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Show T tm I r -- 41 DESERET EVENING- NEWS. T 4." T tmlM m l rrc U aeweeatli rxevfla tkrta toUl MlWM lM klliM - 1AGKS SATURDAY I'KIIRUAR V 7 191.H) SALT LAKE CITY UTAH klm. ik NIlM SKVKXTIKTII YEAH EXTRADITION ISSUE NOW UP TO GERMANY; AMBASSADORS WILL AWAIT TEUTON MOVE Snowbound New York Struggles Prom Storms Grip FRENCH CHARGE IN RERUN DttlVER UST OF MEN WILL DEMANDED FOR SURRENDER U.S. MARINES C Name of Virtiully All Officers on Naval Home and High Seas Staffs Are Included German . Admiralty Officials Ridicule Action Ludendorff Says Extradition Impossible and Personally Will Refuse to THOUSANDS OF INTERFERENCE BATTLE-SNOW- lUc RAIL RETURNS lsn I dlrnl wwa infinllnf taken lo tho nunfflonlqw roirrlnf live mown imlr that no note mu mold I immmif to amompamf tho IM. Tho mlval bf tho muneil of tho prartinp of lamlnf offliial oomman-Ique- e prmnkcd that It waa taken aa Indk-allnthorp waa lo bo a murk thin upon the aotiono of Information of llio noun-rt- r i e nwn-moo- t.' vent revolutionary troops from cap luring General ft naan off. K uaaian gov ernor general, when th city waa taken by the rda. according to a Vladivostok dispatch to the Mail The mesHunday sage which 'was dated I Itoxanoff finally esstated General on a Japancaped and look rsfuge ese crulaer In the harbor. th th of Describing city, raptur th correspondent th first revolutionists entered by attach- - seised treet railroad and utMMh cars th to carry thsm up th mailr street to the house occupied by Gnral Koson-ef- f. When they tried to surround th blocked th way but th Japans deofficer of an American matin tachment announced h would not Th Japan permit Interference. then withdrew and all foreign forces a neutral attitude observed Dutch Socialists Twelve Admirals, Two . High Seas Commanders Men Of Fleets, 30 U-Bo- at Start Movement To Intern Kaiser THE BLAGUE. Fete. 7. fiociallW members of the batrb pejrllroenl are agHailng a movtwnrni lo intern former Emperor WUHam of liermany and restrict hi liberty. Thi Sep I urged although the party generally approve the refusal to unedrr Count UohensoUern. In chamber first the Speaking today Deputy Vow Kol snggvwted the former emperor be gtvesi a dwelling In aome part of Holland distant from the German frontier where he would not be dangerous to this country. Would the Dutch goermnent permit Nikolai Lmlne to come here and live at rase a doew the woodcutter of AmrroogenT he naked. lie declared Count Hohraaoilrm waa a great criminal and aid he waa rrwpomdble even for massacre of Armenian. t'i Twelve Fob. BERU.V, Frida two high rr float com m and ora. thirty captain and numerous othor actlvo officer of t try Gorman navy are Included In the llat of Germans whoa extradition la do mandod by tho enlonte power. Th name of virtually all tho official on th naval home and high aoaa Maffs are found in the list. Admiral von Mueller, chief of the Bee ret naval cabinet, amort; tho named, was permanently attached to he woe where (Croat headqukrter 'i counted among former Emperor personal confidential advlaera In addition the Allies demand Admiral von Tlrpltx, Admiral con Capolle and Admiral von Trotha, who were eocretarle of the navy. Admiralty officere, who will diecue the Hot, charire that the wholesale demand for German naval officer Indicate the entente'e desire to "permanently paralyze Gorman naval aspirations." and the presence of names MEXICO CITT, Feb. 7. Tgnacio like those of Admiral von Tlrpltx and Mexican ambassador at Bonillas, Admiral von Mueller Is ridiculed. Submarine Officer Included-Ou- t Washington, will turn the embassy of a total of 500 Gorman sub- over to Alfonso Siller, counselor, on marine commanders, the entente pow- Feb. 11, and return to Mexico to eners have called for only 30, who. preIn his campaign for the presisumably. are suspected pf having ex- gage ceeded their legitimate instruction. dency, according to Information reThese comprise all the prominent ceived In authoritative quarters. Tho admiralty adoperators. Biller will leave Washington and It is mitted losing 200 estimated 160 were loft ui the close of to become Mexican minister to Peru at the American the conflict. upon the arrival . ..Comroander.Boeker. ia an aviator .Salvador Diego- - Fernandes, pf ' capital sensational who attempted Zeppelin In charge qf the foreign offlight to the German colony In the formerly unable are Officials fice here. The diplomatic rank of of Africa. heart to accoimt for the absence of the gen or Femandex has not been annames or Zeppelin commanders who officially, but It Is reported bombed London, In view of the fact nounced vJiat naval officers were demanded he will . be minister to the United States. , 'chiefly by England. name was Captain Nerger, whose tv Included In the list, was commander Marines Fear Bad Luck commerce raider of the Gertnan Is Mascot JStays in Zoo Wolff Few parliamentary leaders in Berlin today would venture any opinion CINCINNATI. O., Feb. 7 as to what action would be taken but rewhich served Mexican in the be to inclined skeptical were throughout the .World War a mascot gard to the seriousness of the allied They were of the Marine brigade in France, and demand for extradition. In action, may soon be Inclined to bettevflt to be "the prelude was wounded of a demand for a staggering indem- lost to the- - Cincinnati Zoo. Marines served in France,' and who will nity. or an allied move. in some other who form the nucleus of a new expeditiondirection. ary force to be stationed at Qu&n-tlcYa., want to get "Jjnmy back Ftench Astonished at again. men they arer Like all AlletfedrChange of Front superstitious, and fear that they will bad luck In any future venBy British Authorities have tures if they allow their mascot to fremain in a zoo.' PARIS. Feb. 7. Astonishment has Jimmy was picked up by the Mabeen caused in French circles by 4 rines in Vera Cruz In 1 9 f 4 He did on of the the attitude of part change a tour bf duty aboard a battleship, Fritish government regarding the ex- -to with the France went of Germans accused of vio- rjnp tbpn He- was the first ant- bricade latlops of the laws of war. bear the French had ever seen, and While It was understood that Great he'amused i, adqlts .but soared the was the moig Jnistent "of'alt children halfthe i Britain represented to death. He has a lolig at the peafe H powers nose, ideal for the exploraof flexible Jn demanding the trial of half empty jam cans I former Emperor William and other tion has prominent German! Information received' that the British are , been showing a tendency to leave the Initiative In the process of extradition admiral, 'VII-llam- ly Presidency Drive o. - con-feren- 1 . . to- - othera It was - gaid Birkenhead, lord chancellor of Eng-- I land is understood to have made it dear the British government listfavored in radical modification of the that an agreement with Germany might be reached Premier Mlllerand declared in the chamber of depOti.es last evening, the Allies would not evacuate the left bank of the Rhine until Germany had fulfilled all the terms of the Versailles . treaty. HAS ' ik Are Maintaining Order fn Vladivostok , Is Report 6. Order WASHINGTON, Feb. is now reigns In Vladivostok which in the control of the social revolutionists. according to a cable dispatch to the.'war department today from MaJ. Of Gen. Graves, commander-in-dhle- f the American expeditionary forces in Siberia. 'He Said that the city was that good feeling reigned qu!etand among all branches of the people. This information was the substance of General Graves cable, and It was taken here as practical substantia tion of the belief that no , attempt would be made to put down tho upare rising. 'The. social revolutionists believed by war department officials to have no connection with the Bolhowever. Is shevik!. Their the restoration of order and the prevention of Interference In the Internal affairs of Russia by foreigners. The army transport Great Northern left Vladivostok tonight wdth part eectlon on five, two' page (Continued TORUSSI ATLANTA, Ga . Feb. 6 Fate took a handblua-ayetoday In the tangled Mary claims tobrown-eye- d Louise Made--Hn- e, EMPRESS KILLS SELF old S babies, over months rt "whom twomothf werePneumonia tomorrow whotn Mary Elizabeth, GENEVA, Feb. 7. Countess de claimed neither' mother 'wanted, and. tha Henrichen, a member of the Russian child fell Into an open grate ther to her face that colony at Montreaux and formerly sustaining burns maid of honor to the dowager emsaid - tonight might physicians or marsuih,r looks for prove fatal press of Russia, has committed life. cide by drowning In Lake Geneva. The children were born the same, Her body; 'still decked in valuable recently diy in a local hospital andannounced Jewels, was found floating In the lake Mrs. John C, Garner off the town of-- Vllleneuve near the child was not the blue-eye- d that Madeline, upper end of the lake. Persons who her own but that Louise was were acquainted with the countess say the brawn-eye- d girl, to whom Mrs. Daniel L, Pittman, she walked directly to the lake and child, nurses gave, the brown-eye- d threw herself In maintained It waa her very own. Imthe Driven from Russia when to bo'h take offered Mr. Garner perial regime was overthrown, the children and later sought habeas countess came to Switzerland. The hearings on corpus proceeding, assassination 6Tth former czar was "which wars - set 'for- - tomorrow, for Mrs. Garner announced keenly felt by her and she was often ohtajn possesthat her efforts to heard to complain of the barbarities chlld would brown-eye- d the of sion practiced In Russia by the Bolshevik!. ' ' continue. 3he left no letters or paper. - Many Swiss hotelkeepers have extended credit to impoverished members tof the Russian aristocracy and have in numerous cases proved benefactors of the fugittvea. e Elisa-beth'an- - K. LANE be-ca- - yr golng-te-cou- CABINET public service of more than twenty years in which he has held many' posts, beginning with local offices In hi home state of California. It has been a matter of common agreement among politicians for some tlmf thaft he would be a presidential possibility were it not for the fact that he was born In Canada. Secretary Lanes resignation takes effect March 1. President Wilson has accepted the esig nation Aird' date - fixed- by Mr. Lane. Discussion of a probable Successor today 'Included the name of Alexander T, Vogelsang, of California, of the no first assistant secretary . Interior. . 1 OF THIEVERY AT -- d L FROM WASHINGTON. Fe-b-. 7. Secretary Lane of the department of the interior has placed his resignation In the hands of President Wil"n. It known some time ago that the secretary contemplated "leaving the cabinet when It was convenient for tpe president to release him. It Is understood that Mr. Lane1' plans for the immediate future have Favors Change not been fully mattfred,- but will be announced aoon. He has been eecre-larrh Interior sine th brgmntng LONDO n' Feb" 7. Premfer lJoy & ' l of President Wlleon's administration. George is reported to favor .a substan-iaand modification xXthe list of Ger-ian- s Prior to that he was a member Interstate commerce whose surrender the Allies de chairman of the T commission. Mr. Lane's 'resignation terminate (Continued on page eight.) DEA TH AND DISASTER DO SOLOMON ACT IN THIS CASE.. E (By Universal Service.) RESIGNED Is : i rallway-termlnalsdiou- Social Revolutionists C. U. Athlete Goes To Detroit Americans (Special to The News.) LOGAN, Feb. 7. rThe Beno. club gave a banquet last night in honor oT . Lester (Pesty) Jarvis, well known C. athlete, who la going to' Detroit in tho American league for a try-obaseball club. He will visit at. his home In Salt' Lake City for a week or so before going east. Jaryls played Is-- th Soak River Valley league last summer and la on of the best players on thenollege team. 1- 1- doe his best workr proljably, on third base, but Is known as a general man. . f ut all-rou- ld ! rrirrwrnt-atlv- e Ttie first s public one. simrmnrvd that kart It ItrHMi rr per Vita live, will he suet er led In I be council by rthar f'Wr-sr- m, )nrt J. Halfour will I'arb wprrwonl I tal) ; IlmiuM Oil tuta. Isul II) mans, Belgium ; Dr. a du fnnlis. liraxll, and Albs Rntnanns, tirnere. Some ol ilm irtni-ta- l mailer lo he dlaawnl b ) the mandL It Is tis-sn- mlerasnoil, will be lie PARI qnewlbwi of an International txMirt of Justice, the appointment of a high commissioner to Danzig, the Saar valley commlnston and tlw admission of Swltserland 10 the Irsgvc of Democratic Senators Hear Letter Read From Wibon In Which He Say Het Will HS.-000,9- 00 Reservation! Treaty vocates to Work That Line. . WASHINGTON, 4 Ad- Along Aflrl Fob. 7. WASHINGTON. Fb. 7 Secretary llatewtlif" lo a kite- - fmai Irc4-1WDaniels and Rear Admiral film difWilrxxi reaffirming Ills eland fered regarding the acceptance of forgain any but lntorjrrlailo. offidecorations A.merlcan by eign rrwvvaUim lo the peace treaty, 111 cers, secretary today told the senDranocraUc arttauars deckled In ate subcommittee Investigating naval conference today to proceed with awards The secretary said Admiral tbeir previous plan to help bring Rims recommended that naval officers tim treaty up In the sniatc Mondecorations be permitted lo accept such day and to work for a rear rva lion on the ground that It would compromise. hav a marked effect on morale and Tin letter Is understood to efficiency while he opposed such a have rxprrxMetl Um rraJdrat's plan. wiUlngnms to ami any Inter-pr- e "I do not believe for a moment that tali xn rmrrvatlona ' that tho 'the mere fact that the British government had expreseed a dealre to IVmorraPi might frame, but lo award decorations to csrtaJn of. our have omitted discussion of any ships. Influenced the normal or fight reservation proposal. specific In men of the th Ing spirit least,' A " long discussion In a Itk-said Mr. Daniels.' "Its effect may have been pronounced, upon thoee nme srnatnrn are said to liave more eager for Rrltlsh honors than that the Democratic senate urged American appreciation, but In the lenders be more compromising in American navy that number negliIf sir attitude, followed submisgible." "I was and am personally oppoaed sion of the communication. The to a foreign decoration upon tha an. formal derision It only cient principle based upon the belief was announced waa to aid In that If such decorations could be acevery jxsedhle way the move to cepted (here would pot be wanting a few men In our service whose desire take up tile treaty and expedites to obtain them would make them . Its ratification. . solicitous of securing foreign approval And favor. Such an attitude would be subversive of (he perfect Independence Letter Sent Hitchcock of and freedom from obligation In the Feb. 7. President slightest degree to any foreign naWASHINGTON, tion, even to the most friendly nation Wilson has written Senator Hitchcock, with whom we might for the time the Democratic leader, approving the being be associated In war." reservation to the treaty of Versailles which tha senator. pgessnUdaa the tU,. partisan conference committee which recently failed to reach an agreement.' The letter waa written before the pub- V t'lication Viscount Grey letter stat- I Lodge reservations were to Great Britain. 1I -- h rear-lied- Leader Lapturedr,; - I MEXICO CITY. Feb. 6 Guadenclo de la Liave, formerly a federal general but in recent years an outlaw leader In the Vera. Crux region, ws captured Feb. 3 In a battle near Naut-lstate of 'Vera Cruz, and Is being .taken to Vera Cruz for a .court martial, according to a statement l"se(J at presidential staTf headquarters. The battle was disastrous to th rebel forces, it is said, resulting In thF death of Gen. Tonclano Vazquez, and Gen. Vicente Lopes, rebel leaders. and the wounding of the notorious Higlnlo Aguilar. a, Airplane Starts on Cairo To Cape town Flight - r - Senator Hitchcock, took the letter with hint today in the Democratic conference called to consider plans for getting the treaty back on the senate floor. It was understood that the president indorsed the minority leaders stand on the treaty, and reaffirmed the presidents attitude as stated In hla letter to the Jacksoa day dinner. No-Protes- to Grey t BY ROBERT (Universal Service Letter-- - J. PREW. Staff Corre-.sponden- . (Special Cable Dispatch ) LONDON. Feb. 6. No protest, official or to Lord Grey; letter on the treaty" reservations, had been received by the Britjeh governsemi-offici- ment up e today, Universal Serv- ice was Informed at Downing street,. CAIRO. Feb. T The airplane ' At the American embass. It was owned by the London Times which stated that Lord Greys letter had been left her yesterday morning on the seen by 'members of the UpiteiF first stage of its trip to Cape Town, States government prior to its publanded safely at Assuan, 425 miles'up lication. Efforts to elicit Information to precisely- - 'what .members the Nile, after flying for seven future, including a stop of 90 minutes to re- Washington administration had been pair a leak, - It will start from Assuan thus communicated with proved futile. It is understood in well Informed for Khartoum today. MERCHANDISE NEW YOJIK. Feb. 7. Wholesale looting of merchandlseMn transit upon the railroad of ths United States caused h loss of approximately In 1919, according to United States railroad administration statistic This Is estimated to be more than dmible the losses sustained In any pre. out that the war year, but it Is pointed ln creased cost- - of the-- commodities stolen which are roughly estimated to average 95 per cent must be taken into consideration when comparing past Accept Any Interpretative on Foreign Decorations Issue RAILROADS TOTALS -- IYtumIi and Sims rr Daniels Differ . , yesterday that Baron L,r s blt-Va- lf FRANKLIN SECRETARY -- all 1 at r, 7 d Bonillas to Start ant-bea- of the railroad guaranteed h) th government for a period of two ars under an agreement reached today the senais and house conferee on the railroad bill In announcing the ireement Uhatrman t'ummlns manager said the re provided that after the two year period the ercentg of return would be fixed by the Interstate commerce commission, which would tie authorized to fn rales so as to yield that return. With th agreement on this sec. tlon leader hope to complete final enactment of the bill befo 'March I. Determination of Valnc. Tho aggregate value of the properties used In transportation would be determined by the Interstate commerce commission, according lo th bill, the determination being by traffic districts These district would be used as group for rats making and In terrltorte where th roads earned an equivalent of the guaranteed return no Increase In rates would b necessary. Similarly the rates would be raised In to make up a deficit districts where th roads failed to earn the 6 per cent. Figure on the probable aggregate value of the roads are not available yet. The commission has completed th final physical valuation of only three roads and the tentative valuations of only 66. th largest being the Kansas City Southern. The outstanding capitalization and bonded Indebtedness of all th roads amount to approximately til, 000.000. 000. on which a 6 per cent return would Snowbound its forres today In a prodigious effort to ettrt cat Itself from the paralysing grip a storm that has reminded of the classic of ikM Spurred by Maor Hylana stlon during the suspension ofproclam nil but vitally necessary trurklng traffic for period of three dsya, big trucking corporations, the great metropolitan department store and others turned oter their auto trurks and drHers to cart the snow to piers where steamship companies loaned their employees for th task of dumping It Into the harbor Hundreds of stores set their employee to work with shovels The street cleaning department, still short about 10,qno shmelers. renewed Its ef. forts to Induce more men to Join the Russians' Leave Siberia rank to Special attention was Russian digging fire hydrants out ofgiven TOKIO. Feb. 3. Tuesday great been serving at pile of snow officers who has Vladivostok under the command of Trucking In the city1 snow-filleGeneral Kosanoff. gas m or general of streets wu restricted to those enthe Russian maritim province, hav gaged In moving food, fuel, milk and Private passenger cars arrived with their families In Tsuruga newspspera harbor on the southsrn coast of Ja- except those used by physicians have been th embargo until under placed pan. They were on board two Russian Tuesday morning. All UlUacns at Work. warships which entered port early today, arjd their arrival, which was Meanwhile citizens resurrected sno an unheralded, appears to Indicate shovels from and rellars and exodus of Russians from the eastern started to clearattics sidewalks and crosspart of Siberia. a walk too, Women, . . helped in the t snow removal, taking the hint from Reports received late last week the Barnard college girls who yen reflected a serious state of affairs in terday put man to shame I ry cleaning Vladivostok and it appeared the in the vicinity of the college. walks th of had assumed cfntrol Janitors of buildings on aids country up to within a short disdespairing of making headtance of .the city. Nlkolsk. 40 miles streets, way against drifts with a shovel, built OUThe reds hands In was the north, fires of boxes and melted the at that time and American forces great banka. that place snow along the railroad between encounterThe traction companies struggled be $1,045,000,000. and Vladivostok reported Guaranteed Return. to restore traffic on the surgrimly A state ing units of the soviet army. to something approaching face tinea return to the roads The guaranteed the in been had of siege proclaimed the normal, and tiueceeded In a meas- under government control has been of reinforcements and further city ure. Lines of street cars, frozen to the about I00. 000,000 annually, based on Japanese troops were expected. revo- tails for a day or more In the heart the three-yta- r period pust prior to More recent advices stateJ told the story of the com- the time the government took charge, of the lutionist forces had occupied Vladivo- panies' etty. u"a ind I ro ads receiving varying re- -' tribulations. vl d stok January 31 and that allied misstill towns, turn. Many however, outlying In had the city sions which had been sre Isolated and every hour brought Distribution of earnings In excess over the westward left, going return also Is profresh tales of woe from seaahoru re- of ths Siberian railroad in the direction of sorts where great tides had caused vided Inguaranteed of one ths bill. One-haHarbin. Nothing waa reported as to desolation and added to the hardships per cent would be available for unthe flight, of Russian officers which wrought by the snow and ice. productive Improvements. Fifty per may indicate th wholesale desertion Snowcovered trains from west and cent of the excess over 6 per cent of Russian- - government troops or. their New England crept Into- the- would go to th roads earning, aucb prove to half dispersion. If this should behind their schedules excess, while the remaining considerable case! the be th only with passengers tired and worn would be put Into a contingent fund forces in Far Eastern and by the commission and from their experience. Hotels were administered -Siberia would be Japanese and Ameri- crowded beyond for rencapacity due largely used to urchase equipmentwhich cans. also weaker to the roads, to the Inability of many commuters to tal could obtain loans from the fund. reach thelr homes -- dolnfi. NLW T li K. Feb New Tork marshaled Bourgeois, on Hie meeting will be : rm. fart of Meeting coworil of the league uf .N stums will be H. si M. Jatwrw beginning next Unlimak). Urtsili of the agrnda see n he wulnl on tlu arrli'al uf Action Result! in Foreign Reached by Agreement FHv Force Remaining Neutral Mltrr) In the jnmrownl by ihr Frexwh House and Senate Joint o( ihr IM of limn an who ntredlUoti to frmniKlwl hf All Citizens Recruited to rhupMileIn Hrrlln In in Revolt r Recent I Ui I So on Ih llw inn-cMirr In pursue riMInc Hrmnuwrk Committee on Policy For noowil of mlMMMMtnr derided tnU;. I( trtloa mu nuute known Ihnfifh Free StreeU of ObiUcIe to Two Year Period. U1 Mltrlil rxwnmunlqt. Traffic Blizzard Caute tl l andrrMonit tluil In llir iHnnkm of the qamlloa toiUf Iho im wl satlnr look ile lie I lull llir entire quoxtina now U np o Of Great Distress in AtlanLONDON. Feb 7 -- American ma further Ho bf ihr Milo shoe M wall ho action of tho ( WAMIISGTON. Feb 7 - A return when at rned Inter ladlvostok rlnra Utoriiloa. f on th aggregate cent t per tic Coast Metropolis. Japanese soldiers sttrmptsd to pre Tho value ilia I would be Jr K I Vti . 7, rtnviltf I GUARANTEE ON MARSHALED TO APPROVES Meets Wednesday CONFEREES FIX SHOVELERS ARE Submit Voluntarily. ;U Of World League lllMNIV CURB JAPANESE I Executive Council quarters, however, that Ambassador Davis waa cognizant ot the text of the. Grey- ON leHy-bftr--- Lodge Reservations Basis MM WASyilNCffON, Feb. 6 The modified' reservations agreed on tentatively by the recently abandoned bypartisan committee, most likely will be the losses with those ot today. Neverthe- basts bn which 'consideration' of the less there has been a-- , steadily in- peace treaty will be resumed next week In the senate. dreasing number of packages stolen. A technique of robbery has been, deRepublican leaders after a series with their party, col- veloped so highly that the methods of of conferences decided to 'take the master thieves" are simitar In the leagues today United States, England. France, Italy Initiative otf the senate floor In sug- -' of- the bipartisan and Argentina, according to a recent gertlng adoption modifications of thc State chamber committee's report of the United of eommeree in Argentina- - Thief Lodge resolutions Although tt is exto 'decision the inclined under are that the. hunters here, however, pected belief j original Republican reservations will discredit that organizations e attached 40 the treaty when it I .that a widespread Internationalranlzation' Is at work stealing mer-- 1 section two) (Continued on page-five- , chandis. ' 1 or-jb- ; - . ' |