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Show end Loudon. Ih friiurr to rtifitrx th . out h or to th Gorof Gt dUMmiv lo Mu allied euitili. ell-- l the pmin.ro tiiorctn ronlalnel that o Id wo, Hit future atmliar illfftirem-eto similar Fraiu a uimn a for instrilil xmarully talon li man lilauiiiii.utii SUNDAY MORNING, APRIL IP, SALT LAKE TKJHUNK, TJTE r":" die-In- ibrv proceded rui the piov, Minis rif tin- forthwith tety - r: lo applv toiuiH-Hiu- lr.U i the of th fort along th for the cimet Germany haw no tn null, men if her army remains large It J of ho com ern to the A inert-an- , for tti asm rein son. It rloe hot aftcct th I all a ns, because ! Or v Jin' i no common UnjiUh y, tilth Very tit lot of vital tout of tlie fe that Ihtt pulley had beep frontier wtt. i.mnam. Bui It tfufmi-laand that lit Fretu U linnet. to I'm t hum h an I to the 111 w now anas to the meaning of renut by any Interovd hi th ItiiMirthaia 'urn, gut by run- erti fur tint lent even's. It Is a matter of life an-- l t It im If. dnath fur l.i t'olrs. alwus menai ed bv liqaty Fas Ona.) from See tbe rollowing (Continued German ion to r lake Ih I'ol ,1.-1 tea pr'ivtncsa Desertion Charged. to f'ciund by lh New Spring Wearing of Veraall'ra. and Prague to the elmrea of the Ada trraty In riatic Aflcr this uuliappy revelation, from Flume to Cattaro. became wunw nAtrmDy. Ihe I'rtt Apparel Will Be Required. clamor for a revlnuon o wnward of Force Council to rortil th Grn.ur tl)e treaty grew louder and therefor to d wrm Yt Premiums, mad an evritncreaslng lt)ipreann utKn may wrll itHjair for . Th nmy U J Mor Joyd UeorfH. and inoi Hrnlnh Ul) tn tji hnijri ot th oh) mil Him 1uo fry -cauir to onv'suf a coulee which Jmnf J.udndo(f h returned lo I policy I In Oho hr cUmi in Krem h )e amounted to vor n ! Horn of Ih romNo, folio oerthij notnrtof FYanc. team a FYir, French justly th wr r. T h th tao totally !rrcom'Hfcbl , ruj durhift tii pointed out modification of th treaty tini btfo That Are Decidedly Iarla tunfrrtnr fU Into a Ut of an cmli coat tl. Hrulati nothing, whi'.e In half and Kiirt nn Arnit tTil after At tie present timo Halt Lake ah by. It deliberation amounted to I io uring greaif-- profit lo HHtifth trad. of ha lola.ly failed t bna-Different. ' one of the lowest fir under Junker ontrol of ih army for In r mi effort to lilt upon Com Tltti Hnialu wa in (h poaitlon of havwitter1 rates of any tily in tie 01111 more than fehiuh txr on that to altrinpi to do thi mould Iwr fruit of the common ad-- 1 ing harveied Koutd enable tu raid ( Inrf William II. Hywatur pronies n th trx, to litgur mift ruin. At ail tlmr ttn iiieof aof comtnrct.l colon., fleet Tht locate of nrh of the two method to VKlory. mrrev 0 the halt Lake fire department.. At th rival Khrt frovmmnt ha and tii dea ! wow thou wa of and without aarr-flper Append fhtlr altfnaturt ceklnf jo rduc th fain of tit jtinkA'P nd th pi oof hex In thd- - I prc.eot Misuninre rate Of tn follow miMuVtaUo In tii Are fart France from email that to haard the aaud it due inf reamiing victory end am In th Inf their fain which not paa th limit of vntUio of the n lount rrrvtln!un. (y Kilt Lake, due to the city a uuuaually compromi pHnt'lpl. r Approved amounted lar Wiurity did aahJ wholly incomn'etVHiiral not a !i:i cuiiaLie offuer H A Wonderful attlr of number the aide streetr, largelion-eIn reality to th nr m view of dun of both liirommiiurute repatatton prlh tuantialir built brick and build Im ill's ni trtioM thHie oi of reatoripf Firm h province : : feoernmeni Khert fl of IP,' A of tii to rr melton aiiI Asicitraert clpie lugs, the splendid fire department am: Mrranfment ya ctjuld not. if it wUhad. oumpt-- l obedi m Ji confornird lo and rule,J !nti reithr the city'a he A Hritieh ninmi and talked ol l Ih arm lo Gm? utv inona for the great water pressure vtw nor to th French Imperialism wh.ch was, in fact lion in nunthrrs at d In prraonnri, It ) maiim which hue been available for tlnntal. lit in sxoreartd obtain not A fr t detcrmiuaHun rnt. It inuwt. under nrilUary fMud loth Tb ireafv of Vtra'llr emergencies. fur to of k Franco t to mran seemv nil what rolbi , it reduced pirrvur.thl Jn Borne cities where there hat de beyond th morg'ry of French th insufficient benef.t . It nuiat eit vd guarart bar th preoauiion allowed to teed to fty veloped a ehortage of water and a low the them nm of th under to th Vr way army inta t. treaty continental nation, in their ow water pressure, the fire nek liae Allies. French hniruas ud rpAkr may be th protest of th and it enormously overpaeed th mor Just Out cf The! opinion Fire of Hoard and the National diaued Hritlfi'h action nniv. In word, to dtnarni Ger-of- I limit of th undeiaiandinr and and mor pe3i or and Underwriters have been compelled to ouyht by th American purpoti as amounllfig to a desertion many I poaulbl only br th fhow . supports Wrapping of an ally, the aacifu of Kraiu and ton' on th at) whkrh make r Another by the JtrltlnH jt wet neither raise the insurance rates. ht, waiovv to th hr fr light with ron 111' prospective profit the nor th other, 'herauA, in th end. both F'remh summer or two for Halt trad and to fji deair to qyxww too ffrav to I flaked vn by of eatabilehlnf thotr own of Uermau experienced last year, with ta id deejuUred cap all coat incident to apolyinf th Ih military imnt and weariness and popular unraet serioua water shortage and several more view Th But whn will com thl fore? Not treaty. Krnh pointed out thatto thoc- from drov them to agree to oineiblug. to blow eerioua a bad would British th th British, not from th Amr prove troop necessary big fire, cupy Constantinople, Rsgdad, Jerusalem, Halt Lake property ownere, for it ia al- Debate T not from th Italian. Not on of to aecur all th objective of HHt!sh th nation ia lonaer concerned (hr most certain that the insurance rate for but non to support th with th reduction of German military would be increased, if such should l0 to French on the Rhine, where tii Fnch power. conare Amertca and Britain the caee, the increased insurance were iliU In th presence of th common sumed wltn local political debatea lUv to Hut no rootier had th treaty terms enemy. h la frankly premiums ns a result would amount on and ucr to pe interest to an Impamore than the total yearly bora reluctantly announced Gorman military power arten a COME TOMORROW exbad which world tient to for dtbeto ine the asked than Worthless. bonds to France offer th bai for an the 13,300,000 treiiftth as Pledge 1 been aecret to confined th (tea hitherto Luke uixm a8tI Halt uaratitt tension of system. To all this was added the Amortcaa t WHERE YOUR'' of th conference wa tranrferred Italy of her tiav, Greek ami Albanian If for no other reason, this should non tho of world. Th result of to th th had acMuted Franc pre your. only annaatioti. be sufficient to convince Kuit Lnke tax th trafietcr waa unmistakable. To NAMES AS GOOD trraty of Vataalllr. kecausc the Hritl.h psvern that the proposed issue of bonds pres and th public opinion of tii to Wear With th Divides Her Enemies. t Germany and had the American reirMiitatlvr view to rallied that la desirable. ' Jnetlnct)yiy AS YOUR CASH . "ttiaf tirtlaln and Ani.r And. thauka to recent event, Germany , ol.mn'v a defended by imitliental tatesinn In th Skirts eonferenee while with aomethlng lea of lea would support Ftane unhe.italJiigly ha auceeeafui in dividing KAYSV1LLE r attacked by ah unaulmitv, Amfrirtin and Hrttlah opinion and to the limit, at th praeiae moment when th many aa.tln. bid thy coura of ev.nts real supported the main line of th argu Met murt h derided. Tha apaeia-cl- e BY Hi In G not ror at I'nllcd of Faria. Wn and Statca aynat mnt nwrly of the Hritlah gov eminent aolemnl' For th y nvh, for the liallttua. for d.acloHoi th rtact tliut me I nilrd htatc dmoiiehln -th FYench and deolinlng lo a promln not would th the lontinent.U the natbir' preaid.nt 17. generally, them tn puniKhmg what no on In Thursday KAYRVILLE, April ad a at ltritiali hut was I'arla. tlia! width th gave pletlce. Britain or elsewhere claim wa not a wak peace, pear afternoon friends and relatives gath- them befit mad havhia cuiitiintt-uupon neither necwrlty mr adenu tfolaHon of the treaty of Versatile, ered at the home of Mrs. Christopher wet eplitm-e- . to national end American became clear alco did violeiu th s'ght of the prMident of th Cnited wort Burton, Sr., in a most enjoyable social thnlc claima of the IJlra, ih tho present Ftate yrarely for Only a Few accusing Th moment thti amt ad when Franc event in honor of her seventy sixth th (Jreeka. to th ratlonahNllc ha' in lcom go eminent of plrailons of the Italian'. In pent of found that rh Mood alono on th Rhlo bv birthday anniversary. Mrs' Burton 11 dominated mMitarietie th Influence, Dollars' America and retired Payment the the (mm I.mnanians the Kuiope haj Italinue, one of the oldet residents of Kaysville, fa(t, shrill oice of Italy added to th ehoru. and her tiny cuitllrnl at out hern hlav had already withdrawn thidi la fur (he German a prospect whieh Down having made her home here since 1851, from th for any wait ho lonrer avallald faria conference hecattH of been hoped for at i at which time she emigrated with her T'ie Krltlali liad aim routd rot oven h ir diwentiefU'diort ovrr the manner In real naclnt inc ao. S7X7 llarlv withdrawn all but a .mail portion thiHuttime one 1)year wldeh their claim had been handler parents from England. e the AmerVana, the 5S25553552C2!5!SII!3 of their trio and directed their atten-tic- n HritfMii after The rooms were beautifully decorated anti (he Italian, ip our tima proIn Aala and nt British Criticism. and operatlona American military with pink and White carnations, (lame the purpoa of th war, the Hoepo.-Hritam end AmeHca claimed that and music furnished entertainment. other purpo, wa to break On the dher hand, Hrttlzdi and Amer-fea- n bad thus lated from of stake Belief control Miss Emily Brough, the Germany hv th militariserltlclain of the treaty wi directe! society ranc in h enfort' merit nf tb tic element. And th mlMtanatie control hold Inai fft- - Fut they bad done more; tbev badtreaty. t th precis tndl-tprovlrou president, com posed and read a paper Tl army has not t hv the continent and there was a in appreciation of tho life of Mrs. Bur-- I We have come, then, to the moment cent, ot suffering wlijch extend over g Britain have gone home to their own an nicrraeinif dxr to w?e tn ha not been broken. reduced, it xenen.1 assertion that theee provlah.n strong tn numbers. when the ciilef ton. Refreshments were served. itrm of the treaty mlifled jn Ger-m- Itbeen profit, Italy la reconstructing her brfiUe tt of old provision of tha treaty at century of hlatory to escape from Germuch and to retains mllitarconcessions inach'nery "made I eolemee I evce,ivo favor and at tn expense of th men who command it are th men Versailles irv, ? rDC.1Vi'?i wcr t ontv to Berlin and France, with unlucky Belth r enforced man terrorism I Ism. Imperialism ami did snhslantlal vlo- by military ranee. -Davis Chris- I E. Waite, Robert who mad It what it was duiing th war. hore of a peace of under-tense- n avrappevl." an-- l at this moment German known uietnod, bv the disarmament of gium. whose territory rtmalna th fnr, Q end nf to- conboulevard to Faria, are d .trat-vgit la At the present hour ha and Charlea T. Burtort. The in- - jI etHndlnjr reconcHiHtmn. The produced a situation In Germany un.1 hy tho creation of an Inmplrln of. reaking Encouraged. Treaty Ih In i. west O. L. tlnrnt felt that the peace eonferenco had preotudv which onlv Franc, with the tardy sup- violable neutral area on cither bank of front the enemy again. sjrainat Germans guest were Mesilamr It for So la methivla of their which t two till ruthlcsa Interested the Now or agony the tho gun Ihe the French meant nothing. far, of Belgium, Rhine, employed port rlchts longer Axher, Halt Lake City; Lisxie Tracy, j been rrlmlnelly negllacnt W have hen reached a moment exhits with the accompllahinent of application of the treaty of things It meant that America anrl Brll-I- n (n Krawoe end Helatum.th Am) it ia In concerned end llS-eiLudrn-dorfft disarmed onlv our in f for which th war waa actly anglutouH to that hour land. With onlv tnn them agAinHt the chief :! Faria, lad broken their pledges. mta!md tn oppose th waged. Britain, the Fhited Ptstea. Italy, when the shock of two totally irrecon-rlllaM- e hav I unshaken, e.-treaty of VcrsMlIles affirmance ermany who have sought 3wSfrM.,,5Kii It feroclcualv foe selfish renaona, are prepared to view foredoomed the league of decided to Invest klatshal Fvx-- with (Imilitaristic element. conference had been nnduh, eeti pledges, and that tliey al.o ver encourthe. principle to their owt aelf'sh .tstiops. In the melee of these same ra- attributes of mllltsriem and retlr from of murdcrlnir 1hno men who would abolish Henry 11. Blond, Heber Phillips, John sever upon Germany and her recant aging Gcrinonv to exade perforniaiu her pari, alike hv giving encouragement junker control. When tha Kuhr rebel- tnterrte covering their course by sol- cial and national voncentlona. the asso- ttie field of honor. R. Himes, Charles Barnet, Martha a!io. ' dlvernence ef opinion could not to tb hope that ih terms .mild hs lion ha been stamped nut bv fir and emn denunciation ef French chauvinism, ciation between the nation which won Weaver, George W. Barnes, J. W. hlil h lead odlfted and mor hv the McClure nhich, upon. examination, amounts to a th war Iby their combined eacrtflceg and (Copyrighted, lo a nr crisis. r present-o- l i plslnlv Imllcsting sword, what German wilt venture afajn rtetermlnatl-m(iailey, Chris Burton,' Jr., Husannah In lh . the armv? born of experiences all re effort America and with to challen succumbing. demand, principally in Brllaln fhat Ihev did pot svmputhlss Newppr Syndicate.) Robins, Frank Blamires, Charles Odd, amt t sv reni-th Molted Is pollcv States the pforee traly". Ada Williams, H. J. Sheffield, Hr., Net- certain and wrlteni whose whole Italv, OB her psrt, .was doing Sil . the tie Barton, Susannah Btewrt, Fernilla stock tnjOnriiala ould to Intura prani-mainlv out of a trad Intellectually, la borrowed reviamti of plril of evepge. growing out of Fkvnch Anderson, John Coles, Nicholas Bonne-- I I from Rrtt'an aonrcrs, for to Orlando asatnst Wit support mort, Josie Cannett. Martha Robins, Ih treaty In tiennanv'a favor, tin (he refusal son In Mie cot ferem-ebut fnrth.r atlmi'-tate- d continent, on tho coutran. the Krem-T. E. Williams, William E. Bmith. B. I view-wabv Malian desire to block tti elentlv evpreace,1 in Ihe F Yannt Mary Nance Hirum Htrontf I mand rem-effort to errate thre afrong RbiV treat.-held Ininfflclent. IIeur Man!!, V Ia Lavton, Ml if ton I jn nnv that the Czecho-HIatatsa l phoulff Europe Poland. akla and Jugo-SlaBarton, KonaM WatIworth anu Mihap1 Itt a word, the Fiench wr dlja Ipfi la, whereas Italian lu-was 4h Kmilr Brough, Kliabth wit It in romprOiniH of rnf reho, Frsnc Blamires and but advogutq rlinfing to what iad Icn hegsn at once to feel th efSophia Stewart, Mari m freed fects of th j obey of tier allies In th ulNm, while A)ifloAmrion Camilla Christenson. th ehape of a domand reduction hy th Germans of th csi to ahrr, to remake th treaty. under th treat v. This pavments. asaiit-as vital matter for th French, MRS. f Italiait of th German destruction of tha Position Minleading. French coal auliie In tb !,ns region YV. L. A. M mST w, dispone of the Italian po during the war. But the outbreak of the U is totally lit Ion one ten- all, tn Berlin put app CLEVELAND, April 17. An atmosthe whole question Into a deots've form atul of to phere foreboding perhy leading suspend precisely that xlntatlon of varied today's sednion here of the sixth th treaty of Versailles which th French could not. under national convention of the ioung any circumstances, sttf-fn ann tiaiy 10 namely, th Inx salon by Oerman Christian association, .following I wuianr theneiween started--the- y extreme dalmtf of each tn the the area cast f neutralized '4 of, the resignation of Mrs. r inley Hhepard j far of opposition, the Rhine.' i of New York, formerly Alisa Helen rhfuslna. Italy withdrew frwur (h 1 eonference. eoi.tlnuwl and .eotitlcuea to Rhine Barrier Gould, from the national hoard. Fiction. ; clothes-buyin- g 1'"Mrs. Shepard had Vigorously opposed, h"r,. to auopijrt No question of the lllegalltv Of th hut without avail, the adnt.t'inn of an I anrjr ltoat to ennan was Franc since th OK,, injur .,pportunltv possible, hy industrial and social program ys- - I ,iitartlnK Americana and Ctlloo tnir- eaty xpralv forbad auch an tnva-sl-The request of the Gorman governterdays meeting committing the J. W.jI their attempts to coerce the French. A. to use its resources and influence Itafv does t ot incept ment for permission . to - take such in obtaining legislation beneficial to I Policies or principles, she onlv uses them course found approval In Washington. the welfare of women and the basing "", punish ranee for refusing to. stand London and Rome, hut not In Marla, and ;f th approval did not and could not conof active voting membership in student I hinmnl i','".. a without com stitute French warrant, associations on a simple declaration of jr,,arthIt the Germans would not. vohm aent. And Franc at once and In unmisfaith instead of a Protestant church f j taniy comply with th ten of the takable terms forbad such a violation of ' filiation It waa bond le- - Ihe moat essential element In th docutreaty of VerMnillex. on would .thevnr that which covered The resignation of Mr& Shepard ramaj vrv ment of Versailles, that rl' v. Obviousb- - If the Gr French notor iut jpok vry shortly after th opcbibc Af tb baF II mans with warrant eonld tie thetr ness session ef tbe convention. - Other own domestic altos' ions aa a prataxt for natiou, by other Imafd members j bturem were.- - therefore, tm- - moving lar hodl of troop to the who nave tusapproved the program ef I mediately and Immensely served by the Rhln. thev nbt fall to find prethe eonvention supported bv delegates I divergence between the nstions' which texts and the Rhine barrier would bea mere fiction. representing the younger and industrial I had nqurd Germany. It was grist come Notwithstanding this, th Germans did clement of the association and the stu to th German mill that the .British and move he tt wss theii troops Into the Ruhr. Again French should separated! dent organization are expected, by offi- Sonrn of supreme unlisfaullon that there ,1s no rilsput as to th facts. Not ' ' cial oFthe association. A merles should be eflmlnated from t.i only did tho? move troops, but thev lied Ktfuatlon. as lo their numbers. It was a clever move from tb German point of view. It URGES MORE , Reaction of Selfish Materialism was calculated to disclose the disarray In allied camp. It was a challenga hatW een tn fit Mrtlted States,U to the to act alone, thua Inviting France and th domeetlo history of Br'tsln American renaure or to subtruth that, following mit and and NEW l'ORK, April 17. If the people I he, Mir thus consent to the consignment idealsm of the actual war, of of the United elates realized the situa-- iu' of Varaatlles to (he waste-papthe treaty ifiMh ma- r,M,.tkn of th,re Mt lB basket. tion ia Europe, they would ask the gov- - I lerlstlam. thli George, I.loyd eminent to provide at once all that that selfish materialisilo wave, which toon Success for German Strategy. nations need to of save I cover behind the moral d'atrlb The French rplv, the occupation Of I of th Dank fort and DArmstadt. resulted In f Immediate British and American erttj-ctavison, chairman of "the board' of gov-- 1 t'(h and ;he Germans used this eensur ernors of the League of Red Cross Ho- - hv to a demand for a -- soft" to provoke a collision tn Frankfort b- C let lea was j when It over, seeing that the war tween French troopa and German clVtl- Mr. Davison made this assertion h had together obtained tana, who wer told that France was to a dinner held here tonight as a public I ,or vlctorv could h forced hy her elites to withdrew Brl,,sh a11 ,luit first-co- st demonstration to his services during the II "ld;. rcurUy. rltlj th destruction of troops Meantime the BrfUsh government had German served a fleet, the France with upon document reparation as chairman nt th a.pub. of I ThI American seizure of most of the merchant fleet, holy reprehending th French for their Red Cross. It wss Or-- 1 I the through th annexation of most ot course and inuliatlng absence of British I profit i ranged by members of the Red Cross the German colonies and the occupation support. A greater success for German council and heads of operating com-- I of Mesopotamia. Palestine and later was Inconceivable, at last th strategy pent bv the American Red I stantlnnpie. fell tn with 'the demand for victorious a'llanc was dissolved. of th treaty which would French comment upon British action Cross to different parts of the world. a I M the for Hrltalij of reveals the depth of bitterness which It onr T ivincrstnn Dr V.rrxnd I the and hasten th hss treaty rtoprovoked. Franc now know that cnairman or the American Red Cresa, applybu! ration of the profitable German market here la no longer nv real assurance of presided.and General Pershing anil Dr. for British manufacturers. British sunport for the future. ex. repJ. 11. Finley, state commisKioncr of Very promptly the Germans sensed th Igenoies of American and Brttlah The domeseducation, were among the other situation and began a policy of propa- tic shuatlons hav In both rases resulted French nnlitar In eliminating a nation which had. under ganda and of evasion. speakers. ism was denounced st home and abroad, the treaty of Versailles, undertaken to I rti sentimental tndenclea In other uun-trlxerforni certain duties In enforcing tb I were as rlererly exploited as .they DENIES reatv. Henceforth, whatever Franc Is I had hen during th war. But heniifd u lo obtain under the eraty must bo ob- - I Wi els wa Gormsu policy of not com tallied by the us of French fore alone. f with treatv. the and Again plvlng again of tieaty provisions wa raised. ranee Is Injured. NEW TORI:, April 17. Hhah Mir th Issue George, in hla campaign of talk Lloyd . styles-rea- dy. But there ia very much In th traty Effendi, who ha charge of official had proml-the Rntish people tit pun po Frenchman would have conTurkish interests in New York, dented Ishnient of the German offenders against which to to be put int th treaty-haa report that Djelal Mnnif Bev, I International law. because he had be- sentedtherepermit not th express underfh ksjser" would standing that, been J formerly Turk if h ronsul general in New ! pr Tf?,itgins aa a counter-weighcampaign cry. lurk, had been murdered in Budapest France should recelv American and iUi hi wii, who wa m ll thia remain British support. tn tha Mildred i British Sentiment rH imond of Denver. the . to of v Injury , treaty lasting Franc, 4 hen tM I had ful- - and to the eternal 1ia wb Shah profit of Germany. On Sale, in Salt Lake City by the formerly I fuw bv prov,ion n th treaty of Ver. Wilson add I.loyd Georg, bv th us of a.siatant mrJ; u consul general here, sallies for th delivery of th criminal led th fore and of rnch to ft letter from Pjelal Munif I and th moment arrtvd to enforc it. make certain promts very grave concessions, to dated March 22 Urt, ftod eot from I 1iicoYrtngr that British knfi-whe- agr to a treaty which wa enforceable MULLETT-KELL- Y he is now ronsul ren- - I want bad chanred. rforatd droppinf only If Britain and America atony by, and French this meant both hav departed. niafirr. For rral. Th roosul general raid h waI Moreover, the present hour la critteel. : 15S-1S- S foe the moment has arrived at which South Main Street, mmit SUici e. lriMd bv th orlini!v BHt.nh, ermanv th must, according to tb treaty A Ieuvr dispatch on liecrmber 22 j liad orialiiaby )ookd open it provision, disarm. Mr has not disarmed, Fr)Mi aafd that tii Turkish goiernmrfit j yiui dft''iirmiil. bur It luid r troop standing todav th.n put slie ha nso f lie ir sfifv, mid If Jb lad offu-iV notified Mr. I'lau.j could In Jolr, 1914 fh has f sdd all ih YVjad ninoliao. thev wouKI In inimiif. of Denier that her APter, th ha which looked toward depriving to the .hol r beie4 document had of weapon. This doe not bitervst consul Sonera!, ft43d her i L 'eciap of British because they Instated upon bttt Bur ;ered. Tl rCHIjit VHK MTMxt TaiB bavin (JrfMh th Gorman S.4 as flPdfi g4 IM, I r rj SALT LAKE LOW a, Water Shortage Would crease Says Fire Chief Bywater. COME NEW SPRING MODES TOMORROW ON THE J apt-roc- MOST LIBERAL CREDIT TERMS ctmdl-tlon- Governed Expediency. ltwea hr OUTFITS LIBERAL yrr . por r THE WESTERN NEW SUITS ln rutlu NEW COATS tjp lhd CREDIT PLAN IS JUST: THE USUAL CHARGE ACCOUNT, EXCEPT WE ARRANGE THE (tig I rUr pekr 111 I NEW DRESSES 11 rt)irmnt. nrrv whtvr PAYMENTS -nt COVERING A PERIOD TO SUIT YOUR CONVENIENCE tt . one-wr- NEW SKIRTS ins, r ant ferred Press of World. , Out-doorl- snti-trenc- miit NEW BLOUSES itnti-FVn- . EAS-Y- .SIMPL- E- run-tins- nt bn PIONEER FRIENDS HONORED .NO FORMALITIES hr lu V You May Have Your Choice ho-io- t n, il. n, m fnrh x dio MeSTATEStli 11 el ce-n- 1 t con-vite- , Slt" 'wThimTTSlji 3Srsasit5S! ?2'!r!ei,nr, . PS w--e In-t- aac-rif- 4f Gei-ni- slngle-bamUu- Anglo-Saxo- - i- only-echoe- d. s , bnfor'd llrliy. Htart. SHEPARD QUITS RflARH I. o v The sntl-hla- ' ! he-a- - I eonnter-revolutto- n ", frr - Anglo-Americ- 'T" V!,"'. a - Women ofttimes take a peek at the ending of a story before they want to know The End at the beginning. get Theres a lesson for men in Think of Angto-Ainerh-- the last chapter in that." ; when you buy your. Spring Suit;, what you pay at the beginning isnt nearly as important as what they cost you in' the end. se-ii- , . OSS AID FOR STRICKEN EUROPE! 1 Baltimore v - J'.gtr,( , V Clothes er sen-on- n m pel. atn,t are npt the lowest priced clothes in the world on a basis. c hr - But when the service test is apphed they .cost less than so Con-missi- 1!n co-t- called clothes; they have style; they have the utation of a third of a century for the enduring qualities that can s cheap -- . es REPORT OF BUDAPST MURDER come only from- costly tailoring. Spring d t. Chants. l'n hi remvi ler 0or. CO. re SctiLosa RAtTiMor-- td lti hua-Ijft- psr.' lf v r Cuotin |