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Show - C5 " rf S! svi DESERET terests to be protected, and it would be regarded with less suspicion by the outside world. Cornor at South Temple' Toraplo Streets Withholding of United States. assent to the Soil Lake City. Llah. proposal for intervention by Japan or anybody Basueas Horae O. Whitney else may be only temporary? but for the present it Is wise. Ggrmanys.hsnds are fust now .SUBSCRIPTION PRICE. I too fuli of business on the western front to fv-- . lie lilf per pear 3 e year SatuMsy Kpw, permit of any serious' Teutonic activity in the per year r Far East. If oriental intervention wrtuld lend Foreign poet ago ostra. to antagonize Russia, the Kaiser could not be Addreaa all boolni coromofiVraHcma 'r' better served than by forcing such an issue. mllUnrea, THg PCiKKIT SfcWJ. Balt Laka Ula, Nobody can tell w hat the final 'outcome in Rusis going to be, but the oath of present sia of rorrrpoti3ener and other raadlnn "JJJ? publication ahmittl b add reared to tha Editor. safely lies in leaving her to work out her own salvation. If at last the necessity to Intervene 4 Kember Audit Bamt" drenlatloo, 3 P, tffXInpfy, Kaalrm Rrpmwetatlvd. arrives, the Asiatic problem with its vexing K w VofV 3 wftee Fifth Avomia aspects for the rest of the world will be simChicago Office, 121 Booth Michigan plified by giving China at least an equal right with Japan in entering upon the performance.1 Kotered at the octofRce of Balt Uke - eia matter according to Act of Congrean J r - -' i March 1171 vr TIGHTENING THE BELT. 1 NEWS EVENING DESERET Et L y r f M PM ft 4 a JL3L . ; Jdt u? V 01 Q y BLOW IN COMLXti, S! BIT COME TO STAY. TMIE aflr0ftebof Hie anniversary of the F t -- Uuitod dUtes European wee -- '5r? etrrtry-brttrth- inevitably revives dieuionas to whether Ibis formal step ought not to hve been earlier If not in the very outset of Ilia oufbtgnitioa in then at least when Germany's barbar- -, ji Europe, bra in sulking the Lusitania gave direct pro- j b bjrb tba gpfit majority of Arottfi iri cans regarded as more than sufficient, Had w gone In sooner, there is no doubt that we would have been in a position to render more potential and even decisive assistance today, if, indeed, our earlier participation would not have obviated altogether the desperate1 clash whjcb today is witnessing. I But some things were gained by our delay, J costly though itmay have been Tor those by whose side vie are now fighting. One of these things was unanimity here at home and the development of a growth of patriotism which was at best latent and required a measure of ppreparatioTi"and perhaps education "before i i, springing forth as we see Yt now. Another gain, from delay was that the over throw of despotism Jg Russia enabled us to f--1 4, after f a wholesoulfd sioral supjsorU-whs- eh j I h all is the more priceless remforeement that I 1i could not but have been attended .with some I reservations beforerthat event Our entrance t inlo the struggle, coinciding In time So nearly rj with iHe Russian revolution, did much more, therefore, hnrg military support to tba enemies of Autocracy it imparted to them a consistent 'and unconquerable moral backing vtbich they sorely needed;, aiid besides iola-tit)- K the Central Powers, it has prepared Uie soil, and sown therseeds fof an educative liberalizing process among their people, the harvest of w hu h is bound to be golden In days to come, A It is true that the United Rtates has not yet made up in military sense for the weakness created in the Allied system by Russia s defection and collapse; but that is going to be done before long, and the balance will then "hot Only be restored, tt will be made to turn dfct-ivcl- y itt Allied favor. In the meantime, the heartening effect of our entrance has greatly encouraged and revivified the fighting democracies of Europe. Their cause today"! " ours; we are all engad in the world's battle ' for libertyrAnd the assurance that our armies are coming, and that all we hate and all we are ran be counted upon , to see the struggle friends through, will sustain our . against discouragement - and nerve them-- to 'fight the better while holding the line against the horde. of oppression. It may be permissible to wish that we had begun a little earlier; but mffur delay we have secured the absoiuU knowledge and conviction without which w might have been embarrassed and perhaps put to shame. .J 3 full-fruit- ed -- ' tin sore-prees- ed lT CIIIV8 INTEREST L SIBERIA pIUN.V has given more effective in the prosecution of Ihc war than the is disposed to grant her credit for. Her contribution has not been of the sort to much notice, hut it is none the less beneficial on that account. Her immediate neighbor- - Japan has - patrolled far eastern waters, and has, to be sure, aided in Jhe protection of the Mediterranean. China has done none of these things, but her work otherwise has been by no means negligible. - occidental world act , 1 6he has proven herself something more than a mere reservoir of potential frsource.Tor she has had thousands of men in France . for months, not only as industrial workers but as actual f.ghtersaod to send more. Moreover, she has effectually restored order, gfter Russian authority crumbled, In" some parts of the' border territory through which the Siberian railway runsand stands ready to do fnore in this direction whenever desired, blip has not thrust herself into-- diplomatic prominence by proposing intervention in Siberia. hut It would seem to be only fair that Ifjnlerventwn shall be found necessary, she' thdpld be given a hand in it. Whet bir Intervention at all will be ueces-wr- y or advisable remains an open Question. Apart fron&iny other epii.ideratnm.-thecni- x of tho prolilem lies in (tie effect of u h ae lam Opon the Russian silnatiim, wlinlt ijj thus , far opfy iihporfectlv 'conipieViided. There 7 appears to lie ghd res-ofur Ur belief that , Russian antagoid-i- u to Jarn d.it.nc from the war of if& is etill pronouiicevl, wherefore there is fear ihabJapan s appearance on (h eastern. : scene m tho role of ?aior of Russia would have the .Jfect of dr''. lrii' J joto Lhc arms pf fiermany. Chinese in! erven) ton- - perhaps I would heas unaccepiabla-.-jiJapan's, but musl be , gurely not more n; and this , gaid m Us favor, that there is quite as much Nullification for it by reason of Chinese in- v n s iri-- h are two ways ofTtightening ibeiadlZ is used with reference to the human stomach. One is from the outside, The other from .the inside. The former method Isolaed by hunters, Indians, etc, when with the absence or scarcity of food the pangs of hunger are gllevisled by external pressure upon the organ that is making vits emptiness and cravings unpleasantly felt. The latter' method Is used b? tSkfmo;lndrans again, and others who by excessive eating produce an enlargement or distension of the human, bread- -, basket which appear constricted and oppressive." , The generality of. the world at the present IQ anHaatiAanvw owvawaawaw waliof t ima WWWfWWvWrIBg in Sfjni4 IJWJ BUIUI guilty I VIIUI W method the by first, above mentioned. All Europe is finding it necessary to tighten its helC from the outside. In America we have not come to that state of need as yet and too many of ua perhaps are still "tightening ou'rS in the more approved and comfortable wayt But a time may come and much sooner than some of us realize when we too shall be obliged to alter our program and conform to the babit of our .friends overseas. Why not then in some degree begin voluntarily" moral obligation and virtue, a practice which have adopted as a matter of our fellow-me- n Every ohe of "Us can" do somenecessity thing in this line without the least present inconvenienre, and doubtless to the betterment jpf our healtlu And it ought to be. loo evident to require argument that the more we tighten our bells from the outside now, the sooner there will be food enough ail round to tighten them from the inside. m the phrase ITS MORE Tontjtrt at Sill. D qwn Nights Beg. Wed. Eve. k Rt-- i Mata Reg. Thursday. Wins. The Fanny PWWaalnnW KENTUCKY Isrts Company and Frodnetk . EVERY Mo kOVUi PARADE PH its: V! DAY 15. to yi.ee. Mata. n CMMri-- SSc and snrwlie--v- ZVo 7T v Now Playing flakes iiUym HANLON & CLIFTON with Xioft Bryant - till (CopTTlcht. -- by 1 e powerful Indtrtment of the standard. Matineen Thnnilay Note: and KatBrday. Rrgulnr prtrm. m&rnMHH begin at usual hour. If yon have set your wmtcb ahead. don-M- Slnart Barnes FAVORITE SINGING COMEDIAN. PRICES: Vow showing a fbg National 1 . Show ng 1, X. S, I, t. Yon will mt taa yrstttsr glrlsl You will new ksar more catchy songst Yoa will nevsr ses sack dsnsg costumes! st Jack Henry, Rons Oarimr sad riw than Ton will asrer lsagh -- wia present th shapely chorus maids THE BACHELOR DINNER land. A xtotoaily funny masicsl comedy of the new MH opening today. MM fern A Photo Drama of life Depicted with RsierineselhJfir LIBERTY .THEATRE . --The Original ,WM. S. HART In . 1 , THE COLD DECK' It Is Hart's maatnr production. SCENIC. COMEDY. Shown I, Site. S in. t. 1:40, S:IO. Admission. 8e and 10c. Coming. MARY WARREN THE VORTEX." , . -- Dixon's Thrilling Epic of Love nod PuriulMR VorompnnlcU by tho origioal Victor ' Herbert Made and THE FLCNGE OF ' S - I VArDEVILLE 1HG FFATVRES I bn Imre Mat, today Tonight. NEW SHOW TOMORROW at 7:8 and S. Prices: 10c. Me. in M thf vrmr tax. AUDlTOSIUr.1 " - - DANCING -- TONIGHT BEESLEY e AUDITGHIUftl Tin sialic combet emist) attack: ivennany and Km.iar,t will i1cmIv ur future pnritmn in the WirkLl Kaiser, general and munialirt arc mivtakcn. No sing! combai anything. All fighfmg snd all the batdkiccombined Tue- Deseret Savings- Bank do not decide anything peimz tle m mind W W KTer PreeMenl; Ceorre nentty. It the fighting that goes on mlrh KileaA. netVi'v.rriL: on Romney. battlefields, that of men not fighting Ourtiter; John R Barnes. Jclio C tle world question. There is coming before Cailar.i M S Browning. JA A. El- long another combat, a fighL between, the GerA W. IrJn. Smoot, W F man people and the German milrtoiy partv, beEdward I. Burton. Social Democrats Oo 01" and German million Paid ix Coot lotoreot tween ix H iienzoflern prmcea and their Father that fight, and not tho Utet attack on tbe Enghh Jab printing, binding and ell kinds line W ill nettle Germsny poeilion in this world, af ruling done at the Deseret Kewn. . Times. Let ns bid on you work. . ashingtoa t 4 Three shows dally B:4lk 7:30, 9:18. Mattaso prices: 10c, 15c, Sfic. Night prices: 15c, 95c, 35c. Reserve yon seats osrly this week. I' l mossma PARAMOUNT- - EMPRESS ,Adlia.tAiiini&tliiWiwildiX!eill V Fjnf of1-(li- Events. New Pictures, Not Repeeterm." LAST TIMES TODAY. , The Taclicbc t m MU' DESTRrC-TION.-" rngranre and xhe Woman Story. Chiklrea .5c. Prices 10c. A invest it in tnnndchu, A hoing 'the kaicr and Hmd.mburg. av. W . Film ed Current Pantages-Telegra- New The Fsil of a nation IACLE SVU L CO, UNLIMHED. woriH cf the F Thun. No-V- sn , BOBBY HENSHAW Tne Vereexile Bor THE EUEHNS IB NOTHING. w M Ju "4 Dainty Different Doiass -- A. WEDNESDAY a.Vl THCR8DAY Thn Worlds MlgMlort MoUon , Picture Spcctscla PIACE. SFTll.E Comedy. Burleaqua Agile Enroye lVooi Funbutd fat Ill B TTLES m-e- their Orlalnmt Reoentrio and JAENNETTI AND 8IDELLI RIALTO that the number of own When it ers of 930 bond of tbe Second Liberty Loan 1 more than double the aggregate number of stockholder m the United S,afcs Rtcel Corporation. the American Telephone ami Telegraph company the Pennsylvania Railroad company, and all the companies in the Standard Oit great sweep Group, we get a new idea of the bonds among of tin investment in government York World. ; the feople.-rNe- w ' Ignats" ViLKINS and WILKINS is -- following array if Century VsnderlUw- - Last Times Today." Back to the backyard garden. " )Gc Bbrh work, Show no quarter to tbe enemy a thrift stamp! Chicago News. k Mr HOPE EDEN vrtthlhe in eonjuactioa cause Twentieth out-bre- ak JHE mRitoktartM mi ks&tii k 11 nWATY-FnK-UFAT n sttrso-Uo- E ?TH ASTER f Tbe daylight saving scheme goes like clock- - y the hsadllna MIND The day is done and the evening comes at last, thank goodness. i NODDED .. . . For Londoners the curfew tolls tbe knell of parting day at 9:30 pjn. ' Beats the Dutch American and" British seizure of their ships. t ks .SPMV. miles Toe great new gun shoots seveuly-su- c but the Kaiser still remains the biggest gun id ' Germany. save your DOW money and buy savings stamps. today is the great ta ooe sot taiUN.-Q-f life-givi- ng Rusia Opening 2:45 p. m. , Ctoming, Rot STEWART In THE BOSS OF THE LAZY Y. t 1 N the Brooklyn Museum Quarterly for the first quarter of i3i8 appears a pleasant article by George P. Engelbardt entitled Dixieland of the Mormons." it being a narrative of the Brooklyn Museum's expedition to Utah in 19IT, undertaken for zoological Field work in the interesting region of which "Bellevue, at the fool of the Black Ridge, is the center.'Mr. f.ngelhardt writes eloquently, of 'the scenic wonders of the southern Utah country and of the lh.ee or four distinct zones and dunes, eact. eminently suited for agricultural development along certain lines, within the comparatively narrow limits of Washington county, this by reason of the sudden and wide range of altitude. He abo discourses appreciatively upon the thrift and energy of the settlers in guidwaters of none too plentiing the ful streams out of their rocky beds on to the thirsty soil by which deserts have been transformed into green gardens" and fields. During part of his tour Ernest DufTin, a neighboring ranr her and a noted cougar hunter, was employed as guide, and for the trip to the Kolob plateau the services of William Wright, a sturdy, prepossessing young Morr mon," whose home is at Yirgen City, were secured. The expedition as a whole seems to have been entirely successful and the results achieved will have much scientific value. The - . article is profusely illustrated. 4 BILL TODAY Thills, 'Startles, Entertains. R la the one' sMounrting erent of the Year. 1 ith Mats, 10c, 25c, 50c. AD0TI1EI SMASIIIHG HEY and disgusting consequences,- - as "drunk agaia, de 1OcT25cT!0c, 73 rs TARZANdf the APES press-champi- on necessary tion would ordinarily, seem to be an anomaly beyond belief. Vet Ibis is exactly the situation in which the London Time has found itfraternity of the press self, and the worid-wiwill know bow to sympathize with Lord Korth-clif- fe in the distressing circumstance. In a recent issue of The Thunderer the proprietor makes announcement of an increase in the price of the paper to 34 (S cents), by which it is hoped to bring the output down to 120,000 copies whereby a saving of five tons of paper daily can be effected. The restrictions placed upon the import of print. paper have compelled the limiting of the edition to this number, the alternative being to reduce the sue of the paper and omit the features which make It a complete national record. The announcement further advises that if this increase in price fails to effect this saving in tonnage, it will he necessary to ration the public by who unsupplying . The Times only to those dertake to share it with others! --7 a career Of more than 130 years, during which it has experienced many fluctuations in influence end effectiveness, but has generally maintained its reputation as one of lha most powerful political agencies in thy whole civilized world. The Times is probably wise in deciding to maintain its high standard at the cost of reduced circulation with possibly decreased revenue. As to the latter, it is interesting to know that the price now established. while not the highest in the. paper's history, is about the same as in 1785 and again in the year of the outbreak of our Civil War. mark was reached during the The' high-wat- er Napoleonic wars, when the price rose by gradual stages to 14 cents per copy, dropping to 10 with the accession of Queen Victoria, to 4 in 1013, and to 2 in 1914, the year of the of the present war. Eves. teagae Circuit Fnak Crus) LTAirg Dixie Shayne THE SINGING BEACTY. ALFRED LATELL & CO. HARRY & ETTA CONLEY Playlltings A lovirtheir mighty for remind-iits multitude of readers, even piclorially, that there such a condition, with such evil a newspaper should find it desirable THAT even to reduce its cumula- recent issue, the New York World had a IN a powerfully executed cartoon on its editorial page, portraying vividly the inebriated stale of the German mind subsequent to the conRussian peace. The clusion of the title of the picture was "Drunk Again. and it was entirely felicitous and expressive of the idea sought to be conveyed. But an acute correspondent next dar cleverly called the paper's attention to a grievous lapse or oversight in editorial censorship in permitting such a picture with such a caption to appear in such a place in the World's columns. Surely the official whn scrutiny all such material mu I undergo was negligent in his duty the correspondent or he would not have allowed the use of one of the strongest arguments of the Prohibition party, Wh h The World has )teinatn ally rev ibd during the pasl Week, to inetsiphon-eall- y exemplify military intoxication.' The point appear to he well taken, and it is being extensively quoted, -- with 'much entertaining comment, by thoe who have regretted tho great newspapers determined and even viAUmt opposi! ion to .the cause of prohibition generally and the proposed federal amendment1 us particular Te incident has not proved especially comfortable to the wls, either; for the moral is altogether loo plain to escape notice, and tbeyan scarcely A1 prmeflkc, "" AMERICAN THUNDERER ON RATIONS. WHEN A CENSOR r; vaudeville Ike Orrat Uune Race, Rruiifal IN " f - BRITISH OYI.Y Tadag at v E fT-JER- THE BEST Sell Lcb Tfcratro From your chin down you are worth about a dollar and a half a day. from the ebm up you are worth Tberea no liiu.k anything. -Without your headpiece you are just an animal and about as valuable as a horse maybe. . You have a mistaken idea. Too think . you are paid for your work. You are not. sou are pawl for what you think while you work. Its thmkind of brain that directs your hands 'that gives you your rating. And wjiat c aiies you the most con, cern: tho contents of your skull or the mass below the collar bone You exercise your -- body, keep your arms strong, and your legs limber, and your waist line supple but do you regularly exercise your cerebrum f Are your thoughts flabby, unron-Iruik- d, wayaaril aud useless, though you-- i are expert in tennis or got ft " Is your thinker as keen, alert, disciplined, accurate, and dependable as your hands? here do you get your pleasures? From the chin down? Is it all dancing for your feet and meat for your belly, and clothes for your hack? And alt' your fun in the cellar? Dont you, eve- rhave anjrmLjiwAbwattte? "What Interests you taost, boots beer? What paint you most a stomachache, or a lie? How-ar- e what part of yew pulled?-T- E is the eabletow fastened to your ?rou or to your forehead? Rupposi it were possible to live after the head'll ad been severed from the body!" which part would you rather be, tne head part or tbe meat part? V hat are you, anyhow an animal, pestered with a mind; or a soul, prisoned in a i Do body? know that the gist of culture you ronsists in transferring one's habitual . amusements from below to above, the v The Aeeodated Free la eacoalrely entitled to the oae af ai mvi diaoaithra credited to ItepuhUeatioa or not otherwise eredltod In thin and mto local nowo jmbttuhod th nwi.aprr, heroin. AH righto at carton o I spools! dl- Reich hernia ar. alasrpul1 naerL ,.r..y V" HALT LAKL LHVr UHiL 3, lVi8. V 4 Mr r APRIL '3 191fi WEDNESDAY For the Deseret News by Dr. Frank Crane. I J NEWS .FROM TKZ CHIN UP. fr y. v EVENING WM. S. HART Ft In bis greatest western story "THE TIGER MAN' Three Days Oommeong Tomorrow, 6Eft BEB AN to JIT ES OP THE STRONGHF.ART." - sMuliaiui"iHe'iuuainigaw |