OCR Text |
Show LATEST PHOTOGRAPH OF. THE SSE Dec. 27, 1914. Germans preparations pushed for the defense of Antwerp British cruisers and seaplanes attacked German naval base at Cuxhaven. Commander of the German cruiser York sentenced to two years imprisonment for losing his vessel. German spy disguised as a Moor seized while trying to enter Gib- 1 I HOLIDAY LULL IN WORLD WAR LIKELY FIRST TO BE BROKEN ON THE BALKAN FRONT. l Guarantees , Powers Demanded Central of by Greek Government. Germans Assure Serbians They Will Respect Nationality. i i raltar. 28,1914. New defenses of Paris Dec, Ipudon. DUpatchrg from the continent predirt llut the holiday lull will first he broken on the Balkan front. army Itu- - opera' Ions directed against t In this, the latest photograph of the kaiser to come from the front, the German ruler, seen near the right.' i shout to eDter the officers' headquarters In the Champagne region. t CAPTURED o BY THE TEUTONS JN SERBIA can commerce- - by British warships. minister to United Belgian States protested against cancellation of consular exequaturs by Germany. checked Italian government plot to export foodstuff to Germany. British consul at Saida, Turkey, freed after threat by American consul. United States cruiser Tennessee took 500 refugees from Syria. Dec. 29, 1914. their line Germans in Belgium. French invested Steinbach, Alsace. French at Germans repulsed tacks on Sennheim. Russians declared German advance on Warsaw was checked. Issued, announcing that the German will respect Serbian nationality. One of the most interesting of the report came through Athens to the effect that on Friday German artillery on Lake Dolran, about forty mile northwest of Sallnlkt, was shelling lines In Greek the Aiiglo-FrencMacedonia, which the allies are con tlnuing to fortify. This might easily mean that tho looked for advance by the forces of the central powers against tho allied bane at Salonikl was about to begin. The Montenegrin official communl Dec. 30, 1914. h -- ! v C.S c 41 kniMMlBnii' rrr r t Frfr cdtlon states that the Austrians are Mon on between a front intrenching Photograph taken during the Teutonic drive through Serbia, showing captured .Serbian soldiers being marched lenegro and Serbia, which British ob- In the early morning to a detention camp. Among them are women,' for the Serbian women fought as stubbornly servers take to mean a pause In the as the dii active Austrian' campaign against the to enable the Austrian force to be SHE FOUGHT FOR RUSSIA QUEEN OF BELGIUM IS UNTERRIFIED turned to more pressing matters on other fronts. the Christmas eve western front as the along operations not being important enough to record. The German account mentioned only mining operations, In which the Ger mas blew up works which were under construction lu front of their lines. In the Dardanelles the Turkish guns have been busy and according to Constantinople, have done considerable execution recently against the allies trenches And lines of communication. In Persia, the Russians are declared to have severely damaged the Persian Insurgents in a . battle twenty-fivmile from Teheran. Along the Russian front Itself the fighting, according to Berlin, has been limited to patrol engagements. A quietus hns been put on the talk of & huge German peace campaign from Zurich by the departure from that town of Piinee von Buelow and his fetaff of secre'aries. of which much has been heard In the entente press days. during tho past few ' SPEND FURLOUGHS.AT HOME. -I- Cra-cowt- . attack Austrian armies attempting flank movement American government protested against Interference with Ameri- Spr-M- i complet-ed- fccation on the Rhine. Russians raised fiege of rentral powers are preparing a huge the ( ut(itt Whether this' will take the form of an actual attack on Salonikl, or merely an advance into Greece for the purpose of seizing strategic defensive positions is a matter of keen speculation in' Athens. According to one correspondent, the Greek government ha definitely decided not to permit the enemies of the enfenle to penetrate Greek territory, unless the central powers satisfactorily guarantee that Greek territory will not be endangered. . According to dispatches from a source, the Germans have established a provisional government at Nish, withdrawing all the Bulgarian and Austrian troops and ending Bulgarian Austrian Interference In the of Serbian afTalrs. It Is added that proclamations have been r-- iwtfyiliiiiWMldfrirti mV 1 rg. tttleimmntaln-country.pfesuraably Germans retreated across the Bzura river. Russians advanced In South PoI land. aubmarlne French torpedoed Austrian dread-naugand damaged Viribus Unitis. German airmen dropped bombs in Dunkirk, killing fifteen persons. French aviators made raids in - Flanders. Antiwar riots took place In Austria-Hungary. Austria abandoned the Serbian campaign. Dee. 31, 1914, Paris-repor- ted French took half the village of Steinbach. Lull took place on moot of the weetern line. Turks Invaded Ruetlan Caucasus, advancing on Kara and Ardahan Thirty French and British warships bombarded Pola. Rockefeller Foundation ateamer Massapequa sailed on second trip with supplies for Belgium, and fifth Belgian relief ship left Philadelphia. e Thousands of Men from Trenches Celebrate Christmas at Homs. laindon, The people of London spent Christmas In a depressing atmosphere of fog and rain. The city was Ailed with soldiers, many thousands of mud stained veterans from the trenches having received a short holiday leave. The last of men on furlough arrived at the London terminal as late as midday, having been delayed by a rough passage across the channel, which left many of them still pale and miserable when they reached thes-- London. The great, charitable institutions celebrated the day with tremendous energy. There was ample provision for lonesome soldiers, both home and colonial, for the wounded, for prisoners and interned aliens, and for the wives and families of the men at the Jan. Regardless of the German air raids In the vicinity of the hospitals behind the Belgian front, the queen of Belgium keeps on her work of visiting the wounded. The photograph shows the queen with Prince Alexander of Teck at a review of the regiment In which Crown Prince Leopold, the son o' the queen. Is enlisted as a private. PREPARED FOR COLD Drivers of Mail Wagon Succumb to Temptation. Del. Five hundred Washington, thousand dollars in stock certificates and checks, stolen ftotn a registered mail pouch while it was in transit in e a wagon from the Wilmington post-offic- . to the Pennsylvania railroad station Christmas eve, were found late Saturday night in an old stove at the home of two negroes who were the vehicle. drlv-La- g Four Enginemen Killed. Danville, III. Four enginemen were collision near killed In a head-odersburg, Ind., between an eastbound Clover Leaf passenger train and a westbound freight train. None of the passengers. were injured. Wages Are Increased. " York.'Bctwe-P- employees of the S.ftOO- - zai Brooklyn Transit company received a 7,000 Rapid Christ-ma- s gift from- - thd company in the shape of an annual wage Increase totalling $230,000. if 2, 1915. began-offensiv- move- e ment against Kietce, Russia. Captured Polish towns fortified by Germans. Turks captured fortified Rue sian town of Ardahan. Arrest of four German reserv--iot- a on liner in New York , harbor reaulted In exposure of big fraudulent passport plot WEATHER - CONDENSATIONS , rfT There ts a story connected with the Russian prisoner who is shown here In the custody of Teutonic captors. Before the war the prisoner was known as Madame Marfo Malko. the whenever necessary. wife of a Russian junior officer. When In Baltimore, as a result of an Inwar was declared she changed her atvestigation; experts figured that the cut her hair tire, and joined the army. minimum amount on which a single AU the rigors and hardships of the woman could different campaigns and the trench week. Eighty-on-live decently was $6.60 a per cent of the delife did not bother her In the least store women in Baltimore and her sex identity was a secret to partment get less than thaL all but herself. Then she was capA Connecticut inventor's clothes tured and along with the rest of the prop that will nob fall from a line prisoners turned over to the German has a hole fo one side of the upper .sanitation corps.' All the prisoners are endv covered with a flat forced to go through the spring that disinfecting holds It In p'ace. where station, they bathe and have A paper cap has been their clothing, disinfected. - Wien to Madame MalkoVturn came the truth be fastened to the end of a cigtr a It Is made to Insure Its ' leaked out. aanitary e Real Responsibility. Elsie's mother was very ill and one of the neighbor s fitthedLxhnnhlld-'Wh&- t The meu and officers In the British trenches are well prepared for their he would do if her mother died: two enemies. King Frost and exploding German shells. The picture shows a Oh." answerld Elsler who did not group' of British officers wearing their new steel helmets and their winter realise the gravity of the situation. J !ur coats. r suppose I'd have to spank m'f "' 5 St--"" freezer 4eLnhlchj.n(JJhJ cylinder that An Ice cream in reTolVM, side the cream deliver product In a continuous stream Re half a wfter the crank la turned. V- - v. STATE NEWS James Edwards, who was crushed between two boxcars at Bingham, a Salt Lake hospital. John Youna. a Mexican, was sta during a fight In Salt Lake ( ir is in the hospital In a critii a! in bed ajl(1 condi-tion- . Mrs. Eliza West, 81 years o' age, died suddenly at the home o- - her laughter, Mrs. George H. Draper, at Clearfield. Salt Lake railroads demanded n ore extra Pullman cars 'during the su i.mer than did the railroads entering Saa Francisco. February 7,8 and 9 are the da es announced fox the annual theatrical production of the Ogden Elks, wh.eh TTTiryearriS W be a'Tu&trel stioa 'It is reported by the savings banks of Salt Lake that a greater nu rber of real estate loans were made during December than for & similar period for many years. Mrs. Louisa Clark, one of the memEdward .Martin bers of the handcart company of 1856, died at her home in Salt Lake Christmas day. ' Ill-fat- from pneumonia. , a pay roll of $7 000 a menth and the employment of 100 operatives the new plant of the Purit Ruscuit company will be opened atw Salt Lake about January 15. WSth Death claimed a prominent raihoad man in Ogden when A. S. Noble, veteran locomotive engineer of the Salt Lake division of the Southern Pacific, died suddenly. Helen Hale, aged 3, was burned to death at Salt Lake when her clothes became ignited by flames from a small toy stove with which she and a little sister were playing. Thomas C. Rouen, 0 years of age, a veteran telegrapher for the Denver Sc Rio Grande, died, of an acute attack of apoplexy while on duty at the Union station at Provo. Harlow Campbell, aged ?1, night elevator operator In a building at Ogden, sustained a broken leg when he fell from the first floor to the basement through thq elevator shaft. The movement for securing a state demonstration farm In Salt Lake county near Murray will be considered by the Murray Commercial club at a meeting to be held soon. Jesse Gesas, who drove the automobile which ran down and killed a man and woman in Salt Lake recently, has been bound over for trial on a charge of Involuntary manslaughter. Robert Fields, aged 49, a brakemaa for the Ogden, Logan & Idaho Railway company, drank an ounce of add in a drug store In Ogden, and died less than an hour later. . The Saratoga Springs ranch, formerly owned by the Sugar company and recently purchased by the Austin association, will be cut up and disposed of to several different Interests. While cutting down a tree In front of his home, Fred S. Luff, of Salt Lake, miscalculated the time the tree would fall and was pitched to the pavement twenty feet below. He suffered a dislocation of the hip. (frank Gojen Is alleged to have gone gunning for Frank Armondaris at Price, but was too slqw Jq pulling his gun and was shot four times by none of the bullets striking a J vital spot, however. of ths James Mack, Plngree National bank, pioneer in the milling industry of Utah and Interested in a number of the big corporations of the state, died at his home In Ogden on December 27. Members of the Christian Scientist church from Salt Lake and other cities of the state were present on December 26 at the formal dedicatory services for the First Church of Christ, Scientist at Ogden. Utah has been asked to join Nevada and other western states in asking fed era! aid In stamping out the epidemic of rabies among coyotes.. Suggestion of federal aid came In a message from quarantine officials In Nevada. The city of Moab in Grand county has made formal application to James Betram, secretary of the Carnegie cor Toration in New York City, asking for '10,000 for the erection of i library . uilding to serve that district. Edward Hemingway, aged 8, of Salt blood poisoning Lake, is which developed from an injury received two weeks previous when he fell r gainst a curb near his home, re ceivlng a slight scratch on his leg. Investigation made showed that Winfield' D. Jones, aged 17, died Salt Lake as the result of an injury received over the left eye about three weeks previous, when he fell against a table. He continued at work until the day of his death. Relatives have claimed the body of Mrs. Cornelia Crenshaw, who died at Salt Lake from gunshot wounds car-boll- e - 500-ac- re Utah-Idah- o Arm-andari- s, vice-preside- dea-fro- The color magenta la named after a battle which was fought In the year of Its discovery. Lake Erie produces more fish to the square mile than any other body of water In the world. Gardner Savage of North Anson. Me although totally blind for many years, is a telegraph operator and can take apart and repair bis Instrument front NEGROES STEAL HALF MILLION. - Jan. 1, 1915. Russians Invaded Hungary, splitting Austrian army by their operations in Carpathians. Russians in East Prussia driven across border into Polish province of 8uwalkl. Turk Invaded Russia but failed to envelop Russian forces. British battleship Formidable torpedoed and sunk in English channel, 600 lost. German aeroplanes bombarded Dunkirk again. Rockefeller Foundation bought 6,000,000 bushels .of wheat in Chicago for Belgians. Germans BRITISH Ill THE EUROPEAN WAR A ' YEAR AGO THIS WEEK KAISER GERMAN m 1 by F. B. Ahrold. December body had been given to the o department of the University but Utah, having been unclaimed, upon receipt of ths message was sent J-Th- e east Bonus checks from the Utah-Idah- o ax Sugar company of 10 cents per ton the of being handed opt to the farmers Spanish Fork district. Field Manager Snell says that the farmers of thi vicinity sill receive more than of$L the more than the contract price beets. wUl It is announced that a campaign be began by Dr. T. B. Beatty. stats baerd e? tarr e against the spreading of hydroP among the flocks and herdsln Utan coyotes 'and ths dental danger to humans. cf-tb- rabies-craze- d , . - |