OCR Text |
Show Second News Section Second News Section MINES. MARKETS, CLASSIFIED ADS TTR p.ipf AUTOM OBILES REAL ESTATE SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SUNDAY, AUGUST 13, 1916. m FACTIONS AUSTRIAN STRONGHOLD CAPTURED AFTER MANY MONTHS OF UNTIRING EFFORTS UNITY PACT AT WAR'S EN! 3DNGARY IN fl , I,-- .v.-- . : . -- W-r vs -- vS-a-r- yWvi-iS.?- , y SIX fyf v Already Organizations Are Forming to Look After First Step Toward Harmonious Political Action Taken by Parliament. Distribution of Men. WAR EASES BITTERNESS MEN FALL IN ARREARS Rival Leaders Drop Animosities in the Face of Crisis Upon Ancient Kingdom. Tendency of Those Engaged in Munitions Factories I Carefully Studied. . RI'DAPK.-T- f ! nrrt jr.me naf the p-- - i ,irl- r: vr .. nm rn to take T; ".a, in a i.'. fpeecb f 'int r r. 'r-?- .v it i H rr- ii f , - iwiiikH ;t?i from now n i:nfw i TIic upper piciure shows the city of Gorizirij the Anstrian 'ir-- r stronghold which was captured hy Italian troops on August 9. The picture depicts how the city lies between wooded bluffs, showing citadel in the upper left corner of the picture. The repre.ien man! of ifun ..r' -fl.Wl tut t! opposition." tl e Hrst step i rrii.irs marktoward a p unity tint never has in li existed T;;-aPrime. ?'ir; exposition of tho f,'nvprniti nt' prcspeetl ve attitude toward the '..;;. it ion" was given in s itlng of f-Ti-l t par on" of the :i no fiilloweH a statesea liament ment hy i'i'msi .I'l iu.-- Andrassy, one. of i i' : '. in which the dethe opposit i f te politi'-aunity sirability of wax set fnrt'i. H''P'ise i.f t'.e i:tii' ssibility if e wising pnl'li' !y n.. riy q es on tim.i to from state llif confronting time, t'nunt Ar;dra.sy appealed for t hree thlnuHi Tin riglit of desiK- I.',-i !M' !) to know Hie lilted lplnMe details and ptor ?s of t! e j;reat prollfim of tiw day. He i::fnt ioned icoversi- - ' example the war f: inn r' r the f ":rtd, ete .; ' Tn'Tit, th" ftatux tit A polii-- mi tlif p.irt of tli- povcrn- liinf liy ..li!h'it tiie .iine designated! would failed into eont;!ta-tii'j ; I'ovip tl-. la-I!v- pi -- t. !;---welded Tl-.i- i - : ! : " -- l - 1 i : - ! . : - . ladranrl O to I". Tlio tliscitssion of couraee as developed by the PAKIS. Aw. tstod by individual soldiers under fire has drawn some liiehet of the French Institute ing oiitribut ion from Ir. pp.r-ttjr.l- t" ' le-i- re in hir. important matter,8; ( Thf at all times to rltrht to have with t emperor, as cintrn-!itri- t leaders hmc. "'unt Aii'lrj.sy pointed out that a n tin her of iiih'T h: since the war. a pfcd ,i o!icy of takintc of th carefully Int. aei:'it tii .rr t?.at the Hunoj position, and d vn-iinot maintain garian opMi.vit li a ; ,i s i e j. n v w nd f feren y Tor mlt;ikf.t on la, s all re ;.i.r, a 1., t f' K'iv r n u "i t e . t It f th" in the iint ry. he lifi'l.irt'il. t the t;posit ion a v ha e t ft e .Hcnt itn'tits in ths r? ; a-- ; I t i 1 1 ' and yet atand ni? prround in the face of almost certain death through the exercise of his will. These men. he considthe bravest of all. - ' r ilf P ion o VU ,f, ers, y I'l'IKIf'i-t- f 'I tit Whole f u t r of Amon; the soldiers who hold their if t ti.e opposition, ground under ruurderous fire there aro to th, jr. I'.iiHfifr, h may al w a y some w no are afraid and others at it was ruiiy pointed nnf Dr. Ilichet; hut all t ;.! t i.r r e I. Iiiid 'who are not. n.irv f!i;it kt wn i th- - or.Moj.!- - prove their bravery hy still beintr there .,.!. e ;,s t t 1 fhnii U...T-T,! it .. riiTi! to j ,tr. t,e cowards have fled. : ti ipatt Ki . '.eminent i, s. i.'otishlerin the whole war, taklnjs account th atrocious features that into Tn h!j a n n e n f,f fi C'H er have developed here and there, and t Tnerits wloi':,;: tl'. :.. i'- ir ito Mi".-t with all allowances made for occasionpropfKji!s of ' h rn '! f tf r Tijsa. n al weaknesses. ;t I r. Ilichet considers n d ni, u t ft the i.;oi ri . shown heroism soldiers have i n k i of n p. TO o;.;,-.ii ti'.at that th! t a deal of pride on at t.t P rf in soks n.nei to; that justifies grt ii oid m!s f a U i to h wherver the part of the present Rer.eration, in j.i s s H e. of tho belief that see:ned to pre- He armo'ir; therefore taat he con- - spite the frreat conflict that In-- n ;d'r'd if fi ' d it ofr, f(h-t h e governmenta iol '1 before a i'l this n t. v eIoime n t. with proscress nd. t e lee t ua opp'sitttn. in order t' .tt n .in mlitht to tn e e n r e ' Ifffrr and firln while f II ! ifn the op- ao;.t f. tnf a o h :'.o( port in;f. that tow .n f- nohllns- the mm!, had diminished per- exert the itv, trol er the government ' onal courage. which the o: ;;-feet- - l its riirht Tae question was frequently dis- f '.! and ilatv. to i flie r:..;r tovem.-i.er.., .ft. cus.ei ii.h l w ne i lie r the delicate and The parli.imt lit l,rk n i u'lbt!" culture of later years wis not ut tnt as storm rt Tisza tVen ... ing to produce - i;,m.tilritl and to say ta.if h wis willing continue. J a;:rv.il g generation, pre ferring to consul: ..lTh the opposition leaders f f r.ii nto tearduous effort and incapable with re i: ir.I f ways and means of of comprehending that beauty of sacinformed regarding th rifice. keeping th-It is exactly the contrary that important questions rf the country. been demonstrated, according to liegardin.: t h - .q.i! ion's desire to has cultivated and rehave free a ".- to private audiences lr. Ilichet; the most men of France and the of fined young with the crap. Count Tisra declared who that he should fee himself remiss In Great Britain having teen those Stuhave shown the greatest bravery. his duty as a st itesman he if should put anything in; : ' way of others dents of the Jorbonne and other French which would a procedure. universities, students of Kton. Oxford It would cause- him n tiling but plcns-ur- and Cambridge set the example. he if the "leaders of the Ilrery SpoManeoi. opposing parties h.'ve ri... opportunity These are the men. Dr. Itichert says, to corn" '" directly into tou. h with his who luvo shown courage In its In a jest Vhe first 'li.'f ulty In carrying out simplest, form that in to say, by suand that thi program ori:-s not from the go v- preme contempt for death, he concludes, is not the reernment, but r t " r from the opposi- contcanpt, tion itself, specifically from the radical sult of philosophical reflection, but Is wing of the independent party simply the spontaneous manifestation headed by Count Michael Karolyl. The of Inherent bravery. Never, even among the heroes of anindependent party, it U said, is even threatened with disruption. tiquity In the times of Ieonidas, Spar-taru- s or Hannibal, according to Ir. The trouble appears t be as fj'lows; The opposition councillors of th gov- Ilichet. was there shown so much of ernment, an proposed, will advise ex- this kind of abnegation and so much supreme courclusively on , foreign affairs. To be tranquil able to do argue the radical Inde- age as in the present conflict. As to the men who are naturally pendents, they should be a unit, which they are r.ot. for the opposition brave ar.J take supreme risks without itself is split politically Just as Hun- requiring an effort of the will to overcome fear. Dr. Richet gives different gary Is split politically. The bulk of the opposition wants, as reasons, the first of which is that some Its representatives in government ccun-Cll- of them do not believe In danger, they Count An irassy. Count Albert they are Invulnerable, that and Count Aladar Zlchy. In ad- Imagine a have star, they are surthey that Count Tisza rounded by alucky dition. It la of optimistic fatalsort wants to confer only with this trio. ity that gives them a feeling of seThe opposition, or portions of it. curity. In other cases these naturally would like to see Ptephan Rakovsky grave men, even when they believe in and William Vazsonyi added to the not Intimidated by It, beare danger, dea?rain the but government three, In their own minds alcause have they mur.. the sacrifice of their life. made ready In an effort to settle the differences Once conclusion that reaches!, to die or a of the opposition, conference was to be wounded, is something- that does held at which it wa proposed to create not torment them. a middle organization which should and perhaps the, great maabove-name- ! Others, to the Instructions give are neither those who are Indiffallen has jority, trio. This through. The nor those who believe to ferent death, is confident that however, epposltion. In star. They are men can their In own differences be lucky settled. Its who see before them other more powerw hich case they believe a political opvouchsafed them ful Images than that of death, such as portunity has been esldora if ever LaL the fatherland, sense of duty, of honor. uch a3 they have . I T! t I i i j 1 i I ; I lh;-is,i- 1! "! r. i ;. , ! r .'i ne.-e- . - i . : a- . - fjs i . . , '. I ; o.-- i , ; . T- ; - i po-si- I i I - ;: - i i .- : : : i -- J f.-'- r -- I . ! ! I ' : ; i - t .;; t I S d- - i - - 1 i f ! i r i r- j well-bein- ni su-?- pre-ven- e. n-.-on : so-call- war and Entirely Destroyed. interestand the SCORES LIVES London. Aug. 19. By lifting the veil of secrecy tov an extent hitherto unheard of In the present war and al- LOST nf - -- British Public Pleased at Removal of Secrecy Order by War Office. Heavily Wooded Preserves of Grecian Royal Family AltV Moreaux, director of the TJoures Observatory. Im. Ilichet in of the opinion that fear renown of the resiment, ambition to and courafte must he considered sepa- earn pralso or promotion, pride at he-iadmired one's comrades and rately; that the former exists in cer- shame at beinphytaken for a coward. In tain temperaments alongside the latter; nearly all these cases the idea of death that a man may be unablr to control and danger disappears and the soldier He forgets the, terrlflyln; effect of a dangerous is brave without hoeffort. is taking In the risk that every .situation upon his phyftcal faculties, presence of the image that ho has in oon-Mrltati- v!-w- For- titude in Human Race. i that way t:ivTi an .i tlwir constituent In of labor when the war is finished and the Inevitable readjustment of Indus- begins. try to peace conditions Already they are facing in some trades a serious tendency among the men employed in munition works to fall into arrears with their subscriptions, and this is a more serious mat- ter in the English trade unions than it Is in American labor organization because of the different scope and la the methods of the organization '. , i two countries. English and American. The American trade union is priorganisation, and Its marily a fighting Insurance and benefit features are unThe important, if not nonexistent. English trade union, on the other hand, is quite as mucha an insurance and benefit society as fighting trade a union, Wid the problem of arrears is serious one. The American union can a man to wipe off arrears and readjust troubl-ebut much without membership for the British union to do this Is to upset all the calculations on whlcM its solvency as an Insurance society is based. In England, as in America, there Is a large proportion of the membership who pay their subscriptions only be caues they are forced to do so. If their union dues are not paid up to date This class is they cannot work. officials to lie union trade the causing awake nights, for they have found that under war conditions theof power their of the union to deprive them Every man is jobs has disappeared. wanted, and the unions have agreed with the employers and the government to suspend their rules during the war. In these circumstances the men who usually have to be coerced Just let things slide and laugh at the shop stewards and walking delegates when they are asked to pay. Large Floating Population. This condition obtains to a considerenable degree on the Clyde among the maand other boilermakers gineers, chinery workers, who generally Include a large floating population, drifting from port to port as work is plentiful or slack. This condition does not obtain to the same extent in the more the trades wlvere settled trades, or income under the dithe shops have not rect control of the "ministry of munitions. The employers are as muoh concerned about the situation as the union organizers, and have enteredon into the friendly conference with, them situation. They see in tlveth-- situa.tion war is the seeds of trouble when over and the restrictions on union action are removed. Some of them have offered to aot as collectors for the unions. They have suggested that the unions authorise them to deduot the union fees from the men's weekly wages and pay them over to the union , j - WVf The map shows the Carso plateau-anGorizia, the occupation of which is regarded in IJome simply as the beginning of an ambitious campaign which will be directed against the entire Austrian left wing and will synchronize with the steady pressure the Allies are exerting against the Teutonic armies on all the fronts. aj Abbe Morccux Believes War Has Developed Latent i'-- WZoulf of Trieste SAYS FEAR AND COURAGE TATOI FOREST BRITISH CENSORS LIFT MAY BE FOUND TOGETHER BAN ON WAR NEWS LAID IN A! HES vc : lf i'l;-3'-:l lower scene shows some of the famous Bersaglicri which played a big part in the capture of the citv. . i 19. LONDON, Aug.are British trade becoming more and' more worried as the war goes on andi Increasing numbers of men are vritli-- 1 drawn from Industry for military' service, while thousands more ar drafted to the munitions factories,: where trade union rules and oustomaj have gone by the board. They wonder what will happen to the organizations i '. ' t ' t ne - IT.- cut in the "f Hungary oc-- ( the month u b'-t: 'it ir,, .J iu pf.lifi tl ' ! tf-rn- insnrv. Aug. H ed self-sacrifi- ce s-- s, Ap-ron- yi - King Has Narrow Escape While Attempting tG Fight Fire; Companions Perish. his mint. The number of these naturally brave men is notably larger In daylight and in the presence of commanding officers and comrades than at night on sentry duty or on solitary missions that no witness will be able to recount. Men who acquit themselves on ruch missions without flinching Dr. Rlchet considers the bravest of all. I'rlRht Soon Panne. In the. constant habit of It all notion of danger finally disappears, ns In the c;uae of aviators, most of whom the tirst time they are up in the sir have a fense of fear in spite of all reasoning. fter a certain number of ascensions the physical manifestations of appro- henslon disappear, to be supported in the air by the speed of the motor seems to them to be the simplest thing possible and certain pilots have declared that they felt themselves In greater safety seated in their aeroplanes In the air than when riding in an automo- bile. The hardened warriors of African campaigns, habituated to all the risks of war, w re naturally more stolid under fire than young recruits who had seen nothing of military life; but the barracks and the maneuvers and yet, according to the Abbe Moreaux, even those seasoned men. In presence of the new and formidable dangers of scientific warfare, showed no more fortitude than the young recruits who had only a few months of preparation before facing the enemy. Abbe Moreaux is of the opinion that the war Itself has developed all the latent fortitude of the race, and he expects that the generation that has suffered this war will find Itself with new resources created by It. The sentiment of union of common Interest and patriotism will have been reawakened, he thinks, and that many a pusillanimous creature, both In the army and out of It, will have a new courage born of the virtue that makes heroes. The entire nation, he thinks, will participate In this reawakening of latent forces. BAR SOLDIERS' FAMILIES Too Often Stranded W hen Reaching British Capital. London, Aug-- 19. Too many families of Canadian soldiers have followed the husbands and fathers from the Dominion to F.ngland and efforts are now being made to prevent any more of them from coming. Lady Drummond announced at a meeting of the Canadian Red Cross society here. "At one time." she said, "the soldiers' families were granted a k!nd of bonus, and three months' bonus In advance used to be paid for passages to England, where wives and children could be nearer their husbands and fathers training and fighting in France. "It has been found that tho families are often practically stranded over here. The man is wounded or invalided out and sent directly back to Canada by the government, while the wife and family remain here for lack of funds to return. The families also take up much needed room In the boats coming over." . I Athens, Aug. 19. The wonderful forest of Tatoi, the pride of the late King George of Greece, and the summer residence of his son King Constantine, is no more The once heavily wooded slopes of Mount Parties are as naked today as those of Mount 1'entelicon or any other of the Attica hills. The tens of thousands of dollars spent in cultivating a flourishing pine wood, as an example of what might be done with forestry In barren Attica, have been burned up as completely as if the bank notes themselves had been thrown into the fire. The lives of three officers. 120 soldiers and an unknown number of snepnerus ana vinages nave aaaeu tragedy to the disaster Kinjj Constantlne's villa is a. heap of ashes. Even the age-ol- d pines surrounding the grave of King George were felled to save the tomb itself from desecration. Only the old king's palace, now the property of the dowager Queen Olga, remains, saved by the fact that an open space had been left about the building for the sake of the view. Over a month of unprecedented drouth in Greece and a consistent mean temperature in the neighborhood of 110 degrees in the shade has turned the whole of Greece into a basket of dried chips. For a fortnight before the fire at Tatoi reports had been coming in from Mlssolonghl, Patras, Megara and the ferest of Thebes, Kineta, Chalols, Camarlza, Trlchonla, Manes, Pyrgos, Agoullnltsa and the Island of Feyros of forest fires In which millions of trees were being destroyed. The fire at Megara and in the forest of Kineta is still raging and Is .already greater In extent than that a Tatoi. It was only upon the morning of July 14 that the general plague spread to the vicinity of the capital. The fire Is supposed to have started near the ancient fortress known as the Palaeokas-tr- o of Katsimldi, in a defile near the summit of Mount Parnes, only some four mile3 as the wind blows from the Chateau of Dekella nt Tatoi. In a few hours the flames spread ove,r an advancing front of six miles and were sweeping down the slopes of Mount Parnes, where Sophocles lies burled, with the royal summer palace directly in their path. . Klng'a Narrow I'senpe. once the order was given to reAt move the furniture of the royal villa to Athens. The king himself, accompanied by the chief of his personal bodyguard, Capt. Elie Chrysospathls, by Lieutenant Colonel Dellaporta and Lieutenant KoulcuraopouloB, took automobiles and went towards the advancing flames. Four regiments of infantry were ordered from Athens and one from Chalcls to try to stop the fire, but the parched pines were like tinder and nothing could be done. The acrid smoke obscured everything, sweeping In clouds even to Athens. An entire company of Infantry was surrounded by the fire, few escaping- unscorched and some twenty burned bey. nd recognition. The flames approached bo rapidly the place where King Constantine and his three companions were stationed that the sovereign found his retreat cut off and was forced to leap down some eighteen feet Into a gully, spraining his ankle so badly that It was with the greatest difficulty he was able to proceed further. Corporal Alexiadis came upon the monarch In this state and half carrying him managed to get the king to a place of safety. King Constan i lowing the British public to get a clearer view of what is going on at the front' the war office has made a tremendouly popular move. This revolution in departmental methods starth ed with the offensive. Its effect on the people has been magical. The British public is now being fed generously on what it was deprived of for nearly two years, namely personal dointrs of the soldiers. And they like it. Incidentally, added importance is attached to the new order of things simply because the British government is not easily convinced of the wisdom of departing from old customs. Its about the most revolutionary occurrence since the war began. To begin with the public realizes that there is still much that must be hidden from them, but they are very grateful for the concessions made. The people realize further that, this war must be largely an anonymous war and that it is Inadvisable to describe, except after a long interval the deeds of Anglo-Frenc- I tino has made the corporal a knight of the Order of the Savior for his heroism. Companion 104-- I, I vex. Meanwhile Colonel Dellaporta, Captain Koulou-mopoulo- s, Chrysospathls and Lieutenant blinded hy the smoke, were unable to find their way aut of the forest. All three were burned alive. At 5 o'clcck in the afternoon, it was deemed necessary for the queen' and her children to flee Tatoi for Athens. An hour and a half later the king himself was forced to leave, after having given orders to cut the trees around his father's tomb, to isolate It from the flames. By night the fire had cut the northern railway to Larlssa and destroyed the telephone and telegraph wires. The whole sky to the north of Athens was reddened by the flames, which rapidly approached Kephissia, seven and a half miles from Tatoi and only eight and a half miles from Athens. Kephissia Is a fashionable suburb of the Greek capital, where the greater part of Athenian society is established in villas for the summer. Panic seized the Inhabitants cf Kephissia and during the night many feverishly packed their belongings against a move the first thing in the morning. A sudden shift of the wind, however, began to drive the flames back up the slopes of Mount Parnes, and Kephissia was left unharmed. A Te Deum was held In the cathedral for the saving of the lives of the king and the royal family, and a state funeral service, attended by all the members cf the royal family save the king, confined to the palace by his swollen ankle, for the three officers who had lost their lives In the flames. As many bodies of soldiers as had been found were also interred, most of them so charred as to render Identification Impossible. 100.000 Tre Uurnetl. Borne 100,000 trees were destroyed as well as four small villages. In the royal garage seven automobiles were burned. The royal villa, was insured for 140,000. King Constantine and his family move into the Chateau of Dekella, the property of Queen Olga, who is now in Russia. The site of Tatoi has played a large part in the history of Greece. Here at the suggestion of Alclbiades, the established themselves In Spartans 413 B. C, to cut off the supply of grain and foodstuffs bound into Athens from Eubea, with the purpose of starving out the Athenian population. And in 404 B. C. while Lysan-de- r blockaded Athens' and the Plreus by sea, the Spartans descended from the vicinity of Tatoi, attacked and forced the capitulation of Athens, ending the Pelopomesian war. particular regiments or divisions. But in other respects the veil has been lifted and. the British publio has been permitted to read many moving stories which present the war to those who stay at home in a truer light than ever before. Generallj' speaking these are the sources of information which are now available to the public. First and foremost there are the dispatches from the Gen. Sir British commander-in-chieDouglas llalg, who, as a rule, sends from the general headquarters in France, two bulletins each day sumthe marizing in military language ungains or losses, which the armies der his command have experienced during the day and night. These are occasionally supplemented by messages which, coming from the accredited war correspondents at headquarters, may be regarded as semiofficial. "War Office Complimented. to the improved arrangeReverting ments for keeping the public Informed on what is going on the Daily Chronicle compliments the war office and says of the newspaper correspondents: "There are now five representatives of British newspapers attached to the general headquarters and Frederick Palmer of the American Associated Press is privileged Jto join this select band. They are housed in a chateau somewhere behind the firing lino at their own expense let it be said and from this newspaper nerve center they are free to come and go almost as they like. "Consonant with military exigencies they are practically allowed a free hand. As It is obviously the duty of a newspaper correspondent to preserve a whole skin, this freedom Is tempered by discretion, but they must take many risks, and in these days of long range bound to spend most artillery they are of their days as well as their nights under fire." The expansion with regard to the pictorial side of the war is not less remarkable than the development of the side. One supplements the literary Some other. remarkable photogTaphs have come from France since the recent offensive began. Many of them have perhaps done as much as the written description of events to stir the Imagination. Then there Is the moving picture operator who has his place, not only behind the lines, but often at the fighting front. Many films which even now are of absorbing interest, and which in days to come will be of historical Like everyvalue, have been taken. thing else they have to pass the censor before they can be given to the world, but unlike the written word buried under the official blue pencil, these temporarily suppressed sections may be revived hereafter when the war Is a sad memory. f, , slavs Aorra A Considerable DEPOSITS Increase Shown Over Last Year. . e treasurers. The opposite tendency, which 1b manrespon- ifesting itself among Isthea more movement to slble trade unionists, create special funds to meet the situation after the war, and this was explained by W. A. Appleton, secretary of the General Federation of Trade Unions, a body similar to the Amerl- -' can Federation of Labor. Appleton believes the disinclination to pay dues Is confined to a small clasal among trade unionists, and he is nowj working out a plan for an Increased) subscription during the war in order to provide a fund for any emergency that may arise later on. Central Fund Increaed. "We increased our central fund by $300,000 last year," he said, "and we hope to double that this year, if we do net further Increase the subscription. We are not looking for trouble after the war, but we believe It is wise to be prepared for whatever may happen. My advice to all our people is to keep on working and pile up the money for the future. This is not the time for strikes er industrial disutea of any kind. Wages are high and everyone can get work. Of course, there are some cases of injustice, but we are generally able to settle these by negotiation, although dealing with government departments is slow work. "Another matter which hampers us 1 ; emRussian savings somewhatin is the class of men executive and inspecting bank deposits thus far in 1916 are con- ployed work by the ministry cf munitions. for all than the presiderably greater Young university men are all right, vious year. and most of them have excellent intenIn the first quarter of 1916 direct tions, but they have no experience in 103,000,000 handling either employers or workmen, taxation produced over rubles, exceeding the yield of 1915 by and I can't blame an employer from more than 30,500,000. Indirect taxation resenting it when one of these young 174,500,000, which is 78.500,000 produced 'walks in and starts to tell him more than in 1915. Returns from do- men business. Seme small mains and securities owned by the how to run hishave arisen could hav financial administration amounted to disputes that 266,000.000, which is 65,000,000 in ex- been settled in half the time by direct cess of last year. between the men and the revenue altogether amount- negotiations Ordinary had it not been for the well employers ed to 781,444,000 rubles, exceeding the meant interference of these young men. revenue in 1915 by 232,795,000. Russian exports in the first five months of 1916 USE PEPPER IX GERMAN' SHELLS. amounted to 151,766.000. a gain of smugAmsterdam, Aug. 19. Dutch are Imports in the same period rethe Belgian, border reached a total of 641,000,000, an ad- glers on to be getting as much as $4 a vance of 410,000.000. ported On July 14, last, the gold reserves of pound for what pepper they succeed in the state banks were 1,543.000,000.000. getting across the frontierTheinto the pepper The gold reserve abroad was 1,683,000,-00- hands of German soldiers. The total of metal reserves was is said to be used in filling bombs and in making gases. 200,000,000 more than a year ago. Petrograd, Aug. ' 19. 60,-000,0- 0. tear-producin- sr |