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Show THE WASATCH WAVE HEBER CITY, UTAH, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1918. NO. 40. His Meat ektradiie kaiser 10 E II PRIVATE LIFE An epidemic of smallpox her broken out at Tooele. Twenty five cu-have been retained. Mrs. Mary Anu Sutton, 73 years old, a pioneer wtio crossed the plains la one of the Brigham Young parties, died at her home in Salt Lake City. No v enibi r 24, Utah's quota for the fourth Liberty loan was $18,570,3800 and tlxe amount es under advisement FRENCH SECRETARY OF TREASURY AND DIRECTOR OF RAILROADS HAS RESIGNED. DEMOBILIZATION PLANS PERMIT RAPID RETURN BOYS IN FRANCE. Been Indicted Emperor Has Times for Murder in With Dastardly Crimes During the War. Inadequate Salary is Reason That is Eight Divisions of National Guard and National Army Troops, Eight of Coast Artillery and Two Brigades Field Artillery Sail Soon. i,fct0N OFBRITISh AND LAW OFFICERS. f Given by Cabinet Member for Relinquishing Post as Soon as Successor is Selected. Con-secti- Three Regi-men- understood the questetr. ditmu of the former emperor is being considered Gormirn untiali law off n ei s of the crown, close ho are working in Action in tuth the From h .iiiilmnlies. taken immediately the premises u.is of the former em- s(er the fl.ght Holland oeror to London -- It H ion of the Washington. William Gibbs Me- Adoo, secretary of the treasury, director general of railroads and otien discussed us one of the presiileiiti.il possibilities of 11)20, lias resigned ins offices to return to private bus, ness. President Wilson has accept! d his resignation. Mr. McAdoo will give up tiie treasury pontolio as soon as Ins under-Hand- s successor lias been selected. He wished Xhe Evening Nows says it to lay down his work as direetor genthe law otneers have concludto de- eral of railroads by January 1, but will ed that the allies are entitled of the former remain if the president has not then mand the extradition apchosen a successor. omperor, and that this decision who have comindividuals to Upon the new secretary of the treasalso plies mitted or given instructions for the ury, whoever he may lie, will devolve the task of financing the nation commission of extraditable crimes. It is added that Holland takes the through the transition period of war to not the power to peace, which probably will include a Tiew that she has surrender such persous without the least two more Liberty loans and possibly also a further revision of the sysconsent of Germany. tem of war taxation. The French, premier, M. Cleyienceau, Lyon-CaeLetters between President Wilson recently requested of Charles dean of the faculty of law of and Mr. McAdoo, made public Novemof the the University of l'aris, an opinion on ber 22, with the announcement reasons the possibility of the extradition of resignation, give Mr. McAdoos M. Lyon-Caefor leaving the cabinet solely as a neWilliam Hohenzollern. asked to be given time to prepare a cessity for replenishing his personal fortune, and express the presidents decision. deep regret at losing his One of the leading French authorities on international law, Edouard from his official family. Mr. McAdoo receives $12,000 a year Clunet, is reported to have advanced unithe opinion that it was impossible to as secretary of the treasury, the demand the emperors extrad- form salary of cabinet members, and nothing as direetor general of railition. roads. His family expenses are known The former emperor has been Indicted three times for murder In England in connection with the sinking of WILLIAM G. MADOO the Lusitania, German aerial raids and the shelling by warships of unfortified n re-tei- thing. The divisions which General March said have been designated by General UerBhing to return as soon ns the sick and wounded have been moved to the United States are: National guards: Thirty-firs- t (Georgia, Alabama and Florida) ; Thirty-fourt- h SEVENTY-ON(Nebraska, Iowa, South Dakota ALL OF SHIPS und Minnesota) ; Thirty-eight(IndiCLASSES GIVEN UP FOR ana, Kentucky and West Virginia) ; INTERNMENT. and Thirty-nint(Arkansas, Mississippi and Louisiana). A Line of Allied Warship Fifty Mile National army : Seventy-sixt(New Long, and Including Five Big England) ; Eighth-fourt(Kentucky, American Warships, Took Iudiuuu and southern Illinois) ; Eighty-sixt- h Part In Ceremony. (northern Illinois, including Chi(Arkansas, cago), and Eighty-seventLondon. The hulk mid pride of the Louisians, Mississippi und southern German navy surrendered fifty miles Alulmma). Tiie coast artillery regiments to he off the const of Scotland between 0:30 and 10 oclock Thursday morning, No- returned us soon as possible were announced as Hie Forty-sixtvember 21. It included seventy-onh h Demolish Barriers Which Guarded the Old German Front East of Verdun Hun Soldiers Revolt Against Brutal Officers. h h son-in-la- one-tim- e east coast towns TRANSPORTS. TO LOAN BRITONS Bringing Home American Troops. New York. Although the British government may tie compelled to use virtually all its available transports for the return of its own and colonial for the early troops, arrangements transportation home of approximately 40,000 American troops on British ships have been effected, it is learned in authoritative Biitixh quarters. This meludis 12 Oik) who have been training in England and who have already embarked for home on British transports. Discussing what England has done toward American moving troops abroad, it was authoritatively stated that British vessels carried l,OSO,417 Ameruan troops to England and Frame during the war, from the embarkation poils Will Aid in Hun Agent Salt Kampmann, attention in Dies ago by posing as a psj mental lie dm, a,nl whose affair heart with i Salt mysterious 'mman known as Mrs. Smith, eged to have in ought about his and mternme-- i d.mg,. runs on ead at Hie 1 influenza or of the Lake is all- arrest at Iort Douglas as a alien last fall, is ml war prison camp of pm umoma. Marshall Will Be President. ,e V wickersham, attorney goiur.,1 ,n the Taft admiuis-ratmm i n address before educa-orlawyers, hankers and merchants Bp.aged in im ational trade who are tempers of on foreign re- auons, tidvanu ! the opinion that the constitution i 1! s it mandatory upon he I residen i irsimii t0 assume the b if Mr. Wilson leaves .. c?,of ,in ailed a tt, m attend the Says New Yo-- s, i 1(1 peace conferem e Withdrawing Troops from mdon In j,' i mmg the Ameruan England. withdrawal frm England and American army of- ,lle on'-- unlti are a few of the S 0 " l'- - JVf' ! whr.s 1,1 r'"on ,, camps. Give Ba-u- if M"ri,"'rs f ti,e 1W' Kesenu-driV;- " H.irueh With a ' ' lag urn , hers tnt "ll ,,1( ' hoard a lov- rnem- - President Smith Laid at Rest ir a Vi ,ir. The film ral service Salt Lake City Dirbard r- for Irisidert Ju- -t ,ih U. Smilh wee Minute Men. c.md.-tion- s i" g ini.a-inof held here Frt 1.". Tl.om.li health ' t a tei'il'c funeral not would i o pen comniii tee on I' Id i hour was ob'I cniulude its service., a sn,.- n aog-an ,e. hut on's not ,'i Sal I comber 24, served. on tin s; no bv a 'im i throughout Tuesday. Of bus ness t.nd industrial nmlvity. Ch Hr.n Honor Riley. Another Pr. nee for Abdication. fe-School children ,ii , ..J 0,11 T.-j- n- m i; t- - 'ie I nited States, ' , i the 1, I , "r asurt rtraajv j ' Ii'1' from Japan ooiory of Janies t, vv hen a statue r was unveiled. 7 J.3 V i 0,2 t J V- - - y e been completed by E. C. IVnrose, special, agent In charge of (he military survey in Utah. We have a position awaiting you," is the greeting Mrs. Ada Soper, head of tiie women's division of the departof Penns lvunia and Minnesota, ex- ment of labor, hopes to he aide to exceeded its quota mid confidence was ex- tend to women stenographers and typhomes pressed that these slates will lie over ists when they return to their the top when returns from Philadel- from Washington. Officials of the American Railway phia mid Minneapolis are In. Express company have joined with thw council of defense In making an apCHILE AND PERU AT OUTS. peal that Christmas presents be startSouth American Governments Decide ed on their way by December 5. It has been suggested that the final shipping to Withdraw Consuls. be December 10. date anis It Peru. officially Lima, is the intention of the war departIt her nounced that Peru has withdrawn consuls from Chile as a result of the ment to remove all line troops from renewal of rioting in Fort Douglas and dedicate the post In its entirety to army general hospital mid Antofagasta. Iquique use ns goon ns the more pressing deanA Santiago, Chilei tails of bringing troops home and denounces that the Chilean government has decided to withdraw ils consuls in mobilizing of the army nre attended to. The sugar factory at Delta ia operPeru, in order to avoid untoward incidents which might take place in case ating with a full force of employes of outbreaks in Peru and Glide. and is furnishing work and money not only to the farmers, who grow the Wholesale Killing of Jews. beets, but also to a large percentage of of wholesale people on the west side ns well as to New York. Reports slaughter in pogroms against Jews at some from the east side of the county. P.rze-kof state and city efGalicia, where icllars are reported filled with bodies and many forts towaids providing for the emJews attempting flight have been ployment of returned soldiers is to be shot down in t lie streets were rec ivrd realized as a result of uniting with from Copenhagen by the Zionist organtiie soldiers' and sailors committee reization of America. City cently named by the Salt commi-sioa similar state organizaLimit Revenue to Four Billion. tion. slrht party vote, Washington. ly acommittee After having eluded the Ogden decided ... the sen He finance inn Moif citv in a taxicab, to recommend that tiie j teld from Hip which' later turned turtle twice when 1920 revenue lull be limited to it crashed over an embankment south members, of Lav ton. killing the driver, Henry I lie Democrafie by William- -, a colored P.i iti-- h who voted for tin amount sugge-te- d subject, Secretary McAdoo, were opposed by 2t v in's of ago, vvas captured and will the beveii Republicans. f.ue a grand larceny charge. I oiling sre called upon to take a Vail Becomes Burleson's Adviser. lending part In recognition of National VaO S. Theodore Rnii-da.vs, Saturday and Sunday, 0 the Amen in Teiephoiu National I.ritish 7 and s. ember .'( A Teh gr ; ti coinpmiv , - t , become the in roeogni-- i eilebra'ed be to are d.ivs il ; advis'i of pi -- 'I.', -- h r Gt idone by mv (,f tho splendid work of 111 the "V 'I'l'ill'i) llegal P.urle-tin defending France and Bell'.iHiiiii -civiliz-.idotelepho'M . tci.gr iph ...el i.ildc : gium and thereby safeguarding under govei i.tm at coni ml po-;i,- .c $4,000-(XHi.ixx- LOSSES OF HUNS. Up to Oi tuber 31. soldiet- - were killed and the fate of giUHXHI wa not hiiov-n- . it I'mpi' the lorvoTt-- . of Purlin Copenhagen. z vis .ib'e .I'l'horitv had i'lion soldiers v tinevv one led S"eiil Pe,i" Gen. of Moj. A new photograph add- - th t ilero were new-of ter C. Harrm, adjutant gereral ir.-- "i . Tinan ei s ia hostile the army for the next fetr years. He McCain. P. H. Ceil. Mai. succeeds 4 n Largest Bum Ever Raised as Gift in History of World. New York. Total subscriptions to the United War Work campaign were $203,179,03.8, or $32,679,038 in excess of tiie amount originally asked by the seven war relief organizations for their wotk during demobilization of the army and navy, according to an offl- cinl announcement Monday by the national campaign committee. This is the largest sum ever raised ns un outright gift lu the history of the world. every According to tiie committee, stale in tiie union, with the exception on r i.nir i i m ,e I t 1. n 'I l.e llrfi-if- eu.m-tric- i f ; . i. n. U pre-ide- al Sir Henry Bsbington Smith, K. C. B., assistant commissioner to C. S. I., is Lord Pead ng. the high commissioner iv ccrtiol of the Dr.ioh war missicn. Sir Henry has occjpted numerous fosts under the Britrh government. 1 i per-oii.- n. Tli.'t the government does not conOrganize Curn Wood Campaign. You May Buy Christmas Presents. ra-- t ! Vv tn M ."h. tbe war , I an end is inficated He soler Powder Plant to Close. us'cnglnn K ' " s - that Clm- of "nr nre I fuel lv lin id M" d Dnnour The u it th.it Vi t'ie po.ver vine j, - Im " iiig be ruitih'l tics vear, . l i erg hi. e unnd eg - rt m to the thud war Ill lie ,i! i.i i m m hi' ill'll inn.'ii"U )t e) lie',,.'. ;,1 Ilf !,T CU1 li i de-- i a !'' nil W n in Pert Dmchis for of. I'l.nlc 1J thet roll'll ., j i lor her tl,e ' - "f wood of h'n ih e m a.-- eeno at of the vnr. m the .itiuii i'lf i a,. i ,! , t'1.1 the ii foil tics vv in f,,.. o', i d Di" 'I it!' d. and retail iif ieebiig iicln-.'i- IV e i w.l, d in 'lii'i'n " i mi - til i , n i V. li ,n ; uI.poitt"i of her skin tii i t a have In c.l . 'idiMWII. i.l'rri vv is left ii'Hmnh'd by the flames, iif el, .ploy ,,t Dcllmenf inocn Will Get His. r h n bin tied i.wav and putci.es Hoover in England. Ii - ri pm ,nl i n the free Poch Statue Proposed. R, ih ?' .1, reed fr mi her bedv, Mrs. P. Ileibett I.oii'i tbe Hoover, P. A mrhi'--Il n !! a. ,on g l.m lien hue n i the ,vi tin inhmni-trafo- r, 17 Vi trs of as, li s at a Salt I'ioiI Edand oi A''). i,i t dm to M t i kin '! vii In Ilmen ni i. 1, ii ng ibe ere .ion of 1! uev, eli I rman of the eke li. spitnl in a ciith'al condition slop i,., u fa Wu-- h nghm a ,1 njqliop i nmg ward V ho look a p:"n"t ' C p,.rt i her D here. have arrived hni"l. - urn of They uiti slight hope In Id out fora fir wn intros the ping the n! m for purpose. ret cut!; .spxiiKiO (he R a i.iinp revolur.onaiy gmririierr of kiudhng lt ex of lb tho repre-en'atmet by vveie '1 urk.-h hotiM? Th'irmi ,y by Repregenerals duced in the a and the at Ulni, Wiiiiiemt" rg. arre-ti- d Tuhint Brlti-- h food and "hipping departments. MUi keio-cu- e. sentative K.nuott of Oregon. who fled to Germany. Ten Days Without Food. I i's , ki , -- ,1 . ( I U vv -- -- repre-in'a-liv- es ' . po'l g e- I , 'ii I- v Wa-hln- -- in Vl-poupmd he Ku-of Baku, ou the we- -: coa-- t of the avs an offie al statement. Caspian The allied forces were given ar excelon Suiiduv I I iv" v-a- . lent reception. -i rt per- centage of 10(i. 1iij ments for beets made to farmer in the north end of Utah county for October deliveries aggregated $500, 000k In uddltion there was paid by the com pany $35,000 for labor. Shot through the left eye with a bullet from his air rifle as he peered Into the barrel of the gun, Wajne Steffensen of Salt Lake will lose the sight in that eye. Continual mourning over the loss of her son. Corporal Arthur R. Green,-wh- o was killed tu action In France, October 5, proved fatal to Mrs. George R. Green, of Winder ward, Suit Lake. Tho Utah Agricultural college at Logan, through its president, lias offered lls extensive vocational futilities to the federal board for vocational education to aid the plan to reconstruct disabled soldiers. Word lias been received from New York that Vice President Marshall baa been placed on a western Itinerary, to lutiude a speech tn Salt Lake on December 9, under the auspices of the I .vague to Enforce Peace. As a result of the return of peace, work has begun tearing down the old I.- ehl opera house preparatory to the erection of what will be one of tho most modern playhouses In any of the smaller cities of the state. The United States employment department bus announced the completion of arrangements for returning free to their homes In Utah all men who have been Bent to Nitro for work on the Hercules powder plant. There being no further need for applications to the United States highways council for permission to build or Improve travel arteries, the state road commission la mapping out an extensive program for next spring. lleber J. Grant has Jieen chosen by the quorum of twelve apostil's as president of the Church of Jesus Saints. Antiion Christ of Latter-daII. Lund and Charles W. Penrose were chosen as the presidents counselors. The first gold star to be placed on the service flag of Richfield was put there lust week, when a telegram Was received by Sirs. James Jensen ffOin the war department, announcing flint her son U'o had been killed la action October 2. ; Sixty-threquadrangle reports, covering 13.923 square miles in Box Elder, Salt Cache, Davis, Juab, Millard, Lake, Tooele and Utah counties, have n, 4- ; j WAR WORK DRIVE OVER. over-subscr- ipt o. 1.5V) Olio Germen y? JU, -- an' or a $19,003,700, of $1,032,900, ch Have Vacation Until December 2. The second session of Washington. or war congress, ihe Sixty-fiftwhich began last December 3, ended ut 0 p. m. Thursday, November 21, under a resolution which hud been adopted earlier in tiie day by the senate, 41 to 18, and by the house without objection. Since the third nml final session of tins congress will begin in eleven days December 2 the adjournment was devoid of many of the spectacular features usually accompanying the ending of sfi'sbin- -. President Wilson did not go to the capitol because no legislation requiring b.s actum was passed by either hw!v. and mly !ieill crimps of members and spectators waited for the falling of the gavels of Marshall and Speaker Clark. Lawmakers H were Don " Tdiassador of taa j4, J OhiV, e N,..i minister VsiitTlands. c,, . INCREASED. j soclnli-t- s who lmd attended a mass meeting where Bolshevik dm trines were expounded. The men and women leaving the hull broke and lied us tiie men in uniform i barged past the police, but were pursued into the side streets in all directions. The iittaek cm the socialists came at the close of u meeting which threatened lrom the moment it begun to break into a riot. It was called ostensibly to protest against the execution of Thomas J. Mooney, but Scott Nearing, who presided, and tiie other peukers devoted most of their attention to pleas for tiie release of 'political offenders. Several men and women were arrested for displaying red flags smuggled Into the (iarden In defiance of an edict by Mayor Hylun. Large numbers of! men in uniform entered the building before Hie doors were locked with thei avowed determination of preventing at- tacks upon the government. They were restrained with difficulty by police and detectives from making an as-- J suit on the stage. Scores of fist lights were interrupted by officers. Soldiers, sailors and marines then! gathered and, breaking through the' police guard, drove the socialists from! J Lite meeting place, Mounted police, reinfored by autos mobile loads of reserves, rushed from, every station houBe within a radlus of miles, struggled valiantly to clear' the Square, but made little progress. Soldiers and Bailors, thoroughly angered by what they considered an Insidious attack on the flag they hud sworn to defend, paid little attention to blows from night sticks. They were' bent on getting revenge from the Internationalists, and many of them succeeded. ion n : i"" m'"' diplomatic '' h1 d Tuesday to h"-- y v" v' ' TO BE New York Hundreds of soldiers, sailors and marines broke through a cm dou of police sun minding Madison Square Monday night mid aliaeked subscribed totaled de-fe- D'c';onlat'c Envoys. hviys f. - NAVY -- !l ., a '!- l. o RECESS. TAKES CONGRESS ' . - h . f. Loving Cup. Seventy-fourttieth, Seventy-third- , and Seventy-fiflh- . The two field artillery brigades to be brought home are the Sitxy-fiftl- i and the One Hundred and Slxty-thlnaero squadrons, seventeen Eiglity-twconstruction companies and several special unlls from England will be brought home as soon as transportation facilities are available, General March said. $3.3H-5,000- A v Fif- Forty-nint- Forty-eight- Strength Will Be Twice as Great by 1920 as It Was In 1917. naval Americas Washington. strength will he about twice as great by 1920 as It was in 1917, the year the United States entered the world war, It was brought out before tbe gether with many British and Ameri- house naval committee In considering can notables witnessing the Impressing 1920 naval appropriation bill. No A line of allied war- the naval display, statement was given reships fifty miles long and Including comparative but the total five big American greyhounds, took garding capital ships, will be about 300, nil of number ships part in the ceremony. Altogether as compared with 300 in 1917. there were about 000 allied and American war craft In the reviewing Englands Loss by Air Raids. stand. London. Englands bill to Germany About the same time the big surface fleet was delivered, the British for damage done by air raids Is authorforces from Harwich steamed out to itatively stated to amount to One Tiie totals of air raid victims nre: meet the second batch of of the German submarines was dis- Killed, 48$; injured, 1104; total, 1502. abled on route. Prisoners Show III Treatment. Tbe rendezvous between tbe victors Paris. Released allied military prisand he vanquished took place near May island. Rear Admiral Sinclair led oners continually nre arriving at the tiie German fleet between lines of the eastern station, and all give evidence British grand fleet and the allied and of having suffered greatly from lack American vessels, which convoyed the of food while in German bands. Germans to their harbor of Internment like armed guards inarching convicts SIR H. BABINGTON SMITH to their cells. Luxem-burger- ly Forty-sevent- e ships of all classes, including destroyers. The surrender went off according to plan. British war ships escorted the German craft into the Firth of Forth, where internment was begun ut l:4o p. m. The German surrendering fleet was short three vessels, namely, one battleship, one cruiser and one light cruiser. It vvas explained these would be delivered later. vessels surAmong the seventy-on- e rendered were seven batleshlps, five battle cruisers and seven light cruisers, the remainder being destroyers. The three vessels that were scheduled to give up hut did not appear are being repaired, it was explained. King George, the prince of Wales and Admiral Sims were anoard Admiral Sir David Beattys flagship, the superdreailnaught Queen Elizabeth, to- Murs-Ln-Tou- at War Prison. I'itj. Ir. Maximilian who gulled considerable Silt Luke some months Like h Paris. The German frontier was crossed at several places Sunday by American signal corps units and ambulance workers. Short trips were made into Rhenish Prussia, where the inhabitants are reported to have show n the Americans every consideration. American forces have completed demolishing barriers which guarded the old German front east of Verdun, consisting of reinforced concrete pillars stretching along the old front for two miles. At just at the edge of the village, the Americans encountered lank barriers, some of which A few were only half completed. blasts of dynamite soon put them out of commission. At Ltiun the Germans had harriers of logs chained together on four wheels, the logs being movable like On these barriers the Gera gate. mans had installed ingenious devices to remove the wheels from beneath the logs which would then drop across the road at the main road entrance This log harrier was into Etain. just at the western entrance, the logs acling as a check in the event that the mines failed to destroy the bridge. The American forces resting Sunday along the German frontier spent their spare time at various points watching the Germans opposite them. In numerous instances the Germans waved farewell when their detachments started on their homeward march. Reports of rioting eon'inue to reach American headquarters from various One report vvas to the efsources. fect that a German colonel had been dragged from his horse by soldiers William G. McAdoo, who has as secretary of the treasury and beaten severely. from Luxemburg Before crossing and director general of railroads. s many of the privates told the readied Gerwhen Hint they to have been heavy in the last few many they would decline to obey their years, although since the war lie has do as they pleased, and if taken almost no part m the little cap- oftiters, to tusk by their officers, trouble taken ital society that remained. Repeatedly would result. salsmall to referred has (lie secretary aries of government officials, though MAJ. GEN. PETER C. HARRIS he did not refer to ins own ease. Mr. McAdoo made the announcement of his retirement at one of his weekly Conferences with a score of newspaper men in his private office at the treasury. The rise of Mr. McAdoo to a place of influence in the administration, which many have declared was second only to the president, was very fast. As a southern lawyer who had been interested in transportation s hemes in -- cr s,-southern cities, lie went to New )ork ' & and accomplished the then almost untunnelof believable feat successfully ing the Hudson river for electric trains. One of the first men to suggest the s' heme if not actually the ft ' ,1 first was adjudged a lunatic, and iie lived to see the project ail accomplishf y ment. ' o' f 4. i ' the pres, , i ;h that git is entirely probable ident may fill separately the offices of the secretaire of the treasury and director general of railroads. ' ,,v 2 f ti- Break Through Cordon of Police and Attack International Socialists Who Were Expounding Bolshevik Doctrines. ts Demolnliaiion of the nsliington. Americnii expeditionary forces, already in progress with the movement homeward of su k and wounded, will lie liasletieij by the return at an early date tif eight divisions of national guard and muioiml army troops, eight regiments of coast artillery and two brigades of field artillery. This announcement was made Saturday by General March, chief of Btatf, on of dispatches from General Ber- VANGUARD OF FORCES WATCH HUNS AS THEY START ON HOMEWARD MARCH. SAILORS SOLDIERS, AND MA RINES BREAK UP BOLSHEVIK MEETING IN NEW YORK. WILL OF I r- . iv Pa-h- , re-u- |