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Br H 19 2 THE OGDEN STANDARD-EXAMINER, THURSDAY, APRIL 22, 1920. I Advices From Private Sources Claim Two More States Have Seceded. MEXICAN EMBASSY MAKES ADMISSIONS Commission En Route to So nora to Adjust Trouble Be I twcen Factions. WASHINGTON, April 21. Reports i from Mexico, official and unofficial, to day emphasized the growing strength ot the revolutionary movement led by the state ot Sonora. Advices from private sources said two new stales, Hidalgo and Tlaxa-i cala, supported by their legislating and state troops, had joined in the se-1 cession movement. Other dispatches I told of scattering but strong additions Iiu me ii-iuiuuuuibib leu ay ucnerais ! Arnulfo Gomez, Rodolfo Gnllegos, Al ii bundio Gomez and Amaro Murango General Arnulfo Gomez was said to 1 h'tve occupied Tuxpan with 3,000 men . and to be threatening Tampico, the vital center of Mexico's oil region. Mexican Embassy Makes Admissions. The Mexican embassy issued n for mal statement on the situation, de 1 Glaring the revolution to be only a lo c-.l movement. The statement "added, however, that if the secession move ment should spread, it would result in "the stoppage of business, curtailment of wealth and international commerce and the indefinite postponement of the foreign debt." The embassy said ihe only state gov ernors sympathizing with the rebel lion were Governor Enrique Estrada Of Zacatecas. and the cnvnrnnv nf Mio. Ihoacan. This was the first confirma lion received here that the Zacaioens governor had joined the revolutionists and his accession is regarded as im portant owing to the important posi tion of his state. Gen. Hill Sides With Rebels. Another statement from the embassy said General Benjamin Hill, campaign manager for General Obregon, win is a candidate for the presidency and is siding openly with the revoliitioiisls, , has been wounded in a battle at Cnn treras in which the rebel force? woro defeated. General Hill by birth is an American. The senate committee investigating ' Mexican relations today summoned Gen. Salvador Alvardo, who was gov- eraor of Yucatan for Carranza during jf the Hencquiu controversy and who is now In Washington, to appear before it Tuesday. I Silk, Cotton ad Rice i Exchanges Are Closed ' TOKIO, April 1G. (By The Associat ed Press). The silk, cotton and rice exchanges closed today as a result of ten days' slump in prices. With the close of the stock exchange the losses j to speculators were estimated at two jj buiion yen. ! 0 PiiULISHERS i OF-NEWSPAPERS i Must Make Further Conserva tion of News Print Paper or Worse Time Will Come. NEW YORK, April 21. Frank-' lin P. Glass, president of the Amer lican Newspaper Publishers' associ-1 ( ation, g-ave warning- at the annual ! convention today that newspaper! publishers must maek further con servation of news print paper if j i Lhey were not to have a worse time ! ' next fall and winter than they had j 'in the last six months. j "It cannot be denied," he said, ' ("that the publishers themselves j are responsible for yielding; to the j reat demand for paper, and that ( jthcy had increased tnis skyrocket' auction market by bidding against each other, by willingness to take ine volume oi advertising onerea, , no matter how small the margin of profit."' At the luncheon of the bureau of advertising of the association, ' iE. T. Meredith, secretarj' of agri culture, made a plea for greater , publicity for farmers, saying that a bill inimical to agriculture should have the spotlight of pub licity turned on it just as a vie-1 icus franchise should have. The secretary said that many limes the farmers are not in a po I sition to get their views fully be-, i fore the public and could not therefore protect their interests 1 effectively. IMS FIRMS : Ft TO HE ; TiEITIi WASHINGTON'. April 21. Despitr ' ihe government's wartime appeal for ipx payments as a patriotic doty, more than 300,000 firms and individuals fail ed to make -honest returns under the jevenue laws In the Inst two years,' the bureau-of internal revenue an-( inounced tonight. In a six months' dive, which ended February first, $19,- 031,000 in delinquent income and lux ' !y taxes were collected, Commission s'" Williams reported. I "The amazingly large number" of j persons who did not respond to the I t- nvernmenl's appeal has caused treas-! i vy officials 10 consider the delinquent tax payment problem a grave one. A now roundup of alleged delinquents has been instituted to cover the tax period on which returns were made-! i larch 15th. . ! A Message to Fvljoftters VK the rC h"man doctorp right around in your neighborhood' I the doctors made of flesh and blood just like you : the . doctors with IT -aE? h6artS :i-h0S0 ra?n wh0 mo respond to your can in the dead of night as readily as in the broad daylight: they are read? yU -E00d Liat Flcter's Castoria has8 done, is doing ; td Tvill do, from thair experience and their love for children. , Te-T'3 C310 !3 nothing new. We are not asking- you to o7bSWek JU3t Wnt t0 imprCS3 UPn yU thG POScS . Your physician will tell you this, as he knows there are a num- ! JfilfSSSrltbS6 market' and,be fa PartkU,ady -torcTa j. Genuine Cnstoria always beam the sl-naturo of "TT j 1 I 1L iSSf ! Released From Joliet on $10,-I- 000 Bond and Expected to . Call New Mass Meeting. STRIKING SWITCHMEN TO VOTE ON WALKOUT Railroads Announce 120 Men Return to Work in Chicago. CHICAGO, April 21. John Grunau, leader of the outlaw Chicago Yard-! men's association, who was released I from jail at Joliet. today, after friends ; had deposited $10,000 bond, was ex pected to call a new meeting of strik ing switchmen to end the walkout, fol lowing the tumultuous termination of a mass meeting today, called by the committee of strike leaders to vote on leturning to work. At the time of his arrest on a charge or violation of the Lover act, Grunau refused to furnish bond, but later was j released on his own recognizance, only , to be taken into custody again and J iu jui! un riMusnig io inrnisn Dona i-fter federal officers charged lie had violated his agreement to take no fur ther part in the strike movement. Declaring that they had been "sold out" and hooting down attempts of leaders to appeal to them to end the walkout, several thousand strikers to lay bolted a mass meeting when it was' finnouncod that Grunau, who was to ihve presided, was still in jail. ! The gathiring broke up in an up oar. Tumult reigned inside the hall md outside for a half hour but there i as no violence and no arrests were n a do. On the rostrum was an American liar, One of the speakers touched it constantly as he spoke. As another Under began to speak he was greeted viih cries of "Where is Grunau?" "Wo vant Gnmau." Uiforts to maintain nr ('or wero futile. Someone called out "The meeting's adjourned," and there , was a rush for the door. j The railroads announced that 120' men returned to work today and thai , livestock receipts in Chicago and the' movement of livestock and fresh meat . io the eastern points were normal. ;;iecn hundred cars of coal were re t eivetl. on Organization of Expeditions Well Underway; Local and National Associations Busy BIRMINGHAM, Ala. April 21. Re lief expeditions proceeded today to sections of Alabama, Mississippi, and Tennessee, swept yesterday by a tor mulp that killed 155 persons, injured several thousand 'Others and caused property damage roughly estimated at two million dollars. With the organization of relief par ties and offers of aid from local and national charitable associations, the work of assisting sufferers from the cornado was well "underway tonight. Instruction of lines of communication and the complete blocking of roads traversing .the devastated sections of fered the greatest obstacle to opera tions of the relief parties. Temporary hospitals will be con structed to care for the injured and nick, those in charge of the relief said tonight, and plans already are und r way to provide shelter for the numer 9us families whoso homes were blown :iway. Jl i """""" ll-TIIH'WTCtkfcL-kja. I I !sQ -----m IN LINE BOYS fT I I E ' J) There's Going: toBe Another of Those I I f OTff Utah Hot Springs I Hi I L lrtt 'TWENTY MINUTES FROM OGDEN" iSp Bj I SjT lSatarday Evening, April 24thJ W-':'! Hli' I )j If yu're wearing- overalls, it's all right with (jf ! Refresh-. 11 H , ( us Come out-If you are not wearing- overalls 71 ' ment ! 19 I , s. aU right, too. We, being- good sports, are J ) , QGoo-d ! M . H A tryi to help reduce the high cost of living L-'T" W I I Free Dance . I .SraRSSZSSI HERE EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT TSs. 3 I tZ " The Jazziest of Music Furnished by E?P' 1 r 1 ?w.SandUnaViIX:: PROF. EEN FORD AND HIS GANO ((g m We'll Make You Feel 1 " 1 CSrf S i5 1JSPIT1L I. W. W. Suffer Fatal Gun shot Wounds in Clash Near Anaconda Mines. POLICE SEEKING THREE MEN SERIOUSLY HURT Striking Miners Massing; Feeling Runs High and Reserves Called Out. BUTTJE, Monl., April 21. Fourteen men, believed to be Industrial Work ers ol the World strike pickets, and one policeman are in local hospitals 'suffering from gunshot wounds su stained in a clash on Anaconda Road near the Neverswqat mine at -1:10 o'clock this afternoon. Physicians be lieve two of the alleged I. W. W. will die. Police were searching for three oth er men said to have been wounded seriously. Striking miners were mass ing in Philander "Hall and the street ! in front of the building. Feeling runs I Itigh. Police reserves have been call-1 ed nut.. ' l i Investigation Starts. County Attorney N. A. Roterini; ntarted an investigation or the clash in which mine guards and I. V. W. pickets were involved, but early to i night had announced no conclusion as to the cause of the shooting. At his (request the police raided the Simon I rooming house from which place earl l ier reports stated shots had been fired. 'I ho patrolmen found the place partly occupied and not abandoned as wa3 believed and all the occupants declar ed no one had fired from the building and that there had been none there during the afternoon except the usual patrons. i Sheriff O'Rourke, who was in the crowd in front of the mine, stated that lit could not account for the open break, though he said several argu ments were in progress a few minutes prior to the time the first shot was fired. He declared that as the argu ments became heated ho decided to order the pickets away from the mine :.nd was ordering his men to start the crowd moving when a shot was heard and instantaneously there was shoot ing in every direction. Throughout the day there had been Ji-ports of flglns between pickets and men seeking to approach mines inci dent to the strike called by the Metal Mine Workers' union No. S00 to en force demands including a wage of for a six h6ur day and release of "po litical prisoners." Shots Firei! From House. Deputy Sheriff Jack Melia informed Ihe county attorney that the first snot fired passed through his hat as he was standing facing thb gates with his back to the Simon boarding house. He j declared that the bullet apparently ;come from an upper story window of jlhe boarding house and that when he i turned he saw a man lean from the window and shoot a second time. Earl Ut in the day the deputy stated, shots from this boarding house were fired into a street car carrying miners go ing to work. Scattering reports throughout the uay came to police headquarters of mi-, ners, metal tradesmen and hoisting' engineers being beaten by pickets. The operating companies made a special effort to get engineers and pumpmen into the mines to keep them from be ing flooded. Little effort was made to get miners through the lines. J Wyman, it is believed, did not see I the other man, who Is said to have , fired without warning. The fugitive leaped to his horse af ter the shooting and attempted to es cape down main street of the town. A clerk in a general store shot hi3 horse 1 trom under him and the man escaped ; on foot. Posses from Monida, , Lima and Dillon are in pursuit. ' i oo SAN REMO. April 21. (By The As sociated Press). Discussion of what I shall be asked of Germany and how what is asked shall be exacted will bo begun by the supreme council to 'morrow. Tension between the French and British" delegates on this subject has been considerable. The supreme council had a dreary three hours afternoon session over Turkish bondholders' rights; then over boundaries, but did not finish the treaty altogether. The news of Ger many's request to retain an army of 200,000 reached San Rcmo first through the Associated Press dispatch er an3 was discussed in an animated manner in conference circles. It Is re called that 200,000 was Marshal Foch's original figure for the German army, but it aws reduced to 100,000 at tho instance of Premier Lloyd George. The premiers decided to end the Council on Saturday. Many questions iwUI be left unsettled, but each prime :oinister had infernal problems at home demanding his attontion. That is the official explanation. WASHINGTON, April 21. Suggest ion has been made to the allied gov ernments by tho state department that there be granted an extension to Ger many of tho agreement which expired April 10. and wliioh permitted tho pres ence of limited German forces In the neutral zone. Tentntivc decision of the San Rcmo p inference yesterday lo compel strict enforcement of the Versailles treaty, however, is interpreted by officials here as indicating that the, allies have not deemed it advisable to grant the! xtrnaion. The agreement in question was con- -mrm a i M tf"w I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 . -i-- j .y , , LUjm, t i pB I EismMgsia j. minium b quite sensible and Plctical-get sensible practical shoes. Shoes that start out comfortable and stay comfortable. Shoes that look right and I D keep their good looks up to the last "shine." Shoes that wear well, giving I I I ood return for the money they cost. This somewhat exacting description i 1 Psely describes every pair of Buckhecht Shoes. There's no shoe made I H I that will better serve the man who wants shoes that will give him f, ' I "extra service every step comfort every minute." j " F I ' , Tare's aBucKHECHT model for your particular type of foot. Each !' I embodies the qualities of the famous Buckhecht Army Shoe H K - In a variety of styles and leathers from 58.00 to $1? 00 i ' 1 K 0 VMt h your dealer, send his name and your order to Wk L BUCKINGHAM & HECHT I MANDFACr-RERS Sm.thMa SAN FRANCISCO - - jPTOArtWw urn. ,M 1 fl 1 COME TO SAN FRANCISCO MARKET WEEK "1 MAY 17 TO 22 I ' : ' jiest of Germany against provisions of I tho Versailles treaty prohibiting the J retention of an armed garrison in the , neutral zone opposite the Rhine bridge heads. In permitting tho retention in il zone of twenty battalions of Infan try and a small contingent of cavalry 'and artillery in answer to the German t request, the allies expressly stipulated the forces should be withdrawn three months after the treaty should take ef fect, or on April 10. the treaty having rono into effect January 10. American interests, it is said in of nclal circles here, would be vitally af fected by the withdrawal of all Ger man police protection from tho neutral zone opposite the Coblenz bridgehead. Also reports received here recently by officials have indicated that withdraw- i al of the armed German forces froml: that area probably would set off In- i i cipient red revolts in a fringe of Ger man towns fronting Coblenz. Mandate For Armenians Abandoned. PARIS, April 21. Tho supreme council has abandoned the idea of giv ing the mandate for Armenia to the league of nations as a result of objec tions raised by tho council of the lguc of nations, and will ask neutral Norway and Sweden to help the Ar-Li'.-nian people establish a free state, an international loan being floated to finance it, says a Havas dispatch from San Heino. The dispatch adds that the oupreme council further decided to leave a set tlement of tho Cilicla and Syria ques tion to negotiations between Great Britain and France and at the after noon sitting considered plans to give Smyrna political status, takiug into xccount the Mussulman element, with-J out neglecting the legitimate interests in the city. oo Verdict For Mining I Company for Damages W FORT SMITH, Ark., April 21. Vcr U diet for the Pennsylvania Mining com- iHl pany for $100,000 actual damages ' against district No. 2G, United Mine Hj Workers of America, and union locals ( In three Arkansas counties, was rc-' ) turned today in federal court here. Un- iw. der the Sherman act, the judgment ; ifB against the defendants will bo tripled, to aggregate $300,000, court officials explained. 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