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Show SOUTH CACHE COURIER. HYRUM, UTAH Dont trifle with it s dangerous. Irunin Railroad station agents have been granted by Director General McAdoo a general wage increase of $25 per month above the rate prevailing last January with a minimum of $95 per month. Eight hours is to be considered a days DOWN RED FLAG The News Happenings of Seven Days Paragraphed Leaders of the National Womans party are perfecting plans for the final VANGUARD OF FORCES WATCH drive to win over the one vote necesHUNS AS THEY START ON sary to pass the suffrage amendment HOMEWARD MARCH. through the senate before the present d ... artillery. Permanent control of all radio "communication through acquisition and operation by the navy department of all shore wireless stations in the United States used for commercial purposes is planned by the administration, under a bill now before con- ' gress. William Gibbs McAdoo, secretary of railthe treasury, director general roads and often discussed as one of the presidential possibilities of 1920, has resigned his offices to return to President Wilson private business. has accepted his resignation. Mr. McAdoo will give up the treasury portfolio as soon as a successor has been selected. Continuation of the national war labor board until the peace treaty has been signed is highly desirable, Secretary .Wilson has1 informed joint Chairmen William H. Taft and Frank P. Walsh in a letter in answer to their request that the board be discontinued as soon as awards have been made in the labor cases pending. Investigation of the alleged disloyal speech of Senator La Follette of' St, Paul more than a year ago was abandoned by the senate elections committee on a vote of 9 to 2. FOREIGN. Several thousand American soldiers sailed for home froki Liverpool on Saturday on the the liners Lapland and Minnehaha. It was a stirring scene as the men marched from the railway station and local camps to the landing Francisco. stage, amid the rousing cheers from DOMESTIC. the throngs of people along the streets', Governors' of eight southern cotton A Helsingfors newspaper prints an states have signed a proclamation urg- account of a terrific Bolshevik ing farmers, merchants, bankers and massacre at Petrograd. Five hundred businessmen to form organizations and former officers were reported marked hold the 1918 coton crop for not less for and murder, foreigners returning than 35 cents a pound, middling basis, from the interior of Russia were said Total American casualties to Novem to be in grave danger. j ber 11, when hostilities ceased were perTwo hundred and seventy-eigh- t 236,117. This includes killed and died sons have been affected the de by of wounds, died of disease, unclassified thronement or abdication of ruling deaths, wounded, .prisoners and miss houses in Germany, according to the ing. Zeitung am Mittag of Berlin. Of this Major General William Crozier, com number thirty-thre- e were of the royal mander of the department of the north Prussian house and thirty-nin- e of the east and former chief of ordnance, an Bavarian reigning family. nounced Sunday at Boston that he had any wish to intervene in Disavowing resigned from the army and that the American criticism of the visit of resignation had been accepted, effec President Wilson to Paris, the London tive January 1. After forty-twyears Times says that lffs presence in Paris of hard work In the army General is much desired. ' Crozier said he felt he was entitled Subscriptions to the American fourth to a rest. loan in Japan reached a total Alaska is looking forward to a new Liberty of $800,000. American residents or north beginning next travelers' constituted stampede practically the enspring, according to northerners who tire number of subscribers. ' are spending their winters at. Seattle, The German frontier was crossed at Already plans are being made for plac- several places Sunday by American ing returned soldiers and sailors on signal corps units and ambulance the soil of the northern territory. workers. Short trips were made into A majority of the nations railroads Rhenish Prussia, where the inhabitplan to restore to employees who en- ants are reported to have shown the tered military and naval service the Americans every consideration. seniority rights which they sacrificed William Holienzollern, the former when they left the roads employment German emperor, has not left the Henry Ford has announced his re grounds of Amerongen castle since he in tirement .from active participation was interned there, Dutch newspapers the management of the Ford Motor say. company, complete control of the Ford In the presence of Sir Eric Geddes interest in the company to be taken lord of the admiralty, twenty first Edsel. over by his son, more German surrenThe American expeditionary forces eight imwas This dered most the Sunday. will have all sick, wounded and conto Gerhaul down flotilla the posing the in back valescent American soldiers far. It included several United States' within two months. The man flag thus submarines and four of the very large number of hospitals in France has been one being nearly 350 feet cruiser type, the reduced afready by considerably long. medical corps. From a special investigation in west Spread of Bolshevik doctrines in the era carewatched been Germany, the correspondent of the United States has Mail at The Hague has ascer of Daily agents justice fully by department ' with a view to undertaking prosecu- tained there is considerable hostility sethe and his former into emperor against tions If the agitation develops' son. The eldest declare. correspondent say officials dition, Removal of the war censorship re- after William Ilohenzollern entered striction relating to publication of Holland a thousand German soliders articles' on naval matters was an- arrived at the frontier and demanded nounced Thursday by E. J. Chambers, they be allowed to pursue and kill him, chief press censor for Canada. Th? They were turned back by Dutch frontier guards. cable censorship continues. Entente troops are marching on Kiev, Regulations limiting the amount. of consumers according to advices to newspapers in bituminous coul stored by General Skoropadskl, were lifted on November 21 by Fuel Switzerland. Administrator Garfield in conformity Ukrainian dictator, has surrendered, with the cancellation by the war indus- and General Denikine, leader of forces, has been named his tries board of its preference list. Any industry or domestic consumer may successor, with the consent of the nations, it is said. Slow store all the bituminous desired. two-third- o ts anti-Bolshev- ist en-te- nt box of hand a CASCARA . INTERMOUNTAIN. The quorum of twelve apostles has unanimously sustained Heber J. Grant as president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-daSaints. President Grant announced that he had chosen Anthon II. Lund and Charles W. Pen rose as his first and second counselors, respectively. Two Seattle shipyard unions, with about 22,000 members, it became known Saturday, have voted to strike December 9 as a protest against the execution of Thomas J. Mooney, Sap Fran cisco, convicted of murdering a victim of a bomb explosion. Out of all the millions spent by the war department in the purchase of army supplies during the war, only a very small sum was spent in the west, barely more than $12,000,000 in all, and s of this total was spent in the state of Washington. Colorados first woman rural mail carrier, Mrs. Mattie E. Ault of Ken driek, won that distinction by defeating her husband, E. E. Ault, and two other candidates in competitive examinations held to determine who would get the appointment. Six women were on a jury at Seattle, which found Alvin Adams, soldier drafted from Kansas City, guilty of murdering M. It. Raymer, an automobile driver, near Redmond, Wash., last June. None the less impressive because they were announced to be of a private nature, funeral services for Joseph F. Smith, late president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints, were held at Salt Lake City, November 22, during the noon hour. James F. Delaney, express' messen ger, accused of conspiring with John M. Browning of Ogden, Utah; J. H. DeVine and Joseph Eccles, Ogden attorneys and others, to ship large quantities of whiskey into Utah, a prohi bition state, pleaded guilty in the United States district court- - at San y congress ends. Resolutions opposing any extension of credit by American banks to Germany without the depositors consent were adopted at New York by the boycott committee of the National Defense , society. a WASHINGTON. Demobilization of the American expeditionary forces already in progress with the movement homeward of sick and wounded, will be hastened by the return at an early date of" eight "divisions of national guard and national army troops, eight regiments of coast artillery and two brigades of field MA SAILORS AND SOLDIERS, RINES BREAK UP BOLSHEVIK MEETING IN NEW YORK. cold She?"" Keep always at work. a demolish Barriers Which Guarded the Break Through Cordon of Police and Attack International Socialists Old German Front East of Ver-- . Who Were Expounding Hun Soldiers Revolt Against Brutal Officers. dun Paris. The German frontier was crossed at several places Sunday by American signal corps units and ambulance workers. Short trips were made into Rhenish Prussia, where the inhabitants are reported to have shown the Americans every consideration. American forces have completed demolishing barriers which guarded the old German front east of Verdun, consisting of reinforced concrete pillars stretching along the old front for two miles. At just at the edge of the village, the' Americans encountered tank barriers, some of which A few were only half completed. blasts of dynamite soon put them out of commission. At Etain the Germans had barriers of logs chained together on four wheels, the logs being movable like a gate.- - On these barriers the Germans had installed ingenious devices to remove the wheels from beneath the logs which would then drop across the road at the main road 'entrance This log barrier was into Etain. western at entrance, the logs the just in as a check the event that acting the mines failed to destroy the bridge. The American forces resting Sunday along the German frontier spent their spare time at various points watching the Germans opposite them. In numerous instances the Germans waved farewell when their detachments started on their homeward march. Reports of rioting continue to reach American headquarters from various One report was to the efsources. fect that a German colonel had been dragged from his horse by soldiers and beaten sevr . Before crosmiA -- from Luxemburg many of the privates told the Luxem-burgethat when they reached Gerdecline to obey their many officers, do as they pleased, and it taken to task by their officers, trouble would result. Mars-La-Tou- r, rs they-woul- d KAISER HOARDED Standard cold remedy for 20 years in . i, form safe, no breaks In 24 hour relievesopiatesin 3 u1014 back if it fails. The genuine box hnl n'olL0'' with Mr. Hilla picture. At All DriStorea Bolshevik Doctrines. FOOD. New sailors cordon Square York. Hundred's of soldiers, and marines broke through a of police surrounding Madison Monday night and attacked socialists who had attended a mass meeting where Bolshevik kFree illustrated bookSSI doctrines were expounded. The men WO DEMAND in DENVffll for all soar western raw and women leaving the hall broke and Wlldeatsbnng bictnoncyhers I fled as the men in uniform charged Denver closest and best marlst on earth for Western Trapps,, I were the into but police, past pursued bur Shippers. STEPHENS - OfandDBPVBt is tn largest the side streets in all directions. buyer of Western Kjw uruin I no on The attack the socialists came to $10 on express or r uacacui luuaysi at the close of a meeting which threatlivery shipment peisonelly priced by a member of the urn. ened from the moment it began to at Prices D Traps sella Factory break into a riot. It was called osSTEPHENS traps, animal baits all aapnheB at rock tensibly to protest against the execuDand trappera prices. Write today for Big Illustrated Trap Catalog tion of Thomas J. Mooney, but Scott Guido, Fur Price Lit, fl ALL FREE. II Trappers andBhipping Tags Nearing, who presided, and the other A. STEPHENS CO. 1S2 Stephen Dtdg. speakers devoted most of their attenU. S. A. Colorado. Danvor, tion to pleas for the release of political offenders. Several men and women were arrestFARKES'S" ed for displaying red flags smuggled Hair balsam ..A toilet preparation of merit into the Garden in defiance of an edict Helps to eradicate daadraO, For Restoring Colored by Mayor Hylan. Large numbers of BeautrtoGrayorFadedHair men in uniform entered the building at Drrpswts, before the doors were locked with the avowed determination of preventing at- RIGHT MAN FOR THE PUCE tacks upon the government. They were restrained with difficulty by poMade by Town Marshal, Up lice and detectives from making an lt Argument for Would Seem on the stage. Scores of fist fights Hard to Beat. were interrupted by officers. Soldiers, sailors and marines then Mister Mayor and gentlemen," bgathered and, breaking through the egan Lafe Lazzenberry, the police guard, drove the socialists from sleuth, addressing the governing board the meeting place. of the municipality of Grudge, I am Mounted police, reinfored by auto- a candidate for reappointment to the mobile loads of reserves, rushed from position of city marshal of our prevery station house within a radius ogressive little burg. As you know, of miles, struggled valiantly to clear from time immaterial it has been the the Square, but made little progress. favorite pastime of the bullies and Soldiers and sailors, thoroughly anof all small towns to whip the sports gered by what they considered an in- marshal. During my more or less sidious attack on the flag they had checkered career in that capacity I sworn to defend, paid little attention have been licked, In round numbers, by to blows from night sticks. They were about ambitious poogeffist in the every bent on getting revenge, from the in- community. After a feller has licked ternationalists, and many of them suc- the marshal a time or two it grows ceeded.' sorter tame to him and he gives it up and turns his talons to something else. WAR WORK DRIVE OVER. So I respectfully reckon, gents, that ! am the logical candidate. A new man Largest Sum Ever Raised as Gift in would have to go through all that, but I History of World. having met my Waterloo so often New York. Total subscriptions to have- about had my quoter, and should Kansas City the United War Work campaign were be practically immune. $203,179,038, or $32,679,038 in excess or Star. the amount originally asked by the seven war relief organizations for their Up to the Fish. work during demobilization of the Game Warden Hey, kid, dont yw army and navy, according to an offi- know this aint the season for trout? cial announcement Monday by the naSmall Boy (fishing) Sure, hut vhen tional campaign committee. This is the It Is the season there ain't any around, a lot largest sum ever raised as an outright and when It aint, theres always obey to goin in fish the history of the world. aint of them. If the gift Life. Boys to either. the I According committee, every the rules, aint state in the union, wTith the exception the of Pennsylvania and Minnesota, exThe most disgusting sight in hyscoundrel ceeded its quota and confidence was ex- world is a natural-borpressed that these states will be over ing to be good. the top when returns from Philadelphia" and Minneapolis are in. furs- V b commission-Bave- oraauQ DE. UHHBHDE10 as-su- While Subjects Were Starving He Had Plenty of Provisions. Amsterdam. "How Wilhelm held out, is the title of an article in the Frankfort Volks Stimme by Wilhelm Carle, a socialist, who discovered the hoards of provisions which the former emperor had in his Berlin palace. The quantity, the writer says, exIn large ceeded all expectations. white-tilerooms was everything, literally everything one can imagine in foodstuffs. It is inconceivable that after four years of waF such huge quan titles could be hoarded. There was meat and game in cold storage, salted provisions in large cases, white meal in sacks piled to the roof, thousands of eggs, gigantic boxes filled with tea, cofCHILE AND PERU AT OUTS. fee, chocolate, lard, jelly and jam ; hundreds of sugar ' loaves and endless stacks of peas, beans, dried fruits and South American Governments Decide to Withdraw Consuls. biscuits. Their value amounts to several hundred thousand marks. Lima, Peru. It is officially anThese hoarded foodstuffs cannot nounced that Peru has withdrawn her be better used than to be preserved as consuls from Chile as a result of the a lasting memorial to our posterity renewal of n rioting in which should see how, while millions in Iquique and Antofagasta. Germany starved, those 'elected by the A Santiago, Chile, dispatch angrace of God held out. nounces that the Chilean government has decided-twithdraw its consuls in TOTAL AMERICAN CASUALTIES. Peru, in order to avoid untoward incidents which might take place in case in Killed, Died of Disease, of outbreaks in Peru and Chile. - d IheworlS aS - n Thousands erf undernourished , 'anti-Peruvia- people have found ihaf Wounded, 236,117. Washington. The American casualties to November 11, when' hostilities ceased, were 236,117. This includes, General March says, killed and died of wounds, died of disease, unclassified deaths wounded, prisoners and missing. Killed and died of wounds 36,154, Died of disease 14,811. Deaths unclassified 2204. Wounded 179,625. Prisoners 2163. Missing 1160. Total 236,117. I Wholesale Killing of Jews. Reports of wholesale slaughter in pogroms against Jews a Brzesko, Galicia, where cellars are reported filled with bodies and many Jews attempting flight have been shot down in tire streets were received from Copenhagen by the Zionist organization of America. New York. Limit Revenue to Four Billion. Washington. By a strict party vote, the senate finance committee decided to recommend that the yield from the 1920 revenue bill be limited to The Democratic members, who voted for the amount suggested by Secretary McAdoo, were opposed by the seven Republicans. $4,000,-000,00- 0. Hollanders Howl at Hun Prince. Amsterdam. When the former Ger man crown prince arrived at the Zuy-deZee fishing town of Enkhuyzen, he received a different welcome than he encountered elsewhere in Holland. As he descended from the rail way car with a swaggering gait and wearing a fur coat, howls' of execration arose from the thousands gathered outside the station gates. The outburst of hostilliwr seemed to perturb him somewhat. ) f Vail Becomes Burlesons Adviser. Theodore S. Vail, Washington. president of the American Telephone & Telegraph company, is to become the personal adviser of Postmaster General Burleson in the organization of telephone, telegraph and cable systems pnder government control. food -- a saenxiT,c blend of nourishing cereals helps wonderfully in buildin hearth an V happiness Needs no |