OCR Text |
Show riwM rwtfi iw4 Matog DESERET EVENING NEWS. tiM jum OffMTto M Itb4 ' "Tedes FRIDAY MARCH 20 1920 LAKK SALT CITY km SEVENTIETH YEAR tpr Wlte ll t 24 , 20 PACKS k TW 1by.a Um GIvm In U UTAH . EBERT 'TROOPS HOLD WESEL & o A (8) tflb (9) cl (8) (9) (9s (9b (9) (5j b (Os' (S3 in Hands ot Workers Army but Infantry Attacks are Repulsed Artillery City Underto Fire From ' . A A A a A & to cft (Sb . 0 . t5j c cfc (3j c3) Labor Councils Come to Decision Not to Abandon Struggle In Ruhr District Until Government Military is Withdrawn . tllBM err. BLAME FORFRICTION NOTTO GO ONSTRKE, ALLEGES ot work hi Ik (1 Um rn. oe-t- he a lb today acuity Workmen Are Capitulating And CaUing Off Strike And Military Are Taking Over Control of Citiee Held Upper Hand Gotha. iraritf ruin- prom trch th isded room nortb . (ala are day. Mr. O -- L la lht f 1 er I I I hi rc man nca; tala Mr. iynt i on line knta -- - w M CAUSES BRITISH FOUND LOCKED :r R ly h. pro-marti- al Er-Te- five-stor- d. R e. s- - g. 4 IS i Ma-grw- 1 Picture Brides LEXINGTON. Ky., Mkreh fl Paul son of E. R. Little. Little, Lexington - capitalist, . who has town held for ransom by ' kidnapers, was found this morning locked In a room at a local hotel, Mr. and Mrs. Little first learned the wtoreabbuta ot their son when he telephoned, his home from the hotel room. He said ha had been kept a prisoner there since Wednesday night. Investigation disclosed, thet - the room had been reserved In advance by a man registered as J. C. Cox of Cincinnati - The boy disappeared Wednesday afternoon when playmates said he had been seen In conversation with a man. They said they had been given a dollar to deliver a box of candy. Soon afterward the father received a note stating that his' son, Paul, was being held for ransom. Little Intimated that the amount asked for was 125,040. Hs declared he wonld abide by the kidnapers .demands,, that he did not mind paying the money and only wanted the saf return of his son. At 7t20 oclock laat night. Little deposited a package containing the ransom money in a Main street garbage can.. When he returned a half-holater the package remained intact Believing the kidnaper failed to shWi up for fear of being "double-crosseLittle pocketed the money. At 7 oclock this morning the key for the room in which the boy was found was turned in at the hotel desk. At 7:15 Mrs Little was called to the telephone and heard her son' Tolcfc.' Nothing ha been seen of the Mr. Cox since he left the hotel at 7 o'clock. ur d, Detail of Misionary Death in China PEKING, March 25. The death of J, R. Menzles, a Presbyterian mission-tr- y of Toronto, OnL, who era killed by robbers at, Hwaikingfu. (Honan province) occurred while he was Women' quarter in the mission from an attack by a large band. Menzles, answering calls for help, grappled with one of the rob-br- s who was atterapimg-t- o .force an entrance, whereupon the others fired a volley, killing the missionary and and the robber. -- Pacific Liner Spokane Ground in Wrangell SEATTLE, March 25. ing anehorag during a the Pacific Steamship While seek- nowtorm, companys from steamer Spokane, southbound Alaska, struck bottom In Wrangell Narrows, on the Inside passage March 2S. according to. word received by the Seattle- - Merchant exchange today. The report said the veeeel continued her voyage In a J caking condition. On her arrival here, tomorrow she win go Into drydock. RESIGNED Reds Are Reported to Have Been Driven From Wesel Bridgehead South Across LJppe Rive-Artiller- y Opens on Worker. . BERLIN, March GERMANS WON From Uspan JUTLAND FIGHT, Tto dead are: ( . 4, ttotr children. The bodies of the children were recovered first The avalanche hit the house In uch a wsy tKaf they were thrown to the edge of tho Immense pile, among the debris and the wreck of the house, which was dtmqliahed. . . Kind AllBodie. Scores of citizens, working undsr the direction of Deputy Sheriff Oscar Fullmer, dug Into the snow, nearly 20 feet deep, and amid the ruins of the family domicile found the bodies of the father and mother. The family had not arisen for the day when the snow crashed without warning down the steep mountain side and snuffed out the lives of every soul in the The children were clad In house. their night clothes and the father and mother were found where death had overtaken them while they were asleep. The Parr residence was at the foot of a mountain, almost perpendicular in its steepness The slope was covered with the enow of early winter, but it was packed solidly and no danger seemed Imminent yesterday. Last night a heavy wet enow fell and the entire mass- was loosened. The avalanche gathered else and momentum for about one the mountain-side and carrying down with ths snow hugs boulders, earth and debris. : Great excitement prevails In Bingham and 'Vicinity; It Is feared that other slides might occur and many homes are In the direct paths of avalanches .that might, swoop down the steep slopes E. M. Parr had lived In Bingham seven or eight years At one time he was a leaser le the Utah-Ape- x and it is said he made good money. When the fatality occurred he ws a miner in the employ of the Utah Metals The family was well known and highly respected In the Bingham district. . A brother, Sam Parr, lived in Bingham at one time, but It le not known where he la now. mile,--clearin-g SAN FRANCISCO. March l4.-- rf Japan see plot or bride will continue coming Into thie country on-t- il August despite the prescription placed en them by the Japan beeeua of the fact that many orf tto brides secured passport previous to Feb. 25, wnen tto ban beare 4 '" came operative' awaiting passage to this country, Association of Amerthe Japan ica announced kero today. According to lb regulations of the government aa passJapan port is valid for six months after It issuance, the aaoctatton told. "It la therefor obvious that for the few month following Feb, 21 picture bride will continue to. come, though undoubtedly tn decreasing numbers The Japan government cannot legitimately revoke thi passport that were before Feb. -- -- ed Mmmamatoi Dublin Justice . Is Shot Dead March 24. Allan LONDON, magistrate who Bell, president presided ovei the Inquiry into the dealings of the Sinn Fein with Irish - batiks, was shot dead this moralps outside the Maaonlo club In Dublin, according to a dispatch from that city . to tho Central Neats . CORK. March 28. At the resumption' today of the inquest Into ths murder of Lord Mayor a witnese testlfed .that he saw eight ed men rifles, enter the police bar-- , racks after the murder. Mac-Curta- in non-unifor- m car-Tyi- ng Bolsheriki Take qeeeto4 to form a wrw rnhtosl. U w ueoffktoUy repotted fotog, "' rM) VAJtIV March by BisHir Outotw Baser, according t a Ciscaucasia Town LONDON, March T4. The Bolshevik! have occupied Maikop, a town In the territory of Kuban, Ciscaucasia, according to a wireless message sent out by the Russian soviet government at Moscow today. ' , tog e received her Omen BcrUa . Admiral , Credit . Teutons day. w With Superior, Gunnery Reorganization Attempt Avers' America ' Lacked BERLIN,- March 25 Interperty deliberation looking to the reorgaalae-tio- a Men Early in War, He of the German government hod - 5 - Says. - been fruit! up to T o'clock thie evening. Expected attacks oh Vic Premier Schlffer and Increased In the wing of the Socialist party led by Philipp. Sehledmann, former chancellor, featured the day. A wide gap developed between the Berlin contingent of the right Socialists and the party' representative who had supported Oustar Nock, former tnlnleter of defense at Stuttgart. The former faction to mad up of followers of Dr. Bchsidsmann. Ths toft wing of ths Right Socialist la openly rebelling against ths attitude of tha partys representatives in the government who ar accused of attempting to make reservations to the term under which the strike wa ended. Berlin party leader declare the men from Stuttgart have a too roseate Idea of the labor situation tn this city and appeal from acceptance of the term laid down by Herr Legion, which have been accepted by the Independent Socialists, - Msrch 24. Ths superior gunnery, "turned the British on their heeds at ths battle of Jutland, Rear Admiral Plunkett declared today before ths senate committee investigating the navys conduct of the war. Admiral Plunkett was, testifying aa to the need for keeping the navy personnel at full - strength so men WASHINGTON, by their" Oefman,' - might be adqeuately trained. He did no; go Into details aa to the Jutland battle and was aaked no questions re- garding It. who commanded The amendment, the great naval battery of guns on ths western front, was ths fourth wlltneas tn the Investigation of Rear Admiral Kims charges. He told the committee that the navy was without 14-In- sufficient men when the war began, lacked IMnerf Men. had been up again Ger"If many at the outbreak of the wan" he said. w would have been paying Indemnity today, and all because w did not have- - the trained men. W didnt have the men because Mr. Daniel would not let us have them and wouldnt let us do anything to get them. . Charges that tho navy department took steps to prevent reports reaching the QublJc regarding a shortage of personnel In the navy before the United State entered the war, were mad before tho committee by Captain Joseph K. Taussig of the naval war college at Newport. R. I. .Capt. Taussig who. was on duty at the navy department prior to the war and later served on destroyers oversea said Secretary Daniels in hia annual report In 1014, stated that the numerical strength of the navy waa adequate and In IMS said that only an additional 10.00Q men were needed whlle-th- enavy, gsneralboard.ln .Jls 1014 report had stated that 10,600 men were necessary. w ESKL. Khtnlsh Prussia. March 25. 6:1 p m.) (By the Associated Pr Fifteen shells 411 in ths civilian part of Weael today, considerably damaging a number of dwelling tna the business quarter , and killing nurse ad two children. YV'eeel to virths out-sl- d tually shut off from news of I world. Wotkert Entrenched 24. Workers LONDON, - March force entrenched along ths Uppe river, threaten. If they tall to capture Weael to destroy all factories and dismines In western Germany, says aoom-1 patch to the Exchange .Telegraph pany filed in Berlin this morning.established great have Red The similar to that of the German - . army, ' , -- -- head--quarte- rs - Will Maintain Fight : . tO-lO- wild-pigeen- , Wesel Is Shelled March ' 26. Decl- AMSTERDAM. In sion not to abandon the straggle ' was Band Tailed Pigeons the Ruhr district of Germany at a meeting of represents-tlve- s Flock to Del Monte Grove reachedof labor council of the Rhineland and Westphalia at Essen laat Navy Department DEL MONTH, Cal., March 24. only condition under night Theworkera band-Uile- d Flocks o from EO whichllbe k - - To be Put on Sale --fill Wage Negotiations e -- have -t- okenla the withdraw"! of govern their j T; ment force from the Muenater mm Proceeriing in Spokane abode in the grove of greatp pineal' peace At Reduced Price Del Monte. tary district, says a dispatch received ' Trades about For here. Building in the feed la early morning they .armed SEATTLE. March 24. Larg quanthe open grass plots and during the Until these force retire, maintain 26. tities of supplies will be put on sale In large band over the workers will undertake to SPOKANE, Wash., March day wheel, in 20 by the navy department April at Wage negotiations between building golf course and polo field. public order in the district. Per cent less than the market value, trade unions of the city and the Lieut. C. E. "Williams STnemBeF "OT ; Fighting Di&rDotmrr the board supervising the sale of sur- tractor ' organization, practically a Northat announced conclusion a successful today. reached plus supplies in Texas Rhenish Prussia, Campaign BUDERICH. west distribution will be made through conference tost night,' according to an March 24. Ebert government troops the Puget Sound naval station, Lieut. announcement of representatives of 24. Tex.. AUSTIN. Rhine across March Samuel the carWesel In held of still the cases Williams said. both side except Hildebrand, ichtyologist of the north of thl city, at 4 oclock this Small sales to Individuals will be penter and building 1 borer In the case of these two craft 50 United States bureau of fisheries, la in afternoon . Fighting which had been-, made at net catalogue prices and will be delivered by parcels post, Lieut. cento a day was said te separate the Texas aiding the health department In progress during the day was seemfor in Its campaign. Tha ingly dying sway at that hour and Williams said. Carload lots will ro two aide the men having aaked of his visit to to in- although Wesel is under fir from ara day Increaae and the contrac- chief purposes to wholesalers or dealers who au tl In Xhs use .of tillery in the hands of ths workers officials health struct amount sealed bids Articles to b placed tor having offered half that to local rambusla afflnl a fish which feeds en on sal rangy from structural steel to The matter was referred 1 (Continued on page seven.) mosquito larva. unions for consideration tonight provision ft -- -- antt-Marali- ar b-- -- ' 1 - 1 rwtgweid. mm-ti- Harold Parr, Rap. 1. s2-'(X- PLUNKEITSAYS (Special to The New.) re BINGHAM. March Id. Aa Mother aad father. family.' two children, perished In a snow-sli- de dock Uda between 4 aad sornlag near the Ctah MeaM mine at the head orf Carr Boric. E. M. Parr, 41 years old. Mra. Hilda Parr, Ms Wife, . years old. j Khmer Parr, 14. and I4--4- inaa Meatier, foreign total! er to -- lionaires Son'DigappearV. to: HAVE Scores of Citizens Dig Into Snow and Debris and Find IN HOTEL GRAVECONCERN ROOM Bodies Buried Nearly 30 Feet Deep Amid Ruins of Ransom Left by Fa'tKv'Ii'.Home Parr Family Meet Strike Within Three Weeks Not Taken Man Who Fearful Death. Tie-Uand of Menaces and Abducted Kentucky MilEnglish Industries ... - May be . R- - t KIDNAPED BOY COAL CONDITION St E- - ftoto er-Arr- -- Ivory mser died outb H altu-atlo- and ic huk H-T- lns evWWwor of frtrUo ml Otm WASHINGTON. Maw erf Rear Admiral WUllmaa R. Ve ctot ml Bros twee kk tto arrival Um rf Ceptela Ttoesee P. Magra tor, noam eittag Ik taatL third On erf AsteeVee rrafl arat le the yV Admiral today totor tto aavy toari erf tmqwJry tavnsUgaUag kk pern aval froae tto Brea cosubm by Reap Adatol toe slar tto staking erf Uw transport AsllUrs la Orator, KIT. to On his arrival CnpC Map wdar itoiavd groat eltoarrflantto Istarr Beat llsu said share errixy (Vector said. totosqanaiTy. esad salt-ab- le was to to prielwrd at esa. tot fttortor said aa on far aa edtoar arf hi rank was avail bin. Did ChpC Magvader aepport yoa toynlly ted carry eat year Admiral (Vrtocr was tokad 1 cannot Unify aa to his haring carried oat asy ardrra" Admiral do not thlak to eappectod M loyaPy." (Vector arid. htofeeiuw pres-M- nl of tniaoti mid today. in to( to strike, tot aa aaavoSdahto niftoM oMt time. Oer serncwt tor a otort Um or Mvrb SI.. 1 totter It will to ImpmlM to terp GOTHA. COTHA March IS.rOrder la slowly amoral b p out of tba confutlon and chaol of the centers laat It day tn.tha Industrial ara eapB of Kexeny. Tha workmen airlka and f ulatlns and calling off thooar control Result ra taking , .tha military of tha ettlea. Tho atrlker. who for several dtya hold the upper hand In Gotha, laid LONDON, . March II. The morndown their arma today. Tha garrison the gravout o( wore driven ing newspaper today take of fifty men who coal tomortk will return eonffraln week outlook est the city laet row. 'They declare that If. the laat hero Fighting ha been going on bean said a atrlka within has word to U continuously aince March II. weeka wljh a resultant stopllmaled that t peraona were killed three nd aeveral hundred wounded. Eighty page of the entire Industry of the . workera were burled today. country, is inevitable. Correepoijdf nt I' mire Hit. The situation, however, doea not A wall In the room of a leading ho- seem to be entirely clear.' and some tel where The Associated Pres call on the governla writing thla dispatch of the newspapers The waa pierced by bulleta from the dally ment for fuller information. fusillade. The etory of the happen-In newspapers opposed to the governof the rleehea ings here, typical ment charge that the administration many place In Germany, makes an In. la mishandling the whole coal situalaof history tcrestlng chapter tn the Pr. Wolfgang tion and Is falling to keep faith with bor's protest ugalnat Kopp'a nltempt to establish a reac- the miner. ' The South Wales men, who are government. tionary W Ivetta the news of the military coup to be receiving the highest wage, said at Berlin was received the workmen of elsewhere. Immediately ar accused in some quarter here. h struck, statements obtained from both 'spoiling'' for a fight and to b play, aides, substantially agree that thla s lng their own hand against the other The workmen what tlisiv happened: wwh the police miners and forcing the pace. Resentoffered to reto guard the city, and posted notices ment agatnat the government that looter would be shot. They then fusal to nationalize the mines also is consulted the major commanding the influence in tho He declared that the sol- exerting considerable garrison. controversy. diers would support Kapp and law. He sent to The London Times, while charging miles distant, where lurt, a the government with part of .the ooo stationed, for rein, blame and demanding full informaforcementa. tion concerning the controversy, conWorkmen Invest Goth. tends, nevertheless, that on merlta The workmen "from the munition the case of the government U mainly beof the city plants in tha outskirts right and that of the miners wrong. gan to, converge on Gotha, having The newspaper says the governments arma of and aeveral offer to increaae wages not only la seised quantities armored car a The forces engaged In ample, but generous. It remarks that the workmen had killed it would add more than 20,000.000 after ftrhling ts'o soldiers who interfered with -- a pounds sterling to the annual, wage boy tearing down the martial law bill, which must be borne by the con proclamation. sumer, while to concede the full deThe workmen lacked organization, mands of tha miners would involve an but were strong enough to expel the additional 4S.000.000 pounds, which email garrison. According to one of would be impossible. their leaders they realized that they The Dally Sketch says it has learned would be unable to resist successfully that Premier Lloyd Giorge has decidthe soldier com- ed eventually to concede the miners a massed attack-bing in from Erfurt and yielded in or- their full demands, providing they der to avoid further bloodshed. he payment accord agree to Their opponents admit 'that-tlng to output But the newspaper adds, to men not workmen did interfere the strenuously oppose tliia attempt writh-t- h municipal - authorities- - - or establish a government of their own. Fire Xavier Sweeps There is no talk whatever of a soviet, althouglvthe conservatives assert that Apartments Causing1 Bolahevikl agents arrived and tried to induce the strikers to organize one. Large Property Loss Continuing his tour ' ot investiga- -' tlon In Saxony the correspondent SAN FRANCISCO. March 2. Fire visited today every trouble point be- swept the 8t. Xavier apartments, a tween Leipsic and Gotha. y structure, last night, causing damage estimated at many Jthou-sanjfiHtory Control Krista. woman tenant, overThere exists apparently only one Is- come dollars. A was carried to safety by smoke, The sue. namely, military control. was workers everywhere announce as thair by a policeman. One fireman injured by 'falling glass. A principal demands abolition of martial slightly was believed to have of the civil defectivethefurnace law and the blaze.- started guard composed of representatives ofclasses to replace Noskes reacUrging- Restriction tlonary army. In the country districts there are Mexican Labor Of still a few small bands erf armed workmen who have not yet been MEXICO C1TT. March 2. Circurounded up. Such a one stopped the Associated Presa automobile at Kaum-ber- lars urging measures to prevent emiIt consisted of about a dozen gration of Mexican workers to the uniformed men who wets quartered at United States were sent to all state interior deu wayside inn. Most of them were administrations ts by the out that many mechanics or carpenters from Naum-ber- g partment. . It pointed and other nearby- towna They Mexicans are tn a miserable plight in said they had heard that four of their southern states, where they can find unumber had been captured by troops no work. It is also said, that Mexrestricted emigration endangers ican agriculture and Industry. (Continued on page Seven.) BAXE-COBUR- i wfli mdoataMU; W i Karri ngum, HUaoka April I, n-n- vn ot ml to txptnm ml aldtlflK the mr at work after Itot date. It to psotU, of ooww. ttot anme klad of as atnunu wtU to tom rss- rndnt at the wotlaf M flew Torto Mowda j to keep of work win oomr." i i Mavriz mIw of mlMim Worker Cau4 TiliiHil It riy it ML, AT' BREST ON CAPT. MAGRUD1 R HEAD OF ILLINOIS MINERS rXIUA. REPORTED ADMIRAL FLETCHER PUTS MINERS MAY QUIT WORK BUT V . ' |