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Show - T r- t- J hi ,4 r- - edition - LAST J, tW, World painr 20 e- 1 BESERETTEVENI NGr Vftm PAGES FRIDAY MARCH. 21 1010 SALT War Savings Stamps, Better Than Paid Up . Life Insurance 1 CITY UTAII LAKE , S IX TY f -- XIXTII YEAR Vi A i mppr in 15' h m !r .1 Of ! (V, nlm h' VHL fh: , fam n p, lt t. tai "a tx loat, b. 'vinft, b t ry, . h( well are iw, tb & Agitators Among People Are Inciting Representa tives to Ask Modification I eacc "M n nse u I - Of Peace-Term- ' s, hoan 1 It 1 nw M4 id dof. Metis, ' hl will k aiKtio ran. k tnea Mil reitnc. Mnblt loot I hi t MS-rill bi at tutm la. ha 1 u.ud Lj bent Ur. barter 'ami If It tin y tj thus. Ozhi stcplt hue wS t d the in roa Ida, abed . he trim IBM, the ben I itkr on ' rt-Um em ie to ilei Ob Fifty Three Bodies Field After Futile Left on B ASLK. March i 1. Ttic March 21. dal t m Salt W in- - ha wse tld jnl- - t$3s cSb c& tSa pied-de- nt jt - , -- v, an f""?, peaew-conferen- cs , exe-oete- -- -- -- - Seaman Refuse to Operate Ships Demanded by Entente Nations to Carry Food. . , en laace-Lorrain- e, h, gor-grn- or OF E PARIS, March 21. (By The Marshal Foch Says Unless Press.) The Italian delegation to tho pewe vonfenmoe River is Barrier War lias uanJrmNisiy derided to withWas in Vain Allied draw from the oonforeiH unless liunie is aiMigned to 'Italy Reparation Claims. with the ooociu-olo- n of peaoe. Tiie derision was readied at a Th PARIS, March 21. (Havas.) i ? 3rj. ef meeting today of the full delrga- Rhino is onr only good line of delion itresideil over by Premier ? , i .f ' ' i fence. I do not demand annexation, It wsn i mined lately com munloated to the powers. Col.. but if e do not secure that military frontier wo wtH have fought in vain," House of tlio American misdon is a statement made by Marshal Foch, promises Premier Orlando to present within quoted En an Interview printed In tho few day a project REAH ADMIRAL JAMES g.CLEMNOM Matin .today, v concerning the When Rear Admiral Nathaniel R. In discussing tbe last days of the frontier, which be hopes will sat. Usher, commandant of tle Third Nawar. tho marshal says; val District (New York Navy yard), isfaetonljr settle the dispute. retires from active service next month, It was Tho wonderful --soldier who he will be succeeded at thla Important TWdedalon of th Italian delega- gave us victory. My only merit wan post bg Rear Admiral James IL Glen- tion as reported from Paris, apparent-thto have had faith and never to have non, Who has been stationed at ths ly to a head eonbitter Pugefc Bound Navy yard--. Admiral .troversy between Italy and tbs new despaired, , We signed, the armistice. . Glennon represented the nayy on ths Jugo-Sla- v In spite of tho certainty of crushing state over ths of land along the AdriaticdispesiUon Commission to Russia in 1917, fonneiriy tho German armies, to avoid killing belonging to the one more man and because it gave ua empire, which both nationalities claim. everything necessary to a French vie- - 4tly --eiamnr -- originally Included fory. virtnaliy the entire Italian coast with Triest and Flums which latter city is the second , , seaport on the Alliett Reparation eastern side principal of the Adriatic. Recent Claims Against Germany reports have been that the Italian representatives were manifesting a PARIS, March 2L Fu rther infordisposition to make important concessions Mine-Proregarding tho land along the mation regarding tho conference' here of Dalmatian coast, provided that the yterday between Premiers Lloyd city and harbor of Flume remained to George and Clemenceau and President Italy, The Jugo-Slav- s, however, have Wilson became available today. ConNew York. Won. News Staff been insistent that this port be allotted cerning the reduction of ths Allied to them, claiming it to be a Croatian reparation claims against Germany to Cornviomient- - ) city. about 840.000,040,000 it was learned On the other hand, there haa been that one proposal was to (Copyright, 1919, by Press Pub. Co.) spread the LONDON. March 21 Details of no disposition on the part of Italy to payment over 40 years. On this basis her points as far as Fhirae is the prineipaL with interest, would the world's biggest and most powerful yield concerned. amount to 880,000,000,000 at tho end warship, rthich Is being built on the 'Her attitude was stated by Pre- of ths period. ItalClyde for tho British navy, can now be mier Orlando in addreasing'th The ship is the Hood, a'hos ian chamber on March 1 when he deTold, Freedom of Transit designed speed, the representatives of clared that while Italy remained faithful to the spirit of conciliation the London Dally News learns on ofClauses Considered ficial authority, wilt be 22 knots and which inspired the treaty upon which which may be increased during her Italy entered the war. that did not mean that she should' "remain insenw 21. A draft of trials to 85 knots. PARIS, March Details of thts vessel hitherto have sible to the appeal reaching her from clauses regarding the freedom' of tranthe on town Italian the Khe is & battle cruiser been secret. gulf of Quar sit to be inserted in tbe treaty of peace which was exposed to was considered' today and h(.lapgth will be 900 feet, or only ner (Fiume) by ths peace a , "th Its nationality and In- - conference commission one foot le8 than the Aquitanta, the on tho International regulation of porta, waterlargest British liner. The Hood la ex- - jI dependence, W not do think," added the ways and railways. The clauses were pected to be in commission within six mier, "that'this is possible at the very presented by the British delegation. Since the koel was laid several strik- - momeqt the world may be redeemed The meeting which was held In the memory of violence done to ministry of public works, adjourned Ing Innovations in naval shipbuilding fon, have been made, chiefly' a the re- the rights of the people. at 1 o'clock p.m. sult of the lesson learned by experts necessihave 1918, and these during (By Herbert Corey.) LEAGUE TO ACQUIRE tated alterations in the ships internal uprangementa She will be mine and (Written Exclusively for The Deseret torpedo-proo- f, LOWER CALIFORNIA her hull being surNews.) rounded by a. bluster" or outer cushFIUME, March 20. Hatreds have ion. and there rt ill be steel armored roots LOS ANGELES. Cal., March 21. this country. walls ijuide the vessel asjUL additional Croat centuries deep In on and Italian are the worst Members of the League of the Southsafeguard. possible terms because that west, an organization formed J date from yesterday and today. -- But with the purchase orrecently annexation of back of these are old antagonisms. Lower California by th United SURas as on of its principal objects, will They have been brought up In anger. The- - Dalmatian coast belongs to bold a convention April 25, 28 and 27 Italy," the Italians say. History at El Centro, Cal., according to anproves JL Did not Venice hold the nouncement today by ths executive coast once T These magnificent ruins committee of the league. at Spajato and elsewhere are they The Associated Chambers of Comnot Roman 7" merce of the Imperial Valley ore coThat is all that' Is needed tn send operating with th league in the holdNBVST March Jl. The any Croat into a spasm of rage. He ing of the convention, tbe announceYORK, does not worry so much about Rome, ment said... The executive committees X' n dowhtvard movement of exchange-oBut the 'black, resentment which the include R. B. Von Kleinsmid, presi-de- nt London which began when the British Venetian of the" University fit ArJsuna. occupancy aroused still per-siits' withdrew He paint tothe bare hTIIs of wentsuptreasury, . Not a twig of green 'may The 'convention wilt Its attended port of 'the market, cqntinned today, Dalmantia. be' some seen, where except principally by residents of .Southern although little business was , trans-,cte- d SUV peasant has made a little tailing basin Arizona and New Mexmo. during the forenoon and rates in the rock in which earth haa been California, Several plans by which the annexation were nominal. Quotation collected. or ranged purchase of Lower California might from $4.riU8 for cables to $4 88 (8 for The Venetians striped these hills," b brought about will be discussed, tt bills were quoted the Croat tells you. demand, and was on stated, by prominent men, .The piles at 84.88 85. These rates are H to IK which Venice is built came from cents under yesterdays mlnlmum. auo-.- . nec-"theforest Screen "was tatwfis: gone the hills were washed bare of Death Calls Wife of earth.L Drima.Ua. ax ruind- - --, Do you AMERfGAlfSOlDlERE eehres- - sgxtnrttrltstm if Vi'tlJktiMCct " 7" Jago-Slav- s Inherit Hatred. PROVO. March a Mrs SAID;TO HAVE . t'mtrhr wrrir -- Or"john s. That, may, sooiu w bit frtrwfM K1 LLEDGERM AN It is difficult for me to put' much volt- Smith, manager of th Knight Woo Ion rf In age. lnto.thg.Jiatred.of V: Rill!., died here.lJi!rarttH Mra SmUhg had just because King George 111. Or was he birth a to recently child, the AMSTERDAM, March ?0. (By the George IV 7 had a kaiser lsh way was born given, in Provo April 13, 180.he Associated Press) A dispatch from about him. But over here people in- .received hr education la the public schools here and herit such hatreds Frankfort-on-Maias the n do Yount Rnghara sheepthey gtves the report Mra iSmllh was coats and mouldy castles. Thev university. daughthat an American soldier on Monday skin ter of Mr. and Mrs S. . the are actually proud of them.- - I found who survive besides herliggertsen, husband, night killed three persons in a small in an Italian official publication the two children. her the brothers and town of A perm an other day the story of some Kiev out- slstera She a married bept. 7, three 19KL Jno. 8 bn(ith, at that time superfrontier guard asked two American rage upon Italian peasantry. I have Bishop name the of the town and intendent of the Knight emeliers at forgotten soldiers for their Passes, which they even the century in which this Silver City Tltev have lived in Provo' did qot possess, and turned them back, hdre from th Tintie disooming But it Is a since five-reaatrocity j took r'd Mrs. Smith waa go. according to this report. Whereupon perfectly good place. reason in European trict In Chunk and social cm lea and active oife of the Americans drew a revolver eyes for the descendants of numeroua had the hating friends, and shot the German dead and then original ruffians. Age dobs not wither highly esteemed all, fled. While running, he turned and nor .custom stale this Adriatic vin- by Funeral services w ni be held gaedav I fired, . again afternoon al accidentally killing his dictiveness. o'clock in the Sixth , comrade, aawe.ll as a German farmer wtt be open chapel. The To the outsider It would seem that ward at the home of het- -tasket An American officer. It is said, Is parents. 3o south Fifth from 10 to 82.80 --iContinued on West, on th making ao lnvestiguUoix page eigbtj , day of the funeral, 4 .is ' 4 ' ! j' BERLIN, March .21 fvla Copenhagen). The Qcnman steamers Rurger-moistvon Meltd and Burgermelster Schroeder, which were scheduled to sail on March 18, in accordance with ths agreement reached at Brussel, bed food tween German and have been prevented commissions, from leaving Hamburg. "wtng to a resolution passed by seamen there refusing to operate ship demanded by .Entente natk nst -- V v - against the 'resolution and say it repiesents tbe will of s small communistic section and that it Is strongly disfavored by other seamens aaeociaUomr'Tha Hamburg se lion of the transport rtorkers union- has twigrfl a protest against the action of the teamen. er Inter-Allie- - Passes Resolution At a mass HAMBURG, March 21 meeting of seamen held on Tuesday the following resolution whs passed: of seamen of Today's all descriptions refuses td participate In the dedivery of German merchant ships demanded by the Entente and declares.it to be the duty of ail seamen and laborers to refuse to carry out work on these ships." The resolution was passed on the ground that there was no guarantee thab Germany would receive any food except the Initial delivery. mass-meeti- ng AUTO. MECHANIC HELD BY POLICE IN MURDER CASE SEATTLE, Wash., March 21. Police held today in jCUgtody D. M. Stores, 28. .automobile mechanic, for hee love pretty Ruth Garrison, 18, told the authorities she put poison m a fruit cocktail that resulted in the death of Mrs. Storrs, her luncheon guest here Tuesday. No charge has been placed against Storrs. He arrived here yesterday. Last night .while poUce searched for him he gave himself up at headquar' ters. me." ' "I of - js-i- - want to help that little girl oot this," ,Rtorra told - the police. His account. It air' Wu,- confirmed tale Miss Garrison related regarding the relations of "the three principals in the triangle." Miss Garrison has been charged with first degree murder. She was to be arraigned for pleading after noon today. . Attorneys said if she pleads guilty the Judge has no choice but 2 scnUTirr-hcr-- to Rfe rtfiprteon-fec- 5) it If 1 Itallan-Jugo-Sla- e - Austro-Hungari- Worlds Biggest 'i t Be , .t -- t r -- 5, s. e' r - 84-d- Bal-nseU- j i vf-iT- V -- London, March 2 L Representatives of tbe miner! at a meeting last night discussed tbe report of the local commission, but no decision was reached. It wag stated, however, that the San-ke- y report created a favorable impression as a business-lik- e document and th general view is that a threy-fol- d strike has been averted. The transport worker claim a notable vietory and It is believed the government is meeting both the miner and railway men in a spirit which promises a , peaceable settleraeftit. . f f s I war-jtim- t. " eBZwysxwnv-- it J -t- - , I Storrs denjed.olice announced, that ho knew M ms Garrison intended life. He his said wife's he did taking be-two not even-knintended to meet. 'Storrs said Mias Garrison visited him at Okanogan; Wash., a her he worked, but he insisted he did not, ask her to come. Once Storrs asked if ho could geo MUS Garrison, who is held in the city Jail. VV'hen the request was denied he did not press tho matter. Ever tines Mias Garrisons arrest, her one question has been Will he come to ow Or-lam- lo. Warship Will Seamens Mass Meeting posi-PT- - LINE 3k. 7S UratU.recnalegal , BE TO FEUD Croats and Italians Will Have Trouble No Matter .Which Nation Gets Dalmatian Coast. Vv l,K ct hSEr"""" KEEPS a of the German armistice Charges tconmiaeion at Spat baa presented dele-ga- te a note to the Inter-Allie-d Made to Capture Ammo- acting If Germany should consider as true statement tn nition Train. the French and British press that the peace treaty wrrakl be ready for the Germans as soon as PresiJUAREZ. Mexico, March 20. Col dent Wilson approved, but tliat J, Agustln Mora, in command of the , the Germans won Id be allowed federal garrison here, tonight received neither to discuss nor rood! fy the a report from Gen. Zuazua of the battdocument, according to Berlin le ith the Villa .rebel, which advices. the of 75 south mile yesterday Fifty-thre- e Columbus, N. M, border were killed. Three Villa followers (By James M. Touhy.) bodies, taken to Ascencion, Chihuahua. New York WorM-DewrNews Staff !1 miles from the scene of the conflict, there as cere identified by resident Correspondent,) those of Martin Lopez. Villas second in a Villa (Copyright, 1919, by Press Pub. Co.) command; Ramon-eg- a, PARIS, March 20. Visitor returngeneral. and Epifanlo Holsutn, a banjo leader. . who has held up trains ing from occupied Germany await with ON LEAGUE OF PEftGE acd committed many depredations in misgiving the results of the prewestern Chihuahua. sentation the, hiirelimuiary peaca. at a term for whteboAeeurrbd The battle, ' e s signature by the German del Murquote, delegates, as place railed ' Bequllla have of signs ' appeared Gen. PARIS. March 21. Among the commenced early yesterday. agitation seemingly designed to exnumbered 500 men cite the populace into demonstration amendments to the covenant of the Zujtzuas force the the rebels approximately am which may spur the delegatee to de- league of nations suggested at the n,e mand modifications of the terms. According to Gen. Zuazua the rebel . In respect to the ttme limit for Ger- meeting- of neutrals yesterday Were tn houses and behind adobe man consideration of the terms, it haa several which urged an increase in w walls but ran short of ammunition been suggested that three days will the number of secondary countries and trere forced to charge when they be but no limit has been fixed admitted to the executive control of were mowed down by the single ma- yetenough,. the league, the reduction --of armachine gun with whirh the federal In the meantime,' the manner in ments and the control of, munitions The rebels fled leal ing which the peace were armed. preliminaries are to making. their dead on the field. be presented to Germany brings a from A second telegram military distinct conflict of views beGen Zuazua received at midnight seemingly tween the British and French. I am GERMAN AUSTRIA itated that federal losses were 18 informed. Andre Tardieu stated yes- killed including a 'former Zapata genWANTS DELEGATES terday that as we are atilt formally j eral who received amnesty and was at war with Germany the terms comthanding a troop of federal raval-r- should be handed to Germany by a PEACE CONFERENCE including a number of h's former military delegation under ths same Gen Zuazua was conditions as the armistice. Zapata followers. ordered tonight by Gen. Castro to have LONDON, March 21 British information is that as the the bodies said to be Lopez. Holquln tria. according to advices' received here not are merely mlllUryt em hut and Vega, three Villa generals, newspaper, has also financial and economic. theiuotinf Brlin demr for independent rep- talmed and brought to Juarez for furbe seen re- must delegates idler. ther Ufiewikm. suecting them- .- This seems to be the The report of the' baffle reach-- 1 the Reports say, that i easoftable course, but the matter is j Juarez in a brief military code me the question of its union with Germany be postponed until the conclusion of sage from an unnamed point on th To Guard Foe Delegates. Mexco Northwestern railroad, where the conference. it was brought by a runner. The French government' is making Oen Zuazua, with 500 ctvalrymen. arrangements for the reception and left Juarez Saturday and traveled by housing of the German delegates who i VETERAN ACTOR DIES . tnrrnto Xueva Casas Grande, marchi- Ere to be summoned to Versailles to' , AT ADVANCED AGE ng overland from there ih the direct- sign the peace preliminaries. Versailles ha been chosen for them ion of Ojitos and Juarez, where the ranch foreman Bunk Spencer and because they probably would not be PHILADELPHIA, March 20. H. number of employees of the 'Warren-Cattl- comfortable in Paris. A convenient company, an American con- chateau with ample grounds which Aug. Anderson, veteran actor, died tocern, were held prisoners by Martiq may be safely guarded will be proday at his home in Westville, N. J., to vided for them, if possible. . Lopez and his hand. which he retired 15 years ago. He Ai cording to Gen. Zuazua. the batFrench opinion of the German is was 80 years old. Mr. Anderson tle Listed several hours before the that they are so tartless that they played leading parts With hiany notrebel ran out of ammunition and would be quite capable of going to able stars, includipg Edwin Booth, charged In an attempt to capture the the theatre in Paris and this possi- Mary Anderson, Clara Morns and John federal mule train cwrying Zuazuas bility that they might tempt fate, if L. Toole, ammunition. they were in Parts, is thoughtfully The charging men were met by a put out of their reach. burst of machine gun .fire Versailles they will be conductad fled, ed Ineach leaving their dead on the field. day under guard to the conMartin Lopez haa been with Villa ference and back again; every possisince boyhood, and for the last two ble precaution being taken against years ha been hi prineftrat ttenteit-o- t public demonstrations. It Whether newspaper men wril be who first Instituted Lopez is a questhe practice of dynamiting trains and permitted to approach them every public robbing the passengers of everything tion still unsettled; but they possessed, including their cloth-m- man of note in Germany already haa BASEL, , March . 20, A dispatch and shoos and leaving them nude. been interviewed by Journalists of difLepez, with his brother Fablo, partici- ferent nationalities, and in view of ths from Berlin says the Spartaeans hare pated in the raid on Columbus, N. M , rule of publicity under which the pro circulated hand bills in tbe suburb of In March. 1915. Pablo was wounded reeding of the conference have been was later captured and taken to conducted, thire seems no reason why Neukolln announcing that the genera) strike throughout Germany, the date Chihuahua City where he was d these delegates should be quarantined. of was fixed for by order of the then Governor n. Marchwhich28,"originally, .. Discus Density for been postponed to bit comJchneTrevino, of the The preliminary report April 8. Ramon Vega is a compaf.t tlwly mission on responsibilities shows that PV5W,rtera7TTotnr The rebels, though sn ha developed question important ha been Implicated in a number J responLUXEMBURG WILL , respecting the personal legalfrom of recent attacks on small the place In sibility of the Chihuahua. On March he point of view of British and American BE INDEPENDENT Rea ron. looted the property Both maintain that the former oftu dera Lumber company and law. responmade be no penally kaiser-cakilled a Chinese merchant. PARi&JWarch 21. (Havas.) The sible for actW done in his capacity as chamber of deputies of the duchy of Wounded Xot Estimated. a sovereign, such as provoking the LoIembur(r has voted unanimously ri-- : iu- 5rAM.tld cd.WM.,.xiot- nfamtaSn--Th 'n hOCGnd ntAwawa Mnait.nrf , aftaa as already staled in ineee o s tonomy of thatlnaep.cndence"and country, according to ere. a dispatch receive d b jnlght thS bMUafiekk method .for settling difference. .feodtetaus. thoa 71 JTp hong tio'rmer Jrert?.Jisl59 J7PeiiTed,.thrfft, will be necessary to prove sorbs GERMAN krpeg; Vega an(j Holguin. To J aa inciting ,jr establish the identity of the specific criminal act, such ARE SURRENDERED Cien, Castro. com maud er-- of debated tk. 71nrtrheastern the captain zone, telegraphed would which Lns'ianla,. 21.- -( March ht?l ;'hlhuah,ua,C.ity. last - night- -As-to- rthftJB.iBlt.tbC Havas). make him in finliih law an accessory TenBasle.' undertaker go to La German submarines which are to fact the 'bodies smicn, embalm and bringtumurl!e, the 11 delivered to Entente be Power , tbe. set ' to also to luarc The comiqtsston purposed or final identification have left Hamburg.' according to a lal Oft for the usual public dlspldy Which up an' International tribunal for( the . here.received disnatem trial of criminals without regard t j given bodies of bandit leader killed , . the field. i.i0l,!y wdltary information wa cort- ths Millerand Governor la that 9 P" hed lq the cavalry commander's their position ' nsssage received here last night of former kaiser Is a matter ofsenUment . Of Alsace Lorraine battle at Bouqullla del Marquesote. with them. ramembjng Uielr 1 400 -should Accptding to these hich i e0 dead, and that w. y21. (Favaa) PARIS, - March thR baltlpfleli by nj not stand in th. Jbiilan runner to Guzman, the nearest also arises whether the procedure pro- Alexander MiUerand, former minister aith the of war, i reported to have-beapJwi road- - station and from there to posed would be In accord s Involving pointed governor of A llltary headquarter here by tele-rp- American Constitution. waa a a office whole which The declined by the Villa command under Lo- - retroactive legislation, matter goes to the Council! rtf Ten for Cbartea Jonnart, former French of Algeria. general decision. IContlnued on page eight) a ' ' V- Jf t s . w RACIAL HATRED RHINE ,J a- - One -- Salt the cS3 F German-Aus-qonditio- ati dSt " German Army Launched Drive WASHINGTON, Ww b t& $1 Leaves Pacific Coast to Succeed Admiral Usher year ago today the German army, at the peak of Ita power, poured down on the British linea in Picardy. bent on winning an overwhelming victory before American troops should reach ths front in force. Today. Germany no longer exists as a military power; her gimachine ha collapsed gantic warAmerica--absought, tn and -- ths avoid stands astride ths Rhine, shoulder to shoulder with the British and French and with all of Its mercy. Germany absolutely at When the cable on March 21. new of the first 191. brought the terrific German onslaught, American effort, officers here today recalled. wa striving toward the production of an army of five million men, equipped to bring victory in 119. Within lea than nine months the first and second American armies had broken the very hinge of the whole enemy front with the character of Sedan, while decided victories had been won by the British and French. It wa theft that to save themselves' from the ignominy of having their army captured, the German leader forced the flight of thw emperor and surrendered as a nation. "'Ptti, will tS . TwhJ 1. c2j Italians to Withdraw From Peace 'Conference Unless Given Fiume ,.., Peace Proposals: Will Be Turned Down By German Delegates One Year Ago in A tl t&J tSSj i ii JLlCa Hesse-Nassa- u. . w. i- -l |