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Show EMERY COUNTY PROGRESS, CASTLE DALE. UTAH n nrniiii btn MAH3 i ri i nr ui n LtAV Hb MISSIVE DEATH n Ml : - ,m , ......I. t xw. . ' ..I ... . .iiji.iiihi I. I. : ,.. ' .nii.i. . ' 1 u HinunHifli iiiuul " n III IIIi IIIa ft lift 'U I Bill rtnirT rC'V. ' .:T V.."1 i ncvcflLO iiu Drain 'i i " I . u i'unini nnnnr uu ul. mmm a I I Diamonds take hearts. i a ) II L. - r m i Buy your Diamonds at Park'. .:'v;' ''?v:-- "C: BOCHE INGENUITY ILLUSTRATED BY THE INFERNAL MACHINES THEY LEAVE BEHIND. .'V''-..--- i RESULTS OF INVESTIGATION BY SPECIAL COMMITTEE LAID BEFORE PRESIDENT. - BOYD PARK Kwtastsiea MAKERS OF JEWELRY 1'nrin. The bodies are showing devilish ingenuity in the manner In Miilch they are leaving infernal nia chines behind them as they retreat toward I he Kliine. This ingenuity seems to depend ujtou the time Ileinie had to work it out. In some regions every dugout has its little contrivance of death, but of all the assortment the one he left at Clmtel ('berbery ranks first. It was here that ammunition dumps and dugouts began to explode four days after the Germans left the place some two weeks ago. Ten days after the enemy was gone two dugouts blew up from time bombs. Our engi neers have found many types of in fernal machines, such as those fixed to eight-daclocks and thermometers. For ingenuity one found a few days ago was remarkable. Eight feet from the entrance of a handsome dugout that would make a good shelter for weary doughboys was found a cane, hanging carelessly over the balustrade of a stairway. It looked harmless, but a certain engineer lieutenant had learned to be wary. Walking around the cane he examined it. It appeared to be all right. Turning on his 'flash-ligh- t he went over it minutely, and half way between the ferrule and the handle he saw a small black string tied to it. This string led to the balustrade and down to where a person would naturally stand at the foot of the stairs when grasping the cane. Beneath this spot, four feet square, a hole was filled with an explosive corresponding to TNT. This Is one illustration of how the boche likes to ght. This is one of the reasons why the doughboys think less favorably of an armistice than they otherwise might. MSIC E m STRIA IS READ r 10 BEING WORKED OUT GIVE UP FIGHT y COUNT TISZA ASSASSINATED. Former Premier Finally Hungarian Pays the Penalty. Copenhagen. Count Tisza, the former Hungarian premier, has been killed by a soldier, according to a The count fell Budapest telegram. victim to a revolver shot while he was out walking. Count Tlsza, whose life is reported ended by assassination, has long been one of the storm centers of Hungarian polities. It has been charged that Count Tlssa was one of the four men responsible for the war, and the accusation has been made that he instigated the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand. Count Tlsxa was twice premier of Hungary, from 1903 to 1905 and from June 6, 1913, to May 23, 1917. He was the center of many riotous scenes in the Hungarian parliament during his leadership and In 1913 fought at least three duels with political opponents. JUMP TRACK CARS IN TUNNEL. Eighty Lives Lost When Motorman Takes Curve at High Speed. bodies have New Yerk. Eighty-fivbeen taken from what is known as the Malbone street "tunnel." on the Brighton Beach line of the Brooklyn Kapid Transit company, where a five-ca- r train running at high speed jumped the track on a curve and struck the sidewalk with such terrific force that the first car was demolished and the others "buckled" until they were jaunie against the roof of the tunnel. e CONFERENCE AT VERSAILLES AGREES UPON MAIN POINTS; COMMANDERS MUST O. K. London. The Versailles conference, according to the report current In London, has agreed on the main points of the armistice terms, which will now be considered by the military com manded. The final peace terms, it is said, will be submitted to Germany simultaneously with the armistice terms. As part of the terms of an armis tice the Evening News says it understands the allied nations will insist upon the surrender of the German fleet, including all the German sub marines, and upon the occupation by allied forces of all the fortified towns on the Rhine. Sir George Cave, the British home secretary, gave a long account in the house of commons of Germany's ill treatment of British war prisoners and her continued violation of agreements concerning prisoners of war. The home secretary declared that Germany ought to be made to pay for these violations. Battle Against Profiteering. San Francisco. Formation of a pro organizaposed $3,000,000 state-wid- e tion to stop profiteering in foodstuffs and reduce prevailing food prices was effected here Tuesday. Representa tives of the State Federation of Labor, Federated ""Women's clubs, the State Council of Defense and other or ganizations were present at the conference. Australia Does Her Bit. Some concep Melbourne, Australia. tion of what Australia has done in the war and of the losses sustained by the commonwealth can be gained from figures which have Just been issued officially. Out of a population of 5.000,000, Australia has sent abroad 336,000 men. Spanish War Veteran Under Charges. San Francisco. John B. Jeffery. Tl, war a major in the Spanish-Americaand well known in Chicago and elsewhere, was Indicted by a federal grand Jury ehre Monday on a charge of using the malls to defraud. n MRS. ELLA FLAGG YOUNG Germany's Austro-IIimgaria- Austro-Hungaria- n n Czecho-Slovak- Jugo-Slav- Austro-Hungar-ia- Austro-Hungaria- n n No official comment was forthcom ing, but it is known that no response will be made at present to the communication, which is believed to have been dispatched with the primary Intention of satisfying the German people that their government Is not omitting any opportunity to forward the negotiations for an armistice and the renewed aspeace. Regarding surance in the German note that the constitutional structure of the German government has been and is being changed to democratic lines, it is pointed out that the truth of this statement and the scope of the changes already made or projected, after all, are matters to he dealt with in connection with peace and not in arrangA strong disposiing an armistice. tion is evidenced officially to yield to the apparent Intent of both German and Austrian negotiators to continue these tions two essentially different funcin one phase of the negotiations. aw w H ptmdi dooiU-t- 25 cin-Bal- ck. $S00. CARS OMunobiln, n GaaruMed tint cj foaaiaa coa4itioatir tern U vmej y tithe ptniM. Wrli far detailed tin ud dncti doa. Used Cat Dept., Auto Co, Ravndall-Dod-d Salt Like cite OF TURKISH 0LORY CAPITAL Great Mosque of Santa Sofia a Marvel In Beauty of Architecture and Rich Decoration. The great mosque of Santa Soda towers majestically over Constantino, pie, dominating Its surroundings bj sheer thick-se- t ponderousness. Its nilnanu bulky dome and tacked-o- n are, however, only the shell whlcs covers a vast cathedral Justly famed for beauty of line and rich ornament From the outer court you pa through a heavy bronze door and stand within a hall of such cavernous proportions that It seems impossible that even the exterior, that seemed so massive, could contain It. Above, the dome rises in a sweeping curve. Once mosaic figures of Christian saints adorned these higher regions of the hall, bat the vandal Turks long ago covered flit saints with plaster through which la certain places they still can be seea smiling dimly but serenely. The mosque has not always been a The origlal Mohammedan temple. Santa Sofia, a Christian cathedral erected by Constantine, was destroyed, by fire. It was Justinian who rebuilt lr in the sixth century, decorating ft with such lavish magnificence that ha was himself surprised at the result and cried out : "Solomon, I have surpass Ujeer Jn Justinian's day the new templi was a veritable Aladdin's cave. It. walls and columns were of marbl brought from foreign quarries and from other temples. Famous shrinea of Diana, Apollo and even the Temple of the Sun at Baalbek contributed their statues and Jewels, willingly or not, to the glory of Justinian's cathedral Into this treasure vault in 1463 bom the conquering Turks, wrecking, pin dering and claiming possession. From that time on Santa Sofia, Church of the Divine Wisdom, has been a Turkish ths mosque, with minarets added and Dailj crescent over alL Chicago News. DEPENDS ON ONE'S THOUGHTS Kuehlmann to Be Peace Envoy. Copenhagen. The Berlin Lokal a copy of which has been received here, says Dr. Richard von Kuehlmann, former German secretary of foreign affairs, will be one of Germany's representatives at the pejice conference. Whether we ara to say what what think, or not, depends entirely on our thoughts are and how they w affect others. There are some thought it is a sin to hide. The people smother a good thought because fluff are afraid of being misnndemooo i laughed at, take upon themselves dangerous responsibility. To wnc a kind thought Is something for whW there is no excuse. There are other thoughts which U a Dltv to allow to eet beiond your o brain. It is unfortunate indeed tobaj: that them, but at least yoo can resolve or outside never shall get they wj hlrthnlneA. Tf von think this world Vi ft dreary, dismal place, what is $i pood of saying so? If morbid, angni m thoughts have taken possession or a etamp them out as yon would r, MAJ. GEN. J. E. CAPPER I i I Real J it HTIAB-P- enonirh - to epcaa .""i, thonirht which should be spoken, s matter whether it is likely to be VH tilar or not. And be strong enough V; Sn-hrav- hold In s loo oh tTio thfflipht which, H It should escape, would work fathers. tw.j .at, 'it taining chicken or bacon, or any dishes containing more than one kind of meat, must disappear from hotel menus, according to an Interpretation by the federal food board. ?' f 'w6'itV- BARGAINS IN USED Cm By No Meant Always the Part of Wisdom for Persona to say What They Think. en- Ban Put on Club Sandwiches. New York. Club sandwiches con- MET LAKE made October 18 from Cristobal, on th Panama canal, to Balboa Heights, in an hour and forty-fiv- e minutes. gaged in bombing German positions far behind the battle line and hhs met with good results, according to an official communicatloi.. Protect Seniority Rights. Aircraft Frauds to be Prosecuted. of the Washington. Prosecution three army officers held by Charles E. Hughes in his rejiort on the aircraft investigation to lie guilty of dealing with corporations in which they were financially Interested is to be started without delay. While latest note to President Wilson was delivered to the state department Monday through the Swiss legation, cable dispatches from Europe brought inforgovmation that the ernment had caused another communication to be dispatched to the president, asking that immediate negotiations for peace and an armistice be entered Into without awaiting the results of the exchanges with Germany. The Vienna government asserted that it adhered to the same point of view expressed by the president In his last communication upon the rights of the peoples, ess pecially those of the Kingdom of Greater Serbia. and and requested that he Switzerland. A Vienna dis Basel, begin overtures with the allied governreceived here says that accordpatch ments with a view to ending Immeding to the Austrian newspapers the iate hostilities on all Kingdom of Greater Serbia has been fronts. at Sarajevo, Bosnia, and Revolutionary bands are driving the proclaimed assassins of Archduke Frank that the Montroops out of released by soltenegro, the correspondent of the Daily Ferdinand have been News at The Hague learns from V- diers. The rebels have captured ienna. Ocean to Ocean Flight Nikslc, Berane, Scutari and Ricka. The Chicago. Success of the first airAustrian governor general has left plane to carry mall from the Atlantic Cettlnje, the Montenegrin capital. The official text of the German note to the Pacific ocean was announced by Capt. B. B. Lipsner of the air mall did not differ materially from the The flight was version as received by cable. service Thursday. air force again has been busily V were InWashington. Railroads structed Friday by Director General McAdoo to restore employees now in military or naval service to their seniority rights when they return, so far as practicable and to aid other returning Koldiers. Washington. Washington. The long awaited re port on the aircraft investigation, con. ducted during the last five months by Charles E. Hughes and Attorney Gen eral Gregory, was placed before Presl dent Wilson on October 31 and made public. Delays and wastes of the produc tlon nroaram. the report declares, were due chiefly to "defective organization of the work of aircraft production and the serious lack of competent direc tion of that work by the responsible officers of the signal corps. No fault is found with the manage ment of aircraft affairs since reorgan ization of last May, which placed John I). Ryan in charge. The civilian personnel of the aircraft production board is exonerated of wrongdoing. Attorney General Gregory, in a letter transmitting the report to President Wilson, says he is In "substantial accord" with the findings of Mr. Hughes. The report finds no "graft," in the generally accepted sense, but makes for recommendations proceedings against army officers held guilty of in which dealing with corporations were interested. they The chief waste from the original ap propriation of $691,851,866, the report says, was in the abandonment of two types of airplanes one of them the Bristol the failure to salvage aggregating about $24,000,000. Figures show that last May $184,000,000 of that great appropriation had been disbursed and up to October 1 the expenditure had reached about $140,000,000 for all aviation purposes. The attorney general concludes In his letter of transmittal that "no such profits have been allowed as to Justify a charge of bad faith." Bombing German Positions. London. The British Independent o Will ASKS THAT NEGOTIATIONS FOR PEACE AND ARMISYlCE BE ENTERED INTO AT ONCE. Expected That Allies Will Insist Upon Accepts President Wilson's Terms and Is Ready to Discuss Peace Terms Surrender of German Fleet and Without Awaiting Results of Allied Forces Occupation by of Towns on the Rhine. Exchange With Germany. Picking Potatoes Pays. Idaho Falls, Ida. A family consisting of man, wife and two boys and a girl came from Dubois recently and engaged in picking up potatoes at the ranches In this vicinity. They worked twenty-twdays, and picked up MOO .acks of potatoes, for which they received K cents per sack, giving them $!X0. MA MAIN STREET Chief Waste Is Found to Have Been in the Abandonment of Two Types of Planes Charges of Bad Faith Not Proved. Dugouts Blown Up Ten Day After They Had Been Abandoned by Teutons, While Explosions Occur Four Days After Hun Evacuation. harm m Selected. What He Didn't Like About Helen. Kenneth's little playmate, was to have a party. Only girls wr j to be invited, but Kenneth was aware of this fact. lie longed for '4 ,E invitation and expected one up to in?" day of the nartv. But alasl the tlon didn't come. Downhearted, nj'w BlOthefi Irnnw. in' V. ila." 111" nnlWi uw... A UU UI. 1 , "Vnn like Helen awfully well, but i ccj tainly don't like her ways." j Cut Off From Supplies by Flood. Ashevllle, N. C Two thousand negro soldiers and a number of white ofMaj. Gen. John Edward Capper, dficers, employed In the Pisgah forest, have been cut off from all supplies by irector general of the British tank corps which did such fine work In floods caused by heavy rains. He crashing the Hun defenses. Mrs. Ella rlagg Young, best known .served in India, South Africa, and the Socialists Indicted. woman educator In the United States, Milwaukee. Victor L. Berger and present war, and was formerly comand chairman of the National Liberty four others, prominent In the Socialist mander of the balloon school and the loan committee, who died at Washingwere Included In more than school of military engineering. The ton of pneumonia, following an attack party,indictments fifty recently returned by tank Is a British invention which was of influenza. modeled sUer the American farm the federal grand Jury, ci tractor. 1 f Washing Poor People's Feet "ttlie custom of washing the fee' J the poor on Maundy Thursday AVhltehnll wna nhserveal by Eng11 1 j sovereigns until the end of e J enteenth century. After that the cm mony was performed on their hehs" the Archbishops of York antll tne v die of the eighteenth century. j |