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Show -- t WBEBOHE DRY fi iffi BILL 1 i villi. Jr Iyy Si . VC Would Also be Permitted to Place Iron nd Steel and Many Other Products in Addition to Food Under Government Control C-- i$ o last v I t lil'-'- CONTINUE SMASHIf$G TACTICS tDRAWING WILL BE ENTIRELY BY1 AND TERRITORY RETAKE NUMBER. LEAVING NO CHANCE week. they Lost FOR FAVORITISM. h: ! fl-- i f 4 , Operation of British Consst of Putting Down Attempted Enemy Raid. NoJiesum- non of Italian Offens.se in Trentmo. f administration by the house 26 on June by the senrewritten so as to ate agriculture Wilson the power and President give -- responsibility of deciding whether the tn.tl s.hu it he hone dry" during the vttr and to place iron and steel and in addition to inauy other product food and fuel under government conbill-passe- I f the Mdj t ' . D4 i NT- - J-- lA.' n . VL 11, V X rvc'rn and opponents pre- the measure. As a substitute for the house prohibition sections, which without qualification 8 I vi i v-- jJfcfcrW. ; i X y 4 W.ift'A ' wiMOwaiaBMWWS beverages, and empower the Bishop Lidibedeyttf Ariis standing In the ruins of his beautiful cathedral, which the Germans utterly wrecked 'president to commandeer existing sup- . nerore retreating from the town. 2 The band of the famous British Foot Guards passing under the Arc de plies of distilled spirits, but would aue on Its recent visit to Paris. thorize the executive in his discretion Grace Parker, president of the National League for Woman's Service, w no is organizing the woman force of the country. to permit manufacture of malted, fix and vinous beverages, and 'their alcoholic content BRITISH HEAVY ARTILLERY IN ACTION Should the president not exert his authority so as to exempt malt fermented and vinous beverages from the sweeping prohibitory provisions and should commandeer distilled spirits in wyi'M P -- TH-om- p fer-.tnent- ed national prohibition manufacture and consumptould result it is said, entailing ion a loss 'of federal revenue estimated between four and five hundred millions of dollars and new taxation measures, as well as local revenue reductions. bone-dr- y bond, of both TWENTY Part of D. & R. G. Railway Swept Away by Breaking of Dam. Suit Lake City. As the result of the breaking of the Mammoth dam of the Price River Irrigation Company,- - twenty miles of t)enver & Rio Grande main line track has been washed out British official photograph taken on the western front showing a battery of guns Just moved up to an position. MINE SWEEPERS FOR AMERICAN Fourteen Million More Than Asked for Contributed by Nation. Washington. The nations contribu- -' tions to the Red Gross In response to .the call for a $100,000,000 war fund on were estimated at $114,000,000 June 20 by Henry P. DaviBon, chair man of the Red Cross war council. - - The figure, assumes," said Mr. Davison, that stockholders In companies which have declared special dividends amounting to some $20,000,000 will turn their dividends over to the Red -- A last-Christm- eve. -- tJ p '7tr E. L. Trayla. now chairman of the corporation commission of has been selected by President Wilson jm a member of the Interstate commission, to be named as soon as congress peases the bill enlarging that body from nine to eleven. North-Carolin- a, for ..public A . y A bv ' Bond Issue Defeated. Salt Lake City. The proposed bond $it50Q,OQO 4J as Strike of Miners Threatened. Bingham, Utah. With the arrest here June 26 of a number of alleged I. " W. labor agitators, who are now behind the bars, it became known that there was a plan on foot for a general strike of miners In thi'S section. f -- "' , f V K,i' i I ,iiiUflLFWt Lake. -- a'f i 4 ' r- .. passed the billion dollar mark the treasury placed i.OOo.noo to the credit of Great -' . Va - A Jsuiuiir ac- - Norwegian Steamer Sunk. ndon. The sinking of the Norwe-amshi- p -- I? ,rsi Yolette by a German urine Is reported in a Central di patch from Copenhagen. Fif-- n of those on board, including five . -- woru-- n "r were rescued. tl t mi 1 tin- - 1 - ipiua ag rb'-p-. . u New marine nhotograph showing the American battlesLlp 01 hich 'h weea. WI . il .4 be fctfcod k ix( To the eiM, in the icunn of llurt-i- e nT nillUel.l and rnmutie. the (lilel comlmies a tid ihe I icinli guns mve put down an juteinpied infantry attack h the Gcrnmna The German war office nxxt-rlthat axf of Mont t'iirnillct. in Champagne, the Freni h have lavn cuuni,-H,-,under a hem y conccntratimi of fire eiacnate grmmd they captured from the Germans last week Operations of Sir Mucins llaigs army against The Get mans liCFranee and Belgium hne consist, d entirely n effectually putting down attempted itemy raids and uusweiing tlie flr of hostile guns. There Is still considerable artillery actitity on tlie part of the Gerninuynn various sectors in Belgiutn, especially near Ileninglie, Pypegnnle atuP l.lzerne, and lively hand grenAdefiglitlng between the French and' the Germans near ijtreenstraete and the ferryman's house. There lias tieen no resumption of the Italian offensive in the Trent! no re gion of the Austro-Itallutheatre, but on the Asiago plateau there bus been considerable artillery activity, apparently with the Austrians tlie aggressors. To tlie northeast the Austrians delivered uu attack in the Cordevole valley at Mont Sett suss. Italians drove buk the enemy, inflicting heavy casualties. Tlie uiuv einents in Russia and Galicia still have not riscu in importance above patrol engagements and These hnvc been lively in Gulida. In the Macedonia theatre only small engagements by patrol parlies have been reported, although east of Luke Prosha tlie enemy has violently shelled entente trendies. 1 in .kit-- the No dfr'll iratlt- nlfi'l.'i annul - Ini' been and idint.l i miiil luiitniH is In - within M, i nt Ins be, n stated, it the i,'i 1., I itself gn ill do the . lutein piobably aiii)ui"!i, so hei e will be no n Kttn-n- t .idi- - 11 1. 1 tor )n ,d I noiltisin, pdTitt-i- d -- 1 , J ! -- - 1 t p or min w is,An the gul.itimis iiiinlrtovv, ev ery egistmed limn Ik iirs a 4tiimbtr. Hie llinliets will be foiwCiYed to Washltig mi and the draw ing-rll enttrelj hy limber, 'i be Htenniv of the to tlnte ted tm n ll l ciiargi-xoami Hie dratt inaildiu-ran heefstaMts-honly ly comparing jyttiuher with a pt luted list of the mans home district. Tlie question of exemptions will go fore the loeul hoards, if a man is exempted the man hearing the number which was drawn next in .order will take the place and so on until tlie first increment of 625,000 has been assembled. The others will he culled as th need develops. It is hoped to have all tin men In training by September 1. Following 1m the rointdete official registration by states us gifen out by the war department June 2. Tlie figures show liiut ilmost onehalf the total of tt.tJt'.t.lk'W men registered claim' exeuiptJou for various iiuses. Number Claim X e iiuin-mikno- f f ! State AlabMiua Arizona . Arkansas s. olorado ormeetleut . I) Toriila tHirgltt f Idaho .. Illinois Indiana Iowa 4 Louisiana Maine Mur land Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevuda New Jersey New Mexleo New York -- North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma ... tregou 1611,211 V Pennsylvania Rhode Island Month Mouth . Carolina Dakota Tenneasee Texas ll(f,417 62,013 52,04 1 820,345 ,TMi,(2Vl 53,453 22,14!) 135,039 85,386 59,043 29,292 187,611 126,322 408,702 . 22U.775 41,952 22,766 2!t,(!53 13,234 181,826 104,854 lOSJLU) 58,141 127,409 72.330 24D.170 115,149 22,848 Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia . Wisconsin Wyoming The Kentucky and Wyoming exernp-tlo- u clalma have not yet been offirial- - , M F I J V t ! r r ly reiMirted. Few Butte Miners are Working. Butte, Mont. Copper mines In the Butte' district continued operation Moudny despite strikes of their employees called hy tlie Metal Mine Workers union for higher wages and improved working conditions. Tlie force at work, however, was aliout 10 per cent of the number usually employed. Industry Tied Up In Idaho. Fpokane. Advices from northern Idaho points say that strike conditions Decorate Author of Alr Raid. hate .ylrtnaUy tied . up a 1L logging in London. An Amsterdam dispatch to the Idaho panhandle. Industrial WorkTimes the 1.700 are says that Captain Brunden-hnrgrhi- y ers of the World say there Conducted the German air men on strike. All strike orders and Information are said to come from raid on, London June 13, la which a large number of persons were killed headquarters of Industrial Worker. and wounded, has received the order Russian Prisoners Starved. pour le merite from the German government hundred Washington. Many of Russian prisoners In Germany Rock Island Goes Back.' already have died and more are dy acand Chicago. -- The receivership of the tuberculosis, ing from famine Rock Island & Pacific Messrs. sent to a Chicago, letter d by cording . terminated . at midnight Sunday, Rorbdlne and Raknovsky of tlie Russian mifeslon to the Red Cross war and the property returned to the concouncil. The Red Cross is asked by trol of the railway company in, aeeord-anc- e the commission to rush bread to Copwith the decree signed hy Judge raii-jroa- -- June 26, when Frances -- tals-skf- l, i y $10,000,000 to t i :i t"i thou-sand- ,.JtUion. Dollars Loaned to Allies. hington. American loans to the UU(1 e i iii-i- ; Women and War. Woman, according to legend and romance, become during the war the saintly Samaritan who ministers to heroes wounds, but, according to a report made to the London dty wn;&n is really demoralized by the loss of her protector and companion. Women carousing In public hoiiises, drunk and vile of speech, have enhagen. Landis. pow hecome goninipn .plght, in the poorer quarters of London. The ad May Imports Break Record. Woman Slayer May Recover, ministratora of the .patriotic f imd in. - Wasldbgtoa, Ansericaa. Imports, la Wis. Miss Grace LuGt, Waukesha, Canada hare also fhund that great so- May of $281,000,000 reached the highMrs. who David Rotierts to death sliot cial disorganization follows the leaf est total of any month in the history and shot then is improving ia herself, ing of women alcne at the mercy of of American commerce. Exjiorta of strength and physiclaus at the hospital landlords grid others upon whom they $551,000,000 showed a galu of $21,000,-00- said her chances were good for recovare dependent Is financial straits. over April. ery. A Substitute for Cotton. France to Increase Merchant Marine. Germans Claim Victory. The English have found that bog The resolution adopted by I Paris. Berlin, Concentrated fire from the moss, known technically as epagnum tlie chamber of deputies calling for the German artillery has forced the cymhilifollum, when sterilized, makes work of increasinf tlie French merto evacuate the grouei they French an antiseptic, light, soft and coed dress- chant marine to be placed under the captured June 18 and 21 ea?t of Moi.t ing for wounds. It is packed la fian control of one department bas been ac- Cornillet, in tlie Champagne, army nel begs after sterilization. cepted ty the government. ' headquarters announced Sunday. -- Pfsl!: improve-ent- s was defeated oy a vote of at Twist 5 to 1 on Jane 26. This is the lrst time that a bond Issue has been Xa Jililn-- Logging NEW YORK AT FULL SPEED John - Nelson Reeves, his three children about ten north of Minden 3 hi, h in itiMti- - il aU ual Japan Offera Russia Support. Finnish newspaper Coiienhngcn. say that Japan has offered to support the Russian government in the work of organizing tlie democracy and in the reorganization of the army. Japan, expressed according to these paiA-ru- , the wish that Russia would soon resume Its place In the ranks of the combatants. The government has chartered the fishing trawlers Foam, CresL Wave, Billow and Spray and converted them into mine swreepers. The filustratton nets. shows men of the Crest with one of the iron buoys used to stpport the mine of the in Mass., charge At the left is CapL P. C. Shea of Mattapan, kiniiig of wife and niIU-- :ni,inh niiieii pi m n Five Convicted in Murder Cse. La. John Long, Henry Walter and a negro were sentenced to sweepers. life imprisonment and two negroes were sentenced to be hanged for the BATTLESHIP Mirnlen, t fur draftnow await uwii, sc! s approx al. toti-.it- n Kivnl i ii i i'lt-M-- ! e - to 23. 44 of the Raging Torrent Carries Awi Ty Sixty Foot Wall and Floods Valley. Price, Utah. Property damage to railroad trackage, dejMits and crops, estimated to be more than $1iXltXK), was the result of the Idvek In the Price river Irrigation dam in Gooseberry creek, a tributary to tlie Price river, twelve miles northeast of Fair-viewhich began Sunday afternoon and finally resulted In a raging torrent after currying away the sixty foot wall which impounded more than 11,000 acre feet of water. Three large steel bridges have been washed out, scores of highway bridges bavi gono and all concrete cu'herts In tlie Price river valley between the darn and Price, a distance of forty-fivmiles, have been destroyed. Hundreds of thousands of dollars of additional damage in loss of truffle will he suffered by the Denver k Itlo Grande railroad because of the complete tieup of the Immense coal' mines in Carbon county, which deju-- 1 upon the railroad-- for an outlet. Thousands of miners will he thrown ont of em ployroeut until the railroad is able to rebuild from fifteen to thirty miles of track which has been washed away. RED CROSS FUND SUBSCRIBED Strike Extending at Butte. Bow Butte, Mont The - Silver Trades and Labor council, composed of all the labor unions In Butte, voted Tuesday to indorse the Metal Mine Workers union in Its efforts to organize and pledged the metal miners what support is In the councils power in the unions efforts. The vote was w jurl r iiniitn-u- l iinj;ii ihetrmA of ing tin-- IRRIGATION DAM BREAK8. PICKED FOR HIGH POST NAVY freely volunteered their Cross. iai,-- W .ivtiiii.l-i'- i recou-nalssance- Ifis estimated It will require fifteen out of work services. . ilu- - t . n MILES OF ROAD GONE. dajs to get the track in shape for trains to pass over. All of the available labor In Carbon county, aggregating approximately 4000 skilled miners, has been pressed into service. Never In the history of the state has a flood so crippled Industries. Out of the fifteen great coal mines in Carbon county there Is activity at but one and that Is confined largely to the operation of coke" ovens St Sunnyside. Otherw ise, the washout of the railroad bed, at the key to the coal mines, has rendered mining operations inactive and the thousands of laborers thrown ti In- - s - ji rt fj s, iv:ik ( tciriturv Imi vi!i! Inning uiil One-hal- of the i forbid the manufacture of foodstuff into liquor, the subcommittee adopted provisions which would prohibit manufacture, during the war, of all intoxl- eating tn In farm in U,e Town $V x y lni,hu. Tin- - Mtm-.hni- ee trol. Both advocates dicted passage of on, km In ir 4 mi nC. ha vl f Show That Almost Total of 9.619,933 Men Registered Claim Exemption for Various Causes. Figure -- if The Washington. control i i - power president gives the BAN ON SPIRITS. PUT to food mbs Dili FRENCH r x CONTROL FOOD SENATE- '! 5R6V DURIIIG THE WAR the Weekly reflex; kaysville. utah s 4 I |