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Show A t jSfet. T" " is? x a yrWiAre-- tlil,i,iwlP'V'iiWwft3B ' su last edition 0 Woe Of 4 puy 30 PAbES SATURDAY' EVENING' NEW r MARCH 15 1019 SALT Wap Savings Stamps, Better t Than Pai4 Up Life Insurance CITY, UTAH LAKE SIXTY-XINTI- YEAR I ALLIES FIX FOOD RATIONS FOR GERMANY, TEAGUE OF NA TIONSNO W PAR 1 OF TREATY U.S. TRANSPORT STRIKES MINE, AND SINKS USD I MUT BE1 SSILOfiS (TEUTONS TO SOLDIERS JO Ukrainian Attacks on Lem- Socialization to be Discussed at Conference With berg, Grodek and Jagiel-nic- a Polish Delegates 'From Saxony Repelled Council. Boundary About Decided. Commander Hs First Sight Of U. S. Soldiers in Combat Formation on German Soil Near Rhine. WARSAW, Thursday, March 4$. PoHah troops, with the assistance bf local militia, have repulsed German Survivor i of Yselhaven Landed at Hartlepool by British Steamer. Thirty-Fiv- e u 4 volunteer forces whlch attackeiTThs oil field to the region of Dombrowka, J Silesia. Poles Repel Attacks by Ukrainians in Lemberg LONDON, Socialist center economic March 15 Nine sailors office will j are reported drowned in the sinking of WARSAW, Thursday, the American naval transport YselThe following official statement waa whlch wl,! be ciaed by a council haven, which struck a mine at 1'35 issued by the Polish general staff to- will Include workmen, Intel- - o clock Friday morning, according to j which dajr. "Bolshevik troops have attacked lectuals and peasants As the Saxon a report to Lloyds The Yselhaven waa Slonim, In the Grodno district and sue- - chamber hag adopted a resolution bound from Baltimore to Copenhagen ceeded in entering the town, but were MklnK for the gocialrzauon of Thlry-fiv- e survivors have been Saxony, eventually driven out. ,f bas betn decided by the Bavarian landed at Hartlepool by a British "Our troope have Vepulsed 411 at- Wil- - tacks by Ukrainians against Lemberg, central council to get Into communi- - steamer. Tumulty secretary to President was Grodek and Jagtelnlra, inflicting sort- - cation with the Saxon government and son, announced here today that he The upon the enemy. The Yselhaven meaaured 3,558 tons Q " cablegram from the ,7gl,tIncont ues and our troo'ps have propoaa 0,81 in receipt of and waa hillt In Uotterda'm in 191 sent be. to for and!110"8 Prauen, "the Stedetska Saxony, JakBmanice, plenary occupied president stating that bhe was taken over by the United a conference. council has Y positively decided, that the Bydhow nue nwii on German States shipping board after the United siutru League of Nations is to be par front have been repulsed near Moc- COBLENZ, Friday. March 14 (By States entered the war. She left Bal" on Germans fired peasThe The Associated j berg Feb. 18 for Copenhagen, Press) Editorials and peace treaty were --working In the fielda protests against petitions which urge timore This cablegram was sent In re ants who ot the .The sinking .. - .. the formation of a "West Germaa occurred in the North sea aa sponse to one sent by .Mr, Tumulty was any trutb were printed- In todays issus Hartlepool where the survivor were public inquiring whether therestories Boundary thatthe in certain newspaper .lakea le a port on, the aaetbnt Qoa.it of . ' IWgUfVM' wrww I 'tmjOey resents efforts being made here and at England. Li the peace treaty. aWed-dueui 1 to the president at Mayence te establish Friday, March 14. (By the republic. The local branch conny truth in J PARIS. Tarts asking if there Mr. said Tumulty, siders On these of the these reports," will lead to the efforts the Associated Press). -eceipt of "and I m this morning? 4o M contderd by destruction of the German charac-terisof the g cablegram from the president stat, country bordering on the - thecouncll of 10, With President Rhine. ing that the plenary council has post- j A recent meeting held at Cologne, In decided that the league of na-- ( son participating in the discussion, favor of the republic was accepted by liona js to be part of the peace treaty; the people aa the signal for a that there Is absolutely np truth in any report to the contrary.. ACT WILL BE TESTED March 13 - V i p, HERBERT A lAUREMt Recent dispatches from London state that Herbert Albert Laurens probFisher, minister of education, ably wil be appointed British ambassador at Washington to succeed Lord Heading Mr Fisher, who was born in 1865. was a Lowell lecturer at Harvard university In 509. After holding various important, posts ... he was made president of the board of education in 1915 tad was given the portfolio bf the ministry of educatfon mJanuartr' I9IJ. vhetf Premier Lloyd George reorganized his cabinet. - llDITOfI!l. ts Wii-me- -- By Villa Bandits WOULD BAR RUSSIAN RUBLE FROM GERMANY NEW YORK, March IS Prelim. Included in Boland and that the Friday! March 14 Preai- -' ' , inary action toward testing the on- -. of war time prohl- - offlrlal report was received here to-the ! .,!' nt Vi Pson lost no time In plunging nPpn, BERLIN, Tuesday, March lie The atitutionallty .Pola"d !lfb .?ld into the' problems of the peace con- In the filing here day h!U Bishop Joseph C. Bentley, aould mak,e ministry of fihance. It Is understood, bition act was taken frthte on his arrival here today. His ber an "hj'b stake of suit-iwill the ' President of the between a recommend of to nathe German barrieI today i conVrer.ee with Premier Lloyd George Colonia Juarez, together with. Joseph tional assembly the immediate enact- - federal court against the James s the new presidential residence in i the Place des Etats Uni which began The complainant, Spencer. Joseph Williams and two of a law barring the Russian erard s Breweries other Mormon missionaries, were unectly after the president reached his ruble from circulation in Germany. Joseph E Everard asked the court being held by Franciseo ilia vend dwelling place, lasted an hour, while defendant the an for rJer restraining influx The of Russian went luncheon to currency aper the president Felipe Angeles somewhere south of its manufacturing Eb suspending Coi E M House s quarters and for which began In an astonishing man-- , from Vfclle, Chihuahua Neither the actlviUes May 1, next, and its sales MormoH''-Ghurelv two hours and a half was in confer- - condition of clearing house banks and of here or -n e with. Premiers C'fPlHICfaii aad-- lruat. companies foe American Consul Dow have received statute. Tarthat they hold 158,755,510 reserve in many, in Berlin last summer has been, The information about tle reported Lioyd George, Col. House, Andre complaint alleged that the 8ny dieu and Louis Loucheur. the French excess of legal requirements. This is a constant sou roe f annoyance in olaui ot' the caPture of the Mormon bishop and minister of reconstruction. This con- -, an Increase o $8,872,440 from last circles keenly alive to the Bolshevik emergency prohibition ov. 2 1, agricultural bill adopted menace. ferenie brought together all the main meas- 1918, U unconstitutional as directing forced of the conference with Bishop BenHev Wednesday reporting thelnatlonal to safeguard ure intended the exception of Premier Orlando of 4 Martin Lopez, Ramon ega and security and defense, the armistice that Next Week Weather. Italv &00 Villa men had just left Colonia , Naval Assignments. having been signed, .hostilities erasId When the discussion ended at S.30 the "Morthe of Juarez, headquarters and orders given preliminary to reo clock the a numbir of horses president 4eft for the palWASHINGTON March IS Vice WASHINGTON, March 15. Weath- duction of the military torches before mon a stake, taking ace of the Elysee to call upon Presiand quantity of supplies, but harmAdmiral Alfred W. Grant has been de- er prediction for the week beginning that date. dent Poincare. settlers tached from command cf battleship Mgndajr issued The complaint, drawn by Elihn ing noneareof the "Mormon weather bureau being made by the Church force No. 1 of the Atlantic fleet. It was today are Root as chief counsel, alleged that Efforts to nd officials consular British Program verify the announced todav and assigned as comUpper Mississippi and lower Mis- when President Wilson proclaimed the "tht war thus 4oyt tberaPture mandant Of the Washington navy yard souri valleys Unsettled weather with declaring At Peace Conference and superintendent of the naval gun occasional fains and snow, tempera- comes to an end, directed cessation1 of inductions intbUhe ariy under the ARflFNTTNA MAY. Arthur L. Willard, ture below normal factory. Capt i Northern Rocky mountainPARIS, Friday. March 14 (By the whom Admiral Grant will relieve at and selective servirj aojl apd announced .Press The British pro- the yard, has been assigned to com- plateau regions Low temperature plana for resorat.on. of normal peace wa no with much unsettled weather and oc- conditions, there gram at, the p4ace conference Is unders- mand the battleship New Mexico. emergency, snows tood to contemplate the signing of military or otherwise, calling for proRes AdmirwLHenry A. will casional Southern hibition of mountain and' "riiarste preliminary- - treaties with the assume command if divisionWiley BUENOS AIRES, Friday March 14 Rocky the'usqof grains, cereals, No 4 of Ontral Allies as soon as possible after the Atlantic fleet, a plateau regions Low temperature fruit or other food products in the The foreign minister held a long Adwhich poet snow or tori conference with minister! of neutral raina and Germany is disposed of Next would miral Grant held as additional probably first part of manufacture of bee duty sale of the7 wreek; such itiy'amend-ment- s generally fair thereafter. forbidding products; powers today, and Rear Admiral Augustus F Pacific in order to conserve the null ons man j The neutral ministers were inform-powto the rains , constitution, of commandant 9f the Norfolk able with statesFrequent on the hague of present below war and .the carry Ths ed that Argentina will answer the normal. temperature and the then nations, navy yard .has been assigned to com ague would be whipped into perma-reprohibitions, it is charged, were un, Invltatiojv from Faria to Join the mand fifth the district. navaj of nations, which necessary and aebitrary and wholly leagu shape The. final peace treaty would follow and would Include the Without any power conferred on Con- - Minister Fueyreddbn, said Foreign was acleague of nations plan. . gresa bv the Cons kitution. cepled.Jn.principJe. liy.ibis-a-oaetrThe leading thought among the Special Dispensation sT h F 'The sil 't tilso o n s i tie said that wooiil be Bfrttstr'St-thot the Internal revenue department re-- ! suggektuL ,.., . pfWeht. moment seems For -Installation to strip thp preliminary peace. 6f nearttreung MuV 1 to 11 beer prtorlto product not 'UtftlOccsaary Incumbrance and secure the signature of that docuNEW YORK, March 15 A special exceeding J 3 per cent In alcohoUc-bLWILSON ment o that the world can begin to dispensation has been received from content, with a reduction to one-ha1 settle back to normal. of when most the commodity is Reverend the pope to install ths per cent GRANT? TWELVE The British attitude Is that the mat-t- Patrick Joseph Hayes gs archbishop of offered for ts5ln and conaumrion and of first. Importance la to remove .New York at BL Patricks cathedral content of all limiting the alcohol ALIENS PAROLE tne cause of quarfpls between the bel- in Fifth avenue next Wednesday, it brewed beverages after May t to 2 la cent It claimed that beer Con- , ligerents and let the detailed settle- was announced today miral Mllllam Taylor, clilef of the per WASHINGTON March 15 ment follow. Paroles tainlng 2 4 per cent alcohol is not all that It is necessary te j naval bureau of construction and Te- -; Intoxicating, and that Congress gave vqcre granted by Secy of Labor W ilsorr . specify, in the prelim-inar- y 12 aliens of the to no for the of 54 hfttlthl today cent announced group authority per that the palr compact the German BveUi dhe origin of navy nflict lt wa would be ready totoday i sent to New York from the west recolonies js that, regarding attempt the flight la,lon- Germany shall not get atated. under cently lliem.baek. There la a disposition that. Another subcommittee which has by heavier than air craft across the suohGiucstlons should not be allowed.' 41 V riave - drat not belleve that Great Britain Ivliled customs of war has also submitted lttwln beat uYacroti he said, "if the tJhsrftofaTSOmpsctno applications for reopen!nff of hear . come under the league of were pndins report and propod that the nowerq attempt Is mads with heavl "Archduke. Ferdinand1 government and the final.tjeaty should than establish a high tribunal which ait1 craft. should not, in the exercise of Its. CAMP stlRRMAN. Ohio. March 15 Prosecution of Those UNITS ASSIGNED criminal Jurisdiction be blocked by a " " " n Intelligence! officers at Camp a v considerations of rank. took the deposition today of FOR EARLY CONVOY For War It was The commission. announced. Responsible. .... Private Frank Hobel, an Austrian, of Is considering these reports. The navy has four Lorain, O.. concerning a statement coming week. he said to havelinade to another private flying boats of the NC-- l type and work Fr,ll5r March 14 A Kub . WASHINGTON, March IS Units on these is almost completed. of the commission on re- -, t has that he was pn of three Austrians NStiSns Neutral Many not yet been decided whether all four who assassinated Archduke Ferdinand announced todaytoby the war idepart-pien-in- t onsibility for the wr reported to-i- y early convoy be sent over at the same time, but! of Austria in A914, preclpUaOng ths cluded.assigned that strictly and technically, trim-a- l Accept Invitations will I believe that more than , one win world war. l'fcth regiment of prosecutions of those w ho brought The engineers, start This will Insure against total1 According to Hobels story, his mout the struggle were "anomalous s hospitals. Nos. 14, 44, 46, 56. 72, PARIS, Friday, -- March 14 The inshould one or two break r gave him 130 to flee from Austria base sod unnecessary 94 and 116. army ambdliyiee service according to an of- - vitation sent by the conference down. , j after the assassination He went section numbers 617. 5S2, 539 551 this eveejto neutral states' to participate in a l ine Tavlor said that he was to Constantinople and laterthen to 'New .558, 592. 592, 628. 630 and 641, '409th added- - however, that t discussion of the league of nations has notAdmiral certain p whether a trip York, landingtn this country In Octo- telegraph conference "might adopts brought response from Switzerland, would be convalescent ber. 19145v' He was working In the camps Nos battalion; attempted li mu and 6, aero quadrons 'hvatures and even create 1 HMland, Denmark. Norway and . break It Into two hops," shipyards at Lorain when he was 96, 102. 496, 497 and 1.105, 115th to deal with those who! den. These countries have forwarded he "We may field paid, "and this will entail use drafted and. token to Camp Sherman ! Signal battalion, statements on their view to the secre- - of airplane motherships, il the rhl'"' I10 war companies vessels. He is bow in the hospital suffering Non. 305, 327 and bakery hosand field 394, suncoinnittee roCer-c- d jvidence tary of the conference, equipped with oil, 'gasoline and fooV from tuberculosis. . , pital No. 43. a bd , s "Moj-mon- n COBLFVZ Fridaj March 14 (By The Aawuntrd Press ) Gen. John J Pershing had his first sight this morning of American troops in combat formation on Gorman soli On aAUO-ee- re plateau on the east bank of the Rhine, overlooking Coblenz and the winding river, he inspected the jpeeond dlvi-noand presented m?ire than 80 decorations He later reviewed the division Mounted on a dappled-gra- y cavalry horse, which was presented to Brig Gen Uohn Hines, commander of the third army corps by the British mission, Gen Pershing insjtected the supply trains, ammunition units and motorized artillerj and then passed on to the Infantry The commander-in-chie- f walked along the lines of soldiers, questioning company commanders in reference to conditions generally. He talked to scores of doughboys who wore wound stripes, inquiring if they had fully recovered, and askfng others if they wanted, to go home Without exception, they were eager to return to America as soon aa possible lot family and business rea so n h u (ver re per? They 1512. to serve a long as it is necessary for the United States to keep an army In Europe. At the head of the line of those receiving decoratioaa and Jor the outranking two generals, was Scrgt Louis an Israel of Newark, N J , whose mother U living in Holland He waa given the Congressional medal of honor. During the battle of Yhe Argonnephe crossed the Metise. fell into a German trap, escaped and again crossed the river with vein able Information aa to the enemy forces. MaJ Gen John A. Lejuene, commander of the second division, waa given the distinguished service medal and IWcelved the Insignia of commander of the French Legion of Honor . Brie Gen. , W. C Neville, comu mander of the marine brigade at wood, was decorated with the service medal. Seventy-eigsoldiers received distinquiahed service crosses .The plateau where the review took place was used for years by the eighth German army corps for the same pur- ferity-irrTTTrt- Germany to Turn Over Mer chant Ships and German-Owne- d Securities in Pay- ment. BRUSSELS, Friday, March If. The German delegates to the conference here regarding thh , taking over by the Allies of the German mercantile fleet an 1 the provisioning of Germany today definitely accepted the conditions imposed by the Allies, BRUSSELS, Thursday, March 1S.F A monthly ration for Germany of 870,000 tons of foodstuffs was fixed . -by the Allied commission witch la here conferring with a Germaa gallon as to the turning over of Ger- man merchant shipping agd German- owned securities in payment for food Shipments. u BERLIN, Tuesday, March 11. (By the Associated Press ) . Germany ox- pected that the Allies will provide food supplies until Aug 15. which la the earliest possible date that, flour can be from this years harvest y counted upon, said of State von Braun today before v he Wilt leaving for InBrussels, where with an take part negotiations tft food Allied commission relative over ot shipraenta and the turninguae of the , German shipping for the Entente nations Herr von Braun said Germany would oak for 1,400,000 tons of gnun and a mdnthiy Importation of 100,000 tons of pork and fats. In addition to condensed milk,1 rice' oatmeal - and other commodities required particu- Ikrly for Invalida, infanta and Kospt- tais. He estimated the cost of these shipments at five billion marks. 4t is a matter of great Importance, he said, that food should srrive at the earliest possible moment and that the total, anumipt b knouli, so that the government coaid adjust rations until the nekt harvest. s -- tl g, mo-me- nt Bishop Bentley. Is Held Prisoner ly President Wilson . Problems Into Plunges Ev-me- nt ! I e er 1 J nt - 1 v tTJ-tc- ''f some'-change- e to-b- e. I. Ue lf i A i Bel-lea- ht 1 J ! ,i J -- , ft I, f i ,1 J, f T J, , I ! I y f ' ' j' c J 1 . $ I ,.j .Jr. t 1 1- -2 ..I. , ' J ! - ? . , i ' I , ' , fs r i h r p -- - -- w i i I na-uo- HOLLANDIA BRINGS BACK U. S. TROOPS NEW YORK, March , 1 fath-rallu- re lwd non-sto- P-- , .L, l.l ry S t t The signal fcorps complete, 1 1 officers and 477 men; mobile hospital No 101, eight officers and 43 men for Cpip Grant and Dodge. . her-ma- ( 15 DEMOBILIZES, WASHINGTON. Starch 15 War savings stamps were sold tn January at the rafe of 45 cents for every person ip the United States with total sales of $49,399 00(1, according to report fiom headquarters today. Ver-- 1 mont led In per capita sales with $1 2aMor a total of $438,000 ( tptitl of $519,000 Moritanjalth Srae second, "Jtli",spd $1.05 per.oapite.l number, Utah with a total of $412 000 and 94 C41MB6 WASHINGTON, March cers and men demobilized 1.41 9, 38$, th war department announced tqday, 88,774 being lit 'the commissioned grades. Discharge haa Owen ordered for a total of 1.678 500. Officer applying for reserve commis. sions total 25,798. -- per capita was third Idaho was fifth with a per capita of git while South Dakdta, Oregon and Colorado ranked sixth, seventh and eighth with per capita of 81, 75, and tt. .New York stats was last with a (per capita of 15 cents. ! j I 1 er .... ' " t ash-ingt- - s ,s f, -- Thls afternoon Gen Pershing inspected and reviewed the first division which he helped to organize in for service in Prance He pre- Unrest Prevails sented a number of decorations, In Westphalia among them being a distinguished service medal for Brig Gen A J LONDON. March IS "Acute an- commander of the division rest prevails In the whole Westphalian ipdustrial region and it probably will be necessary to enlarge the British DID NOT ASK bridgehead in that direction, says aWILSON TO ACT dispatch to The Mull from its oorrespendent with the British armys AS ARBITRATOR The German province of Westphalia s one of the most important indps--tri- il 15. Ecuador March GUA1AQ11L, districts tn Europe H hag one It was othciaily announced todavof the richest coal fields fJn the world that the report that Ecuador has and the iron industry there has been asked President Wilson tot act as ar- developed on a vast scale. bitrator in her boundary dispute with leru was entirely without foundation It Is explained that such a step might CHRISTIANS INCITED be considered as seriously compromisKOREAN ACTIVITY ing the. the Ecuadorean congress tefore it had had a chance to pass upon the league' HONOLULU, T. H. March 15. The of nations project. Korean actitiiv In behalf of the inof that countrv was In- A Purls dispatch March 10 reported dependence b Christians. accordng- to ths-- foreign mvn ietet f Ecoad or cjblecraJn.vta tbe Appu.UJ, requested -President Wilson to .newapwper hew.bttate-'Xhe situa- The cablegram . boundary dispute ffThe expectation tion in Korea adds thatis the subsiding gradually In Paris, hbWevcr,, it w'as said Was that President Wilson would prefer toiand, ib8M.nanyuIe!,deJ'8 ln the ,rTet Tested by submit the question to the league of --"prls,ln Japanese. nation , j. Under-Secretar- fir-la- by-th- 'j" AMERICAN British Minister Who Will Be Named Ambassador taU. S. ' G |