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Show PAGE THREE, THE PROVO HERALD V' . i - -- "T ORDERED and J MS1 QUI SVE They Visit the Governor and Secure Permission to Remain In . Camp. . - j FURNITURE Ordered from Bingham, he alleged,! by orders from the polige, and assured of bis safety "and his rights as a citizen by Governor - Bamberger, r Ben ) Voggia- ,- Hational-rgaatz- er mine, mill and smelter workers of the American Federation of Labor, ... re--' turnedTo' BJBglamSaTSlraayTiTgtTrd"; demand the right to remain there as a law abiding American, Bingham is what is known In union terms as an open camp, some of the workmen being union miners and others not belonging to that organ- Hniiwrr' aim t, .i..,, nn imnnrlnl ff?BnM". haseeiLthe eMer..of.a-fitor- or. m di.ssension.Jn Ger-- j Beebe tumber Go. Provo, Utah. Third South and Academy Avenue. " - that purpose, . u i .' v. . ...... nnvpn in iifiii win- R n -, un.l caj.tor oT French iaui.en ui G. Korniloff, commander of the Russian army In tolicla L. -Gen. Lieut. ofBcer. German .itured Ilalicz. profits, and the people marvel at the trouble makers" only go on to oher stupidity of "senators who &ve'M9iMW'iTWr-WMFimiiYtSto comprehend the necessity for speedy propaganda. Work is at a standstill action. in many of the biggest mining and lumber camps of the country President Appeals to Business. ' The of labor last week President Wilsoh on Wednesday is- createddepartment THE the United States public servsued an appeal to Ihe business Interreserve, for the mobilization of ests of the countrytcdisplay true loy- ice, ftdult male volunteers for service in alty by foregoing' unusual profits In of every kind, public and President's Embargo on Foods felling their goods to both, the govern- employments -- which ure private, neofSriwry. to effective ment and the public. He warned conduct of the war. and Other Supplies, Hard them that , extortion would not be tolRussia's Drive on Lemberg. . Blow at Enemy. erated, and condemned especially the HeHsaTa T thaTTaan6jgWTieTrhe was in the cabin which serves as headquarters for the" mine workers in Bingham, Chief of Police S. snbues notified him that he must leave town.: . J IviEvTorT Chief Jones by what authority he would force Qoggin to leave town, and Jones is reported to have aid ' that-hhadrtseen authorized to order Goggin to leaver Insisting upon knowing upon whose authority he was deported, uoggm declared Cihief of Police Jones finally said to Locke: "We have had several-- : ' meetings and have decided that he must leave this, camp' before another l sun shines on his back." Locke, who is Jocal secretary of the mine, mill and - Smelter workers of 38Wp-an of Laborr ' 1fieAiaer!caEr:FedefatioTr unfairly . high schedule of ocean ei by General' Brussiloff and command iinrtn Viohalf nf flntrtrin flint memed At rates. the same time freight by General Korniloff, continued a law abiding and peaceful AMERICAN CROPS TO BE BIG bers of the Council of National De- their great drive In Ga'licla last week i he was. citizen, that he had a right, to stay fense were holding Important confer- and inflicted a tremendous blow on the there as long as ne oDeyea tne law.n ences with the heads of the great stee'l Austcp-Germaforces . by breaking . and that he would not go. carried concerns to arrange for a sufficient through . their lines and' capturing . The- next train, however, on Drive Tremendous in Russians, to Locke and Messrs. both Hailcz. Goggip of war steel for This as is the supply purposes, regarded jcity Lemberg, Break Through Teuton to the Salt Lake City protest against The immediate result of thts confer- key to Lemberg, the Immediate objecLine Governmental Crisis in ence was the assurance of the steel tive of the Russian bffenslve, and last deportation of Goggin, who insists he In was on a peaceful mission and against Result Germany May producers Jhat they, would .supply . all year was unsuccessfully attacked with whom no charges were brought. internal Reforms. the steel needed by the government at Brussiloff from the north. This time A meeting was called to talk over; a price to be fixed after the concl- he - moved n- It from the south and the matter at the state capitol, those usion of the trade commissionVeost in- took it with comparative ease, togeth- present, Uoggiu stated,, being Govern By EDWARD W. PICKARD. u. The matter' of food, Its production quiry. Thereupon the president au- er with a. great number of prisoners. or Hamberger, wuiiam Anerr, O. Young, C. and Ben Locke, Goggin shippinmore imThe thorized German Chairman Denman of and were the is armies Austrian becoming, and control, tb commandeer shifts on separated and their morale so broken general organizer of the American portant daily as a factor In ending g-board Federation of Labor. International the The aspect stocks, shipyards and' raw mater that Korniloff was enabled to use his the wark . assured the Governor rials if necessary and to begin jexpen- Cossack cavalry in the pursuit With two BinghamBamberger was brought sharply to the front la men that their rights week w'hen President 'Wilson pro- .diture of the $750,000,000 fund for the telling effect would be respected and that they ' Some distance-t- o the north the Rus-slan- s would be protected. claimed 'an embaio on shipments of construction of a merchant marine. I returned No of The Satur Locke In has the attacked the and Plnsk food and certain other articles. fiercely adopted board, policy Goggin sector, gaining considerable ground, day night to Bingham. After their ar-- ,j one has been blind t the fact that building as many steel ships as possito Salt Holland, and the Scandinavian coun- ble and making up the deficiency with and the activity of their artillery in the rival there they telephoned Riga region presaged an attempt to Lake that they had not beento molested, tries have been shipping great quan- wooden vessels." remain and that they expected Delay In sending in registration lists break that, the strongest part of the there and assert tities of foodstuffs into Germany ever as Ameritheir rights since the war began. Tnls was with- caused a postponement of the great Teuton line In the east can citizens. On the west front the Germans in their rights, but, taldo It and still day for which the registrants in the In response to telephonic Inquiry, feed their own populations, they have national army have waited, the day of staged a successful drive against the Mayor P. E. Straup of Bingham, who been Importing very heavily from the draft, the lottery of fate In which British close to the Flemisfi coast forc- had been absent from the city, stated America. Therefore It Is equally with- the prizes are to be honorable service ing them back across the Tser river that he knew nothing' about the dehowin the rights of America, certainly for all selected and death and wounds in the dunes. British trenches were portation of Goggin. He said, would investigate the he ever, that a war to the week on a of for the off GOOjrards the to depth many. shut During captured the part of wisdom, matter. Telegram. department issued complete instruc- front of 1,400 yards. This German atexportation to neutrals of 11 foodtack be an of of to the fhelr work tions for the may exemption need for part attempt stuffs beyond wnatthey own sustenance and what we- - and our boards so that it might be carried out reach Dunkirk, or it may have been "allies can spare. It would be stupid with expedition and with reasonable made to forestall a British drive along AID assurance of fair and Just treatment the coast that would threaten the Gerto continue lo supply food, even Indiman submarine bases. rectly," to our enemy, and the United for all selected with death and wounds There was tremendous fighting In States, though slow to act, is now act-- the training of the selected soldiers ce, the Germans making desperate of are being rapidly-co- m iugfirmly. course are walling, but if they are not other arrangements carried to com- attacks especially along the Cherain des Dames. But the French withstood for us they are in a degree against us pletion. It was made known in Washington the assaults stoutly and when they and must stand the consequences. that every man xf the 10,500,000 reg- were driven back anywhere, Invariably Bingham Deputy Sheriff Confers With President Wilson, being a humaniistered will' be drawn and that enough recaptured the lost ground. named neutrals Insists that the Bone, Nebeker and Ray. tarian, must be permitted to ship into Ger of the first names as they come out of Troubles. Internal Germany's Asserting that the I. W. W. situa- 'Cermtmys-teteraa- i nmrraalrrp fement-4sB- -s oe on reserve ne ano in Bingham is assuming a serious . rest wui they can glve guarantees that such army, i creasing, the opponents of Chancellor aspect and that agitators from all sec as out order in their called be will long consumed only by products will be von Bethmann-Hollweg- are growing tions of the country are congregating as more are needed. women and children and other In number and boldness, and the cab- - here. Deputy Sheriff J. W; Edmunds Yet "another step in the making of , This is kindly, but iglnet seems up. But all Bingham Tuesday held an extended nores the fact that the German women the great national army was taken last tlds can have no Immediate effect on- - jot with - Leon Bonerspecial conference are doing most of the work In the em- week when Peesident Wilson called In- th nrosoonHnn nf th war fnr u la investigator of the department of jus- Napire, releasing all the men for fighting. to the federal service the entire ebeker, JJnited States! Internal and th general staff, headed Iticei-Aqui- lla TI W-Guard and National. Guard retional and Ray; United marshal, In domiAmerica. Great Crops by Ilindenburg and Ludehdorff. district attorney. Sheriff States serve, tha Transfer to be completed by nates the entire imperial government , The success, of the American camsought to secure' assistance August 5i This legalizes the, sending In the, ministry mean little from Changes of increase the federal government in. tbe production of the Guard outside the boundaries of paign fjr 4noretiia n-- the substltution-O- f one-s- et Is demonstrated by the highly encour-ntrtn-g avoiding dangerous -- disturbances . "' the nation.. of even and for the which he declared to be Inevitable in puppets another, of forecast crops. government Various occurrences, more or less fall of the chancellor will be of v. a 111 li 111 lli 11 g Lil C uuicdo immcuiato only The acreage sown was immense and have In themselves, . were taken. academic to world. Interest the outside 6teps the general outlook Is for correspond-ingly'lnimens- e unimportant aroused our more than lenient govern- - It would to the officer, Bingham According thewar appear that, must'g yields of all grains mept to Ihe danger of penmtttlng Teu- Tin until the kaiser the crown prlne street fights are becoming a common wheat, and even In wheat there 4ons and-th-elr occurence in the Tamp, between citi'ull will bo a fair average crop. The yield this country, and a number of German are eliminated, or until the Gorman ar- zens and members of the I. W. W. of corn will be tremendous,- and in a Wash-ingto- n The vast majority of employees of the diplomatsTh mies meet such crushing defeats that organization. he declares, are not in word, the United States will have not have been deported. Every day, tke people take matters Into their own the miners,with the movement which sympathy only an abundance of food grains for too uerman ugeuis uu yi , hands-wh- lch means the Bame thing, are said to be 'advocate the agitators itself, but also great surplus stocks for , of the country are being gathered The maln of they are able to gather Its allies. The cropof potatoes .will patts In and put where they can. do no harm. an audience. A "War credit unless . to vote refused tag be the biggest on record, and the haj is even some talk of legislation .the government declared Its Mr. Bone said yesterday that' he There re-- rm nU policy ot.jAiaJtoiQrtnce, will rtheiregulation of newspapers print garding peace and reform, and thlrthe was informed as to .the plan of the he heavy, aboutf 4f possibler agitators ;TnlWSWfffH - e other hand. Food Cbntr&ller ed called forth a protest fronr the New demand of the committee 1; snpnorted aarthe-p- ro IIt. dcclarcdrin Batockl, says Germany's fruit and veg a in min a the by relchstag, of majority of the workers the rights tection etable harvest Is far below the aver- disorders if it is carried out The Ger- was inevitable. The era and the 'handling of the present "sitisterial crisis be ' age and that the yield of grain will press continues to athimself went so far as to issue uation rested with the state and "as good 'as in 1915V - which was a tack our government's conduct pf the peror not yet reachCondiiions have francounty. for equal a manifesto declaring 1 year of drought and miserable, crops in war, to ''strafe" Great Britain and to ed the point, he informed Sheriff EdIf will in chise Prussia.. This, granted, the empire. rV,7 'A v where federal intervention sneer at Russia. decidedly weaken the dominance of the munds, . The senate is" still trying to formuwould be necessary. the-1W. W. the Prussian in Junkers After government 'Getting trouble at Bing "We are late a law to regulate the distribution The attempt to restore the Mancho ham." said expecting Mr. Edwards In his report The Industrial Workers of the and use of the country's food and prob the-fc-tO"Mrr4oner-!mbe- rf -Worl, leBerally dlweputable organ abtrtnruiltSTjrTttattfflpTnlancB;-and .out to have been In now turns and W. to the are ure, droves, to tne flocking camp Is openly opposed has agreed to vote on the bill on lzation that for the financed by Germany. Another bril- and the citizens have organized themtrouble the all Is mnklng ex21. war, July The, Ion? and patience selves in an endeavor to see that ser liant stroke of foreign policy by hausting wrangle over: this "measure country that it canby fomenting The young emperor again ious trouble is averted. As the pro: strikes and riots In those parts of the has been caused largely by6the of the mines is going largely to General and abdicated accused Is Chang Hsun, duct It Is West where It strong. Of the "drys" to take advanthe government, we thought .that pos:' rend kaiser's the dohis sponsor and its agent tage of the" circumstances and make of being wholly ibly the department of justice might "to the imperial city section of have some voice in the handling of It a,, prohibition law.1 Whether the dis- ings are certainly treacherous and re- tired Peking, where he and his fast dwin- those who 'are trying to create distillation of whisky shall be prohibited, bellious. The war department has re- turbances: that It is ready to do its part dling army were hemmed In by the whether the Stocks In bond shall be ' J . ''Many of the agitators are coming fqrcea.-'kVvaand publican disorders, these In suppressing commandeered nnl used, for munitions, ad- to Bingham, from Arizona and in the the of British The are report weekly communities taking ""Whether beer and wine shall surylve rious Western activities was past week we have had ma"ny fights or perish and a dozen other like ques- steps "to rid themselves of the men who miralty oh submarine , these peothe was showing onjy 17 mer- between the citizens and. been very gratifying, Blsbee Ariz., stir them up. tions have been the subjects of argu-mejused ple.- Be.er bottles have were 17 while others sunk, decent' citizens chantmen in these melees, as and dispute. The Inclusion or first town to act The weapons freely 1, that were attacked, escaped. During which hve' occurred in spite of the exclusion of fuel, steel and other prod- of that mining center rounded up the same period .arrivals in Brrtl" best efforts of peace officers-lapto- p and members sympathiW. W. L 197 ucts "also has been debated vat length. were 2,898, and 'sailings 2,71 and on a train cattle ports them them. The people of the camp are Meanwhile President Wilson and Mri zers, loaded Kansas was de- not interested'ln the, agitators and the-steamer American The treatment .mild Such them. Hoover have fidgeted and fumed and deported ' v English-speakinminers want to be but the stroyed by a German food speculators helps the town that applies It, wgpd In valHf-- e .., been making immense unearned news 104 and 105. H PHONES tH VE US A TRIAL. , .. -- i REPAIRED. NOW IS A GOOD TIME TO HAVE VOUR FURNI-TU- R REPAIRED, STAINED, PAINTED OR REVARNISH-ED- . WE CALL FOR AND DELIVER. isation ; .. It is customary for the Federation of tabor from time to time to send organizers into mining camps to ob. Mai ARE PREPARED AT ALL TIMES TO FURNISH GLASS AND GLAZE YOUR WINDOW LARGE OR SMALL. AVE SEND OUT AND TAKE MEASURE OF GLASS WITHOUT EXTRA CHARGE. T mm WEEK wwrv -- Eussla.'sj-aaakene(looslrecfc- j - ,; ; j . WOHEII AND 1000-HE- Hi 500 20CONTCTKaSTS 40 ATHLETES-4- HORSES 41 20 20 30 LEAPERS 20 CLOWNS EQUESTRIANS EQUESTRIENNES AERIALISTS ACRES OF TENTS GYMNASTS 20 EXCLUSIVE 10,000 FEATURES SEATING CAPACITY T mCTlCULil THUT0RIU1 BtlQE . Or RARE WILD ANIMALS 100 20 TUMBLERS HEAD HORSES-IO- OO RartTlmd Complete Zoological Collection, . t APPEALS FOR HortiFrefolnipcttooitntlm. '., FtveTtntiolTlwroochbf u Svperb Educmted Equina Exhibition, High School Mmmgo Mortem of mnimortftm ywffcliMh - KOCURBIfWrW'S -- . MAGNlTUDEr-MERI- T AND-MODERN-ISM, r United for Educattnf tnd Entartttalnf. cutterino CTDFCT DARRnC stupendous, MODERN. .KALEIDESCOPIC O W1H' LtiV?JHE GROUNDS AT 10 O'CLOCK AND PASS THROUGH THE PRINCIPLE STREETS. Mil in Unith and brtllUnt In tplendor. '"Thli ihould b $m whtharlh or not. ImmadlaMlrtftor th iwid and ihow it eln tt 6.40 jun. u to oe imo Orr tin -- THE THRILLIKa FREE OUTSIDE EXKIBIT10M 'w Ok tha ' lmnedialelurfith Ao' ,. isttithnllinj FREE . '0, Show Gromv. Parade tXHltBTWH 0UT511 on me snow grounas.. ! 1 r 1 . ex-cv- - 75 MILES TQ THE GALLON. to-bri- ng , n. deter-mlnajtl- 0. B. PflOVO THE MOST PRACTICAL MOTORCYCLE MADE It offers you a combination you can't get In any other (Motorcycle, namely: Almost entire freedom from noise, straight line worm gear drive rjflr tranamlsstott-an- d magneto, drive? absence otuxtiliIry-IcEai- n fewest number of parts, two speed transmission that can be shitted by On-th- man-Americ- 180 F. The Cleveland Lightweight ine.-relc- I PRICE -- ii s s TfiOTUwttlwa44n lng ollrlth gasoline, no oil pumnoo fuss whit and no need to worry about oiling. Weighing only 140. lbs (as against 325 for an ordinary Motorcycle) it can be handled almost as easilyaB a Bicycle. A demonstration will convince the moBt skeptical that It la the In cheapest, cleanest, most quiet and easiest handled Motorcycle existence. .". Call or write for Demonstration . ;' v Company Archbold-Bicycl- e XHASW AARCHBOLD JVtflr. .. ,.... 4.' . ' Provo. IWione 171. ; West Center St The season Is getting late and if you want to enjoy the pleasure of as fine spin in the country or canyon tee us about a CLEVELAND 172 . LIGHTWEIGHT. ' r-v-- ,'.-. , n ; . g It rid of them. They appeal, however, to many of the uneducated classes in their arguments on wage questions, and this is liable to cause serious trouble, we believe, unless .it 1s halted r at once." Tribune, , Adjustments, Collections, Confidential Reports Arbitrations -- Despise No One. ." In Uvlng among men one most cot despise any personalities, no matter how really debased, miserable or lndl ' crous. S'.hopenhuupr. - -- J7tjrn r , . HfiTTlEK 283 N. First East, Provo, Phone 200 (2 double Utah 0) |