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F,ftitth Year-No. 213 Pr.ce Fiv. cnt. OGDEN CITY, UTAH TUESDAY EVENING, AUGUST 17, 1920. LAST EDITION 4 P. M f
1 BOLSHEVIK CLUTCHES ON WARSAW BROKEN I
II POLICE AVENGE MURDER OF INSPECTOR
I A efts A A L ' A .av .
H Ceil ORDEAL
OF REPRISAL
FELT IN ERIN
Police and Military Use Bombs
and Bullets to Clear
Tipperary Streets
LORD MAYOR OF CORK
DEPORTED TO ENGLAND
1 Belfast Irishman Debarred
From All Privileges in
U Mkm House of Lords
jH DUBLIN. Aug. 17. District lnspec-1
ffSaaaaaaaaf tor Wilson was shot dead at Temple-1
Yjifl mare last night while walking fr""
SHeaaaa! the police barracks to his home, ac-
Am dint to "' 11 ""' 'fhurles
I BELFAST, Ireland. Aus 17. Tlp
nararv underwent 0 grim ord.-nl of
,,-prls'al Inct night following the mur
der of District Inspector Wilson ar -cording
to a press dispatch The police
find military turned out to avenge In
spector Wilson and with bombs and
bullets. speedilv cleared the streets
The town hull and several shops wen
worked. The disorders lasted several
hours.
CORK. Ireland. Aug. 17 Terrencc
MrSweeney, lord mayor of Cork, was
deported to England today aboard a I
destroyer, after having been foun.l
guilty of sedition by court martial yes- j
tC McS.veenev. who has refused food'
since he was arrested last Thursday
night was Convicted of having under
nnnirni the secret iol k. " cipher,:
, f bv mi made d seditious spe oh on
rLaaW the occasion of his election, and of
having In i
resolution oi the Cork corporation
SIB pledging allegiance to the Iilsh rtpub.
M j i. nn p.'ilt i" u ,"' n "ur'
tlal declared was likely to cause dis-
ItiM affection.
BH LONDON, Aug 16. Alexandei M
arllsle, prominent Belfast Irishman
HH and a prlw councillor, has been dr-
ItSaaal barred from the privileges of the
Haaaaal house of lords by a resolution paesed
Vasal today. Action was requested b Ban
Curson, th foreign secretary, who de-
wM olarsd thai Mr Carllslo'p letter in re-
ply to a demand ft t him foi u a pol
il og$ toi an affro it to ihi I ousi
fffK "aggravated rather than diminished
HH' his recent Insult."
' X . Bxandei M Carlisle, landing i"
fjA hind the rail a) th steps to tbi throne
WVgm v. hen the house "; ioids passed Hm
mmmm sechnd reading of the Irish coercion
flaaaW bill. August 9, protested If you pass
HB the bill von muy kill England, not Ire-
land No replj wa made and ho left
PJarl Curaon later, acting on the re-:
st of the house of lords, sent i ,
JM demand for an apology for "a serious;
I, i, i f front 4o the dignity of the lord-i
ship." To this Mr. Carlisle replied
that If he had offended the king he I
was ready to apologize, but If It was
ot lords, "then the case la dlffsrenl "
Yfk SYDNEY. N. S W.. Aug. 16- Rival;
Ekv met) tines were hold In Australia yes-i
4
lending the arrival Of A ich bishop
prominent In Ihe pro-Man nil demon-,
m rations, declaring the archbishop's
treatment was a gross insult to the)
Catholic church. Resolution! were
mm
oa the archbishop's movements and i
tiling the resentment of the meetings.'
' hesa iesoiutions win be sent to in
iniar Lloyd Oeorgs ami Bamoiln Del
. lera, "president of the Irish repub-'
9 The antl-Mannlx meetings were,
equall enlbuiani in bupporliog the
rk British and Australian premiers. The
Br speakers declared the archbishops ut-
i lotus splrll
which sought to provoke disruption of
ii, empire and kindle racial batred.
19 LONDON u 16. Premier
Hr Oeorge told the house of commons
Ht that the government was prepared to,
H give every assistance to the mother of
Hi Archbishop Mannlx of Australia., who
H y. It In Ireland, to visit the archbishop:
In England, but that the government j
H vioulrl not nermlt the archblshort tali
Visit Ireland.
This was the answer to a question
whether the government wool.) re
consider Its decision to bar Archbishop
slattUlx from Ireland In view of the
archbishop's statement that after
many years absence he wished to visit
Ireland to see his mother and not for
any political purpose.
NEEDS LOTS OF ROOM
FOR HIS RECORD FAMILY
iv UnJ renal s-rvicf.)
NEW YOKE. Aug. 17. Immlgra
t.on officials here today were run
,ticed that iir Paulson will need
every square foot of the 160 acre farm
he has bought in Minnesota when they
hud seen Paulson's family.
When they walked off the steam-
hip FYederick in from Copenhagen
It looked II ko school letting ut.
There were fifteen little Paulsons,
i -nKiriK In a:e fiom 19 years to four
months. Then the future- American
t lurmer dropped the real bomb:
"If this Isn't enough to work my
farm, rn ssnd back to the old ooun-
liy for reserves," he said "1 have
two daughters und three hens on the
other side, all married Thev could
bring nine grandchildren, too
Bssl
OUTLOOK FOR SUFFRAGE DARK IN TENNESSEE'
CLOSEUP VIEW
i OF COX GIVEN
BY SULLIVAN
Has No Press Agent an'J
Moves About Dayton Very
Informally
SHOULD BE DOUGLAS
FAIRBANKS OF POLITICS
Candidate Anciressive and
Competent But Hasn't Got I
Down i.o Real Action Yet
Hv U IRK si i,l l
(Gopyright, the New ork Evening I
E6si )
COLUlfBUS, ihlo. Aug. 17 Your J
correspondent has lately spent several
idays at Dayton In this contract with
the Democratic candidate)! home town,
one was conscious of several marked
Impressions quite different from the
preconceived ones based on the early I
und hasty newspaper dispatch that
came out of Dayton Immediate!) after,
the nomination.
As to some cf these Impressions,
deallnK with Cox's personal back
ground and with the attitude of Day
ion Inward him one would rather wait
'for ihe maturing "and confirming of
the Impressions before attempting to
vvriie thehli but there is Qne quite
'definite impression which Is shared
1 1 all the other newspaper men with
whom 1 have talked. Neither Cov noi
j those Immediately around him, nor the
Democrat!" national committee ha
:yet waked up to the fact that they
compos'- One-half of the great nations!
campaign and that more than one
month of that campalrn has already
passed and thai less than three month.
I remain.
COX COMPETENT
('ox, so far. has done practically
.nothing towards adjusting himself to
the enormously Increased figure he S
In the nation and neither Cox nor
the national committee has done any
thing towards surrounding the Candi
date with a machinery adequate to
I what is now expected of him. Cox
Is so obviously competent a person In
'practical affairs that hardly anyone
Would be so rash as to aa that he
doesn't realize what has happened to
him. Nevertheless, it Is a fact that the
Democratic campaign so far has bet n
conducted as If it were merely a local
campaign for governor.
No changes or additions have been
mule to the personnel around Cox In
Lhe waj of additional secretaries or
clerical help. Ills son-in-law who Is
the executive head of his newspaper,
now seems to. devote a good deal of
his time t0 the candidate's personal
afl urn. but that Is aooiit all that has
been done towards preparing for the i
Incn teed mall and the other rruilu-j
lue ,.f details that may be expected
to pile up if the campaign Is to be
energetic.
You occasionally observe v'ox him-1
h telephoning about Ihe time of
trains and the like. His trips from I
Dayton to the places where he makes
peaches are not organized with any
more careful preparedness than if h!
Were I priv its Cltfsen. All In all there'
le not In Dayton that air of many
is:tor, of piles of telegrams und hur- I
rving messengers that one is accus- j
tomed to associate with a candidate!
for the presidency
I XCI ii mini vi lit M7T1V1
In a way this lack of excitement Is I
.ittr... t.,. but doesn't Ko with the kind i
of campaign that the Democratic na-
tlonal committee must soon get under
wa If the full strength of the part
Is to be brought out for Cox In Novem
ll r 't is m marked contrast With
Harding's home t Marlon, where the!
secretariat and clerical help taken on
for the campaign already fills one'
house and Is about to overflow Into!
another For the mosi i.an kmIuMv
I this lack of organized expansion Is due
to the change In the chairmanship of
(the Democratic national committee
and the fact ihat no new machine!
Can possibly get under way as prompt-!
II) as the old one could have.
Kroni the point of view of effective
tnd business like organization the Re
publicans were much, wiser In holding
On the chairman who had been In
charge for the past two years
( IGGRESCTVE
As to Cox himself, sverj impression,
you get la one of quick competence, all
his friends and associates pli ture him I
as extremely aggressive and his ca-1
ir-. er would seem to prov e thHt qualltv . I
,His friends say that when he really
gets going ami puts his back Into the
mpalgn, he Is the Douglas Fairbanks
of politics, nevertheless, anvone who
h-' " " 1 ton recently rniJ5t have
wondered whether Cox hu yet realiz-'
ad the huge proportions of the bus!-1
ness of impressing his practically un
Known personality on a hundred mil-'
lion people within the space of eighty'
das s. I
'ox undoubtedly has energy very-'
body says that of him Whatever he!
wants he KOe9 after aggressively and
general he brings home the bacon 1
but for the purpose of the present I
(C'ontlo"i on Pero Two.) I
Tennessee Capitol, Scene of Struggle
. m I
mtmmmmrmmmmmmmBmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm,mmmmmmmammmMmmmBa mm m
BRITAIN ASKED
TO TELL STAND
ON 'ANTI-REDS'
Soviet Russia Wants Defini
tion of Empire's Attitude
Toward Gen. Wrancjel
j LONDON, Aug. 17 Soviet Russia,
I through M, Kariu noff. ;iead of her
trade mlhMion here, has asked Premier
; Lloyd George for a precise definition
Of the British attitude toward "Jeneral
Wrangel," commander of antl-Holshc-"
vikl forces In southern Russia.
in a tetter to the premier. M. Kam-
ensff quotes ail dispatches exchanged
between the British and Russian gov
ernments com isrning General Wrange
beginning with the dispatch from Earl
Curgon to the Bolshevik! foreign min
ister on April 14 It was this mes
sage which urged a termination of
hostilities and the d:M.andment of
General IVrangel'i troopa on the basis
of amnesty lielng granted
HALTi i s u r ( rrt)N
M Kam eff declares this dispatch
Indutcd th. soviet govern ment 'to re
frain from military measures which
would have rendered General Wrangel
powerless, and he seeks to .-how u was
British Indecision relative to Its Rus
sian policy which encouraged General
Wrangel and led to the present situa
tion and recognition of General
wrangel by France.
He intimates that Great Rrltatn Is
large!) responsible for this recogni
tion being extended.
FORCES m:ri v eqi m.
SEBASTU1-ML. AuK 17 (Rv The'
Associated Press ) -The mllltarv!
forces ol General Wrange! head of
the anti-Bolshevik government In
south Russia now ajrgregate ajbout 50 -
000. one-third of whom are bigh-clasi
troops. Russian officers eslimate (hat
the opposing Bolshevik forces num
ber about r.0.000. Their estimates are
thai the Soviets have some 300 00o!
troops on tho Polish front and luO -000
reserves.
i oo
MAGAZINE PUBLISHED
IN PRISON IS SUSPENDED
0S8ININ0, N. V. Aug 17. Thr
Sing Sing Bulletin, a magazine edited
by the Inmate, of Sing sing prison
and said to have a circulation evenl
in Europe and Asia, has suspended
warden Lowes announced last night 1
Visitors going to the prison todav to
obtain copies of the August number
were refused them.
Protests against suspension have
been sont Governor Smith bv former
Attorney General George W. Wicker
sham. Judge Otto Rosaslyh Adolph
Eewiston and others. It was aald Suii-'
erlntendent C. F. Rattig.n three
months ago ordered rh circulation of
the Bull, tin reduced from 5.000 to!
1.000 copies. j
BULGARIAN PEACE PACT
OFFICIALLY PROMULGATED
PARIS. Aug. 17 The treatv of
peace between the allies and Rulgarla
Signed laS November, was officially)
promulgated today
t
i
' jimXy&iXWZtQ jUOTfrom iwhj, miu i' w. n j JseseSBasaar
OMAHA HOTEL
MANAGER KILLS
; 0AM5H COUNT
Fatal Shot Fired When Vic
tim Tries to Enter Ar
mour Home
OJCAHA, Neb.. Aug. 17 Christian
P. Van Knuth. an Omaha real estate
dculer. who had claimed to be a Dan
ish count, but who was naturalized
an American citizen several months
ago. died late last night In a hospital
arttr he- had been shot by Milton W.
Armour, manager or a grill in a proin
ir.i nt local hotel
The shooting occurred at the Ar
mour home. Armour was arrested but
Irtcr released on bond. According to
his story the automobiles of tho two
men narrowly misaed colliding earlier
In Ihe evening, after which Vim Knuth
followed Armour to his residence
where he forced an entrance.
Armour said Van Knuth was ' iiifu-
iriated and that he fired his pistol at,
him because ho wanted to protect his
family
According to tha police a bottle of;
liquor was found In Van Knu'th's car.'
POLICE AND RAILROADERS
IN JAMAICA ON STRIKE
KINGSTON, Jamacla, Aug. 16. A
strike has been called by policimcn
here and by railway employes the
former demanding double pay. while
the railroaders object to a white traf
fic Inspector. rder Is being main
tained by troopa and special police, j
oo
0STEND HARBOR OPENED;
SUNKEN WARSHIP RAISED
LONDON. Aug. 17. The British
cruiser Vindictive, which was sunk
in the entrance of Ostend harbor M i
Hi 1918. has been refloated and the1
port Is again open for traffic.
-w
l .VM s REPORT.
WASHINGTON, Aug 17. St.
Joseph. Mo., lrevl.se,!) 7 7 . '.' .1 D . Increase
535. or 0.7 per cent.
Santa Cruz, Calif., 10,917, decrease'
229, or 2.1 per cent j
WILSON READY
TO REORGANIZE
I lEIIGOJEPOfiT
But U. S. Insists on Protection
of Lives, Indemnities and
No Confiscation
atBXICO CITY, Aug 17. (By the
Associated Press.) President Wilson
is ready to recognize the present Mexl
!can government if the laiter agrsOS
with the terms set forth in a proposal
from Secretary of State Colby on this
siibject, according to a message sent
!: President Do' La Huerta from Fer
nando I'ulrcno. egexlean high commis
sioner to the I'niled States, now In
tl.e American capital, says the Excel
sior today.
Secretary Colby's proposition, ac
cording to the newspaper, was:
First, that North American lives and
property be respected,
Second. that indemnities be paid
lorelgners who suffered during the
revolution ;
Thlrfl, that the Carranza decree :
Which urn f,,in,l In I.o 1 1... . k..
- ' . v u . u . J ij , villltfll il IUI j UV
derogated. '
WASHINGTON. Aug 17 The1
three proposals given in Mexico City'
, dispatches as precedent to recognition
,of the present Mexico government are
jonlv a few of the conditions announc-J
d by this government according to a
Mate department official. It is true
that the three conditions are among
those laid down but performance of
i duties instead of mere r.romlses is held
labove all conditions, It was said,
, Recognition has not been promised
Mexico under any conditions, bj was
j authoritatively stated tods -
w -
STOWAWAYS OVERCOME
BY SHIP DISINFECTANT
NEW FORK, Aug 17 Two stow
aways aboard the French line steam
ship Niagara, which arrived hero to
l.iv from Rordeayx. were found last
night asphyxiated by fumes of disin-i
fectants In one of the ship's ventlla-l
tors, where thev ;ir,. believed to have'
hidden to escape detection. The ven-!
tllatora were closed when the ship'
was fumigated ul uarantine. j
I CLOSE RESULT
PREDICTED BY
BOTH FACTIONS
Suffragists Lose Five Support
ers in Last Few Days, Is
Ciaim Made
NORTH CAROLINA IS
SCENE OF FIGHT, TOO
, Friends of Amendment Hope
ful of Result in Legislature
at Raleigh
VASHVU 11 . i2 it i be
Tennessee house adjourned ihis
afternoon until ten o clock tomor
row niornlnjt without taking ac
tion on ratification of the federal
Suffrage amendment.
ChC vote on the motion for ad
journment wa- S3 to ! and va
regarded pa a vntorv fOl the imtl
ratiflcnUonl.sls. Three hour's of debate on rati
fication proceeded adjournment
ami attempts were made to force
a vote-. The house however
BCCTTfM (Tlsposcd to grant every
member who desired an oppor
tunity ii apeak,
i(nii before noon tomorrow
was regarded r ert tin
RALEIGH, Auk it The
Norlli CarOlllU senate- fale todaj
voted to postpone action on rati
fication Of federal woman suf
frage to the m vi regular session
pi the general assembly. The rote
was to -3.
NASHVILLE. Tenn., Aug LV. Mem
bers of the Tennessee house went into
session today pr pared U) vote- on rati
flcatlon of the federal suffrage amend
ment. Favorable action un the ratif
ication resolution already approved hv
I the senate would make Tennessee t lie I
j thirty-sixth state to ratify the amend
ment and would give the ballot to Ihe
j women of the entire country.
Both advocates nnd opponents of
; suffrage went Into the final stage of
'ihe light with confidence. Leaders of.
J the two factions made conflicting
claims as to the probable result of thej
i vote, but they generally agreed that i
me result vvuniu u ciose.
Leaders in lhe house said the coni
Imittee which last night agreed to re
.port the ratification resolution recom-,
'mending adoption would make its re
port during tne day Debate on the re
port was expected to begin at once and
1 it was expected that action would b'
taken b fore the house recessed until
tomorrow. The committee which con j
isidered the ratification resolution vot-
j ed 10 to 8 to recommend adoption.
PREDICTS DEFEAT
Speaker Setli Valker: leader of the
anti-suffrage forces, predicted that the
amendment would be rejected. Suf-,
frage advocates, althouph they admit
ted that five of the seven representa
tives from Davidson county (Nash
ville) considered pledged to suffrage,
had gone over to the opposition, de-1
idared they were still confident of sue-;
cess. Fifty voles is the constitutional
.majority necessary for ralifitai Ion.
. Basing their claims on polls, suffra
gists have contended that 53 to 60 rep
resentatives would vote for ratifica-tion.
oo
DRIVER IS KILLED WHEN
CAR GOES INTO DITCH
WKHSTER CITY, la.. Aug. 17
Oliver Kerrell of this city was killed,
and McKinley C. Thompson, star'
pitcher of the Webster 'itv ball team'
fatally Injured last night In an auto-
mobile accident.
FerraU, who was driving his car, i
was trying to pass another and tho,
car went into the ditch Both men!
were brought to a hospital here, Fer-'
rell dying within an hour. Thompson I
sustained a fracture at the hu.se of
his skull and surgeons entertain no
hope for his recovery
oo-
STRIKING DOCK WORKERS
OF ITALY RESUME WORK
j
HOME, Aug. 17. A settlement of
the dot k worker.' strike- which has
embarrassed shipping in many Italian
tmrts the Inst week has been reached
through the Intervention of the gov-'
ernnunt. Strike leaders have ordered!
resumption of work everywhere. 1
SOVIET FORCE I
FALLING BACH I
FROM ATTACK I
Polish Counter Offensive Re-
lieves Red Pressure to
Great Extent j
FRENCH GUIDANCE OF
ARMY IS SUCCESSFUL j
General Pilsudski Given Credit j
for Directing Move Which
Defers Danger I
Lsaaaaaal
BULLETIN.
Warsaw, aov, it my the asso
elated Press.) The Russian prcssur . H
I upon Warsaw haa been relieved, uc- I Laaaaafl
COitUng to the official Polish com ' H
munlque, Just issued. The statement H
! reported that General Poisodski di- 'H
rected the eountcr stroke that effect-
The statement says the Boisheviki,
who had planned to cross the Vistula
southeast of Warsaw, in the region of
.Uaclejovvicc (35 miles from Warsaw) H
forced back.
The right wing of the fourth Polish H
army, in breaking the soviet reslstanci
if Rock 3 miles south of Bledlce)
took 200 Kussians prisoner und cap- jH
I tured some cannon and 14 machine H
The communique announces that H
the Poles in following up their coun- H
tor offensive to relieve .he pressure H
Ion Warsaw have advanced along the
I entire northern front. They have H
pushed th Russians beyond mij w.. u H
and regained Ciechanow, the H
soviet forces retreating while Polish H
aviators fired on them with machine e I
H
Fighting continues in the region ol
Radsymln, to the northeast of War- H
I saw, the stutemeut says. H
BULLETIN.
( WARSAW. Aug 16. 16 p. m. Asso- L
olaled Press. I The Russian soviet
I hold upon the gau of Warsaw has
Been broken, according to allied offl- H
icers here. H
The Polish counter offensive Is de-
cl&red to he In full sway at various H
pclnts with the soviet forces falling H
back in confusion.
PARIS, Aug. 17 Several unsuc- J
cessful counter-attacks have been H
hed bv the Poles against the Rus- H
slans. who have been hammering
against tho gates of Warsaw In the
neighborhood of Cholm, on the south
iveStsrn fronta Rusiau forces which
bad crossed tho Bug have been hurled
back across that stream, while in the
region of Modlln, northwest of War
saw, the Poles have begun a counter H
nslve, directing their attack in the-
of Bflawa. H
Mllitar) ritlCS said the situation LH
was better than for some lime
The battle near Cholm may be a
precursor of an offensive designed to
southward soviet forces engaged
against Warsaw, il was said. Little
significance was placed in the Polish
attack near .Modlln. as critics consld
sred that attacks of both flanks of the
soviet arm) would be rash.
11 l i p I KuM I BENCH.
WARSAW, Aug. 17 Thcie were re
newed signs at the front Sunday that
the French were taking a more prom
Inent part in the guidance of the Pol
ish army. General We.vgand Is said
to be responsible for the new tactics
employed.
oo
75-CENT GASOLINE SOON
COMING, ENGINEERS TOLD
san FRANCISCO, Aug. 17 Seven-ty-flve
cent gasoline is a possibility
within two years, Prof. C. F. .Medbury,
of the Case School of Applied Science,
. land. Ohio, declared toda in an
address here before the Engineers'
Ills conclusions, he said were based
on his knowledge of oil fields already
explorated and prospective develop
incuts In various couutr.es. lie de
Clared 'hat intensive investigations in
all parts of the world had demonsiml
ed thai there no longer exist adequate
quantities of pare gasoline hydro
carbons and that- the future welfare
of the motor Industry depends on in
ventlon of a motor engine capable of
economical transmission of power dl
ncily from crude petroleum, or a
light, efficient storage battery.
Prefi ssoi afaberry .said the litum
Inous shall s of Colorado, I'tah, Nc- WM
vada and allfornls promised to aug-
no in the world's sunnlv of crude oil.
oo
MUTINY BREAKS OUT ON
U. S. SHIP NEAR EUROPE
LONDON, Aug. 17. Danish police
received a Wireless from the Amcrl
can steamer iioxle. enrouto for Lon
don yesterday, asking for help be
cause of mutiny on board, asyj a Cop
enhagen dispatch. Motor boats, with
armed man, were instantly sent out,
but no trace of the vessel has yet
been found,
(The Hoxle sailed from Norfolk,
i Jul 30, for Copenhagen. She
has a registered tonnage of 3.085.)
oo mml
SANTA FE MAIL TRAIN
DERAILED NEAR CHICAGO
CHICAGO. Aug. -17. Five or six
, .,rs of t-'anta Pe mall train No. 13
were derail' d at LorensOt Ills., earlv
today, according to reports to rail
road officers hero. No one was In
jured First reports stated the train
had been telescoped.
The train, which ft Chicago at
2:16 a. m.. was composed mainly of
steel baggage and mail care.
I
wmmt