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Show I LAST Wadin' I, pour .16 BE BER1 TE B OTW&-W-W edition d( t to 5 Hems ' FRIDAY .NOVEMBER PAGES -- t&b d6b -- CITY UTAH 15 1918 SALT LAKE SIXTY-NIXTI- YEAR I tSb dSb tSb dSb dEb Waf Saving! Stajnpa,l!ttcr TiJ Than PaW Up . Life Insurance - DEMANDING HUNREDGUARDS IE: PLAN REVOLUTION, ARE DISSOLVED BRITISH POLITICAL Titled American ALLIED NAT .Woman Is Ardent War Worker -- " DUTIES Bloodshed Occurs inBelgian Old Party Lines Shattered iers Ca pitalW hen-So-ld Indorsement of Coalition Government Issue in Com i. Committee Opens Fire. Campaign. I Mut i Major General Rhode bjr Six Officer and 19 Soldier Off For German Headquar-ter- . PAMS, Nor; 15. (By The Associated Press) The naval terms es of the German and Austrian are being carried out rapidArm-teUo- ly. , Admiral Hugh Rodman win he the American representative at a meeting tomorrow with German naval delegates at a British port. LONDON, Nov. 13. :0 pu. iBy the Associated Free. ) The. German which Is delegates terms of , cruise Koenlgsborg, carrying - the German to 'arrange the naval the armistice. It la demood here, witt be met by Brit bit warships this afternoon and will be escorted to a point at sea where the German delegates will, . meet Admiral Sir David Beatty, commander of the British grand fleet. ID JLAm. LONDON-Nov-l- S.. Ah (American mission commanded by MaJ. rGen. Rhodes will leave Saturday for Marshal German headquarters, I Spa. 1 Foch Announces in a wlrelecs message to the German high command. -The mission will consist of six officers and 19 soldiers. The German command is asked to give instructions to allow the mission to pass. The wirelesa reads: "From the. Allied high command to the German high command at Spa: "American mission, consisting of six officers and 19 soldiers in nine motor cars, with Gen. Rhodes as chief of mls- sion. will leave for Spa on the morning of the by the way of LaCapelle, ' Beaumonte, Philipeville, Liege, and Spa. Please give instructions to allow the mission to pass." - --- lth i Arouses Speculation In Washington Circles t WASHINGTON. - 15. Nov. Newe that an American - - , military mission, headed by MaJ. Oen. Charles D. Rhodes, commander of the 42nd Raln- bow division, will visit German great headquarter a( Spa next Saturday, aroused much speculation here. 8o far as could bo learned no official information as to the object of the trip had reached Washington. The purely military character of the mission was regarded as an indication, Gen. Rhodes trip. was for tho purpose of arranging at the German1 high command for the occupation of various fortresses in Alsace-Lorraiwhich IleJn front of the American line. Prepare to Enter t Alsace-Lorrain- e Radio Telephone GHENT. Wednesday, Nov. IS (By The-- Associated' Tress) There Ufno organized authority yet in Brussels, but with comparative calm and dignity the Belgian capital awaits' the -coming of the armies of liberation.On Sunday three delegatfs from the Republic of HambtQ", arrived at Brussels Standing on a balcony, the military commander of the' city addressed a crowd of three thousand soldiers and 'civilians. Three million Germans have been killed during the war, he said. That Is sufficient. Let us have peace. General von Falkenhausen. the German governor ieneral of Belgium, received the delegatee and in the meantime French and Belgian - Socialists addressed the crowd. A letter had been received from Field Marshal von Hindenburg who Rhine. It Was was at Blngen-on-th- e read to the crowd. It said: I am hearty in sympathy with the regenerative movement! Soldiers roust obey the orders of the supreme sol- diers committee. Let us have peace.the Boms soldiers -- then -- entered -the park which" has been closedsmashed public for four years. They the marble slabs surrounding the beautiful ponds, broke their guns and threw the gun barrels into the water. They then formed a procession and Marseillaise paraded singing the through the city behind the red flag. , The only bloodshed In Brussels occur ed on Wednesday when a patrol detailed by the soldiers' committee to keep order fired upon a disorderly crowd, killing twelve civilians and wounding, about thirty. The crowd had disregarded the firing of a blank volley by the soldiers. Nov. 15. Squadrons of Amerioan airplanes fighting in. Francs tip to the moment of the armistice were maneu verlBg under the vocal orders pf commander that the squadron reached -- each pilot by radio telephone. News of the successful develop-menth- this device, hitherto a military secret, though some Inkling of It had reached the Germans just before . hostilities ceased, was allowed to become publio today by John D. Ryan, director of aircraft l. , r . production; ol DITCH ' .SPclO" rS J A U ns. K v Are St t , lK- Thursday, Nov. 14. Jan Chrtatla'n 8 rout tonight entertained a party of American editors on behalf of th government Addressing ths guest he said t ' -- & - r : N il fcyW tef ' i sVvskvFv.- fT ica. "Old k .v. oom-mand- er PARIS, Nov. 15. Gen. Hirschauer ef the second French army, will reach i Met on Sunday evening, according to Marcel Hutrn, edlto.r of the Edho de WASHINGTON. Nov. 15 AmeriPalis. He will not make an official can Mon-d- a) delegates to the great peace conuntil entry of the city, however, ference wre understood to have been . selected by President Wilson, although of the German civil be - andRepresentatives there to probaWywlll will go authoritiea military until the place and date of meetNancy today to reach an agreement has been decided upon formally with Leon Mirman, director of public ing the International council which rerelief, on Important questions arising by today In Franca Discusfrom the taking over by the French of assembled well informed quarters today in sion Alsace Iar of the administration apd of the probable personnel of the deleralne , upon four men.' They gation centered " are. " Robert Lansing, eecretary of state; German Army Begins to head the mission; CoL K. M. House, now in France attending the InterEvacuating Poland allied council as the personal repreEllhu Root, 15 The German sentative of the president V LONDON, Nor. associate Justice of J army has begun a general evacuation Louis Braadeis. court. ef Poland, according to an Exchange the supreme - The belief is growing here that Telegraph dispatch from Copenhagen President Wilson will attend the openGerman Berlin. from quoting of the Congress, though . troop inreports Warsaw have been disarmed ing session around the not to sit as a delegate nd arrested as have ail German civi" J peace tablet lians in the Polish capital. ' CM will answer: . TDMAKECiD . WOMENS PROTEST i5. It was said at the White House today that Which might be made to the appeal addressed In thj women Gertnan to' Woodrow name of Wilson for aid in securing a modiflca lion ef armistice terms plobably would go through diplomatic channels. , anyjeply wireless Pres Censorship . Is Discontinued Nov. 13 WASHINGTON. ti nuance or press censorship - Discon In con- nection with raw.- postal and land telegraph lines effective at once was announced today by the government , censorship board. ( Bait Lk k tin abort 375,900 of Its quota of th United If a r Work, fund and the drive closes Monday noon. This alarming situation was disclosed at tbs luncheon of canvassers ln'tbe Commercial club today. Salt Lake has raised $115,-90- 0 to date. The various committee pledged themeelves to canvass their respective dukrlct onoe more. But --in order for them to raise the required sum, every person they visit must donat generously even though it is for the second time. Citizens of Halt Lake, it depends on you to save your city from disgraceful failure! -- -- 'Vienna of America S'r.7V ' i ' la essen- PARIS, Thursday, Nov. 14- -r Socialist stormed the AwstriAk . building la Yicauaa" Wednesday and pried to enter the chamber where' the new boundl Was in session. Shota fired before order could be stored and SO persons la the crush . i outside the building were JnJarC according to dispatcher T . here. - A party of Socialist oocup4rt t the office of Neue Frab Prusc ; and brought out special sdiiiOD advocating the estahllshiaeat of aJ. Socialist republic as fat Bwastyi LAW HARCOyPt - . One of the most a.dvnf war workers -.- Amerlca-has become Jointly responsof the American colony in London is ible with for the new order Europe Lady Harcourt. She was Miss Mary which will arise from the ruins of Ethel Burns of New York City, daughter of Walter H. Burns, whose mother this war. sister of the late J. Plerpont When the great American republic Morgan. As a member-- ' "the Ambulance Voluntary Aid she has Joined us in the strugglerit was fcol htlped to organic sever i hospitals only with material weapons, but with and th American Nurs.i Club in all that moral rslnforcement which London, Caros . from the-- splendid -- vision- and moral ent' slasm of President Wilson, IIIIAH DEPARTMENT TO speaking on behalf of the people of the United 8 tales.. HU was the great vision of a league of nations, and our Nov. 14. Viemm LONDOM, announce main concern now must he the that Ul EXPEDITE HETURN OF ef Europe for tbs future of the saving war is. the werlTf vu,r. Ajvf organised' V, or n ixe the world against Gkartest fogutst to 5 Jet hunger. iksf will be the best preparla Ytamna os ation for the' flow order of interna- been refused, aceor tg ( a f ' r WASHINGTON, Nov. IS. Congratulations and expressions' of ths nations proud esteem were cabled to Gen. to "American- Pershing 'for-th- e Franos today by Secy. Baker, with a promise that now a respite has com, the war department will do all in its return of power to expedite the early force -- so that the the expeditionary oountry may welcome its soldiers home. T E LONDON, Nov. 15 American airmen landed at Cologne on the Rhine Thursday, according to a Cologne dispatch to ths Copsnhagen Politlken and transmitted by tha Exchange Telegraph company. U-Bo- Will Hpist National Flafe Crew at ' LONDON, Nor. IS. Tbs crow of at a mass meeting German at Brunebuttel, according to a Copen-- , hagen dispatch to th Dally Exp.resa, resolved to oppose the revolution and reinstate ths officer, They decided to fly the national flag instead of the red Gag. . PUBLISH ARMISTICE GERMANS DID NOT r COPENHAGEN, Nov. 15. The qnotes the British military attache here. Colonel Wade, at saying in an Interview that the Germans In pubarmistlcs lishing the terms of th omitted six or seven articles. Including allies providing that relating-to-t- h - food If necessary. Pol-Itik- French i, wnttj ns at ry Twenty Perzoni Injured La When Mcb Storms Parliament Bui! ing During Session Is the tial. Wounded Veteran Home From Europe - fruitful and-mo- st, dead and a new Europe world is slowly emerging, he said. In the upbuilding of this new world THE HAGUE. Thuradajrf Nov. 14. The Dutch government has issued a proclamation urgently appealing for of citizens in a the, gravs crisis." It says the minority is threatening tfa seise power and declares its determination to maintain authority and order. AMERICAN AVIATORS - Gen. that .tbs greatest, io,c3csrp ijL - Lieut fhet of the great war had been the coming together of Europe and Amer- 4 s ft - APPEALS TO CITIZENS - ONDON, i mssrn GOilliulT- -" Organized Hunger, Say Smut. American Flyers Given Orders By NEW YORK. Nov. 15 MaJ. Gen. Beaumont B. Buck and Brig. Gen. G. Barretti and 400 veterans, many of them wounded, arrived this morning from Francs aboard the United State Brussels Soldiers When naval Harrisburg. " Council Proclamation the shiptransport steamed past the statue of Liberty at dawn the men lined the rail and cheered themselves hoarse. . AMSTERDAM, fWsday, Nov. 14, News of the signing of tbs armistice The new soldiers' council in Brussels, was received aboard the ship by wirethe Niewe Courant of Rotterdam says, less Tuesday and was the occasion of a J Ten Senatorial has published a number of proclama- celebration. tions arranging for tbs orderly withElection Contest drawal of German troops, appealing te their offithe soldiers hot to ;e; WASHINGTON, Nov, 15. Contmrts cers and sending a brotherly greetof the elections of two Republican sen- ing to the Belgian population. ators 1 Truman H. Newberry of Michigan and George H. Moses of New Hampshire were forecast in proceed- LaborParty Want ' ' ings today befortf the senate privileges Peace Table Seat . and elections committee. Protests against the seating of both, elected on AMSTERDAM, Thursday, Nov, 14. LONDON, Thursday, Nov.' 14. The the face of the- returns, were received Crown Prince Fredrick William of today unanimously Germany arrived at Maastricht on by the committee which deferred Ac- labor conference tion. adopted ,a - resolution submitted , by Tuesday from Spa, having taken a James Ramsay MacDonald, chairman circa it o ns rout In order to avoid muof the labor party, demanding that tinous The party, which at the official traveled troop. labor be represented Monsignor Cerretti in three motor oars, was held peace conference and that an interna- up by frontier guards because all Its Leaves For America tional labor congress sit concurrently. members wars armed. Internment was There werA cheers for International ordered, but when it became known ROME, Thursday, Nov. 14. Mon- socialism and the Bolshevists. that one of the party was the crown signor Cerretti, papal prince, all were disarmed and detained of state, left tonight for America. until the arrival of the Dutch Yenrut Survivor at Maastricht and other of. , -- v Arrive at Miami, Fla, ficials, ' The crown the prince accompanied commandec to . the letter's home, MIAMI, Fla,' Nov. 15. Capt, Feeser where he with his suite, unand 12 other survivors of the small der guard,- remains, - pending Instructions from of Phila- he steamer Tenrut, American E T Hague. delphia which went down last Sunday, off the Bahama Islands, have arrived here after 12 hours in an open boat. The steward and four others of ths ON CITIZENS crew are missing and sre believed to . have been loot. under-secreta- 15 (Havas) The PARIS, Nov. French army will make an official entry of 8trassburg on November 25, ao- cording to an official announcement. High official will go te that eity eight days later for the ceremonies incident to the retaking of Alsace and Lorraine by France. ooalltioa government with himeetf as premier, shall he continued after the war for the work of making pear and carrying on, the labor of- reconstruction. Never before were British political conditions as chaotic as they are today. The war baa shattered old party lines. " The electoral reform bin adopted by parliament during the summer of 1917 virtually doubled the number of voters. It rave the ballot to all women over 30, men over 21 and soldiers under 21. This added ,000,000 females and 2,000,000 males to the voting lists. "How the women will vote and what parties the soldier will support none can predict. The legal life of the present house of commons expired three years ago and has extended its own tenure of office from term to term by reeolutiona This has been an informal proceeding which would have been impoesible except jthat It had the indorsement of public opinion because no one wanted an election during the great war. As the new voters will be entitled to take part in choosing the government Mr. Lloyd George has before him the difficult task of trying to keep together that majority of the ConBerv-stv- e party which supported his war measures and enough Liberals to glvs him a balance of power.- - The decisive factors will be how many Liberals will follow him and what policy the Labor party will adopt. Herbert II. Asquith remains the official leader of the Liberal party while Mr. Lloyd George is a free lance without party organisation or party funds behind him. He wishes to continue the political truce which all parties declared at the beginning of the war and trusts to the slogan that he la the leader who won the war" to attract" vote. The program of his followers Is apparently to nominate Lloyd George. So far as Ireland is concerned the election probably, means the almost total disappearance of the old Nationalist party of Redmqpd and Dillon from Westminster. The Sinn Fein-er- a are expected to sweep southern Ireland, but the members elected by Sinn Feinn always refused to taka the their seats. In addition to trying to bold together his Conservative and. liberal supporter. Mr. Lloyd George I trying to reconcile the Asquith faction. Mr. Asquith could have had a high seat in the present cabinet if h would have accepted. There were two obstacles, hpwever, home rule and protection. One of these the Conservatives win not have and the other la objected to by the Liberals. ' be- - Against LONDON, Nov. 14. The LONDON, Thursday, the coming elections is whether the country will lniforse Lloyd George's proposal tha-t- the present It World. . ing Thursday. Nov. 14. The Berlin soldiers and workers council has decided tod(saoTve the Red guards, according to an Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Copenhagen. . Captain von Beerfeld, the leader of the Red guards, has bees dismissed for making revolutionary plans. The greater part of the force under Field Marshal von Mac ken sen (In command In Rumania!, has Joined the revolution, tbs Budapest Azest says, according to a Copenhagen dispatch to the Exchange Telegraph company. LONDON, Thursday, Nov, II. More than 100 mm, mostly German officers, have been killed in disorders In Brussels and soldiers councils have been formed In that ' city and at Antwerp, according to an Amsterdam dispatch to the company Exchange Telegraph quoting the Telcgraaf. A New Old Europe is Dead en WarPrioner ' nd with small nations divided by profound antipathies and most of them with minorities conducive .o Internal weakness We may therefore expect more dangerous of war in Europe than In the past. Therefore, it Is impel that we "create an International organization to keep the peace. . .."The league also would, be useful in solving other problem. For Instance when the league is established, Amer tea might be asked to 'act In some trouble lij .Turkey or Russia on behalf of the league which would give her general directions. Or take the case of th former German coloniea Some of them must fairly and properly be given to th British dominions who conquered them and. for whose future development end security they are necessary. But there may conceivably be others which tho Allies, while refusing to restore them to Germany as they cannot foresee what course the future development .of Germany might take, might transfer to certain powers until their ultimate disposal is . .. settled "Probably other knotty territorial problems could be' deterred In th same way. The task will be as diffwberrAmer-ic- a icult as it bt great.-b- ut Joins hands with Europs and Great to In aoive it, I Britain attempting have no doubt -- a solution will - be found." , To be Repatriated .Nov. . 15, (Havas.) PARIS, French war prisoners numbering 429,. This OOOwtll: be repatriated-eoc- Di number. Includes those who have been Interned in neutral countries. A delestaff gation from the French general has held, a oonferenqe at - German headquarters at 8pa to arrange the details for bringing - these men back to this oountry.--- ' - meurtriqrsb"rv tional good feeling and "The position U tragic in tha extreme. A whole world order U passing away. There la danger of thing far-atoo going Europe a setback from which giving h will not recover for generation The evlU bred by hunger threaten not merely the old Institutions, but civilization. We saved the soul of civilization; now let us care . for its sick body. "Not only th liberated of our Allies, not only ourterritories small neutral neighbors, but the enemy countries themselves require our helping hand. Let-u- s extend It In all gener oslty and magnanimity. . Germanys Dirty Fight. It would all have been so much easier if Germany had fought a clean fight and not stained her hand with such crimes, but even so, we must be influenced by larger oonsiderationa "The existing inter-alle- d machinery which is ths nucleus of a league of nations protmbly will undertak this. task. - in the period of reconstruction after the war., ail countries. Allied, neutral and enemy, will have to be rationed for oertaln raw materials. Hera again international machinery, la necessary. We thus or making straight for a league of. nations charged with the performance of these International functions. "Then as regards th primary object of ther league, from Finland to dam despa teh to i--r-s graph company. -- , - . ) . J , 1 . . X STOCKHOLM. Nov." 15. Great dtc" order In the suburb of Vienna, a- -' go rn panted by shooting and pluafv1 Ing, is reported In special d la patch to the -- - Swedish from Berlin - er. aV-tpap- t.1. From Vienna comes tasws that strong morverohlat tendency hi O man -- Austria most influential Cfcjf ttan Socialist party probably wllLr-su- it In a monarchy hi one form The imperial family MU another. . la In Vienna. -Aeroplane Hangars Burned.', in Vienna and Neustadt the aara .'if. plane hangars have been burned been shootAt Salaburg ther baa , ing In th streets. From Rusaig and Pettaii revolts are reported,' the mill to. food stores being plundered, 5 A Berlin dispatch to the Berk Volltche Zettung say "The rormer Austrian navy has ceased to exist. The most valuafce' warships are lying at the bottom" the eea. Austrian naval officers whe arrived this morning from Laibach io whom relate that the Jugo-Slav- s, the fleet was handed, blew up all the biggest ships at Polo, valued at fast 090,000, to prevent their falling the hands of the Italians. The Czecho-Slova- k pres agency, wires fmmLa,lbachr t - Object to Italian Occupation. "Italian military force have oeOut The Slovene NatlOmdi pied Trieste. . - 4 Council has proisstsd." . Council The. th Agram has sent a deputation to Serbian troop now occupying Mltro-wltz- a, asking that the Serbians ye- - -cupy tho whole of Jugoslavia. f f -- huer -- ;r 4-- al 4I Reports of Pogrom At Warsaw Received LONDON, Thursday, Nov. 14. The British foreign office has issued statement saying: --"Report of a pogrom at Warsaw have reached the government. Should these reports prove true it would point to a serious situation because force of violence and disorder . already threatening 4he life of. every populo--- tton thflhine and the Volga wou d 1,6 encourased' The statement points out that the Allies and United State are ready to lend their whole resources to the task" of restoring the economic basis of or-derly civilised life io those countrte and are showing by their acts that (hey desire ordt r and civilization. . . INFLUENZA CHECKED IN Secy. Houston Calls - On American Farmers --- 15. Farmers . WASIIINGXD.NV.Nov.' of the United State werh'valIcd'upon GERMANY. ASKS FOR by Secy. Houston today to corrtTtUute the United War work campaign for PEASANT COUNCILS to9179,500,000 for continuing the work . -. eV of the seven welfare organizations adAMSTERDAM, Thursday, Nov. 14-- The ministering tq the needs of American new German government has is troops Oversea and in this country. "The cause is great," - said - Secy, sued aa appeal to the peasant, popula- Houston. The total amount asked for formation th for tion asking pf peas- isgxtat, but not greater than the patriants councils for the purpose of or- otism of the American farmers. Every flag wljl have ganising food supply. The appeal says bouse that flies a service success of .this a special interest in th that such voluntary For every dollar mean is better than bureaucratic organizacampaign. tion and wilLavert recourse te comjpqi-enr- v added cheer and Comfort to the aon meaiuir. , f r ' - n fcrmse " . ' WASHINGTON. ' Nov.' H. For th first time since ttpanish influenza became epidemic in at my camps home, the surgeon generals weekly report shows the disease .effectually checked, .with Indications of further Figures mad publio improvement. today record a decrease of about one-thi- rd in number of cases for the week ending Nov. S, as compared with th previous week. The total was IJJJ ' a compared with 19.175. The epidemic now is wearing Itaelf out In the west, the last section to be -affected. Marked Improvement r" A eralty was shown in, the jl r - -- w |