justice was meted out to King and Cody. On or t.o of the defendants stirred a bit Floyd waa given a slightly less severe each but succeeding sentem penalty, to prison or heavy fin was received Is stoical silence. Immediately after the sentences ha I been passed, Frank C. Dailey of Inrtfar-- i spoils special assistant attorney and chief prosecutor of the already famous case, wiped the slate dean by moving tne dismiss?) of ten of tbe 135 respondents to the indictment who bal He also moved tea pleaded "no contest of Traieiso d'sc'iarge of Klmer 12. Whit City, who was given a severance becau-- . n Dait--y a iluwve-goof illness, and of James contractor, who went to South Am lea on business before government officials could serve him with a warrant. Ninety days were granted th attorneys for the convicted men tn which to perfect an appeal. Then court adjourned. -- Defense Testimony Fatal we Testimony offered by the Ufn the determining factor in bringing th of veroiet to the guilty. jurv "Without Paul King testimony tbsl ha told Senator Newberry the campaign would cost 50 000. the government had a weak rase. and. without the King-Nsone o' berry letter, no case at ali, said th Juror. "We coqld find no othe-wa- r, however, after the defense He had supplemented th scanty government that Newberry had taken an active proof shown bv hi pert in the campaign beanddirected almost own writings that - every Important move." sr.,d "W e are all with you. senator. several freed defendants as thev crowd---s 1 Th chef figure in th around He wile, brother grasped their hands end son were wnn him. Jlrs of t.ie verriut only to showing the eftecis tb determined composure with ah', h ale met the tvarul co.idutenoe of .. ef othvr fxv Mint tear tlure were ppprere-- T.l l.o had f lot i only among til wiv b en ireed E nnmtutired he wms 1 Juuti K. Spnvv the ci fet !'-- . ri.vy b. w - Nwm -i Postmasters Named. Special te The Trthuae March WASHINGTON, been appotatd Utah. Hetncr, Pettit ha 20 John posricsr at l .(CenULtea I tn psg i 2. 3-- ) |