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Show 1 ' DESERET E VEXING NEWS C3ERCT EVENING : NEWS iWr- Booth Tampla end tut Tam pis Straais 6U Lka . G. - r- V J Leo IN . City, Utah Buainaas PRICES. SUBSCHIPTIpK Whitney ?r ff Muw .........7..;. ri pr f4i Mrr Xdiuou !i! t tViP Cent ..M poatsga astro. communication and all ra THB 0E8ERET NEW. j 'Halt Lake City. Utah. Foralga ' I'SAdraao an symptoms when they appear. In other words, the qualitymo4f to be desired and exhibited is the cool, common sens which will enable the community 'to concede that the medical experts know what they are talking about and that their wamlnga and councils are based the pub he upon 'ai intelligent- conception- -! and welfare, ... safety ; PRUSSIA, A DEAD STATE. VVIHAT is the real feeling of Berlin? We are not vouchsafed many glimpses actual of lye in the German capital, but once fat .fcorraopen (lenre and other reading matter Editor. a in while to the' truth filter? past the censors, the ahould addressed g jjNMteMlea largely through the means 'of the energetic Moanbar Audit Bureau Circulation F. McKinney, Eastern Repreaentmtiya of the Holland and Swiss newsill. representative I Ppm Tor It Office J Fifth Avanaa One Avanun. illuminating Hem cornea papers, specially 'Chicago OWc.1 It South Michigan i Bntarad at tha poatcfflce of Balt Lake City, as from Amsterdam dated Oct 9, and is taken from Faand elaaa matter acoordlns to Act of COP areas one of the foremost conservative newspapers iWarch A lift of Berlin (which means a supporter of the The Assoc' at ed Press Is escfualrely entitled to The paraKaiser) the daily Kreuz-Zeitundlapatcnaa tba use for republlratlon of all s lerodltad to It a not othorsrise credited In tnt aa . reads follows: moms pa and a'so the local news pnhllsned - graph iharala. -per.' All rights of republlratlon of apeclal dlsPrussia as a state is dead, but ln this . earnest hour we Prussians band ourselves - - - OCT. 17, 1918. HALT LAKE CITY. together, and, standing erect and with dignity, we receive the fatal aword thrust of socialism and democracy. Prussia will STAKE CONFERENCES SUSPENDED. exist fio more, or at least, only' as a geoI graphical expression. The work of all our' ' famous men from Frederick the Great OTWITHST ANDINQ the plainness "of Die to William II lies in ruins. From tho notice already published, suspending, pub-j- ld throne of the kings of Prussia (he jewels 'usomblages including all religious meeU have been ripred out" Saf Muring the prevalence of the infhiepza d Such a note of rpair it indeed a sharp epidemic, queries continue to be received at " tha office of the First Presidency as to whether contrast to. the clarion peals of victory "the been accustomed to tend tha flake quarterly conferences, schedules for Berlin papers have r ' forth. which are customarily prepared aad for some months in advance, come . . DIGNIFYING AN EVIL LIVERY. . egZhta the scope of the above order.- - It would WHETHER It Is straight patriotism, or appear superfluous to have to say that they merely business foresight or. a comM eerlataly do. So long as the suspension bination , of both that baa impelled promnot In must Is order effect, these conferences in the establishments brewing tie held. When it ts lifted, those that have not inent keen affected by it may be held al per schedule F.asl , to - offer their plants jfor aa y; tmleee otherwise determined by while those" that have had to be the government may desire, the fact that such onltted may be fixed for a new date or passed tenders are being made is worthy of notice. It entirely as may be decided when the health la only a short lime since the management of L brewery at a&ntkra has improved ao as to make decision the great Anheuser-Busch ' In and the the Louis, world, largest perhaps feasible waa reported to practically German-owne- d, NO SUCII RETREAT IN HISTORY. have offered the plant to the D. B. governand quite redMPLETE evacuation of Belgium by the ment as a munition-factor- y; H. Zang German Invaders Is a development of the cently came a like offer from the P. concern a of which, Denver, company war situation in western Europe which may Brewing been baa German its in of name, English spite imbow be looked for at an early dale. If the since 1889. When the grain conservaperial high command has not decided out of its property movement tion, began, the London owners owtrrwisdom that Us dccupatton of that territand necessity foresaw the advisability logically untenable, the Allied armies' ory-(s not even engaging In "the' manufacture of el are doing their best to force that decision upon or near beer," and instructed the Ibsen. On a scale magnified a hundred times soft drinks. to prepare for government management plant Germans are repeating the performance the Denver brewery proposes to Another action. of Napoleon from Moscow more than a hun- make malted .milk a specialty, increasing the dred yean a?0. His has been rale- as the from 1,000 pounds daily production present in hisretreat and famous molt spectacular to 1Q.OOO pounds, with .the intention of making tory; but compared with that of Ludendorff in' Denver one of the largest manufacturing centhese days, the former is as an ant alongside ters of the country for this product. aq armadillo. Many distilleries have already shown their Nor Is ft alone that the proud business sense by engaging In the manufacture to withare conquerors finding it prudent of denatured alcohol; and with the breweries battle-draw" On not one of . their far-flutheir plants fronts are .they able to score a gain or finding opportunity for continuing bottled soft drinks or malted even to hold their own. Their .sun of victory by manufacturing or taming them over to the government has set. and deep gloom - pervades thefr souls milk, to both parties, there will be no with profit to which ibeir faces and the fond Fatherland "a such of property and vested Indestruction am. now distressfully turned. Witlr their utsuch thousand no of terests," throwing most endeavors to make their retirements apworkmen out of employment,- - as was lugubristave are able to barely pear strategic." they in connection with the change off the utter demoralisation of a rout. The ously predicted conditions to dry." All that the wet" from appearance of Allied cavalry upon the scene reform appears to' mean in this respect adds to their dismay, and affords a striking great is merely a change Of products from harmand aignificant indication of the completeness to harmless, from evil to beneficial, while of the enemy's collapse. When a retreat be- ful will continue to' be employed tn workmen come to precipitate that the horsemen ar desirable mors occupations, and owners will called up to apply the goad and put the finish from other sources than the their profits get Is not the much there for hope Oi the flight, of human lives. wreckage pursued party short of getting back home or tragic before they arrive there. ... COTTCnderlng GERMANYS BIG BILL FOR REPARATION. hostn-- - M 5 g.' seml-an-Wal- ly -- proper-au-tbortt- ' f " - " from-Relgiu- ng u ?! - THE PLAGUE'S PROGRESS. . health renorts afford no sign that the LOCAL of Influenza, although vigorously combated, is being as yet successfully restrained or overcome. A more, hopeful note, however, comes from" the East tn the statement that the decrease in the number of Tcases In srmy camps Justifies-- ' "the belief of 1 medical officials that the peak" of the troulil a been passed o far as the soldiers are Concerned. Even more, encouraging is . the announcement that after a three weeks suspension tlje public schools and theatres In Boston with, be reopened next week. One of the first of the laroer ciHes .of the country to he wtolently sVi,?d hv the plague, the Massachusetts metropolis' has' undergone ft siege pfohfthly more?crre than", sny other big 'municipality- - because pf the suddenness of the attack and the widipread drffuspn , of the gnalady before ity serupess was fully snscd. U Nevertheless the measures tpken to resist ft 1. wrere heroic, and they seem to have borne fryiL That the army, also,hould he early to report that the epidemic is Jibing brought un-- i' dec j'ontrol, was to be expected for nowhere 'Ip civil life Is it possible to enforce precautionary,. preventive and approved i via t ion or curative measure so strictly as amopg men and in places exclusively, under military con-irOur own turn for improvement- may be expected to come soon, provided the (Jff warnings and the advice of the health officiate shall be conscientiously heeded- In the meantime, while there is iy occasion to magnify people's fears into a condition denoting hysteria, there is on the other band no warrant for minimizing the serious- -' Asm of the menace. It is as foolish to aceepf U a fatalistic dictum that everybody is pre-- 5 "tined to have" the disease in some form, ' " f i er aggravated, and. that therefore none to hscape,- - as it is to neglect en- -tis proper precautions to avoid being -- ol. fit frly nvni raftmrmf un jthft ruined condition In which the THE utterly have found French 'and Belgian THURSDAY 17 1918 OCTOBER .RELIGIOUS UNITY. Tor The Deseret New fcr tor. Frank Crsnfc In a letter from k gentleman connected . with the welfare woHTfofc the ermy l find . thle eteUmeot: 1 have eeen amuing thing happen here, r "On September th the President tanned his letter requesting thnt the seren agencies engaged In war work unite their campaigns ' ' In the week, qf November XI. On the very . night that hie letter waa received, five representatives of each agency- the T. M. C. . T. W. C. A., National Catholic War Council, Jewish Welfare Board, American Library Association, War Camp Community Service, end the Salvation Army met In Dr. Mott e office. He waa nominated for Director General hr Mr. John G. Agar, representing the Catholic, and bis nomination seconded by Mr. Mortimer L. Schlff, representing , the -- t - A-- -- f ilL Jews. -- TONIGHT -- EVERY NIGHT -- and MATINEES "In this week I have eeen these agencies, which before bare regarded - themselves-somewh- at aa competitors tn good Work, ab-- . soiutety opening up tp each njher and petting aaide all personal considerations In ths ' promotion of ths united Idea. "I behevp. tf the country can Catch that , plrtt of enthusiasm, tljai this united drive , is going to do more for the union of the religious people of all creeds In this country than the last hundred years of discussion has , done." t This Cndioatss one of the most significant development in ths religious life of America and one of the most hopeful evolutions of the twentieth century. . In some way the scattered and contending organizations through which the reUglone life of the nineteenth century expressed Itself must coma, together. Moral conviction hs instinct of helpfulness are net the -property of nay one denomination. They are ' the common heritage of humanity. They express themselves in eerrioe, not in opinion. In service there la no rivalry. In eervlcs and love is tho only field Of perman' ent unity. Ont of the ocourgs of war not tho least helpful that Is appearing is thle drawing together of sfi sects, this realization on tho part of religions organizations that tho surest way to win the approval of Him who rules and Judges no all. no matter by what najne Ho bo called or with What rites He be srorehipped, la to do our full duty toward one of tho leadr of these, my breth' .ren." , , Only by the vision of this truth Shall ws come into "tho unity of the Spirit which la tho bond of peace," and escape from, tho of unity of opinion which can bo but tho boos of contention. (Copyright, m. k a a. of The DesSret New, , t From tho Files v rr i r A- "OCTOBER IT, ieiR. The quartermaster's department of the to army was arranging transport Christmas to American ths gifts sailors In ths garrison at Manila. Relatives wore enjoined not to send quantitles'of sweet things calculated to disturb- ths digestion of men living In . tbs , tropics. Henry Day died at his home at Draper, Balt Lake County, at the ago of TI yearn. Ho woo one of tho early pioneers of Utah and man of sterling worth and integrity. Twelve thousand wheelmen, led by Mayor Harrison; paraded the streets'of Chicago riding decorated bicycles. The parade was reviewed by President McKinley from' the Auditorium, and was given, ns a preliminary . to t)io dedication of the Peace arches of the national Jubilee. . FuneriS services were held for Samuel J. . Kenyon, of Salt Lake City, who died follow-In- g an accident on Utah Lake, In which he nearly lost hje life by drownitig. His death was caused by an overdose of morphine, taken by mistake while suffering from tho effects of ths accident. While making hi last trip previous to reConductor tiring from railroad service. Frank Ball of tho Oregon 8hort Line wad thrown under the wheels of his train at American Falla, Idaho, and lost a leg. Mr. Ball had received tho nomination for county clerk of Bannock county and the following day intends to quit tho service of the company to give attention to his campaign. TThe office of tho Richfield Advocate was burned to the ground with, a lose of about IS. 009. Bo closely foBowing tho destruction ofi the stake tabernacle, the Incident gave rise to the belief that there was a firebug at largo the Sevier eoonty town. cities after the Germane have been driven out, Justifies the bitter remark of a Frenchman who had seen the evidence of the scientific looting practiced by the invaders "We knew that they tere assassins on their advance. but we did not knew that they were robbers on their retreat," A certain amount of devastation is always to be expected and must he excused as due to both the necessities and th'e accidents of war; but there is nothconsideration of honor, decency and humaning In the regulations of civilized war nor in ity. there is the practical and economic phase oi as recognized by humanity (be practices of the case. Our aide does not propose to place civilized mankind that can be cited to justify iteclf pi the position of having to resist or of the wholesale the application Jhe torch, wanton" destruction of -- cathedrals and other, pay a claim for damages or indemnity It pret ths enemy .shorld xelain his comstately buildings, the looting of private houses, fers lh and the organized carrying away of everything plete b hhopol of that kipc i( business. But ofvafce upon which the modern barbarians the enemy will have rash- - a tremendoualy long can lay ihoir greedy hands. Lens, Cambrai, account to. settle that under the best of ciream- -. and all the other cities recovered from the fiances he will be years arid years tin getting we should go to work to enemy bear cruel testimony' In Uieir smoking, nd of the debt. .If his orchard and facfarms, cities, to destroy to which the ruin savagery they plundered demolish his famous structures, steal hie been subjected by the present-da- y Huns tories, and Vandais; and the bill which Germany is hia wots of art and everything of value that Incurring to be seUled one day wtyen the mat- ,we can find, wewouIJ'TcaveTub so weak ter of reparation" becomes a word with helpless, discouraged, and crushed that he actual meaning, is getting to be enormously" would go into hopeless bankruptcy, and despair anil we would never get a cent out of him on large and is going to involve a mighty reckoniOur present calng.-' . the big account ho owes In spite of the. maddening" provocation culation, is to collect that account to the last which Germany has given in these Trespects, penny, and the sooner the collections begi to hack in her own coin (orae in, the more' rapidly the reconstruction the idea of paying has never foupd favor peoples, ol the wasted French and Belgian villages can be undertaken and hurried along. some" soliL Allied have suggested though diers, when sweeping victoriously over the If there Is any Special sort of weather German Fatherland, can never be brought to lower themselves to the same plane of that is favorable to Spanish -- Influenza, we barbarism as that attained by the Germans should like to know it, ao as to place a prompt in their invasion of France and Belgium they order for some other kind;' also, if a person will not repeat 'east of the Rhine the thieving, a bo has recovered from the malady becomes rapacious. Vandal tactics that have made the Thereby immtyie, the experience will not have name ol German so bated everywhere west been in vain, Uiopgb others need not, for that V of (hat stream. AnafL b"wc, w f v i ; in Your Homo TheAmuement Place That ' : wT U Never Closed . MELBA Hear HEIFETZ, CARUiO, " Hen Lander and Marion H&r-ri-s. and ilCORMACK. Hear the U. S- - Mar'ne Band, Sousa and Boston Symphony Orchestra. Hear all of the worlda-greatea-t The same selections that bringartiste. thousands to their feet applanding nightly. v . For dancing just the mnsie yon want newest, catchiest, selections, brilliantly played and equally aa enjoyable for conoert pieces as for dancing. GALLI-CUEC- T, ... - - .... Mot Versatile of Entertainers The Victrola It the ient terms. J . w 1 a i" s I a ; . Ton need only to pay for a few record now. Begin payments on the Victrola after it has been placed in -- your bome. Style N6. 10, $ 90; pay cash $ 8.50 for records Style Ho. 11, $115; pay cash $ 8.50 for Tecords Style No. 14, $175; pay. cash $15.00 for records Wehave Victrolaa from $22.50 to $400, ' records you scant. a Theres a shortage and and just" the -- ' ' 1 A Victrola Now! . we can wake-nopromis- for Victrolas Exclusively o a io. vSnmfW Phono Vas.3Z75'l50 Ihi n. hr with-Allie- 7 Don't deny your family the wonderful enjoyment that comes from having a VICTROLA. DonJ, imagine you cant afford it CLARKS wiltaaage most conven- Crone.) TWENTY YEARS AGO. T v Wilh Encores Aplenty No Waiting--. . No Crowding d "vrrri'.rr Chlldrcn'o Couha ta cWkjfi Use Caticcra Soap to ta tfM at a sail . vi tbc throat wJl j prowpOr gtaiog the chile suqr ToQcciYcarC!i C gwMlft Owe tWo rpirn 4 - ' T .l . . Sf. a |