The Omaha Daily Bee VOL. 51 NO. 59. faun u Swm-CIim Mitlir Mar 21. I KM. tt Omtlit p. 0. Uaw Aol March 1, ICS. OMAHA, THURSDAY, AUGUST 25, 1921. By nal (I ttr). Dally hi tenta?. I7.U: Dally taly. IS; 6uaay, 2.i; to aolaU.la UUU8 Statu, CaaaCi aa Maalia. THREE CENTS JV n n lib mm $ Filibuster On Anti-Beer Bill Rages House With Trunk Packed For Recess, Watches Senate , Battle Over Camphell Willis Measure. Final Outcome In Doubt Chlrnfo Trlbune-Omahu ee Leel Wire. Washington, Aug. 24. With its trunk packed (or a month's vacation congress was compelled to remain on the joh far into the night, while a filibuster raged in full blast against the Campbell-Willis anti-beer bill. A tangled legislative situation has developed, the outcome of which is ihflicult to predict, lhe house, with i chores completed, stood by and watched the senate tussle over the anti-beer bill. The fate of the anti-bcer bill hinges .upon the conversational endurance of J 'he rival factions engaged in the fill buster. "Wet senators piled their desks high with books and documents and prepared to make a night of it. They declared their determination to go on filibustering until the "drys" threw up the sponge and agreed to recess without passage of the anti- beer bill. "Drys" Stubborn. Radical "drys" in the house were equally stubborn. They flatly re- tuseu to, act upon the senate resolu tiou providing for a recess begin ning today until the senate gave Us final approval to the anti-beer bill. There was danger from a dry view- rtftltlf l,ntl.lAP .11 it Ua f U.K. ) continued all night, congressmen and senators with their railroad tickets bought would quit Washington and uichk up inc quorum in ootn nouses. The senate met two hours earlier than usual in the hope of cleaning up its affairs and going home. Efforts to sidetrack the anti-beer bill met defeat at the hands of the drys, who steadfastly refused to agree to any proposition involving delay to the measure. Senator Reed took the floor and spoke for hours against the bill. ' Towards evening the agricultural bloc grew restive over the delay in getting action on the conference re- r t nnnnnnnnn c . credits bill. They began to fear that this important measure would be caught in a legislative jam and that action would be held up indefinitely. They entered into a temporary alli ance with opponents of the anti-beer bill. Kenyon Motion Carried. Vhen the house reported its rati fication of the report on the credits bill, Senator Kenyon of Iowa moved to take up the measure. The motion v.as carried, w to is. wet senators heartily supported the motion, re ctum to rne Two. Column Htxtn ) Boy Tries to Whistle With Coin in Mouth; 1 Surgeon Saves Life Arniand Gilinskv. 3. son of Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Gilinsky. 617 South Thirty-seventh street, narrowly es caped death last Sunday when a 25 cent piece lodged in its oesophagus. The child was taken to St. Joseph's hospital where the coin was ex tracted." The youngster soon recov ered. -The boy had been ordered by his mother to take an afternoon nap when his wakeful nature yielded to an impulse to learn to whistle with the quarter in his mouth. In an un guarded moment the coin became lodged. r Mail Plane Wrecked Wesl'of Salt Lake City Salt Lake City, Aug. 24. An air mail plane driven by Kenneth Unger, crashed to the ground, tearing a wing and causing other damage Tuesday night at Delle, SO miles west of Salt Lake City, while on the way to San Francisco. The accident is believed to have been due to engine trouble. The mail was transferred to a train to be carried to Reno, from which point it will again be taken in the air to San Francisco. Unger es caped serious injury. Prisoner in Los Angeles Jail Killed in Gun Fight Los Angeles. Aug. 24. Horace Sox. 22. a prisoner in the countv jail here, was shot and killed by dep- ..A. aUAx'fTll At1a tAill.. !H .... fight which ensued following the dis covery by Deputy Sheriff Al Patton of art attempted jail break by Box. Canadian Railway Union Expelled From Labor Body Winnipeg, Man., Aug. . I he Canadian Brotherhood of Railway Emoloves was expelled from the trades and labor congress of Canada by a vote of 394 to lal. The action was a climax to a long standing dis pute over jurisdictional matters. Six Bodies Are Recovered From Burned Macon Hotel Macon. Ga Auk. 24 Two bodies were taken this morning trom tne uins of the Brown House, which nvs aesrroven nv Tir eariv Monoav. This brings the list of known dead to six. One man was still listed as missing. Leviathan of I J fi L. ) Two Killed and 25 Injured In Colorado Wreck Rio Grande and Western Train Plunges Through Bridge Weakened By Re cent High Wraters. Grand Junction, Colo., Aug. 24. Two persons are dead, two believed to be dying and from 25 to 35 more injured as a result of a wreck which occurred on the Rio Grande & Wcsjt em railroad near Gale, Colo., about 3:30 oiclock this morning. The dead are Douglas Armstrong, engineer, Grand Junction, Colo., and a man named Fairfield, whost initials and exact address were not obtained in early reports. It was said Mr. Fair field lived in a small towu in south ern California. William T. Linkins, fireman, Grand Junction, was seriously injured and may die, according to rcportstrom the scene of the wreck. . The train wrecked was Rio Grande & Western No. westbound. It left Denver at 8:30 o'clock Tuesday morning for Salt Lake City. There were many coast-bound passengers on the train, railroad officials said. The freck was due to a wshout fol lowing a cloudburst. According to a report made by railroad agents to Pres. J. H. Young of the road, part of the train plunged into a stream when a bridge gave way. The engine and tender got across the bridge before it collapsed. When the bridge gave way, the en gine, tender, mail, baggage and smok ing cars crashed into the stream. The part of the train that went into the stream was still standing at noon in the position it fell. The dead and injured were taken, to Grand Junction, where the injured were placed in hospitals. Two wreck ing crews are working on the wreck and it was said more injured and possible more dead may be under the wreck. The iniured who have been iden tified in addition to Fireman Linkins. whose arms and lees were scalded and whose face was badly cut, in clude Gus Sutton, extra engineer, Grand Junction, chest and arms cut, internal -injuries; Samuel Crews, Mohrhcad. Utah, right arm injured; Thomas G. Moore. White River, Colo.,' internal injuries; G. B. Reed, White Rock, Utah, head, hands and arms cut, shoulder sprained: Otto Hofmeister, Xew York, ribs broken and head cut; Jacob Joseph, Cedar Hill, Tenn.. ribs crushed and legs hurt: James Hutchison. Bellingham, Wash., back hurt; Mrs. James Hutchison, right arm injured; John A. Peterson. Portland, Ore., head badly cut; Willie Petty, negro porter, Raton, N. M ribs broken and in ternal injuries; Donald Rcdfern, La Havre, Cal., face, scalp and - wrist cut. Boulder Woman Kills Self In Salt Lake City Hotel Salt Lake City, Aug. 24. Miss Nellie Cleveland. 25, Boulder. Colo., was found dead in a rooming house here last night. According to a police report she shot herself through the right temple some time between 7 o'clock Monday night and 6:45 o'clock Tuesday night. Mis Cleveland came to Salt Lake from Seattle, Monday afternoon, on the way to Boulder. She is said by the police to have purchased a re volver from a store and to have killed herself with this wapon in her room. A letter addressed to r her at Boulder, a postcard from Mrs. Charles Cragin, .were found among her belongings. Two Complaints Are Filed Against Ex-Grand Island Cop Grand Island, Neb., Aug. .24. As a result of gun play following the raid on the Savoy hotel early Mon day morning County Attorney Suhr today filed a complaint against J. J. Maloney, e.-chicf of police, alleging two counts shooting with intent to do great bodily injury and shooting with intent to "kill. Both Officer Bus well, upon whom Maloney opened f.re, and Maloney, who was shot in return, are recovering. The war rant was served on Maloney at the hospital Air Wrecked - Z.J5.2 s . IN I Huge Dirigible ZR-2 Able to Lift Cargo of 45 Tons Huge Craft Was 500,000 Cuhic Feet Larger in Capac ity Than Ship Built to Bomb New York. Washington, AuS. 24. The "ZR-2 (R-38) was built at the Royal Air ship works, Cardington, Bedford, England. The ZR-2 is the largest airship that has ever been built. It is about 5UU,UU0 cubic tect larger in ca pacity than the German Zeppelin L-71, which the Germans built to bomb New York City. Its total lcnsrth is 700 feet, its greatest diam eter 85 feet and its total height from the bottom of its suspended ears to, the top of the hull is 92 feet. Its cubic capacity is approximately 2,720,000 cubic feet, which gives it about 84 tons gross lift and a dis posable lift of approximately 45 tons, which consists of gasoline, oil, crew, cargo or armament. Its motive power consists of six 350-horsepower Sunbeam Cossack motors located in six-power cars. It lias a speed of 75 miles (full speed) and a cruising speed of 50 miles per hour. It carries 10,400 gallons of gasoline, which gives it a cruising radius of 6,000 miles at full speed, or about 9,000 miles cruising speed. The propellers on two of the power cars are equipped with reversing gear, which enables the ship to check its speed at will or even fly astern. The ship is controlled from the control car situated forward, which is similar to the bridge of a ship. The captain controls the ship ex actly as does the captain of a sea going vessel. The communication system consists of engine room tele graphs, ship s telephones and voice tubes. All orders to the power units on the engine telegraphs are repeated"" back to the control car Defore being put into execution. The ship is equipped with a radio set, with a sending radius of about 1,500 miles. It is also equipped with a wireless telephone and radio direc tion finding set. , If the outer cover were spread on the ground it would cover a four acre plot. The gas bags which contain the hydrogen gas are lined with gold-beater's skins. Gold beat er's skins are taken from the outer covering of the intestines of a cow. There is but one gold-beater skin to each cow that is slaughtered. There are 600,000 of these skins used in lining the gas bags of ZR-2. 'The cattle sent . to market from several of -our largest ranches on western plains would have to be slaughtered to build one airship. The structural strength of the ship depends a , great deal , upon piano wire, used as stays and braces. There are 60 miles of it on the ZR-2. There are 20 mites of "duralumin channel section used in making the girders of which the hull is- com posed. Woman Says Husband Has ' Another Wife; Asks Divorce Marriage of Myrtle Richcreek to James Sevola Richcreek at Logan, la., December 16, 1913,, was set aside in district court today because Mr. Richcreek claims he was already married at the time. In a petition - Sled July 23, she charges that Mr. 'Richcreek, al though he represented himself to her as a single man, married Hattic R. Shaw of Indiana January 15, 1899. Her husband's first wife, she says, is still living. Geologist's Widow Weds London, Aug. 24. Mrs. Florence Becker, widow of George Ferdinand Becker, American geologist, was married Monday in London to John Campbell Forrester, a member of the Bengal legislative council. in England, and t?" Ford Not Developing Road With Idea of Engulfing All Other U. S. Railroad Systems Does Not Mean Line Will Not Be Extended Wherever It Offers Opportunity for Service, But He Has No Idea of Making It Nucleus for Great Organization. By RICHARD LEE. CniTeranl Service Staff Correspondent. (Copyright, .Mill, bjr I'aUenal Service.) Detroit, Mich., Aug. 24. Henry Ford's Detroit, .Toledo & Ironton railroad the 454-mile line making history in the transportation world, thanks to Ford methods will not be developed with a view to engulf ing all other transportation sys tems, but Mr. Ford's revolutionary engineering ideas will be available to the railroad builders of the world. That does not mean that the D. T. & I. will not be extended wher ever it offers Mr. Ford opportunity to enlarge his field of service, but he has no idea of making the line the nucleus of a great national rail road system that would crowd out existing organizations refusing to embrace engineering ideas of the new era of railroading. "We cannot do everything." was his simple reply to an inquiry o'l plans for future branching out in railroading. Service is Sole Aim. While he does not say it in so many words, the Ford idea in en tering the railroad field by the D. T. & I. road is to see what can be Conferees Agree On Farm Aid Bill Compromise Between House Senate Reacted on Terms of Exports Credits Measure. Washington, Aug. 24. A complete agreement on . terms of th'e agricul tural exports credits bill, which has been in controversy between the house and senate, was reached by conferees. The disagreement outside of the controversy over the anti-beer bill was one of the principal ob stacles to the recess provisionally ar ranged for congress, . The measure, as agreed to, em powers the war finance corporation to issue $1,500,000,000 in it's own bonds and to. lend $1,000;000,000 for financing agricultural exports. The house refused to' agree to senate pro visions which would allow the cor poration tc lend directly to European purchasers of the commodities, but the.- compromise .will, .allow the finance -corporation to lend to any body, providing sufficient collateral is furnished to it "for the sums ad vanced. ' - v The extra $500,000,000 of war finance corporation securities au thorized 1 by the bill, it is expected, will be sold and the money utilized for purchase of railroad securities. Conferees ako agreed to eliminate the senate provision allowing the war finance corporation to lend $200,000, 000 to the federal farm land bank. Pioneer Kills Self. Huron, S. D.. Aug. 24. E. T. Burger, an old time resident cf this city was found yesterday afternoon in his home with a bullet hole in his right temple. Lying beside the body of the dead man was a .32-caliber pistol. Mr. Burger had-been in poor health for some 'time "and it is thought this caused him to take his own life. An inquest will be held to- iiay. J: Commander of Craft ' " .aaC . i . ' ..at . - ov hi! Ill va 4 En done for mankind in the way of railroad . development. -.He has no thought of "showing up", the rail read engineers of today,. ...He ..has seen another opportunity to serve and service is his sole aim in life. His 75-ton locomotive destined to be nationally known as the "flivver engine" will probably be as widely ridiculed and just as widely used as the "flivver automobile." . Ford's idea of service wholly precludes the possibility of the new era locomotive being held exclusively for the Ford lines. In the same way the one third weight freight and passenger cars designed to slaughter the cost of railroad service will be available for the railroads of the country and of the world in time. Henry Ford has a most peculiar thought for a railroad president. He thinks that while increasing wages, freight rates should be cut low enough to rout the high ccst of living and that passen ger charges should come down to the point where all can afford Pull man accommodations. Gives Tram Service. In the passenger service he has utmost confidence in the ability of his "gasoline tram to produce even more radical reforms. With that (Turn to race Tiro. Column Three.) Geneva Woman And Son Killed Mrs. Simon Totemeier and Boy Loses Lives When Auto Plunges Off Bridge. Lincoln, Neb., Aug. 24. (Special Telegram.) Mrs. Simon Totemeier, 45, and her son, Walter, 11, were al most instantly killed when the auto mobile driven, by the husband ai father, and in which they were rid ing, plunged off a 20-foot bridge near Greenwood, a few mites northeast of Lincoln. ..... Mr. Totemeier and two 'other chil dren sustained only minor injuries and werfe brought to a hospital in Lincoln for medical attention." A traveling salesman,(.who was waiting at the. other end pf the: bridge for the Totemeiers to cross, 'Saw the ac cident and obtained help from Green wood. ' - According to the story'of the ac cident told by Mr. Totemeier, they were driving from Omaha to their home , in Geneva when they struck the bridge. Two strips of plank had been placed lengthwise across the structure and in attempting to keep the wheels of the car upon these planks he twisted the steering gear sharply and shot the machine through . the , railing and off the bridge. ' , His wife and-'the little son were dead when rescued from the debris of the wrecked car. . The Totemeier family is wealthy and quite prom inent in Geneva. Capper-Tincher Measure Signed by President Washington. Aug. 24. The Capper-Tincher bill for regulating trad ing on grain exchanges and the bill which extends the period for doing assessment work on mining claims were siened late Wednesday bv President Harding. J r I ' - a 1 ft Jli' 4 l 4 x , ij.. ,i MAKING KEAtV IbR,TH& JXKHfi " . N iff V.. NawMeiiTrained 15 Months to Take Charge of ZR-2 Personnel of Ship's Crew Taught How to Operate and Build Rigid TypeN of . Airships. , . . ' ' London, Aug. 24. The first sec tion of United States. naval rigid air ship detachment' arrived at the royal air force airship base, Howden. East Yorkshire, England, on April 20, 1920. The training of the American per sonnel has been very thorough. They have not only been taught how to operate a rigid airship, but, in ad dition, they have been instructed thoroughly in airship construction. Their instruction .also included four days' study of the German Zeppe lins L-64 and L-71 at Pulham. The R-32 was assigned exclusive ly for training' the-American per sonnel. At the time of the arrival of the Americans R-32 was out of commission. A large part of the work of recommissioning . R-32 was don by United States navy men. , A great many of . the members of the crew of ZR-2 hare witnessed the experimental flights made by R-33 and R-36 from and returning to the mooring mast at Pulham. . All officers and men have, spent a great deal of time at the royal airship works, Cardington, Bedford, England, wtiere the ZR-2 was built. Bethany Man Jumps To Death From Bridge A man believed to be C. H. Young of Bethany. Neb., jumped to his death from the Douglas street bridge about 7 Wednesday evening. A cane, which he hung on the railing before leaping 110 . feet to the river, has his name and address written upon it. The body , has not beetf' recovered and there is no other .clue to his identity. . John McMaJion,, 2101 Grant street, and Miles Zolleho.ffcr,. 2117 Locust street, who were crossing, the struc ture at, the time, saw the man jump. They said, he appeared to be about 55. Ed .Cadwallader, 2508 Avenue H. Council Bluffs, tollman at the east station, said, that the man had loitered about the bridge for an hour before making the leap. , Woman Held as Slayer of Broker Suffers Collapse Los Angeles, Aug. Z4. Mrs. Made lynne Obenchain, indicted in connec tion with the death by shooting here recently of J. Belton' Kennedy, be came so nervouS -last night in her cell at the county jail that .he county authorities announced they would re move her to the county hospital to day until she showed more calmness. , Mrs. Obenchain's illness was de scribed by matrons as a nervous col lapse. She broke down completely and wept through the night, they said. Arthur C. Burch, indicted with Mrs. Obenchain, was also more nervous than heretofore vesterdav nd last night, jailers said. O (i o l Technical Point Delays Signing of German Treaty United States Commissioner Postpones Ceremony Pend ing Information From U. S. Government. By Tho AMOcluted freai. Berlin, Aug. 24. The peace treaty between the United States and Ger many was not signed Wednesday as had been intended. The delay in signing resulted from an unexpected technical point raised in connection with the formalities as arranged bv Ellis Lorinz Dresel. the United States commissioner, and Dr. Friedrich Rosen, the German foreign minister, yesterday. The ceremony of signing was to have occurred at noon at the foreign office, but it was post poned at the request of Mr. Dresel, who asked the privilege of querying the Washington government on the mooted point. At both the headquarters of the American commission and the Ger man foreign office it was said that the technicality which involved the delay did not affect the contents or character of the treaty, as both gov ernments reached a full accord on the official text some days ago. Conference Postponed. German editors had been sum moned to the foreign office for a dis cussion of the treaty, but the con ference was postponed pending re ciept by Commissioner Dresel of a reply from Washington. Although the point which was re ferred to Washington is said to be of minor technical importance, Com missioner Dresel preferred to obtain a ruling upon it from the American State department. If this reply is received early Thursday, it is prob able that duly executed copies of the treaty will be exchanged that day. Vienna Pact Signed. Vienna, Aug. 24. The treaty of peace with the United States was signed at 1 o'clock this afternoon. Negotiations for peace between the United. State and Austria- as well as between the United States, Ger many and Hungary, have been in progress for some time. ; Officials Surprised. Washington, Aug. 24. Word that a treaty of peace with Austria had been signed received in an Asso ciated Press dispatch from Vienna, caused surprise today at the State department here where officials said the expectation had been that the negotiations would be continued sev eral days. " It was learned that negotiations have heen under way at both Vienna and Budapest tor several weeks, l he negotiations at Vienna were carried on by Arthur Hughes Frazier, the American commissioner there, and at Budapest by U. Grant Smith, the -American commissioner to- Hungary. The nature of the treaty with Aus tria and that under negotiation with Hungary are understood to be the same in principle as the German treaty. They are expected to be followed by treaties of commerce and amity.' Fire Raging on Army Piers at Hoboken, N.J.; Leviathan Damaged Hoboken, N. J., Aug. 24.-Fire broke out late Wednesday on army pier No. 5, near which the giant liner Leviathan is docked. The flames spread rapidly and soon enveloped the structure. Bodies of several hundred soldier dead are on pier 4. The mast and some of the wood work on the forward part of the Leviathan also caught fire. Fanned by a strong southeast wind, the flames soon spread to piers 4 and 6 and the evacuation of all movable property thereon was begun. New York City fire boats were hurriedly summoned and are assisting-the local firemen in fighting the fire, which was still spreading at 7 o'clock. Fire apparatus of Jersey City and all municipalities in Hudson county also have been called out. Burning embers have set fire to roofs of several houses on Hudson river and Washington streets, ad joining the army piers. i Farmer Breaks Toes Callaway, Neb., Aug. 24. (Spe cial.) Henry Draper, living west of Shelton, sustained two broken toes and another toe was badly mashed, when the wheel of a wagon loaded with lumber passed over his body. Three-Year-Old Daughter Of Winston Churchill Dies London," Aug. 24. Marigold Fran ces, the 3-year-oJd daughter of Wins ton Spencer Churchill, secretary for the colonies, died last night at Broad stairs. The Weather - Forecast. Nebraska Fair Thursday and probably Friday; somewhat cooler Thursday in northwest portion. Iowa Generally fair Thursday and probably Friday; not much change in temperature. Hourly Temperatures. I a. m. a. m. .71 1 p. m . . . .ft. ...7 ... ...M ...M ... . .. ...8.' I p. m... 8 p. m... 4 p. m . . , 5 p. m . . . 8 p. m . . . 7 p. m . . . 8 P. m . . . T a. m.... 8 . m ... . . m.,.. 1A . m.... 11 a. m..., IS noon . .! ..71 ..71 ..7.1 ..7 .. DISASTER IS GREATEST IN AIR HISTORY Airship Passing Over City of Hull When It Breaks in Two and Bursts Into Flames. 17 Americans Victims By Tho Aiwoclateil Tresi. ' Hull. England, Aug. 24. Seventeen officers and men of the United States navy and 27 officers and men of the British navy met death Wednesday in the collapse of the great dirigible ZR-2 over the city of HulL Eveery one of the Americans on board the ill-fated craft perished, as far as could be ascertained at mid night. Only five men of the 49 who were making- the trial trip in the dirigible prior to the vessel being turned over to the United States navy are known to have been saved. The American officers who started the trip included Commander Louis H. Maxfield, Lieutenant Commander Emery Coil, Lieut. Tenry W. Hoyt, Lieut. Marcus H. Esterly, Lieutenant Commander Valentine N. Bieg and Lieut. Charles G. Little. The American enlisted men who went up with the craft from Howden were C. I. Aller, Robert Coons, L. E. Crowel, J. T. Hancock, William Julius, M. Lay, A. L. Loftin, A. I. Pettit, W. J. Steele, N. O. Walker rnd George Welsh. Washington, Aug. 24. Seventeen Americans were on board the dirigible ZR-2 when it was wrecked today during its final trial flight, a report to the Navy department from London said. The report filed at 7:30 o'clock, said at that time there appeared to be only six survivors from the entire complement of 49. The report follows: The ZR-2 was wrecked with heavy loss this after noon over the Yorkshire coast. Fol lowing two terrible explosiors the airship buckled and fell in flames into the Humber rier. There were 21 Americans on board. On Final Trial. " The ZR-2 had begun its final trial flight on Tuesday morning and was believed prepared to land when dis aster took place. The explosion took place as the balloon was pass ing over Hull and so terrible was the concussion that many pede strians in the streets were sswept from their feet. The shock from the detonation was felt 50 miles di? tint. . ;t The airship was flying at height when the disaster overt' It was seen to emerge fr clouds and as the explosion curred, broke in two. One part re .. L. in the air and fell in the Humber. 1 The descent of the falling half was unaccountably slow considering the weight of the material. i Explodes Over River. Hull, England, Aug. 24. Disaster overtook the giant dirigible ZR-2 ' late this afternoon. The monster airship exploded over the river Hum ber here, falling into the stream a mass of flames, the explosion and fall bringing death to many of the of ficers and men on board, among whom were five American commis sioned officers and nearly a dozen other Americans of lesser ranking, in addition to the regular British crew. The number of fatalities has not yet been definitely ascertained, but 12 bodies are said to have been re covered and it is believed that not less than 10 on board were saved. The disaster occurred while th ZR-2 was on what was intended to be its final trial trip before being turned over by its British builders to the United States navy for its, flight across the Atlantic. The airship set out from Howden early yesterday, was prevented by a storm from landing last night, and was cruising about today making further tests before proceeding to, Pulham in Norfolk, where it was intended to moor it. The dirigible was floating easily over this city shortly after 5:30 o'clock this afternoon, all being seemingly well with her when, ac cording to survivors, a sharp turn was given its rudder and it swerved in toward the Humber. Apparently the strain of the turn was too much for it. Crowds gathered in the streets of Hull in tently watching the movements of the-air monster, saw a sudden flash and heard the report of tremendous explosion, violent enough to shake tlje buildings beneath and break windows in the city store fronts. Windows in Town Broken. Then the airship appeared to break in two and burst into flames, the crowds beneath, meanwhile, running panic stricken in all directions to es cape the wreck of the falling, dirigible, which, it seemed, would drop di rectly upon the city. ' . The explosions in the big dirigible were of such force as to wreck many of the windows of store fronts in the center of Hull. When the ZR-2 started on her trial flight from Howden, Tuesday, she had on board Commander Louis II. Maxfield, of the United States navy, who has been designated by the American Navy department to bring the ZR-2 from England to the United States: Brig. Gen. S. M. Maitland, the British air marshal; (Turn to Fait Two. Columa One. ;7 : p ,