OCR Text |
Show yfSmsisxBtsiiats. Wg noraiw homes If 11 'Sv xtt; use k.7 smncwcnn ZwIEf C TSKEATXW Focaas ooNXftXHiNa )C01t5IlCVliOAI(igC4L. WHEAX ncwnoroiHniaiuu VOLUME XXXIX. LOGAN CITY. CACHE COUNTY, UTAH. MONDAY, APRIL 29, EXCHANGE IF Americans In Amiens Sector MARK HYMAN MOUNT (By Associate DAMAGED TRANS- EXHIBITION .OF RETURN PORTS CARRIER TO PORT WASHINGTON, April 29 The two American transports in collision at sea several days ago havegreturned safely to an Atlantic port, the navy department hag announced. Secretary Daniels authorized a statement saying that neither was seriously damaged. No lives were lost, t A bard of inquiry may be apthe pointed ' to investigate -- 1 SOLDIERS ARE GIVEN PIGEONS (By Associated Press) LONDON, , April 29. An ex- hibition of carrier pigeons here shows many devices used to protect the birds in their flights at the front. Several pigeons are shown painted in camouflage coloring, while gas masks for use during gas attacks are also exhibited. . Many stories of-- the heroic deeds of these birds of war are charge of running without told by the men in charge of lights, in the convoy when they the exhibition. Several cases collided. are related In whi?bjpigeons their pierages af terrac, Wilt Make rTulicts Wt with grapnel It ing - - 1 s de-livcr- is-sa- id By French Method that, the 1 . "ft K (By Associated - percentage of casual- ;r ltd ties among' the birds is very low - - (By Associated Press) AMERICAN WITH- - THE ARMY IN FRANCE, April 29. Enlisted men of the Ameri- can Expeditionary Forces have received the welcome news that hereafter men who have not saved tcir money will not be deprived of their leave in designated leave areas because of lack of funds. They will be considered as having a duty status and therefore quarters will be provided for them and the cost of l ations; commuted, at the established rate ofa dollar Soldiers on leave in other areas will not be furnished with quarters but will receive a ration al; lowance of sixty cents ft dby. While' the ; 'only designated leave area fer American troops at present is in Savoie new leave centers will be designated aS leave needed and eummer-tim- e aiess probably will be near the sea , jq aye they4 very Quickly get- to PresSlv know' something 6f shell fire, WASHINGTON, April 28 American ekperts are t adopting; and hovv to avoid it. The older French methods for the manu-- j birds, it4 is asserted, become facture of bullets for shrapnel very wise to danger. In the pnd shrapnel bombs. first months of the war the DIRECTORS NAMED French made all the bullets in bolds, and the best that,, could BYTHE PRESIDENT CASUALTY be achieved by this hand method was the production of about ' 4 4 , 250,000 bullets in a day by ten (By Associated Press) workmen. By machinery now in WASHINGTON, April 29 use, ten workmen produce 2,500, appointed 000 bullets a day. The French The President has of Alabama, manufacturers east the lead al- William Harding Allan Forbes and Eugene Meyer loy and antimony ?nto cylindrical of New York; Angus Mc132 Jr., weighing ingots, each of North Carolina, direcLean pounds. The ingots are placed in tors of the war finance qorpora-tion- a hydraulic press which runs the Formal announcement that lead into twelve wires-The sent to reinforce the Americans wires being wound upon wooden have participated Allied armies, bobbins, have a capacity of a ton. From the bobbins the wires in the fighting was made public are fed into a hydraulic punch, by the war department in its and thus twelve lead spheres are weekly revew. cut from the 'wires at one operation. The spheres are placed in Troops Of Kaiser revolving barrels and rendered Occupy Tavestehus . smooth. - Warns Of Another Coal Famine In East CHANCE ANOTHER LISTS HAVE 156 NAMES (By Associated Press) WASHINGTON, April 29-- Two casualty lists published today by the War department, contained one hundred and fifty six names. Twenty two killed and missing in action, including ten officers. BONNET , .. ROUGE OPENS , ' . TRIAL : (By Associated press) PARIS, April 28 The trial of the persons involved in the affair of the Bonnet Rouge, a new'spaper, said to have had financial backing and to German Associated Press) (By BERLIN, April 28. German have been engaged inwillpropabegin troops in Finland have occu- ganda for the enemy, tomorrow. Seven persons are of the Tavestehus, city pied and miles northeast of charged with espionage Aboe. The war office tonight an- communication and' commerce nounced this in the following with the enemy. statement: DIS- COUNSEL In Finland we took Taveste-hus-aft- GENERAL MISSED a fight. Our troops were enthusiastically received. (By Associated Press) ST. PAUL, Minn-- , April 28 ROOT AGAIN HONORED An order promulgated by Director General McAdoo, to be(By Associated Press) come effective Wednesday, May WASHINGTON, April 28 1, dispensing with the services of Elihu Root, presi- - of general counsel for railroads, sev-enty:ei- April 29, Further warning of another coal shortage in the east, even more seriouf than that of last winter, unless there is an early readjustment of traffic on eastern railroads, was given today by the National Coal association. The erroneous demands of WASHINGTON, other war industries are crowding coal off the rails, said the associations announcemcnt,and the resultant continued shortage oFcarraUhVmine7hcul" er Re-electi- Target Pat-rohn- about-Millard- here- - tonight The order does not interfere with the work of the legal staffs dealing with routine matters, it is dewajr-reeeive- announced tonight by the execu duction to the danger point.1 tive council of the American 4 Society of International Law. Ypres Yeteran Is The council adopted unanimousFor Thieves ly statement reaffirming its conviction that the nation must NEW YORK, April 28 abide by and defend internaWilliam Mdlard, who was tional law. twice wounded while fighting with a Scotch regiment - Mr, Green well, yiho for- - a and who became a policeman considerable lime has representhere after being discharged ed The Jewel Tea Co. here, from the British army, escaped death by a narrow margin today and has been 'a member of the when two burglars fired a fusil- Fourth ward choi r, left c this lade of shots at him when he morning for his former home in surprised them at work. The bul-- ! Canada for the purpose of en lets spattered upon the wall j listing for active service with s head. The bur-joof the Canadian -- regiments over a in roof. France. glars escaped clared. PERFECT RESIGNS eh ne (By Associated Press) PARIS, April 28 M. Delaney, prefect of the . Arrondisse-men- t of the Seine, which includes the city of Paris, has resigned to accept a higher governmental post. M. Autrand, prefect of the department . of Seine-et-Ois- e, will succeed him. PreM) 29-E- Lokal-Anzeige- veloped yesterday afternoon in the vicinity of Locre, was repulsed. There was great activity last night by hostile artillery from the river Scarpe, opposite Arras, nbrth to Lens and between Givenchy and Nieppe wood, on the southern side of the Lys battle-fron- t. -- KEfilMEL AMSTERDAM, April William watched the battle for Kemmel hill, says a correspondent at the - front of the As early as six oclock( the correspondent telegraphs, His majesty posted himself on an advanced field position. Every stage of the.battle was followed exactly. The emperor personally marked all results on the maps. He remained absorbed in contemplation of this war picture ' until late in the afternoon when upon returning to headquarters, he reviewed two divisions which had distinguished themselves. 4 'PARIS,' April 29. The Ger mans made several attempts last night to advance on the French positions in Hangard wood on; the front before Amiens, but were checked by French fire. mperor POWERS TO 0 r. The A NEW ''Seder And D;f::l Written by a Prussian Officer Who Participated in the FRENCH AVIATORS MAKE THEIR ESCAPE Brest-Let-ov- Ida Ed kC el Vilh Terri": bujlP (By Associated Press) Ooprrlf t , Detroit rmProM LONDON, April 29 The CHAPTER I. newest Russian government in I am a German soldier, Naturally Petrograd, according to the Copenhagen Aftonbladet, says an at the time when the. war started we Exchange telegraph dispatch, did not know that there woutd.be such a war being waged today. has denounced the treaty. It calls for a new Dally we soldiers we're told that inquiry. YlI asier-Alt-cIi Ravaging and pillaging of Belgium ' TREATY k. liens la Thi There RUSSIANS WANT Mark Hyman, who for oovoral year has been special assistant to the attorney general for antitrust investigations, is now assisting Assistsnt Attorney General Todd in the Hog Island 1 Confessions of a German Deserter I GsrcusBcrpAfi::!': Kill I'd ,0a Brili-- : C:::- - vii, luawaal 1 Ad'l Objective bY7;: Prisoners G:r-m-aa sk (By Associated Press) Prance and Russia wanted to attack PARIS, April 29. In escap- treaty, with Esthonia under us and that the kaiser was doing evBRITISH Russian rule. ing from a German military erything possible for our protection. IN FRANCE, April 29 The G. Already on July 20 we were armed to Germans prison, Lieutenant Roland what began today the teeth and prepared to tnarch away. Garrog and Lieutenant Antoine these preparations, which seems to be a general assault on During celebrated Marqhal, the !two showed us all that war had to coma, the British hill positions on the French aviators, repeated the TARIFF DISPUTES 18 men of tny company deserted. Kemmel front, southwest of exploit cf thd famous German The government published, during Captain Koepenick.Af ter pavthis time, bulletins almost hourly to Ypres, thus opening a new pha?3 ing been twice caught and punTc strained tariff relations prepare the people for the war, a of the great drive in Flanders. ished. for attempting to take that existed between Russia and subterfuge that succeeded perfectly. French leave Garros and Mar-ch- Geimany much of the time be- Consequently two days before war was Apparently the crucial tent cf recalled how gullible the tween 1890 and the outbreak of, declared, the people were overwhelm- the Allied holding power in thlj war, but they were certain area is at hand Theprcl! ry people end soldiers proved them- the war are described in a re- ingly forwas only to ba between Ger- bombardment started selves in the case of the shoe- port made public today by the that itand CLj early France. maker Voigt .who, under the Bureau of Foreign and Domes- many Of the intervention of Belgium, morning, and took in a mile cf jiame of, Captain Koepenick tic Commerce, Department of Russia, England and Italy, the coun- front. Infantry attacks d;yclep-e- d ' and m arTomcers uniform laid Commerce , r try had as little' thought as it did of , , shortly afterward ; .d the everything under contribution d The predominance of agricul- any participation of the United States. and was saluted fend honored as ture in Russia and the advanced All thought only of the promenade to battle' appears to have Lem cn Only n German military (officer State of the anuiacluring indus- Parts, which, to the disappointment of in earnest when Haigs reports fhs people, .and also, surely to, the were issued in London at noon. t d . could Je, ,4, , tries knd banking and carrying disappointment of the putomcjr.j has i blue . made French So they facilities of Germany, coupled been (!,; , ; than had, been f BRITISH ' horizon cloth uniforms resembl- with geographical proximity, wishedlonger drawn out HEADQUARTERS for, ing a;f closely as possible those furnished a solid basis for close In these days of uncertainly the IN FRANCE, April, 29.- - The of German officers. When they commercial relations, but the in- soldiers, contrary to the cruel treat- fourth Germany armyi this were finished all they had to do dustrial aspirations of Russia, ment which they had experienced be- morning heavily attacked the was to simply walk out of their tesulting in a decided protec- fore, were treated liberally with great Allied front. Flandehk prisonof sunnlles. delicacies and ers captured have admitted that prison, out of the camp and out tionism, and the strong and ag- quantities (Continued an Page Five) the German intention is to atthe town, saluted on every gressive influence of the German hand by sentinels, soldiers off Agrarians introduced an ele tempt the capture of Ypres. Severe fighting is reported in ment of economic conflict that Germany Permits duty and civilians. both the French and British Once clear of the town they at one time attained the proporMoney For Prisoners areas. The attack extends over a doffed the uniforms and made tions of a tariff war. fifteen mile front. The Belgian their way to the frontier of Hol- - The author of the report, Mr. WASHINGTON, April 29 Yser it is also reported ha land by rail quite comfortably. Louis Domeratzky, tariff expert Germany place no restrictions been attackedTheir greatest difficulty was in of the bureau, gives it as for for on the remittance his money crossing the line. It took them opinion that, aside from political c'vilian and military prisoners, three days during whch they contingencies, which were not in that country, the war departLONDON, April 29 A discrept on hands and knees back- without influence on the tariff ment has been informed by patch to Reuters agency at Otward and forward alternately, relations of the two countries, Pleasant A. Stovall, American tawa, says an intense bombarddodging sentinels. Russia has had the advantage in minister at Berne, who trans- ment from artillery concentranegotiating commercial treaties mitted a note from the German tion is in progress! from La-- , with Germany. This was due pri- war received Basee to south of Houtholt for- -' More Men Needed department est and from Vimy to Lens. to ambassate fact the that marily Spanish Germany through On Munitions Work was the chief market for Rus- dor at Berlin-Al- l sias agricultural and forest money sent to civilians AMERICAN SHIPS WASHINGTON, April products an dto Russias need, and prisoners, the war departof mechanics and as a debtor nation, of a favor- ment said, should be remitted TORPEDOED OUT tool makers must be transferred able balance of trade. The auth- through the bureau of prisoners hazor American Red considers it Cross, relief, extremely on profrom work to make any forecast as Washington, D. C in the form ducts If the munitions output is ardous , PASSENGERS SAVED e to future tariff relations be- of check or postoffice order tjhe to be brought up to the daily tween the two countries, but to the American Red Cross. requirements of the , nation's discusses at some length the sitLONDON, April 29. A party n cf American army fighting forces, according to a uation as it existed a few Utah Soldier Is and Y. M, G. workers under statement issued last night by months before the war started. Killed In Action Arthur E. Ilungerford, arrived the labor department. in London lart night. The ship Munitions production is now Roosevelt Is To , Salt Lake, April 29 Th on which they sailed was torpedonly 75 per cent of the ordnance Tour Four States first Utah soldier has been kill- oed on Sunday morning and sank departments program, said I. ed in action on the French front in twelve minutes. All the pasW. Litchfield, chief of the clear(By Associated press) News has been received in Salt sengers and all but three of the ance division of the federal emNEW YORK, April 29, Lake of the death of James L. crew were saved. ployment service. This departti ' ment could place 10,000 skilled Colonel Theodore Roosevelt, the Hendrickson of Gunnison, Utah, men today. National Security league an- Mr Hendrickson was a member German People Said Unless local manufacturers aid nounced today, w'll put the con- of F battery, 145th field artilTo Be Losing Nerve in persuading their workmen to cluding touches to the league's lery (Utah regiment.) Mr. Hendricksons take up war work, a call upon Amei icanism brother. drive- - witha the "250,000 men enlisted m the speaking tour of Ohio, Michigan J. M Hendrickson, also member London, April 29 (To national reserve will be made Iowa and Wisconsin next month. of tlie Utah regiment, who went Reuter?, Ottawa Agency.j-- A within a short time. Only citizens of German birth to France and W2 in the en- telegram from Reuters corresor parentage will have seats on gagement, hag not been located, pondent at Amsterdam says: Mr. George W. Smith, a prom- the platform with the colonel at according to the messages, reExtraordinary nervousness inent merrir.nt of Park City wa3 most of the meetings in the ceived in Salt Lake. The young and depression prevails in Gerkilled, and his wife was injured rrincinal cities. The meeting of men entered the engagement in many, owing to the losses in the in an automobile accident on May 25 will be at Wittenberg! different units, it is understood western offensive, revealed with Saturday cvemng. Mrs. Jesse roiictr0. Scrimriield, Ohio, andi Details are very vague regard remaikafcle frankness in an Earl of this city, a cousin of Mr. ing the death of James L Charles G- Ileckert, by Captain von Salzman in wa- -, notified and request-fdoIt is known, however, he Vomsche Zeitung, in which of the college' has consent- ed to come, hence has gone tof to acl as chairman of the re-- j he had been in France but a he endeavors to restore their Park City. rhort time, probably not more lost confidence to the Germans j , ception. committee. j After a meeting in Des than one week. He volunteered bv emphasizing the importance writes to on May 26 the colonel wll go to for action at the front recently cf cf Kemmel hill. , A correspondent ask if a certain patent medicine W!sccnsin. A meeting has been while stationed at Camp KearMr- George will cure dyspepsia? It will no; arranced for May 28 by facultv ney. The detachment with which Barrett an old doubt be helpful, as you will members of the University and he volunteered wag a portion cf and respected resident cf thH exercise, walking! on May 28 a . meeting ..will be the April replacement.. force. of eitv is reported as being United States army. down to the clrug store after itjhed in Milwaukee. Uy ill, GERMANMAN al , , , - - 29-Th- ousands non-essenti- al pay-ab- fifty-seve- a f . - ar-t'c- le rien-drickso- presi-Smil- h, nt - I , the-captur- e - Mr, Carl Peterson cf Salt Lake spent Sunday in Logan visiting his little son Siubby. NUMBER 101. TtK-wl- ay E TEST OF THE STRUGGLE FOR 1 -- Tonight and KAISER WATCHED Germany Now Demands U. S. Troops Now In The Line Which Bars The Way To Paris And Amiens Heavy That Russia Exchange -Attacks In Progress There Prisoners With Her And Threatens To Oc(By Associated Press) Attacks shortly aftercupy Petrograd If The WITH THE AMERICANS IN ward. developed Muscovites Refuse t NORTHERN FRANCE, Sunday, The enemy attack which de- April 28 American troops have on the taken up positions (By Associated Press) French Under battle front. the WASHINGTON, . April 29 command French the high Germany has demanded an ex- Americans face the enemy on a change of prisoners with Russia, line barring the Germans from and .has threatened to take Pe- Paris, and Amiens, where thdfy trograd unless the Russian gov- have been for a certain number ernment agrees to the terms ad- of days. vanced, the State department LONDON, April 29. The learns. . Germany is" sending 'a com- Germans this morning opened a mission of one hundred and fif- heavy bombardment of high exteen members to Russia to pre- plosives and gas shells on the sent the German demands, the entire front between Meteren and Voormezeele, south and dispatch said. southwest of Ypres. Infantry Wither Flr 1918- - , get-valua- ble, 1 |