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Show Four Watch the Shopping Days Before Christmas. XViore lerald-Hepuhlica- It's Daily for Bargains. n CLIP Salt Lake Smelter Settlements Lead, $5,373. TITE Silver, 5138c 02. Copper (Cath.), $19,425. METALS Zinc, $17.25: $17.50. Inter-Mounta- in Vol. 4". No. 4 6. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 21, 1915 WANTS BOY-C- D TO MARRY UPON ORGANIZED riANCEC IS AMERICAN GIRL LABOR DEPENDS of Washington, M1SS VIRGINIA MACKAY-SMITI- I ghter of the late Sisho Alexander Maekay-Smitformer rector of St. John's Episcopal church in Washington. Miss Smith's engage to I il has been announced, hut both her familv and Berlin are oiv-activities in beliali poking tne match at tin time in view or Boy-Edof Germany. Captain Boy-Ewho is military attache to the German embassy, is shown in the insert. Soy-E- TOSERVE n ma I J j 's d, sa v of North and Ihe State of ,'' r' .'4 of Control 0 7 Te.. Iec. ' V V LAE0R ::C 4 --- ' , T v- ysy '''"", - " f rs X is in official control of tlie former Villa State of Chihuahua by virtue of an agreement between Gens. IJub-ert- n I.inion, Manuel Handa. Lieut. Col. Flaviavno Paliza and Col. Amlalon and Carranxa Consul Andreas Garcia, by which !)() troops and the organization of the Villa government, including the cities of Juarez, and Chihuahua and all border points, accept the Carran.a domination. The agreement grants amnesty lo all but General Villa and his brother IJipMito. The generals entered Into conference delegates from (ieneral yesterday with the Carranza conconfer to Villa Al-exan- h. Yaquis Again Purser fs Make Raids Taken From on Americans Wppenr. late last niht the reportedconference to General General Villa lt -- tlele-vate- FRANCISCO. Ic. Tons Chong, president of the Chines fieimhlie association, received a cablegram from Shanghai. China, tonight, which stated that five Chinese provinces had declared tlutr independence against the rule of Yuan Shi K.ii. The province concerned in the revolution are. according to the cablegram, Kwangtung, Wlangsi. Yiiannan. S.chucn and Kweichau. Mr. Tong. who has presided recently at several mass meetings of Chinese from all parts of California, said tonight he believed the action of the five provinces would be followed by similar declarations from all parts of China. He said the Chinese in America were to the return of stronglyto opposed the monarchical form of China government. Iarge sums, he said, had been pledged by California Chinese to finance a general revolution. -- . U. S. Ship Admiral Winslow Confers With Steamer Borinquen Held Up and Searched by French General Obregon Regarding Cruiser Descartes. Indian Outbreaks. n-e- ral ifornia Chinese to Finance General Revolution. ) h. to turn over the entire territory and and for himself all troops and arm?, without any folto leave the capital Cal- R. If). M. rdn Five Provinces Declare Against Yuan Monarchy ! n do - 11. inc. YOUK. They of their Villa at Chihuahua City. received no reply Late today they and instead learned Genera! Villa, from their advices". G that after receiving 500 or 500 men and Villa gathered his when and that left the capi.tal nboutJ! was unknown. with Upon opening the conference s the the Carranza consul today, would proannounced that they ceed upon the unreselnded authorization as given by General Villa. They ald they believed he feared that the Continued on I'aS- '! time os strenuously ;im iocs the IJerlin !!;.! i. nn is trythe govei niuent. hut Captain Hoy-U- d Against Ni:U" ing to so ahead and make all arrangeof his government at ments for his wedding before he sails. and the :ndhr of hi? ttamee, i.'ap-tal- The nafe passage kIvcji Captain iioy-I- l Hoy-Irecalled military attache does not cover li.s wife, and as she of the German government, is trying would be a German subject after the to arrange in Va.hini;ton the marriage the vessels of the allies might of himself and Mi.f Virginia marriage .Mackay-Smittear her away from the side of her husdaORhter of the late IMshop band and take her to Kirkwall or fome Mackay-Smitrector other bleak point on the north coast of frni"r of St. John's Kpiscopal church of Wa.h-Inj- f Scotia nd. ton. has been attentive to Captain I'.oy-U-h d llecalled by his government through Miss Mackuy-Smltfor more than two demands made by the United States for years. He visited at the liar Harbor his activity in connection with the vio- borne of the family and also at the lations of neutrality. Captain Boy-K- d He has been home in Washington. is insistent that he wed Mi sh Smith seen frequently at the Mackay-Smit- h before leaving. Mi.s Mackay-Smlth'- s home since the United States demanded family objects to the marriage at this his recall. T.i- - i oraniziition. The Carranza do facto government Large Sums Pledged by V XX. .V '. 5 I A . In Vf N wo5 , i GUARANTEES Dec '20. David minister of munitions, rave jtii account of his stewardship in the house of commons tonight. with story of the insufficiency of munitions in the eailv days of the war and the history of the establishment of his department to remedy this situation, the minister V'adually warmed to his subject and reached the climax with the declaration that the success of the allies in the war depends on the attitude of organized labor 'whether it will allow the pnernment to recruit a sufficient number of skilled men for the factories which the munitions department has brought into, be in jr. ON DON', Lloyd-(Iconr- o, Absence of State Church or Standing Army, Nation TODAY'S PROGRAM. "We want 80,000 skilled men and from two to three hundred thousand unskilled men for these new factories," he said. "We must reduce the pro-po- rt ioti of our orders which go abroad and develop our home resources. Upon the supply of labor depends, I think, our success in this war. Upon this whether we can reduce tlie cost of the war by scores of millions of pounds. Upon this depends whether we can supply our troops with the right sort of guns and enable them to make next year's campaign a success. Iependi on Orj;iinIeil I.nbor. g "It Is a question whether we are a in an end to to bring the war year or linger along in the 4 bloodstained path. Labor has tlie answer." e Earlier In his speech, Mr. admitted there was a bad shortage in the P.rltish munitions supply in the first ear of the war, but declared that the present situation was quite different. Dast May the British were turning out only 2500 high explosive shells daily against the Germans' quarter of a million. Production Enormously Iiicrcned. "Here Is the situation now," he said: "The quantity of shells fired in the recent September operations was enormous. The battle lasted days, even weeks, yet there was no shortage of shells. This was the result of four months careful husbanding. Yet we replaced the whole amount in a month and hope soon to be in a position to replace a like quantity in a week." "It Is too early to talk of the danIn the last ger of overproduction. great battle, although there was a tremendous accumulation of ammunition, the generals stated that with thrice the quantity of ammunition, they would achieve twenty times the result. Two hundred million pounds, or the cost of only forty days of war, would produce an enormous quantity of munitions. If you had that quantity at the right time the war might be won in forty days; whereas, without it, the war might be prolonged perhaps 400 days. James Henry Thomas, labor member fo Derby and assistant general secretary of the Amalgamated Society la-of Railway Servants, speakinge for the had bor party, after Mr. concluded, said that organized labor Id be found willing to follow wherever the minister of munitions led, if their rights were properly guaranteed. de-pen- - GAVE UP DARDANELLES FEAT ONE DAY TOO -- Si ds -- Chihuahua state, prepared to oppose re-u- ASKS el ) Ii'h former sul, Andreas d? Garcia, upon the 5 i Ie-uinni- nr yyy.'. Hec. Ed-iiar- JC said Mr. Anderson. "He and Mr. Depends on Educational Inme this informed have that Ryan action is taken on the ground that stitutions to Make Americans, unpleasant features are being injected into the race and it will be Says Dr. E. P. Cubberley for the good of the cause of educaft tion that no such fight be permitted. Dr. Gowans and Mr. Ryan TALKS TO CONVENTION are the best of friends and each was anxious to withdraw in favor of the OF TEACHERS OF UTAH other." Dr. Gowans said he had withdrawn in the interest of Mr. Ryan because 'Cut Out and Connect Up," Is there was no issue between them and each was In favor of the other. Mr. Ryan made a statement to tlie Keynote of Annual Convention onso KVAS. same effect. Sounded by Prof. H. R. Driggs It was generally presumed in educational circles that Dr. Gowans withdrew because he feared he might be considered a candidate nominated only to at the Morning Session. represent Salt Lake, with the result that an issue between the city and rural to name was be preschools would be drawn. He said he did not know his Three Hundred Are Here sented to the convention. Informed of the result of the conference, Howard R. Driggs, incumbent in the presidential chair, and D. C. Jensen, member of the board of trustees, took the position that since Dr. Gowans had been nominated in a general session of REAL WORK STARTS EARLY the convention his name could be withdrawn from the ballot only with the consent of another general session. The election will be held from 9 a. m. until 5 p. m. today, so there will be no further general session until after it has ' 20. Gen. 400 armed Villa, with men, it is believed, U somewhere in Tex., 3v Z !. IT- U- at the Right Time, Might Be Won in Forty Days - SAX fosv tary of the association, ized to give out a statement to the x effect that Dr. Gowans" had withSHORTAGE IN SUPPLIES drawn on account of unpleasant feawhich were being injected BEING RAPIDLY OVERCOME tures into the race. Neither Dr. Gowans nor Mr. Ryan would say what these features were. With Sufficient Guns and Am"Dr. Gowans has authorized me to scratch his name from the ballot." munition V'--.v;- i-- lth hi of flic lilpolif.. 1 Ilia, financial of thf nxencj- of (rip Ilia ormmUntinn nt Jnarrx. the rroK.rd Into the I tilted ln.rt Uerc tnlchl, ilia Iilnmelf, it vin t.enernl mI on good authority, nlo had in hldinK onr- rrotcdInand the Hitkir of the eltj. 4 ihprr 111 fart to locale timrrni Villa here lonlshl proved tina vaillna:. lowing. . Says British Minister, War S. MAY FIND ASYLUM IN U. PASO, ElsKrar cisco Lloyd-Georg- v V.- Chihuahua Chief Leaves Chihuahua City at Head of 400 Men and Whereabouts Is Unknown to His Former Followers Who Are Gathered at Juarez I'mjmi, USON RYAN, e David Appeals in Name of Patriotism for between hours' duration last Right to Employ Unskilled the two nominees. night Following the secreWorkers in Munition Plants meeting, J. Fred Anderson, was author- j! AMNESTY GRANTED TO ALL BUT VILLA AND BROTHER I!I . I Vol. 172, No. 46. superintendent of the Jordan school district, will be the next of the Utah Edxicational association. Dr. E. G. Gowan, state president superintendent of public instruction, who was nominated by D. AV. Parrott as a candidate against Mr. Ryan, has withdrawn from the race. Under a ruling of the board of trustees, his name, however, must stay on the ballot, .but he will not be an active candidate and he has announced that he will support Mr. Ryan. The withdrawal of Dr. Gowans followed a conference of almost two SUCCESS IN WAR . Mexican Insurgent Leader's Former Aides Turn Over to De Facto Government Army Salt Laka Herald. PRICE FIVE CENTS ORSON RYAN TO BE NEXT HEAD OF TEACHERS' BODY h. i Premium Coupon 11 It's on Page WEATHER. Tuesday nnrt Wednesday, fair MOiitli. unsettled north portion, 'ot much chaoKe In temperature. Republican. ! A Complete Index ! Dec. 20. Yaqui GUAVMAS. Met., have beun raids xipon th American settlement at San Pedro and have attacked the lllchaid Con-- I struction company's experimental sta tion there, according to a dispatch received here today by the American consul from settlers in the region. A large body of mounted Indians was aid to be proceeding southward. .V later disp.iteh from Oniagota said lighting was going on there and that troops garrisoning the town were withdraw Ing. Acting upon urgent orders of General Oi.regon. fQ t Carranza cavalrymen left Kiperanza. tw;!vi miles from the scene of th reported hostilities, and should reach the scene late tonight, while I'""!) troops who left Magdalena should reach there tomorrow. Tii- - flagship Snu Diego reached Wins-loAdmiral today. early Guajmas Genwith conference a held long eral Obregon. w ANC0NA NOTE FORWARDED lut for Publication at Waatiingtnn Wednesday. L'0. Dec. Secretary Washington. Landing announced today that the second American note to Austria on the sinking of the steamship Ancona had gone forward yesterday and should reach Vienna tomorrow night. While Mr. Lansing gave no intimation of its contents, the note is understood to be a virtual reiteration of the criminal demands, with the implication that it i: the United States last word on the subject. The text of the note will be isued for publication in newspapers Wednesday afternoon, Mr. lansing said. lie Cilven -- Deo. NEW of Rrooklyn. purserWilhelm of the American steamship Iorinuen, was removed from the vessel off the harbor of San Juan. Porto Rico, by officers of the French cruiser Descartes, according to the ljrin'juen skipper. The ship arrived here today. Captain Dow of the Borinquen said a. m. on December 15, that about while his shl; was five miles outside San Juan harbor, the Descartes threw her searchlight on the Porlnquen and then fired a blank shot across her bows. Officers of the Descartes then boarded the steamer and took off the purser. Garbc. it was said, was a German, but had taken out ills first citizenship papers some time ago. Washington. Dee. i0. The United States still is awaiting a reply from the French government to the vigorous protest rocentjy .lodged against the action of the commander of the cruiser Descartes in stopping three steamers o of the New Rican line and taking off Germans and Austrians. As soon as the state department Is officially advised of the latest instance or what it holds to be flagrant violation of the protection of the American flag. Involved in the removal of Wilhelm Garbe from the steamer Horln-que- n by the same French commander, supplementary representations probably will be made to France with the intimation that an immediate cessation of such acts is expected. th;iiti-;- i:mouts ha v. London. Dec. 20. An order inscoun-ci- l tonlpht indicated a further tightening in the restrictions on exports. No further exports of pig iron, scrap iron, steel scrap or hematite are permitted and restrictions are laid down on the exportation of vegetable fibers and of yarns made from them. YORK, 1 20. ro-in- Nov. Lloyd-Georg- ANOTlinit PHOTKST FIM2D. Washington, Dec. 20. The United States has protested to Great Britain against interference with parcel post shipments between this country and Sweden, Secretary Lansing announced today. Resides filing a protest the state department has asked Great Britain for an explanation, Mr. Lansing said. of the Associated 120. Con-stantino- ritons Give Up Positions armor-piercin- on Gallipoli i f f tog-ethe- OR DEPORTED BY BULGARS Women and Children in Adrianople Placed in Prison and Brutally Treated men being deported to Asia Minor. Women and children were detained two days In prison before the removal, says the dispatch, and were subjected to brutal treatment by their captors. Many were placed on sailing vessels bound for Asia Minor. Two of these vessels foundered off Rodosto and a ple would have been surely forced, in the opinion of a number of of the defense works near Tschanek, as expressed to the officers artillery Associated I'ress correspondent, who has just come from the Dardanelles front to Vienna. One of the principal batteries had for three of its large caliber guns just g shells each, when four efforts of tremendous ended the night For the fleet. French and the British fourth gun five shells were left, making for the entire battery a total of seventeen projectiles of the sort which the aggressor had to fear. What this meant is best understood when it is considered that the battery inhe.quesgivtion was the one which had to en the widest berth by the allied fleet. "During the evening of March 18, the Associated Tress correspondent talked to several' artillery officers from the , battery in question. "Better pack and be ready to quit Evacuation of Anzac and at daybreak," said one of them. asked. "Why." he was sure Suvla Zones, Where Thouto get in to- "Oh,, they are sands of Lives Were SacriThen the officer stated his reasons. and sure the British that He was so ficed, Carried Out Secretly French would return in the morning to finish their task that there was no question in his mind as to the proONDON, Dec. 20. The British priety of discussing the ammunition -matter. troops at the Suvla and Anzac Their IRnff Work. districts of the Gallipoli peninsula "We'll hold out well enough to make have been withdrawn them think that there is no end to our This news was first announced supply of ammunition, he said. "But here about their if be done they go it can't today in the following official work in real earnest. With our heavy statement: they can reduce the pieces . useless, " All the troops at Suvla and Anzac, batteries on the other shore without with their guns and stores, trouble. The case looks hopeless. You have been successfully transferred 'had better take my advice." Following the Injunction thus giv- with anen, the correspondent arose early next other insignificant casualties to of sphere operations." morning and packed his few belongin other sectors of the ings, keeping meanwhile a watchful Operations eye on the tower of Kale Sultanie front, on the Gallipoli peninsula than where the flag, showing that the allied fleet was near, was usually those from which troops were withdrawn are to be continued, it is intihoisted. But the morning hours passed and mated in an official statement issued (Continued on Page 8.) tonight. Army Withdrawn Secretly. "Further details of the evacuation of the Anzac and Suvla zones have been received." says the official statement. "Without the Turks being aware of the movement, a great army has been withdrawn from one of the areas occupied on the Gallipoli peninsula, although in the closest of contact with the enemy. By this contraction of the front operations at other points of the line will be more effectively carried out. "Sir Charles Monro gives great credit for this skillfully conducted transfer of forces to the generals commanding and the royal navy." The withdrawal of the British troops majority of the exiles on board were from Suvla bay and the Anzac zones drowned. ends more successfully than most miliContinuing, the dispatch says: tary men possible the most "A memorial presented to the Bul- unfortunate thought of the British arms chapter in this war. Thousands of lives were garian government, invoking interference in behalf of the persecuted Ar- sacrificed in gaining these positions menians gives a frightful picture of and other thousands in holding them. their sufferings in Asia Minor at the 3IIMMIM WAU13S hands of the Turkish authorities. The t PHKLD. document furnished a list of twenty-nin- e Washington, Dec. 20. The constitudistricts in which the Armenian tionality of the Maryland law fixing 0 the minimum wage schedule for laborpopulation, consisting of between and 900,000 persons, either were ers employed by the city of Baltimore killed, exiled or forcibly converted to at $2 a day was upheld today by the the Islam religion." supreme court. ARMENIANS MASSACRED to the Dec. HI. A LONDON,reports that alldispatch Armenians in Adrianople had either been massacred or deported by the Bulgarians, 1000 Had the Press:) VIENNA,fleet returned(Correspondence to its attack upon the Dardanelles batteries on the day after the great bombardment of March 19 last the waterway to Eloyd-Oeorg- York-Port- . Turkish Ports With Ammunition Gonej Could Have Withstood the British Guns Only Another Day 800.-00- r f 9.30 Departmental a. m. College school section, home ins. high Meet and ICast Side High school; economics section, room school, 22; Lafayette mar j?rade section. Assemblygramhall; and kindergarten sec- primary 4Salt Lake theatre. tion, 3 p. m. Agricultural room 16; section, Ameri- Lafayette can School school, Peace league and home and school sections. Assembly section, Monroe school; hall;art uufciness section, arayette scnool, room 20: classical section, Lafay- ette school, room 21; crafts sec- Lafayette school, room 17; homo economics association. La- 4fayette school, room 22; juvenile4- court section, music room. Brigham Young Memorial building; section. Lafavettekindergarten 4- school, room 15; library assoclaBarrett tion, hall; modern lan- guages section. Lafayette school, room 18; music section, Consoli- 4- Music hall; nature and science 4- section, Lafayette school, assem- 4- bly room; physical education sec- -4- - tion. West Side High school gvmtnasium. General Session. 4- 7.30 p. m. Assembly hall. 4- "The New Athletics," Program 4- - Orson "A Live Library." Ryan; 4 Miss Mary IZ. Downey: vocal selec- 44- tions, Orpheus club of Salt Lake; "Citizenship and School," Dr. K. G. Gowans, state superintendent of 44-- public instruction: "The Coming Patriotism," Dr. Lllwood P. Cub- 4 berley. : 4- 4-- f- 4-- - - - 4 4 4 4. 4 4 4-- . TTTJTHOUT a state church or large standing army, the United States can depend only on her school system to maintain the democracy, and it is the schools that must remove the hyphen from the name of the foreign-born citizen and make him an American, says Dr. Ellwood P. Cubberley, head of the department of education of Leland Stanford university. Dr. Cubberley was speaker last, night on "Changing Conceptions of Education" before the general session of the Utah Educational association in the Assembly hall. More than 2200 teachers attended th opening general session of the asso ciation convention yesterday morning. Every train that arrived during the esmore and by night it was timated that 3000 pedagogues were in the city. A large proportion of these day-broug- (Continued on Page 3.) Ford Is Forbidden to Hold Meetings in Danish Capital He Will Visit Copenhagen to Select Delegates for Peace Mission to The Hague. Dec. 20. Henry CHIUSTIANIA, information that he will be prohibited from holding meetings in Copenhagen, it was learned today. He will go there, however, in a week to select the delegates to Accompany his pe ice party to The Hague. The newspapers, in commenting editorially on the Ford peace mission, express little hope for the success of it. Tlie Verdens Gang, after saying that the expedition will live in history, adds: "The great industrial organizer has undertaken a gigantic task seemingly without a definite plan. His peace plans seem without shape and not worked oui. The delegates appear to know nothing about it. The purpose is greatly admired, but it unfortunately is vague. Nevertheless, it will figure in history." The other newspapers comment iu a similar vein. |