Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, June 06, 1921, Page 2, Image 2
c Lloyd George Is Eager to Discuss Silesian Tangle M. Briand Said to Be Holding Out for Agreement Before Meeting, Reviewer of World's News States. By HENRY W. BUNN. (Copyright, 1!2I. WMhlniton Star.) Washington, June 5. (Spe cial Telegram.) The following is a brief summary of the news of the world for the seven days ended June 4. Upper Silesia, Etc. M. Briand and Lloyd George are exchanging notes. Lloyd George is very, very eager to meet M. Briand at once. M. Briand is not at all eager to meet Lloyd George. Why? Tis said that M. Briand is holding out for an agreement in advance of their meeting that the de cision by the supreme council upon the upper Silesian boundary must be unanimous. The treaty clauses concerning upper Silesia very stupidly create a doubt on this head. It is apparent now M. Briand might get better tirms for the roles through the re quirement of unaninity. That may be one reason for delay. It is certian that M. Briand will "fix" things as well as he can for the Poles before he meets his astute friends. Then, M. Briand says, the first thing to do is to restore order and firm allied control in upper Silesia. Commission Suggestion. Until such a time a decision would be flouted. Meanwhile let an allied commission of civilian experts, (bet ter qualified than military men for the problem is economic and racial) intensively study the situation and report to the supreme council. Lloyd George replied that the idea of the commission is first-class, but still he must see Briand at once. There are other things besides upper Silesia to talk over. It has been suggested that M. Briand hesitates to meet Mr. Lloyd George more on account of one of these other things than on account of upper Silesia. Lloyd George would like to lift the penalties imposed in March, to-wit, occupation of Duisburg, Ruhrort and Dusseldorf, and the customs bar rier. M. Briand thinks these penal ties should remain in force at least until disarmament requirements have been fully complied with. As though to justify M. Briand, it partly falls out that the Bavarian government has notified Berlin that it cannot disarm the Bavarian einwohnerwehr. Occupation Takes Effect. This is a very serious matter, since, if the einwohnerwehr are not disarmed by June 30, French occu pation of the Ruhr basin goes auto matically into effect. The trouble in upper Silesia has boiled up "again hotly. On May 28 the Poles and Germans agreed to an armistice, but it was almost immediately broken. . . , Great Britain On Friday week the executive committees of miners and mine owners met again. Lloyd George presided over the negotia tions: in fact there was nothing to it but Lloyd George. If the parties to the dispute would make an agree ment for at least a year, with the requirement of three months no tice for abrogation thereafter, the government would contribute 10,000,000 to ease the fall of wages to levels corresponding with the cost of living. Lloyd George expected the owners to further ease the fall by foregoing profits for the present, as they had already of fered to do. .... The committees decided not to answer at once; to consult constituencies. Orders Revoked. their Meanwhile the railway men and trannnrt workers have formally disinterested" themselves. Their committees have revoked the orders not to handle imported or "black leg" coal. Meanwhile, also, British railway and power companies arc converting coal ourners uuo on burners. , . , , Russia Recent reports, which J am nnahl tn annraise with any con fidence, give out the following: That strikes and other evidences of dis satisfaction are increasing in Petto; grad, some blood having been shed in fighting Detween woriceri aim reu tenons: that anti-bolshevist revolts in Kuban and Daghestan (northern Caucasus) are successful; red troops joining the insurgents; that western Siberia has been practically cleared of red troops, most ot wnicn nave re tWA tn the Urals. Some reports say that Lenine's lifting of trade restrictions-has not materially eased the tooa situation, the peasants refusing to sell grain, and Moscow and Petrograd being on h verm of stavation. Other re nnets aver that a brisk petty trade in InnA and other necessaries has sprang up in Moscow, reminding one of the middle as. while Petrograd's distress has been relieved by impor tations. Siberian Situation. Fatprn Siberia It will be re called how some months ago, after sundry vicissitudes, the far eastern republic seemed at last established on a firm, conservative, liberal basis, under a constitution closely modeled after our own. We were told that government and legislature were trulv reoresentative of a population at least 70 oer cent "bourgeois." The communists had acknowledged de feat and professed loyalty to the ma jority program. The new govern ment advertised itself as white, in vited inspection, made overtures to the great "bourgeois" governments. Especially did it desire recognition and a moderate loan from the United States. But somehow things have gone badly with the Chita government (for Chita is the capital). Perhaps the members of government were not happily chosen. Perhaps the reds repented of their renunciation and renewed agitation. Perhaps time discovered that a great many classed as whites were really what are called moderate socialists. Perhaps the Japanese militarists have secretely encouraged move ments and tendencies hostile to Chita, finding their account in con ditions which might seem to justify retention in Siberia of the Japanese Summary of Flood Conditions Outside Of Pueblo District Denver, June 5. Reports received by The Associated Press at Denver indicate the following conditions at outlying towns: Greeley All east-bound trains on Chicago, Burlington and Quincy railroad detoured on account of the flood. Rivers, creeks and irrigation ditches overflowed and several bridges near town washed out. Sterling Four drowned and dam age running to more than $1,000,000. Floods receding in the district. Marshall The Big Marshall dam still holding, but all residents in the valley have been ordered to seek safety. Loveland Eleven reported dead. City in darkness after 5 o'clock Fri day night Telephone service main tained by means of storage batteries. Two reservoirs, the South Side and lhe Ryan Gulch, broke today. Hills boro dam, five miles east, also broke, the concrete gates being washed away. Colorado and Southern rail road tracks washed away. Damage will run into hundreds of thousands of dollars. George Arndt, 60, drops dead with excitement. Longmont Flooded. Longmont Three feet of water in the main street: communication cut off breaking of irrigation ditches principal cause. Three hundred members of Lions club marooned here. Many residents of Longmont stranded in Lyons, Colo. Frederick Town under three feet of water. Two coal mines flooded and several mules drowned in the mines. Dacona Irrigation ditches broke, flooding town. Railroad bridge washed out. Firestone Irrigation ditches broke; flooded conditions. Wood Under water several hours; many buildings threatened with destruction. Lvons Town and environs flood ed: many persons stranded. Estes Park Several persons in jured in floods. One home on Big Thompson river near here carried away and its occupants compelled to camp last night in the open. Erie Water reported :: ieet aeep some places near here. Thirty houses washed away. Rail Tracks Destroyed. La Salle Union Pacific tracks be tween La Salle and Julesburg torn out and trains are being routed by way of Greeley and Cheyenne. Berthoud Business district under water Friday night but water is re ceding. Crops badly damaged, ine rain did not cease until 10 o'clock this morning. T afavptte Town under two feet of water; many business houses and residences damaged; communication cut off. Fort Col ns The Poudre river, which runs north of that city, was rising tonight and at 11 o'clock was flooding the basement of the Fort Collins packing plant. a orioge near Fort Collins was expected to go out at any minute. Boulder Many persons maroonea in mountains near here. Willard The bodies of all mem bers of the Davis family, who were washed out of their home here late Fridav bv the flood waters of Paw nee creek, were found tonight. The father. Carl Davis, was the only member of the- family to escape. He is in a critical condition from, ex- posure. Trinidad No train service from north except one belated Denver & Rio Grande train. Service will be in terrupted 10 days, railroad men be lieve. No serious tlood conditions. troops now there, and even an ex tension of the area of occupation. Penetrates Eastern Republic. In April it was reported that Sternberg, Semenov's old lieutenant, crossing over from Mongolia, had penetrated deep into the territory of the far eastern republic and some where between Verkhni, Udinsk and Chita was fighting the republics forces. Reports added that his ac tivities were pleasing to the Japan ese. He seemed to have disappeared into the Siberian murk. But today we get . news of mm again tearing up the railroad, "rais ing cain." On May 21, we heard that those Kappel detachments were on the move, lhey had taken Mikoisk, the important railroad junction north of Vladivostok, invited in by the property owners. A few days later, moving down the railroad, they took Vladivostok, the prop ertied citizens welcoming them, for the local government was rosy. They setup a new government. Some reports say that the Japan ese have observed strict neutrality. Other reports say they are meddling a little. Some say Semenov is on his way to offer his heroic leadership. Others say the Kappel soldiers will have none of him. Red bands are vaguely indicated in the offing. The Chita government is reported con centrating troops to handle the sit uation. Another dispatch says No such matter." Perhaps the most trustworthy report is that which as cribes to the Japanese foreign minis ter the statement that "The time for evacuation of Siberia has not ar rived." War at Standstill. Near and Middle East The war between the Greeks and Turks in Anatolfa is in a condition of stale mate. The Greeks undertook their recent unsuccessful offensive against the wishes of the British and French; wherefore the latter declared a strict neutrality as between Turks and Greeks. But this stalemate may not last, owing to the folly of Mustapha Kemal, the nationalist leader. Listen ing to the suggestions of Moscow, he has flouted both British and French. He holds and maltreats 40 British prisoners whom he is pledged to release. He closes his ports against British shipping. He puts to death as a spy a British Indian subject, whom London declares innocent. , The British have not been wont to stomach such treatment. As for the French, the Angora assembly has re pudiated the treaty signed in Lon don by French and Angoran repre sentatives and guerilla warfare against the French has been assumed in Silesia. It is said the British are preparing to blockade Kemal's ports and to as sume direction of the Ismid front; that the allies have deneutralized the straits and the straits zone, neutra lized only the other day. It is in timated that the British and French may now strongly support the Greeks. Hundreds Die In Pueblo Flood; Loss $10,000,000 Business District in Ruins 132 Bodies Recovered Many Refuse to .Leave Homes When Warned. (Continued From Puis One.) it is believed many of the dead were carried far down the river and may never be recovered. Raillroad officials were pessimis tic about resumption of train serv ice. All the lines in Pueblo either were washed away or the tracks were so twisted and torn that it will require entire new construction of roadbed and tracks. The first warning of Friday's flood came shortly after , 5 p. m. in telephone messages which said that dams near Portland were threatened and the water in the Arkansas river had risen dangerously at Wetmore, Portland and Florence. The fire department siren sounded 15-minute flood warning and within a short time every available police officer and guardsman was sent into the West Peppersauce river bottoms of West Pueblo to warn the in habitants. Many Refuse to Leave. People were slow to leave their homes and many refused, according to soldiers. One woman dragged from her home before the flood crest reached the bottoms, crawled under the house and refused to come out. It is feared a heavy loss of life resulted in this section, al though it has been impossible as yet to conduct an investigation. On the crest of he flood which turned from the river, into Fourth street was carried a two-story house. Scores of people were caught as the flood entered Main street, flowing south into Union avenue. Within two hours the entire wholesale dis trict and a erreater part of the bus iness district were flooded with wa ter 10 feet deep. Several persons were rescued from a candy factory, swimming through the flood with the aid of ropes thrown by city firemen. Many business houses and residences were set afire by burning timber float ing from a flaming lumber yard. Boy scouts rescued George King nnd his son, Francis, from one build ing in boats. Trains Swept From Tracks. Southbound Denver & Rio Grande railroad train No. 3. due in Pueblo from Denver at 7:45 o. m. Friday tuaht was held near the Nuckolls Packing plant north of the city. The tram was swept into the river. Most of the passengers have been account ed for, climbing to the roof of the cars and making their way to the Nuckolls Packing company. Mi'ccsMiri Pacific train No. 14, which was to leave Pueblo at 8:05 Friday night; also toppled into the stream and most of the passen gers on this train made their way tn tti. Nnrknlls Packing plant. On the Denver & Rio Grande trf,;n thr known dead are uuney Wilson, switch foreman: T. E. Little- john, engineer, and "Dutch" Haines.- i weniy icicgi ap.i up, -marnnnpr! rill r in 1? the flood in the dis patcher's office of the Atchison, to aIi Rr Santa Fe railway. SOUtll fUCDIO was CUt Oil irum m. rest of the city and few details of damage over there are avaiiaDie, Mother in Omaha. The South Canvon bridge and a railroad bridge two blocks below it trie nn 1v hridees left intact. Dr. E. R. Carey rescued his boy Robert from his home. H wife is visiting in Omaha. Among the known dead are Mrs. Mary Murphy's daugh ter, Ethel, 14, and a son, 5; Mrs. Charles Clark, 60, a boy of 10 named Skinner, and Patrolman Brown. .A negro rescued four women from a tree and nearly lost his own life in the attempt. Three women near him were drowned when their boat overturned. During the height of the flood, i while a severe tnunaer storm was raging to the north and burning buildings lighted the heavens, scores of people were seen trembling on the lawns or in the streets, kneeling in prayer. Scores of Persons Rescued. Scores of strong men risked their lives to bring woman and children to safety. The Colorado Rangers, the police and troop C of the Colorado National guard bent to the work of rescue. Scores of per sons alive in Pueblo last night owe their lives to the bravery of the men of these organizations and scores of volunteers. Then came the fires. A flash ot lightning burst. There was a crash and in the light of the next flash a building was disclosed in flames. There was no water to combat the blaze. So it swept on. v It swept through the Florman Paint comoanv. the gas plant, the ice plant, mowed down two big garages in its path, and then at tacked the yards of the King In vestment and Lumber company. All were laid in waste. Search for Relatives. With everything swept away but the clothes on their backs and the few things they carried in little bundles, many moaned and cried, while others tried to locate relatives and friends. The court house was thrown open and served as a can teen and hospital. St. Marys hos pital, one of the principal hospitals in the city, was cut off by the Ar kansas river waters and volunteer workers brought equipment from it to the court house, where aid could be given the injured and dying. All morning motor cars moved up Main street, carrying the dead bod ies on the fenders. Harrowing experiences came to rescue parties, as well as those they tried to reach. Friday night, W. S. Hopkins of Denver, state Y. M. C. A. secretary, here to open a mem bership drive, and Clark Jantzen, assistant boy's secretary .attempted to reach two negro women stranded in a treetop five blocks from the heart of the business district Their boat was caught in the current and both men were thrown into the water. Jantzen succeeded in getting out quickly, but Hopkins was in the water more than an hour. Mother of Girl Lost J. B. Roberts and Robert Way land, prominent business men, vol unteered to take a boat and attemot THE BEE: OMAHA, MONDAY, JOITE P. to reach two "women whose calls could be heard in the darkness, j After much difficulty they found one, a girl of 19, Mary McAllester, clinging to a power wire and sus pended in the swirling waters. She was taken into the boat. The men then attempted to reach her mother in a treetop near by. They succeeded in getting the older woman into the boat, but she gave a lurch and the occupants of the boat fell into the waters. After a struggle, Roberts and Wayland, with the girl, managed to scramble onto the roof of a floating house. The mother was lost. The trio floated until thev reached water in which they could wade with safety. Among the refugees, an aged Mexican woman cried for some one to go after her daughter, stranded in their home. In her hands she clasped a bundle of clothes and a pound of ' butter. The house was nearly eovercd with water and no one would risk the attempt at' rescue. Bemoans Loss of Phonograph. Mr. and Mrs. A. G. Verhofstad, far oast middle age. were typical of many of the unfortunates. Fleeing before the rush of water, they had nothing but the clothes on their backs and a small box of valuables. "And I just bought a $135 phono graph yesterday," wailed Mrs. Ver nofstad. Joseph Rosen, clothing merchant, narrowlv escaped death. Like most of the merchants, he was in his shop at Main and Second streets, attempt- in ar to save his stock, i he tlood waters from the Arkansas river rushed no Main street so quickly he could not escape. In a desperate ef fort. Rosen broke through a tran som over the show window and was seen hv T. E. Creel. D. V. Ruppel and others in the Dan Creel Furni ture company across the street. I hey shouted to rescuers on the second floor who lowered a rope and named Rosen to safety. Denntv United States Marshal H B. Mclntyre of Denver was another You are nolo lookinp at W fl 111 Has t I ! II IbJWIVwi 20jr20 cents fa mtr-tighl package. Also obtainable fa rod tins of SO, racuutn-ualtJ. Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. who had an exciting experience. At 11 o. m. he returned to the federal building after having filed a news paper dispatch to a Denver paper. s he had waded water an inch or more deeo he attempted to change foot gear but before he could do it water five inches deep was inside tne duuo.- . r 1 . 1 mg. in a lew minuies more nc aim Postmaster S. 1. Belleheid waaea waist deep in the lobby to safety. Girls Marooned in Y. W. Twentv-five eirls are marooned in the Y. W. C. A. building which was in the direct path of the water. One whole section ot the rryor Furniture store, in the downtown district, was carried away when struck by the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe railway loading sheds which were swept from their founda tions bv the flood. The Y. M. C. A. tonight was hous . i . t i j mg refugees ana issuing rooa earns, Nothing is being sold without per mits. The military forces continued m charge of the situation tonight. Prisoners m the city jail on tne ground floors were hauled to safety by ropes dropped from the second floor. Maj. Paul P. Newlon arrived from Denver tonight and took command of the state troops here. At 9 o'clock he announced that no accurate esti mate of the loss of life could be made at that hour. "Conditions are beyond descrip tion," said Major Newlon, after an inspection trip. "Virtually every building from the postoffice to the souare bevond the Union station on Union avenue, was completely wiped out. In addition to the havoc wroueht bv the water, buildings un dermined bv the inundation have caved in, causing a scene of desola tion and horror beyond anything have ever seen. , "Many of the principal business buildings in the main business sec tions of the citv became roaring fur naces soon after the first fires broke a piefhire of p out. It was impossible tor volunteer workers to get close enough to tne blazing buildings to fight the flames Water 16 Feet Deep in Depot. "Water reached a depth of 16 feet in the Union depot and from that place all the way up town . to the postoffice the water was five feet deep. At 3 o'clock this afternoon the water left the business section of the city. "Volunteer workers by the hun dreds are aiding in the work of rescuing victims of the flood waters. One troop of cavalry, a battery of field artillery, the American Legion and the state rangers are superin tending the work of rescue and re lief. "Rangers arrived here, today from Walsenburg, Denver. Castle Rock and from Colorado Springs. "We eft Denver at 10:15 a. m. and reached Pueblo at 7:15 tonight. The trip was the most hazardous any of us had ever undertaken. In tour places we crossed rauroaa trestles over swollen torrents with big roaring waters below. In other places we were forced to haul, pusn and carry our car over maKesniu bridges where roads had been en tirely washed out. Red Cross Busy. "S. W. Pressey, acting purely in a civilian capacity, is directing work of salvaging and rescuing. A main Red Cross headquarters has been established and bodies of victims are being taken to the city morgue as fast as they are found. Victims who still are alive and suffering from exposure, are being cared for by men and women volunteers who are nerforminsr heroic work. "Military law was declared here immediately after our arrival and the citv is orderly. "Fifteen men were arrested this morninsr. charged with looting the homes and buildings devastated by the water and fire. Relief Funds Authorized. Washington, June 4. The south western division of the American CIGARETTES and the blend can't be copied! Red Cross was authorized tonight to draw on the national disaster relief fund up to $50,000 until Monday to afford relief in the Colorado flood district. National headquarters said the "whole extent of the problem" was expected to be known by Monday and if it was then fodnd that the national disaster fund and the re sources of the southwestern divi sion were not sufficient to meet the situation, "additional funds will be forthcoming." Secreetary of War Weeks tonight instructed commanders at Fort Lo gan, near Denver, and Fort Douglas, Utah, to hurry available supplies to the relief of refugees of the stricken area. Medicines, tents and blankets, as well as commissary supplies, were en route from both posts within a few hours after the orders left the War department, dispatches said. Thousands Killed In Great Disasters During Last 19 Years Other great disasters recorded since 1902 other than floods are as I follows: 1902 Eruption of Mount Pelce; 30,000 dead. 1903 Irroquois theater fire, Chi cago; 575 dead. 1904 Burning of steamship Gen eral Sloctim in the East River, New York; 1,400 dead. 1905 Japanese steamship Mikasa sunk by explosion; 599 dead. 1906 San Francisco earthquake and fire; 452 dead; property loss es timated at $350,000,000. 1906 Valparaiso, Chile: Earth quake, 1,500 dead; properly damage about $100,000,000. 1907 Kingston, Jamaica, earth quake; 1,100 dead; property damage about $25,000,000. 1908 Earthquake in Sicily and Calabria; 76,483 dead. 1910 Cartago, Costa Rica, earth- uou are nolo looking what does it. IT'S all in the way those fineTurkish and Domestic tobaccos are blended-ycare-fully, skilfully and as never before in any other cigarette I That's why they "satisfy." 1 ......I., i con A. .A 112 Sinking of Tltantej IA& dead. , 1912 Earthquake in Turkey; 3,000 dead. 1912 Sinking of Spanish steam ship Principe de Asturias off Spaini 500 dead. 1912 Sinking of Japanese steam ship Kicker Maru, off Japan; 1,000 dead. 1914 Sinking of steamship Em pres of Ireland in St, Lawrence; 1,024 dead. 1915 Earthquake in Central Italy; 29.978 dead. 1915 Torpedoeing of steamship Lusitania: 1,198 dead. 1916 French auxiliary cruiser Frovence, sunk in Mediterranean; 3,270 dead. 1917 British warship Vanguard Mown up at dock in a British port; 800 dead. The 66th convention of the Inter national Typographical union is to be held at Quebec the second week of August. . , c 3 cooEwes iThe cookie jar should never be fembtv. Make healthful cristyy cookies for the Kiddies with EAGLE BRAND Condensed Milk C at 4