OCR Text |
Show - r i . -r i J T)ESERET EVEXIXG , DESERET onfli Tempi Bre a f I ! ji ,11 (laNir lift Daily, 1 Bml-WMkl- f and City, Wto - ( - SUBSCRIPTION PRICKS. Niwi Copie r employers, bankers and other who are Just Railing to accommodate with credit end time those who manifest patriotism, end "sagacity enough to maks the small initial payment and ask for help hi doing the rest The person who BMW doesn't come sross" in response to the final, .. appeal might ae well say right out that bg 8 doesnt want to, fpr the excuse that he cant n. ,2 Cents Will hardly, be accepted Jiy hUmost patien T and most eharitabjp friends. NEWS at TtmplQ Strt UtK . EVENING per yea pee , yr , -- ' ''Hi ml Member Andlt Boreas Circulation. 1 P. McKinney. Raptor Retreee Ota tire. New Tork JS4 jnfth Avenue Cb tempo Office, 12 fioatb Michigan Arenne JaI a Entered at the poetofflre of Salt bake city, aa ja YLpeeoad dame matter aeeordlnp to Act of Coapreaa 0e j larch A 1I7A The Aeeociated Preee la exclusively entitled to of all news dispatch the noe for re publication credited to It or met otherwlee credited In th n ewe paper, and aleo the local newsy pnollehed heroin. AH rlpbte of repnblicaUoa of apodal horo are alao reeereed oe BALT LAKE CITY, - ;i OCT. 18, 1918. SHORTENING THE LINES OF RESISTANCE. Vrf ITH in the hands of the and Zeebrnsye practically cut off 00 Chat ft must soon go the same way, the reported order of the German admiralty Id all submarines to return to their home bases ie almost satirical Where are nowZlheh , home bases, and whither (Shall they return? Their reel on Ui e Belgian coast up. and there befny noth in hospitable for them on the tortuous Holland eoart, they can have no other refuge than in their own harbors of Bremen and Hamburg or on the lee side of Hie Wand of Heligoland. To come barb to either these bases would tnean that the radius of of !, 1 their activity bad been reduced loexeeedingly id narrow limits it would imply that so far as f submarine" operations in the Atlantic are cont cerned, they are practically at an end. i But this shortening of the lines" of resistance on the sea would precisely correspond i with the program on land to which the geni: i eral staff is bending every effort Their skill ?! in retreat has. not failed them; and although 11 the Allies are crowding them o relentlessly - It that they cannot withdraw h the orderly manner they would like, nor take the time to de:l!!i stroy the railroads and create their habitual waste behind them, their losses are 1 not so heavy as to be disastrous. It Is only in sur--1 prise battles and in stout rearguard battles for the purposes of covering retreat That thejr casualties roll up alarmingly. Once started in retirement, their losses decline; and this ac- -i - counts in some degree for the readiness with Ml which they abandon positions where they could surely make a determined stand. Their gne j er I J I great object now is to conserve their until they can reach their own border, Ms where, with the line shortened at least ;if , one man esn do the present work of two. This also explains their anxiety for an J ft ft j armistice, duririg which they Would doubtless be glad to evacuate all Invaded western lerri-M-J jP I lory and fall back to their own frontier. As W Os tend already AlHfls, betfif-ferok- r i eir -- 1 4 department T HE lished man-pow- - au red against Interference by the Allied armies, !,; they eonld perform, this retrograde movement very comfortably; and even thongh they might tr'nfot do ai thorough a job of destruction as is ill their wont jn connection with their withdrawals, they could cause an amount of damr? BS age that would greatly hamper any Allied offensive until much reconstruction work had been done. The present aspect of the situation 1 l,l suits Gen. Foch far better. He is all the time -j t-- l n on the heels of hi enemy and is pressing him to spread the so hard that there Is devastation eo dear to German strategy. Besides that, he is destroying German morale by tiis incessant blows, and Is planting discouragement and despair throughout the German forces and Fatherland. And finally, if he is hurrying them along to a line of defense where ins lead of 280 miles of front they will have only 140 miles to take care of, why, it simply mean that the new line of attack will be correspondingly shortened for the Allies also. no-tim- e, HAVE YOU, READER, BOUGHT MORE? "THE CRESCENT VANISHES " j , j the lime these lines shall be read, the campaign for the Fourth Liberty Loan will have literally entered upon if final phae, with only a few houre remaining in which to complete the task In hand. That the subscriptions Jo dale have not come up to expectations, fntghl as well he confessed; but Ihere is slill lime for if fhe country to ri'dcpmirpTf antf niate up in a" f grant! final hcrt of speed for the dilatorine I J thgt has thus far prevailed. It would be almost .sacrilege- to doubt that this will be done. The Kews is ceriamly not going to be one of thne to doubt it. These victories that opr boys are winning over Ihere' every day: this increasing desperation of the enemy as manifested in his 114 frantic yet insincere appeals for peace; (his U - glowing consciousness that we have only to 1 press manfully and unremittingly on to achieve 1 MI aU the glorious objects for whick we drew the sword and have' suffered and sacrificed all 1U thist we repeat, should give to fhe closing hour of the campaign a huge Impetus that will J M St carry it far and irresistibly "hver the top . U This country has tl-- money, plenty of it 1! for half. doren sjich tones a '.hi now being 1 1 1 offered; and, to speak with lutire plainness, it ji. hasbimpiy got to hand it over if not in one lM a,y. then in another, TN proposition is'.pnr and, poor, maf weh y! that each ipdiridual. f ponder, without taking too, much time about ity I And the question for each and every one I put 11 3 te hhnsdf is, not How much have I done?" but How milch more an I do before the books tomv'rrow night?" There j scarcely a ringle soul that can gne a valid reason 'for not doing stilt a little more, tf the y ijt t there, the opened up. The country is full of e J Install V ' S . - and 'mother must make good, nourishing sandwiches' to go into those lunch baskets. Royal Bread will be the first thing thought ? 00 - of.!- - . - . L - . fc. , " . Its among the thousands of happy, romping school ' children that Royal Bread is doing Its hit satisfying healthy appetiteshuilding sturdy- - bodies keeping 'little minds alert. ' . . -- ism. y All the nobility, , chivalry, . and finer touches that have characterized ware ef the past in civilized nation have, boon cast aside. The German eoldlsry has deliberately is liked by both children and , and.undeC th direction of high command -- out that its QUALITY is , dependable. They know that each evenly baked loaf is light, appetizing ' and nourishing. . . ..Your, grocer carries Royal Bread.. becluseibe y conducted itself like brutal savagea Thr difference between the Hooligan and the soldier la the air to brought out by a recent report ef Edward Price Bel on the , record ef the activities of the Royal Air : .Force for May, June, July, and Aogunt of , , this jeer, - . - , , . He shows that the British have filer aimed their bomb exclusively at military object Ives Such as airdrome, railroad com- - I munlrattona, mdntttpn and raa factories "The essential difference," he says, "between the incoherent German policy ef ' haphamrd bomMhg ef London and Paris with, ruthless disregard of human life snd . the British policy ef attacking only care- fullw selected military Objectives is shown by the table of raids issued monthly." The Germans are Air Hooligans, and th British are Air Soldiers. , ' That I the difference. , e (Copyright, IMS. hr Prank Crane.) , have-foun- d BAKING CO., Salt, Lake. ROYAL HE conquest of Palestine and Syria by Gen, T Allenby brought great elation to the TWENTY YEARS AGO. Syrian refugee colony hi Manhattan; and when the news reached this cotLry of the capture of Damascus, there was socb rejoicing on the east side" In New Tdfk that many an oriental family remained up all night to gel the latest scrap of intelligence. Tbeir. feelings found the following paean of joy in the the, newsvictory" edition of . paper organ of the colony; "Hail to the son of Lebanon and Syrial The destruction of Turkish power! "The Crescent 'Vanishes and its light will not shine again in the Orient, which is the Cradle of the Educator of Humanity. Beirut is waiting for the invaders, the conquerors who are coming- - to uphold - civilization. Damascus came out to meet them and the Cross shines with a holy light Hail to Syria, whq has been longing for ' v the army of salvation and libertyl 'Long live Lebanon, the and its people who are filled with happiness! Hail, Syrian These poor creatures, driven from their homes by the unspeakable Turk to. find a harbor of refuge in America, have waited with almost more than human patience for the which they believed was sure to come. It seemj to them as though the very haqd to them. Many of heaven were surely-openeof them will return to Syria and the Holy Land carrying with them American ideas .of progress and civilization; and the favored land of centuries' sgo is likely again to receive an impetus that will sadly upset the fashions and for residents the methods to which American accustomed. been have generations agricultural machinery will start the reform, with other phases of modern progress sure to follow. One of the first things to be considered will be the reforestation of Palestine a country that, wasonce well provided with trges, the removal of which, by the Romans under Vespasian and Titos, was quickly followed by " ' " climatic deterioration.' to It is not too much expect most remarkable changes in all that region within the next few years, changes enough to maks if such a thing were" possible the wraiths of Richard and hls fellow - Crusaders the " cba$t a new song of hope' realized fter the New manner of the modern Syrian refugees-iYork but loud enough to be heard to the ends of the earth. From the Files of The Deseret ' Ash-Shaa- b," ret-ributi- d ' -- DT nc of agriculture has now pna for the final estimates of yields, to be given out fn December; and the country may feet assured that the harvests have produced an abundance of grain for all homo needs, besides sufficient for our share in feeding onr allies overseas. Firaf in interest, of course, is the vilest crop, the second largest in the countrys history, with aa estimated total of nearly bushels, or only 6.00,000 less Than the record crop of 1915. The season for this great and vital staple opened with glowing promise, but severe reverses followed, these to be succeeded in torn by" a most satisfactory improvement, which jn the actual harvest was realised tn a yield tbst is about 45 per-cen- t greater than last year or the year before. The oats crop is the third largest on record; and with the ex- ceplion of corn, all the other grains have exceeded all previouk yields. King Corn for once has actually fallen below the average, ami yet it. is. hardly to he classed as what the market operators tall a short crop at any rale the price quotations have tended rather downward than upward since the report was published, indicating that the trade" is concerned less v i'h the fact of a reduced production than with the question of prices after the war. Last year, aftd also hi ?9!3, the torn yield was considerably mexressoflhree bill ion bushels,and inf915, it was just a shade short of that stupendous total This year It is somewhat less than two and three quarter billion bushels, a marked falling off, but atilt handsome enough as a figure to enable the kingly product to hold its head high and to wear nnashamed its royal honors among the field crops of the nation. 6 !- 1D18 ,'" 4 devilry. Human nature la a oorlaua thing. Whan had It feoa vena than aay animal. 'itNo oas maa-killibora or mad elephant or irritated rattieenafco can equal the corned-see- a of a bad man. , Ad there to somethin taaclnatln about violence. Once ou start to break up .the furniture you cant atop until yiu have' mashed every china cup In the pantry and on the what-no- t. every knick-knacocThe primitive Northmen indulged casionally la a Berner ker rage, and savages further' eoulh ran amuck. . through the atreets killing every living thing. Under the restraint ef civilization theee a wild impulses have long been dammed up, finding vent only in bunds of crime or revels " . ef Intoxication. 1 Germany the Hooligan Impulses seem to have come to .a head. The boH has angered. ripened, burst, and the ppe to out. The Only reason a normal human being can ftnd for each acta . aa cutting don orchard, bombarding undefended - towns, and treating the people of captured territory a la Simon Legreo to pure Hooligan- thejasl Teport for the year except 1 I 18 A bathoa IS ana who Joveo to'fcreok, Aaatroy, bar. Intimidate, of kill for abear - A JdLENTEOLTS GRAIN YEAR. i- J OCTOBER -- . e.s,- Foreign postage eztrs. f buslneas communications and 11 DESERET NFTWS. Salt Lake City. Utah. b CarCeepondenee and other reading matter for Febilcatlon should be Addressed to the Kdttor. Moon Edluon !J! FRIDAY NEWS J', Lion-Heart- ed . - OCTOBER a last. Kent IJoJtfoii 1 Th war department received the foTlow- Ing from General Brooke at Porto Rico; "Flag have been raised os public build- Inga and forts In this city and taluted wlth national salute. Tb occupation ef th inland to now complete." The occasion wag th signal foig genera) rejoicing both her ' and in Porte Rice. ' The 4 ' f , 5 EXCITING Sometimes when an automobile races with a railroad train lor a it ha the luck to get there first, but in most- - instances the train reaches there at just the same time, end then that automobile never tries it again. - I Uiiadelphia Pre. . , - BUM e Anglo-Sax- BSSMEA HOST COHFLmON ays w esnt- - help but look batter "kiri feel better , after an Inald bath. on' h. on pretty Jong one. It fighting in France is reaches from the ghivery Shetland through all the British Isles clearcross the ocean it spreads out to take in Canada and Texas, Alaska and Florida; it is led by men from New England and from Vir1 ginia and Carolina, with whom are joined the CLOTHING TAXES. mingled recenter Jriood currents of the West; . . lme 'v fceaiHi which is called a man's coun- ever across andtfier oeean the far-fluact a higher limit on ntens goes then, taking in Hawaii and the Philippines try rtoD1! - 'ban' on womens before tbs Ux is on it way (we have many men from both icmriTh- - Rev th propoMl i just the( other Wand realms in the service today' lend sweeps romal fe whatever you tike New down to the Antipode to take in the lean hunw'f . York of thousands from arid Australia snd , dreds the. comfortable, progressive denizen of New Zealand a wonderful world-wid- e TRK.GDGIJ OF SANCTITY., assembly, all imbued with the same idea, which is that of church of a suburban has manv'j government by the people, of the people and Tt.f Boston. TrangcripL tortes U li'idif toe coatnenU made by visitors. I for the jectfJ grade-crossin- ng S-a- ry SAFETY FI ROT HOT yATER YOU DEMOCRACY'S LARGE FAMILY.? ' The line of support of the tn ai5srHBiT30' at. -- r aan CImt Creek Ceata, Seeelfy CMk Oil. ( tha haat a( tha aaoS tkn Se anaa. Thar eaat M thaa tha aaaia. ' AND CONCLUSIVE Yon' enn Jelp him' by ordering sU tbo coal yon wd need for the winter NOW, while we ara able to give it to yon. aa4 dee-ora- ted Chronicle-Jelegrip- coal Is one of tb . Freezing weather followed lain and snow In Missouri. Kanes Iowa and Nebraska, ajj) much discomfort was felt as a result. Th lessees of th Warm Spring, Henry Barnes and Edward Byrne, eerred notice on the Salt Lake City Council that they Intended to dissolve partnership and Jnvited' tha city to bid on the lease, improvements and furnishing. The real estate situation in Salt Lake was reported greatly Improved and building activity was said to be better than in any season slnce.lt 99. The demand for small residence properties was increasing and tjis only thing which prevented a large volume of business was the lack ef this class ef propertieet K party of Church officials consisting of . Presidents Lorenzo Snow, Georg Q. Gannon, Joseph F. Smith, Franklin D. Richards and ' Elders Brigham Young, Haber J. Grant and .Own Woodruff, with their wires, left over the Oregon Short Line for Omaha and th Transmtoaiseippt Exposition, to be present during the celebration ef Utah day. It was reported th"g a large Anglo-A- m eri-can syndicate waa being formed for the pur-- 4 poes of buying up Cuban bonds. Th country's outstanding Indebtedness, was said to , be 1J09.999.899. " Th Dowager Duchess ef Sutherland of- -, fersd a reward of 129,909 for th recovery of Jewels said to he valued at 1150.099, which eh loot on board a train hound for f . Calais; while on her way to London. 'The ' Jewfls included a necklace worth 129.999. On one occasion, when trwiporUtlon ef big problems with which Undo Sam has to wroetls continasQy end with th of winter this proUem will becem - mors perplexing.' , Forme! opening exercise ef the national peace Jubfie at Chicago Included addresses by George R. Peck; Archbishop Ireland, who spoke for th Berth, Judge Emory Speer, who epoke for th South, and President McKinley, who had not Intended to apeak but who offered a few words In rf-- sponde to tha Insistent demand of tb as, sembled throng. . Salt-Lak- Heeds : the R&rt-cM&y- . th ehnreh rmi with evergreen and flowery; an old Tady walked up the aisle to the chancel and lood sniffing thp air after everyone else had . left the church, CH IMF: FOR INVENTORS, Dont it smelt solemn?" she raid at last, Besides a remedy for bureau drawers that a she turned away with evident reluctance. I Stick and pocket knives that rust in ' your dont know as I ever realized just what the e dont today, pocket, there ae a number of little devices yet odor of sanctity meant before have any such trimmings in the cburtj I atlift to work upon, one of them is a contrivance tend up in the North. Pittsburg to store 1(3 in the shade temperature for use ' in January, St. Louis Globe-Democr- Two UJcviHe To look beat and feeLones beat is to enjoy an inside bath each from tha system tha morning 10 Gush previous day- waste, sour fermentation and poisonous toxins before it is absorbed into tha blood. Jest as coal, when it burns, leaves behind 9 certain amount of incombustible materia) in tbs form of ashes, so th food and drink taken each day leave In th alimentary organa a certain amount of indigestible material, which if not eliminated, form toxin and poisons which are then sucked into the blood through the very duct which are intended to suck in only nourishment to sustain tha body, Tf you want to see tha glow of healthy bloom in your cheeks, to See skis clearer anti your get clearer, you are told to drink every morning upon -- arising, a glass of hot water .with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it, which is a harmless means . of washing th waste material and toxins Com tha stomach, liver, kidneys and bowela, before putting more J. food into tbs stomach. Men and Women with sallow skin, bver spots, pimples or pallid are those who wake up with a' coated tongue, bad taste, nasty breath, others who are bothered With headaches, bilious spells, acid stomach or constipation should begin - this phoephated hot water drinking. ' cohr-plexio- ' , Victory is certain ' If you will lend Uncle Sam all the Cash you can possibly spare, : To help Otir BoyB , ; - ' y Over there , Bight the wrong You can do your hit over here. INVEST !ii 4TD LDEtTY LOAN 1 i Seief Coal ' Direct, from mines to your home, 2001 POUNDS TO THE TON. ! ' jDelivered 'Immediately. ; PRICE AND QUALITY ALWAYS RIGHT. Send U Your Orders NOW. , . quarter pound of ttmeatona phosphate costa very little at the drag store but to sufficient to demonstrate and hot water that Just aa purifies and freshen the! clean, skin e the outside, so hot water and limertdne phospbate'set ohAbe 1it4de : , g , Organs. Advertisement.. , - A K2t3e pr! 47 Mala SL Ca. Wta 445457-- C |