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Show BRUTALITY OF ENTERTAINING OUR - " r SOLDIERS soprano, .who went overseas several weeks ago Jto aid in the recration program of the Y. M C. A- Knights of Columbus, Salvation Army and. other organizations. In a letter to James Forbes. chairman- - of the program committee of Americas Over There Theatre League, she says that after an American en tertainer visits a hospital the wounded men want to get right out of bed and rejoin their units lam hard at work she write "singing every, night, and love every rajnute of it. The boys seem to enjoy me as much as I lemrand always say : OK fplease dont go yet. - Have a .heart-- Sing just one. And of course I sing until there isnt I am a pote left in my voice. going to be down in this section quite a while, with headquarters here. Next week I am to " give a' recital in the Municipal and Theatre for the city of the offiers and soldiers of the allied armies. It is the second r - -- concerts here. Quite an honor, I am assured. The people have been so wonderful to us everywhere, and cannot do enough for us. I sing everything for the soldirs. .incidentally we get up very and they lively conversations . love it. They are ' and so human. so enthusiastic It is so big and I feel awed and marvelous that wissh I could stay unutil the drop of the hat. You simply cannot imagine what has been accompliished- - j I have sung in motor camps, 'T. and Knights of Columbus huts and dugouts. Salvation Army bakeries, Red Cross Hospitals and even at the bedsides of the boys, one at a time, every thing from grand opera to Tickle Toe I even dance a little. Such a spirit- They, want to get right out of bed and gi back We wont go at the Boche. back till its over, over here,, is the entire sentiment. And they Want the best you can give thm, is too geood for thm. Try to persuade a lot more people to come over, specially girls. The day we arrived in some Americans ran out of a shop crying: American girls! Gee, . those American girls look good to us! RETAIL GROCERS TO SIGN. FOOD PLEDGE WASHINGTON, Oct. 8. Every retail grocer in the United States will be asked this week to sign a pledge to conform to the rules and regulations of the food Administration and to cooperate in the enormous food saving program necessary if America is to fulfill its obligations, to its associates in the war and to European neutrals, - , - Here, and There. J darlboro Is leading a movement among English women to sell their. fam- Ily Jewels for war funds. Thei;e are now 2!) aviation training fields operated by the government In different parts of the United States. An order for 240.000 pairs of rubber boots for the French army hns been placed With American manufacturers. Australians are experimenting with a mammoth harvester 'vwtUrb.jtrlp grain fields St a rat of about 80 acres a day. - h , IN IRELAND GIVEN TEUTONS ' (fly Associated Press) Sept. 30. Ireland Oct. 8. Although PARIS, soon may become a watchwork talk is in the air, there still quilt of conscription districts peace and districts, is no peace for the German and .armies in the according t5 member - of-t- he ' ' field; Irish recruiting council, whose While attempts arc being alloted time for raising 50,000 in made circles volunteers as an alternative to in to and show Austria Germany conscription, is drawing to a the that latest peace proposals close, with the allotment as yet of the central powers are honest unfilled. The council, jwhich is compos- expressions of a desire for a just peace. Marshal Fochs ared of five Irishmen, represent-ing'amies are proceeding without parties, have divided the nr their task of clearing pause country into ten districts, with and France of the inBelgium a quota for each, and has ar-- l vader. And they are continuing ranged wi,th thq government to meet with great successes. that in districts which will their in Serbia and Albania, Likewise, quotas, conscription will not be the Serbs and Italians are fast applied, even though the total terof vounteers falls below the re- reclaiming enemy occupied while alast at ritory, reports the quired 50,000 men. British under General Allenby It is generally predicted that in Palestine still were, hard afsome of the districts will . fall ter the Turks. retreating far short of their quota. And While further good gains have that; conscription is expected been made by tie British east of to be inaugurated, even at the Arras, where the operations have cost of resistance. in view the capture of the highly The objection of many yoking important town of Douai, and Irishmen to entering the' army, other advances have been re erd-eand the traditional Irish hostil-itl- y country. between Cambrai and St. to the War Office is being The wreckage caused by the chief interest for the met by recruiting agents Jby Quentin, Russian invasion oL191-Lwacenters in the fighting present still evident, according, to the pointing out the special attrac- in Champagne and between the traveler, who found the streets tions of the Royal Air Force. Argonne forest and the Meusb, of Gambinnen in a ruined con- This service is not under control where the French and Americans of the War Office, and it has are dition.' Reconstruction of. driving the enemy steadily owever,-wasgoing northward, despite great resistpositions. forward steadily by the forced many ance in positions of high stratePolitical feeling runs high, and Ital- labor of gic value. ian prisoners, who were being however, and the class of All along the front from worked on railways, bridges, young men, who make the best Rheims to the Meuse, a distance soldiers, the missile troops, of more than fifty miles, the barracks, and fortifications;. y are not volunteering in large v met has everywhere jth numbers. serious'r&Versfe'3 "and Is ' falling EGYPT PRODUCES Two or three members of the tyack at sbme plac$1fi' disorder, MUCH FOOD Irish Parliamentary Party have under thd heavy pressure that identified themselves with the is being imposed against him. recruiting campaign, but the Where the enemy is trying to reOct. 8. .WASHINGTON, party as a whole, has held sist, the French and Americans has war that fact DespiteAhe aloof. are' meeting' their counter-thrust- s been raging throughout MesoSide by side with the operawith feplendid stamina potamia and that many of the tions of the recruiting council, and gradually forcing f,hem to their Colonel Lynch, member of parlinhabitants abandoned step'by step. of iament, is conducting a crusade give ground,the:' soil the horpes and holdings, East of Argonne forest. . nwnwitluihe that region has been made toLf vie- w- of betwecn"thateat'W(wdeIbaf add a lUrge share to the worlds organizing a brigade which he tlon' ftnd the Meuse4, tht Ameri Colonel cans have further advanced their production of foodstuffs for hopes to command1918. of the line, side on the Lynch fought notwithstanding the fact A report from Consul Oscar Boers against Great Britain, that the enemy has thrown in S. Heizer at Bagdad tells of re- but his feelings towards the reinforcements to hinder large cord crops in many parts of present war have led him to the blotting out of the forest and The lay aside all racial feeings and the land of the Caliphs. the forming of a junction by British army authorities are come out on the side of the way of the Aire valley between are given credit for much of Alliesthe Americans and. the French t . this production. As a result, it troops on its western side. In is estimated there will .be a surthe latest fighting the Americans plus of 120,000 tons of barley drove the Germans out of Chatel Chemists and wheat after supplying the Chehery, northwest of Win needs of the civil inhabitants. and obtained command of west of the Aire. the heights Seek Pomm CuThat Will official comThe A NEW COURSE German latest Whola Annies, rtroy munication reports that the u 'I FOR WOMEN American Americans Monday evening bechemist working on the poison ga problem may bring the war gan a new attack in this region. to a victorious close tor the allies In Taken altogether, the entire PITTSBURG, Oct- 8 A new their laboratories. , southern front of the Germans wocourse of instruction for They are working hard, together to be in a rather serious seems s' colormen has been inspired in the with British chemists, to find and odorless Invisible less, which, gas, from La Fere to the situation, Carnegie Institute of Technol- sweeping over a sleeping army, would of north Verdun. Laon, the great ogy, by the Surgeon Generals destroy It storehouse of the Germans The Germans are also working to call for 1,000 women for servfind finds a such side Whichever gas. is of northeast Soissons, to ice at home and overseas It first will win the war, declares a to be on fire, indicating writer. teach crafts to disabledsold- - Washington r The Gas shell" Is not necessarily a the possibility of an early falliers in" military hospitals. ' To shell. It may contain a liquid or even ing back ; the meet this demand Carnegie a solid, and It opens np the whole Tech. is to train women as itphere of organic chemistry to be defenses are outflanked at both ends ; Rheims has been restored upon for materials, reconstruction aids. , Previous drawq In every German drive this year and the Germans pushed back art training or aptitude in art there has been a gas strategy. Full of it, work is a requisite. The subjects dress rehearsals in gas maneuvers to more than ten miles north while General were eastward every possible situation to be covered in the course will meet held by the Germans before an attack. armies and the American metinclude basketry, weaving, In the March drive captured maps First army are brilliantly carry? al work, chairs caning, making show the Germans had worked out a over allied territory. ing out their part of the great system sonlng tovs and block printing. Some tones were arenened with gas movement that converging and others left untouched. The Gerdate distant no at far seemingly Work man New were supplied attacking troops Accepts with maps to Indicate the safety xones will force the enemy materially Oct. 8. WASHINGTON, which they might pass wl (fl- to readjust his line. William C. Delaney has resign- through THE HAGUE, Sept. '30. Thousands of Russians and finish Red Guards imprisoned in a secret camp at Friedenort, near Konigsberg, Germany, are living and dying amid terrible conditions, according to a neut- ral'who has just arrived here after a long visit in Germany Many of them, he said, are virtually naked, and are clad in rags. Deaths Are common, and he predicted, that with the coming of winter most of these still Alive would perish from exposure. Food conditions in West Prus sia, this informant said, are by no, means as good as .in East Prussia, the home of the Junkers. Ample food was obtainable at fairly reasonable prices in the east in - consequence of which the population was comparatively cheerful. To this situation .he ascribed the continu-e- d resistance of the Junkers to the desire for a quick peace, which, he stated, was growing Fapidly jn other parts of the . The Very Stuff of Victory DUBLIN Austro-Hungari- The materialist has said buying Liberty Bonds signifies nothing. He looks upon each issue as representing an investment which has no equal today in a'll the world. an "well-inform- - ed - ConsequentlyTTie views their, purchase as involving no sacrifice nor deserving of credit. As far as his vision lets him see he is right.- - But unfortunate is he, indeed, who cannot look beyondthesimpleaction and recognize the full power of the motive! -- ll bonds are the greatest investment in the world laid at the feet of good fortune,, because they are may righ1 the promt of the greatest government in the world , bac rd by the resources in the world. Such, however, is not the great overwhelming and men and w omen ling reason tjw millions of now own biroons of dollars of Liberty Bonds and in this Fourth Liberty Loan are subscribing for billions more. y-with-interest most-tremendou- . d non-fighti- n many-Russia- ene-frt- . THIS SPACE SUBSCRIBED TO WINNING THE WAR BY; . Cache County Farmers Equity 15 SPLENDID CHANCE -FOR- - j j j ! . - May Apre-mont, - ed Chemin-des-Dam- , out harm. 8ome xones were subjected to ephemeral gases which evaporated before the arrival of the oncoming Germans. Other areas were bombarded with several hundred thousand shells, the gas from which lingered for hours. On one seven-mil- e sector the Germans 'disshells lu one charged 125,000 es ds , day. The 'front" Is not the solid line It looks to be on the maps. It Is a series of strongly-hel- d posts, often hills. The Germans use gas shells against these strongholds, attempt to drive the defenders from them and to pass through tlm safety xones between Adjournment Early WASHINGTON, Oct. 8. The senate and house adjourned early yesterday out of respect to Representative Talbott of Maryland, veteran member of congress, who died Saturday. Both houses appointed committees to attend the funeral. Use Journal ads and get. satisfaction. . s The motive is a far deeper one. It transcends all material considerations and its fabric is the very stuff of victory. For Liberty Bonds to the great host of American men and women represent worlc accomplished, thrift acquired, money saved and devoted without stint or limit to that greatest purpose which shall finally achieve victory over organized force inimical to the peace of the world. So when your dollars are invested in United States Government Bonds of the Fourth Liberty Loan, though they are invested in the most wonderful investment in the world, they become more than ordinary dollars because they are then the concrete expression ola hallowed purpose and dedicated to its achieveipent, the very stuff of victory. . War - That - ed as director of the war risk insurance' bureau of the treasury to become manager of the railroad' administrations section of marine insurance. Most activities of the wr risk bureau jwillbe under the supervision of Charles F. Nesbit, commissioner of the division of military and naval insurance, which includes . If you didnt seeJt in the all activities except the marine Journal didn't happen and mfamens insurance. ,'w. NO REST IS Gou-rau- a knee-lengt- RAISING TROOPS THE TEUTONS ABROAD American entertainment singers, actors and actoresses, dancers and jazz artists have a greater opportunity to hlp beat the Boche across the Rhine than they may think, according to Amparito -- Farrar, a concert - ..Tuesday,' October Sr 1918. THE JOURNAL, LOGAN CITY, CACHE COUNTY, UTAH. PAGE SIX RUSSIA come one with which they deal. TO WAR the-pro- -YOUNGMEN 8 AT1 n pi t: 1 ilL j ; U. n. Tls. visional government announces the following aims: A ; Oct. WASHINGTON, Infmediaie aims of the Erection of a single and powerful Russian army beyond the Russian provisional government influence of political parties formed at the con-- '. and subordinate, through its vertton ;at Ufa last month inchief, to the Russian clude liberation of Russia from military the. power of the Bolsheviki provisional, government. in the liberSoviets, annihilation of the Breast-Litovs- k of of demoRussia ated restoraparts treaty, zemstand cratic .of treaties with the allied municipalities tion nation and continuation of the vos actually guaranteeing genvfar against the German coali- eral security and public order. tion. of addition to about five hundred meii now, beiqg induct: ed; into thq collegiate .section of thp Students Army .Tajuiug Ctyps at the Utah 'Agricultural CdUqge, the Institution 'has; been ai&hprized to induct six men for mechan ic41 and technical training amd fob graining jas telephone; elecj. ricfajis, according' to! instruc-tiqnjust received by President These aims along with those E.t G. Petetson from the . War Ddpartmnt,' affecting the internal affairs of Russia are outlined in the Acting oq these instructions, text of the act constituting the thp College1 will begin the imof Russia, which mediate induction of. four hund- supreme power was received today by the Rusred men, nineteen years of age sian embassy from the provison and over who have had a al government. The act was apgrammar school education, into the convention, which the vocational work, and of proved by was composed of representativtwo hundred men who have es of all governments and parthad at least two years of high ies m Russia except the Bolsh- schooflraining into work to eviki and the forces which prepare as telephone electric- the first constituent ians. which was overthrown The vocational training will by the Bolsheviki. include a course in the aims of The new government is exWar of 1914 and pVactical work to prepare for any one of the pected especially to bring some measure of order out of the following. Auto experts, chauf- chaos in Russia, and the allied feurs, radio experts, carpenters, are understood to governments concrete workers blacksmiths, will-b- e it that, hope eventually or machinists. The telephone electricians will secure special available. courses in physics in connection Induction is also open at the with their practical instruction College for those men who regAll qualified who desire to istered prior to September 12, secure induction into either of but who are not in Class these groups should present who have thirteen or more unthemselves at the College at its of High School work. These once. Already many have made men may enter.' the collegiate application for this work and section of the' S. A. T. C. the quotas are filling rapidly. Induction may proceed at Rations, housing and thirty the College until October 31 ina month will be received by stead of until October 15 only, the men as soon as induction is according to a recent communicompleted. Uniforms will be cation from proest Marshal furnished as soon as they General Crowder. Pan-Russi- si op-jxs- ed -- 1-- A dol-a- rs Development productive forces of the country with the aid of private capital, as well well 'Russian as foreign, and of personal initiative. Legal regulation of commerce and industry. Development of labor legislation, protection of labor and regulation of the conditions of employment and discharge workmen. of : CAREFULLY INSPECT NEW CAR Not Safe to Assume That All Parts Have Been Properly Lubricated Before Shipping. IL Is not safe to assume that all of the car flint has Just been delivered to the new owner have been It sometime properly lubricated. happens thnt prease cups have been left unfilled when the car was shipped and Unit ffliee- l- bearing, universal, steering gears, etc., have been oveiv parts looked,It Is always well to go care- fully over the lubricating system of the new car and see thnt It has. Its due allotment of lubricant. DO NOT USE FIBER WASHERS Action of Gasoline Ha s Tendency Make Engine Run Sluggishly Lead la Better, to Do not forget that fiber washers-shoulnever be used In the fuel line or In any part of the engine where the gasoline can get at It The action of ' gasoline upon the fiber washer has a tendency to make the motor run sluggishly by forming n deposit of minute particles from the fiber. For this reason lend washer .should always be used in the fuel llav d |