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Show ''S '1, ' 1611.1"1"..."......"." . , - I''' eoweistenS ineiweett la the Nees will keep pep side et the lediPer,. , : ' tvegliblatto. E ,,. ..,..,,m.Emeosn000EnomEoommb rs p ti E ,,, D, J. 4 '1 7 . rhInf'int " -- Tent , SATVIRDAY . IT LAKE UTAH CITY TEN ife.n-A- ut .1 wed . ' r (Special Correspondence). in OMEWHERE the ?did lands, , ' 4England, Sept 13-.-1 have to tell, çi as calmly .as possible, the inside story of the great miracle of this war and to describe the man bes ' .. hind the miracle. It is the story of shells, Millions upon millions of elicits, and therefore it is the stery of the Somme and of Vimy and of blessines.. It is the eery of victory won at the darkest and most tertible moment of defeat. It explains with equal predaion the present position of David Lloyd . George of the battle time in sad the present-posititIt is the dominant. dominating, d6mlnTrance. tering Fact of the history Of the war. One man has sent nearly ten million heavy high the pact two yeare.,----ecoloeive shells to- the- front-Iai is the same man who ha l perpetrated the most His name la Godfrey cheerful, hoax of the war. John Boyle, Viscount Chetwynd, civil engineer, formcornet in the band at San Angelo, Texas, er end deputy eheriff of Tom Green eourty, retired r, eighth holder of the year old title, tyrant, genius and master of the His official position is managing director of shells- lime s national shell filling factory, situated He is an expert in the German would like to see. shell chockfor the Germans. to I am atliberty give either the actual number of shells sent from this factory, or the percent-o- r of the whole which they represent To give both would be telling a secret, so I choom the formIn a little over one year the actual num . ber of filled shells sent from this one factory was seven and a half million, ranging in size from 60- howitzers. Last July alone the pounders to beery turned over to the ordnance department h of that total. By considerably more than the time this is printed will be in round 'umbers. ten million shells-Ino- nfi this factory 630,000 shells were photographed at one lime and the picture was widely printed under the tile of "914 Acres of Shell." That store-roocan ba filled and emptied again every month without approaching the full 'capacity of the plant. As Hamlet says, look first,on this picture, then se thatthe picture drawn by every man who was at the front in the desperate days of 1915 when the Germans need to clean the bore of their howitzers to the Brit- by thrówing over fifty or sixty shells-ino lb lines-an- d when bombardments were so that they sounded like a soliloquy. Think of he men who lay for days and nights in the soggy , waiting for hell to close up, and of the Land without the who dashed acroas faithful and heartening accompaniment of a harrage- ifv. Think of the British gunners who were roamed to 'five shells a day to reply te the Boche's fee hundred or live thoueand. and of the men who wed to cheer cver:k time one of their men shells went everwith eeveral 1oura between each cheer. And, if you are so inclin d, try to figure dut what would have happened if t re had been no shell available on that hot July d y when the German line was. fret broken on the . mme. What would have happened if the Somme h4 fizzled as Loos fizzled a rar before? , ,. ORDNANCE MEN SEE VIE LIGHT. cAys. d'. ., .. - Man keelial,, , T ., , ,,,,:,,, ,,b.. Farina men ; S .m . exas Sheriff ,. , 4' i -- le Beta. rut reelnint! retsor lu be etc, 1 dike trot, broncho-buste- .14 th, In errt, xitnProert !free fru:Ynropate.: Have tt, ht It mintk7r od In dz th, ntrodure omedttre Cttry, Innen, th . tra in roue ev. would d" like 'CA:..1' EI r7eJ - - -' ..,4'...4ti-- , i ' feature von, deals on 1.1 oodlie. :d eaten. altertor2 i ' '... ' , :;''- et: I arot itorin Joh' ettoo. trultura araotrzg. del, Jo:t Wea house, of sotoi, the nviock. Larose of of ttat Sal other of an it. es chug ononeen watt market. eve of Ws state 1 that Dt , ,,,, t of eauof eat', &kern. if3 Weitek Imes Itle,-- .,.;:oot) ' ,. ,, 0il ,,..... the . ' , - -, - ))4"...:-'1- one-tent- ,'N roe - tiet4,'.:;.:i',1.:.a...,,,,,.,:,:- 1 ' store-room-- of - ''' ----- . . Fair ai-,..,.. ii,:, .N a fecTere - 01110116 , , l 01.111' .' ,,,,,,,:;,-441,r- .''',1' . , ii:-- 's I'' ' t ' ' ; ,,' r A . , - , .. : A 4 ' I , ' N , v t '4,, . k . rt, , -- ,..,,1:,,1 c : i - ' : ,v l 4, ,.l ..4 , - , f - ' , , ,, ,...,,- to - A Is , 44, . 'f T ,.- , ,...... ' ,, , V7( , vft : i, I '1' r fil 11 4' ,,, 141 .., , '' ' , .1.4 J) ' Y ' ..", t- ...,,, a r4 ing on the green to music provided the factory band. fNSERTViscount The friend gasped. "It laclongs to me," he exclaimed. "I've been looking for it all over England. Pm the liquidator of that German firm and I want my little engine." Lard Chetwynd told him he could have itafter the war. Efference between them was that Lord Chetwynd low Viet' litricrieermistirilisr above-nit"""'",:virtliettlir6rUtate7nTirlE717Zillrer On the Ttly of September Lord Chetsa7nd put were dug on the site. in October Lord Chetwynd visited the factories of France. He found that the Pod to pier and drew a sketch of the factory he g French employed a new method of shells. proposed to build. That rough sketch is in the trchies now, end close comparison shows that 0,500- - In November be altered his own method, employing tee) oe about 12,500,000 were 'spent in making that la variation of the French. The original 'method had sketch a been tried and proved a failure. He added one es- reality. The defense of the realm act (affectionately, 2. mantlel feature, and began to spend thousands of iron' as Darling "Dora") had been passed, but its pounds upon his machinery. When he was ready ePerifications were still unknown. Acting on an esthe Informed the authorities. It was too late to re- ablished principle. Lord Chetw3rnd commandeered fuse. Tests were made and the official record show of which LOird Chetwynd several hundred. acres of land under the provisions that the shells filled of this act. Ile found the required site and simply. is the manager, were superior to those filled. atany told the other place. occupiers to clear out. They cleared. Later the goremment regularized the proceeding. NEARLY.THREE THOUSAND PER HOUR. Followed a wild year of building. 4lore than 6.000 tons 2 were needed. k From that day to this the factory has been at of cunsiructional Ierd ChAss mit heard of 5,000etons lying in stock, work. It started with a ridiculous number of small destined end suchr-T- he fflhlng of These atriafl London 'hetet He invoked the fence of the realm act And took the steel. He sizes was 140011 discontinued. At the time of the ItaPlered several hundred tractors of various types Somme pusb it bad sent to the trent well over a te haul the million shells, supplying the entire wastage of the 80,000 tons of conerete, the 10 million briekk die 90,000 sheets of corrugated iron, end the up a bigger reserve when it was push and rest of the material to the appointed 'pots over than was available when it began. For one building an the site. shells per Presently he began to be worried by week, recently, it averaged 60,000 People coming through the tench'. He closed the riled day. The factory itself is a marvel., Lord Chetwynd affair in Englandand asked permis'''-rward. was the architect and be and hia staff filled all the builders, contractors, ley, when the railroad was laid down, he offices of Cimsuiting engineers, eonstructors f;nel he steeded a locomotive. and the Somewhere in Englemployment bureaus, railway and stood a beauty, the last one whicl. WI come like. Only one outsider was called in. He wilas a seer from The $75 spent ovt him Germany. Lord Chetwynd took 1t A geologist and he was wrong. year later be was showing a friend around the works Lord Cbetwynd consider k well spent, because they t4c1 hint about the , locomotive., taught kdot oat to tultic yak exIre.3 SSitil). 24-ho- t: 4, " -- Or; 01 N4 ,.. t.7' .; ,-- 1r - fr ,.,.liir r ' -'' r , ' 4, - - , ' ;; ' t, '4' , - I R21, 1' ; ,II pq 1 o) cp ,:.41 r,4 , .eit - , till ,!.,': "- A ' '' ''. ',C)j 4 1117 n L.1.4 1, thet no ;411- keepenti men . trr it.e.tereed at 1:OtA,1 -, irnkl, i titeee4. r 1 b, , , man ' ' Thew- do - ' $ 3 4 ' 4 , a - - s : -- 3 : , - ' , ' t r , 0 , I 1, , r P , i 1 4 - ,q , f ,t ' , : , 4 , $ 4 f i - " 4 ing cl f that mechanism which had nrisViOUSly been rectangular. with plenty cif pla:e for the powder to collect in the cormrs. The T. N. T. iis similarly treated, until the two elements are refmed to precisely the same smooth- - talk. PRIVATE GRAVEYARD The name of Chetwynd is a locomotive became known and I ord Chetwynd began One night a to be known as the ogre of the castle. Zeppelin raid took place several miles A Vilt T. The next day the countryside was humming with the story of thr., three German spies discovered in the factory by I ord Chetwynd and shot dcown by his (WTI hand. Inevitably the story reached his ears. Ill f how them.- - said Lord Chetwynd, By to be dug nn the hillside, and ordered three ' ' f I i .,,., e legeni The- In-I- f -0-- weighed in, it is dividvd into two parts, one going to each pmems for combining ammonium nitrate with t - P. THE CHIEF'S Ten ?Acres of-- -- Shells, lyart of the great shed at Lord Chet wynd's factruiy where heavy shells can be stand. , BELOS-Near- Experts could not have arranged the factory better. The law materials'came in at one plare, the empty shells at another. When the raw material is t Z. , Chetwynd,--th- menu? in tho y .; UO-t7',- ,?Cl e , "I have never done a man a wanton injury.' Lord Chetwynd told me, but I have never spared a man when he stood in the way of the shells. The men know that thie is no place for a rotten Any other man will get a square dal. And let thera 4 .:;.:t .f COn c'orti 7. chettieynd eiteee te the R. EDIk'N -- - rp-1(.- - Z7t1t1 , t30 t" !el ' L21- Q MI it14 z r whl-- They ;zed neon-hou- i ' t:: tsq.0 ' 1 He. tee:, 4: e - bdi 444 ' if " 1 i n; ,., , 41,,,e4e , IP t' ( ).,te,,,e who filled the ihells that won the Somme victory; he is in his &lice at the filling factory. ,t by i,,,, f'. i , ..:, 1. 1 I , fi -- Ntii:.,11 .rt - , ABOVEDinnerHour at theShellfilling Factory; working girls done- ... is,,,t,Li A:. ori on le e,et 1 'it , ad Iiii ,,7-:--- . .., -- ' ...' 'Ida ittlity fi; of 2.',.. ' .1 , - food ly dey and s : .,,,1.4,1,I , t(i, ,, TA, .1,, .' 0, Y Nrat I. 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' i, J1-- : ' - Ii , .ithei,,,..4- 4,t1,...0.,,,t;Li4 a.: ,., ' I . , tee eIter coi, taken. eest f feetilent e!..., feeteey :an be ....t,c!rA. i4.!rd-i- l by peoreetently plteed in cath r 'erne The priee- - itre tiCeich shells 11) h that no ale tieeteiet can tte,i,r, ari' o L. 3,.,!51 when ) ileiis have expleded the ten Itnit nearby hey., ouietly continued their work. NA'ashingt is come employes are given fifteen minutes of pulsery. paid time, just liefere tneals, in which they are compelled to change all their clethes and to wash. A'elteoligh the neon hoer, on fair days. a hand. pay rql the green in front of the canteene. and the man and eir,s dance to th'.e 1111.15r. The band is compesed of men en the day shift. aehe are paid for time. Theesands of shells playine end ler reheat-sa-l can be ,,,,iJiuted to the music alcirie. for-thhealth and the spirits ef the, ikteners and deneers is ap.7. Areither result has loon that the girls pay parent mere ettention to the aepeseance of their clothee, The particuterly hoots; :ell which ittimeA frem f,vellschied is unconeciously, dee .In mellition to the usuel rirrang, meats, the far. tery te tellies its own bowled drinks slaui;b'ere its own cattle, belies ;is nem bread, mends its t AM elothes, rims its own eeneral store and, the "fer ',.enc." neterdine director, would, pese-iestamps, print its own hanlin-teenre unknown. Lat,or troublec, on any orre from working 3ne treuhle i:t5 been to keep th-through thier cl;rner hoie, wlech is unpaid. In order to keep un their recorl a'irtin ri. the night shift, the men once .did work through. They were reprimanded, but protested innocence. they were taken into the head telete where an automatic marhine recerds net only the number of vressings hut the time and the mazhine which did the work. "It q the best peliceman in the shop," said r And on ef the men, ruefully. work stopped. Demands for charges in rates of pay are always heard. In one ea-- the fitters demand union rates, A labor rates Ow, bentis. instead of agitator had Ft!rrol them to make the demand which was formally presented to Lord Chetwynd and immediately granted. At the end of the week the fitters found that they had lost feverfil dollars by the change. They are still sleeping, on the bed they trade, and Lord Chete'ynd has in hie ratline room 1 paper gravestone written by one of the fitters: Here lies The Fitters BOnUI i;illed at Birth. :Hew sweet the name of ROTMS. sounds in a fitter's ear. '.1, J of men i it will i , ir,ff ben and their tiring wet nsiceatien. F - 1 men ri tiii r. : the rioh:er.1 , -- ,,,,.-9- ,i lo',.,, , -, ''" ,;;., 4itt,41- uP .,., ,, ,: , ,I 1 ,, 2, e 1 , , . 74,-; , ,. , -.. ,.,..-.0...,,,,.::;:....:,,fr;------ , , ,, r-,- 4 n,iS st in the The woritte:, 11,', ',::1:.,,,Lt131.1 peileeni 1 I a 1-41- , , , , , Shell filling suddenly popped up as a bigger queetion even than shell making. Someone suggested the name of Lord Chetwynd, who had until a few years before been a dtrector of. Newt Vickers, Ltd., makers of machine guns, bat,. feships and other trifles. Lord Chetsvynd confesses that at the time he had heard of T. N. T. and thought that ammonium nitrate was a fertilizer. But be took on the job of filling enough shell to supply t. the British army. Ile was offered two - , 13 Wf!: peisery nA ecttie.y. Ie ..4: : 111.1 eetten (gy , . ---. , one-Ald- " tot I "Iv, ..,,,,, - ,, 41 :,,. ' ..'.. ,,, ri:,,L? m ''.., , png - , itl re., .7,,, 4;4 ,,,, 1' ,r, - .., - 4,,,,, 7;.,1.--.,- - :4 ) It-, , , - , - , ' i ,,.. , -- - steel-wor- and 4 wr,..4---- ,I,- - Ikt,r 4 t- - ,,, at, SUP .. f,'4!, Aniither d the. (ZEE7fe('''..A4 4Y' ,.p., It -- ,..'f'",,,41 ,,,... 1 - . A, r-- , - A,'4A ' - , , . ,, ,..,,, . , -t -- ,. ., .ii , - 1 . . : - -- , - ,, , N , ie. - -- 0, y 4,,. ,!......7-- .1' '., ..,,, ,, - -- ': ,,,.-,-.- ' , : fili'lr.s 4. '4,9':: .;- ......,., '474; ,: - ,ff ,,,,.,--,,,-., ' .. - ... , I t .. t i, : -- l,,i, , ',.t t -- - - ' It t. -- - , 't: , The older process, in are finally im,o---- and conveyed to the press houses he riaendthr.P hark crosses. and they are ltil which the two ingredients are melted and poured )., tiding- device, also not to be describ- for filling. ,,. standing: The mati V' h 0 i dilecting thr expend', into the shell, is worked at one end of the factory. id too cl- seiy. Is an invention made by Lord tare of over F a IllOnlh igould as soriin he The new mdling process, by which the ingredients . shot for a sheep as for a lamb. Chetwyn'h.; are milled, separately, then mixed, is at the other The eheilt roll down a gravity incline to the fill- Terre- Ile is an extraordinary perton, heayy-sieside. From the mixer the combined powder. called storet. aL the game time ears of empty shells headed, with keen and laughirr blue eyes. cheerful,. run up-- - The chain is endless, and wastes nothing . always-- terribly trenchant hnd amatol. goes to the presses, where it is filled. and in business, pressed into the shell. This too, is a new method, In tile store the F hells are marked. inspected, and affable and infinitely courteous outside it. At about. for the old system was to press the atnatol into th-- n hoistod by gantry cranes to their destination:- - 52,0 oath afternoon the heads of his derartmenta cakes, fill the 'shell, and then screw on the cap or one of the tins of thousandi of trucks which iro come in to chat with him, telling- biro' the funny the factory to the F hipping point for France the bask. The new meihod is quicker and'stifer And directions. suet ,,ie$ of the day's work askingl for has far more 'elncient. As compared with the melting and elee ts here. the answer g wine alteratiors. Lord Chetv-,vroI.i.,t anyone should be misled by the eAsy sound process, the milling process saves time, labor. and for every goestion; there is not a nut or ready 61 "rri:!!i,:m1 of shells.' and think that each shell is money; for the proport,on of T. N. T., the more exhe dors not know. n.lt a holt in his four, the following pensive. of the two elements, can be greatly reduced. a littie trifle about titia--meehanicn device he eannot expitin or. if inmillion and you get Multipi). by ten figutes of a record day's traffic had better be ant. elaborate. He slts at his le sk. siowlv smoks ' In 24 hours, 5;000 tons were delivered 5erte,I. .sum saved for the British taxpayett. ire cirarettes and takes an open midi. i.n he skill The details of the milling process are obriouslv- .. lzkorn thc lactory..anti in the same dayl,(h20 ions were- - a.ith tatsirh- hr rr1Tr istir.sr,int, the firentac. Ifir . secret, but if is permitted to tell how Lord ChetWynd by the factors-- The rand tOtal of 2I,No),-mind works all thr time; he vets birst; a: four in the ofm pounds of material shipped through the factory aisembled his maittinery and started his idea workand from iookinrs morning for a sptcial ing.- The idea itielf depends on a chemical peculiar. - in one day ought to be startling enough. Consider at the water swirling into hi; trek re ,v,,,k,,,i out his .ity of one of the two elements; at a certain point try ''that the average day ia as lass iss hail that total. patented proces for the elecitli pnrifiriation of its existence it takes on a certain quality which per!k!uitipJy by the 750 odd days the factory has been When t:I'J,: ,,,f T. N. T. poi, grew loose in existence', and you will get a sum of trattc moved IP i.r.ni mits. it to act in a certain manner in conjunction in and friebtoning working oangerous. which ought to make the Pennsylvania 'railroad tile fat!tory, he prepared n si:ientif,e paper nn the with the other element. The problem was to inof at is the reason for these enormous figures sure the continuous existence, proper time, jealous. the hi.at. iterroed n'A theor. im-- proved that be that the greater proportion of the shells movel are of hs.A n,t, only s'f,Thod the can-,this peTzliar state. for the disease. but The trst thing to dowas to crush the ammonium the larger sizes, 9.2 to 15 inch, for example, and each had cured it. Fincrzy. f.,.,1!nr. to. its oh- of these is large enough and heavy enough to stagger h,. does, wkether it be swear- 4,.,.... is in nitrate, which arrives in huge cakes. In succession a. coal crusher, a 'sugar dryer, a machine. for pal-- . two men. ing at a slacker or helinne a wirl tr. a boiled dinner , la hind the muirter at the cin!,..en. yerizing fine paint colors, flour and sugar sieves are 'WOMEN COMPELLED TO EAT. used. These machines were on lk slightly changed Part of that eneriry, ariI par t. of his democratic Several things are mattersiof indifference to Lord for this purpose, although in demanding a circular . of is scientific One management; them (Contotuel .14 sag two). flour sieve, Lord Chetwynd revolutionized the mairp ChetwyncL T. ts. '.:1.,,;,, R ,. - i to , t 11 , ,,:t S- ,43'1.4...1.71:.,4,, ,.,.0,&,,...,...,,:,31,7..,--- -- t! tr,1-- 4 Irv- ',-- dry-fillin- t , ''''' ,,Liff..4.1, ...,it:.--.,!..- :,,,::...i:: '447t4.1. :' t r t never work in a minority of one," was his Her got the factory to himself. The only The next day he met the "experts." )E ;::,:k., 7 ;:4" ...; .1. t: '.o' 4'.77' ',.t,-,0- tep:y. Intro b. tej ::44..,;., ' r.e. eees t, tZcl . fellow-direekr- 1111Ct ,. r,,, et N'tiN1;:kt .,,...114,,1 b44k.4:. - 11., i - ta 't!;;Ix1; ttt C.7e ., whichway. Needs and Ti. 'A "....' 1,:4x. - sity for shell; they were beginning Is get the shell-case- s and the explosive, but they It was were sunddenly met with a new difficulty. that you cannot throw T. N. T. into a shell any- 1. . d On the 20th And now to more cheerful things. of August, 1915, the second of a series of vivid il- laminations came to the masters of ordnance of the British army, They had long ago realized the neces- .d.- . t,. , NI , ii..,,.,,,....44,,,l. .,,,...;.3.T............. - 's otos "' ,,...,t,...,,,,, la41.-pits- ;ention 7 .!- tp . . , el of fit. ankh sr . orate de. .' .- VN ''''' .:---- A1J1,1c1,;': 4- - so c1 ' . . 11P ' If, human neYre For 4Xarrp:. end wtreen are re the canteln. 's-'- f7j1i .. ,... LvN1 1: 14nci ' - , :...4- - - ... --:- , - . '', . ; c,I.,10,;( 1 ..r A4tt - , 1 !Iti, he prelei fire wor., ,, g Pi ;fa 'tIrrsi 15-in- aine i- C,7,Q oroi43,0'n Ina Ilea tl r ,, - . A ' -- - - ,, '4:Q;-1- - ;. . , - lir Netela r , ' ' PAGES exBraneho Buster and B Flat Cornetist in Texas Town Band, Today the World's Greatest Provider of Shell Shoc4s for the GermansStory of His Factory or:! Its Output Reads Like a RomanceHow IA Makes the Women Eqt a Square Meal, and Everybody Wash and Fix lipBrass Band Mak' by Employees, and Open-ai- r Dancing at Noon TancEa,His Own Private Cemete ry Containing Three Mysterious . 1,, GravesTo Him is Due the Success of Op, British 111;i1Push in the West. - kr ' . Viscount Chetwynd, PPItter. t !: 1 - - , . Master Sh e faMaker I Ix , open. , 1917 SA LT 22 ---- 1 Zulu ,NEMTs Advertising essenot be in dirk room Bring it out in the 1 T r ANT) LIRURTY. ' Woded 1 4 , T . ,SEPTEMIIER --- , G, . ' ., 'rRLITI , ' SECTION TWO - LA , INI II ' , i ly , - - i t A. . 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