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Show QREEN RIVER DI8PAT0H, QREEN RIVER, UTAH ! 0 Conflicting Thoughts 0 Something New EackJsyyMwlDlMlasMthhf to err case. New gift differ ga Mna OVERTHROW OF THE REPUBLIC THROUGH BLOODY REVOLU- TION PLANNED BY REDS. Establishment of Bolshevist Qovern-meIs Object of I. W. W., Soeialists and Radical Anarchists, Declares Solicitor Lamar. nt Mall mutter seised Washington. since Hie signing of the armistice has disclosed that the L W. W, anarchists, radical socialists and others are perfecting an amalgamation, which has for Its object the overthrow of the American through a government bloody revolution and the establishment of a Bolshevik republic, according to a memorandum sent to the senate propaganda committee by Solicitor Lamar of the postoffice department The memorandum was made public Holiday by the committee, and Chairman Overman said It would be read Into the record. Declaring that In Bolshevism the radlcul elements of the country hud for the first time found a common cause uxin which they can unite, Hr. Lninur said his information allowed that propaganda against the government was being conducted with great regularity and that the magnitude could be measured by the bold and outspoken statements found In the literature. Accompanying his memorandum were several hundred excerpts from mall matter allowing the trend of tlie propaganda. These will be made public later. Particular reference was made by the solicitor to the activity of the dissatisfied foreign element of the country, but he said perhaps the I. W. W. was the most active In the dissemination of the propaganda because It has ut Its comnuind a large field force known as recruiting agents, subscription agents, etc., who work unceasingly in the furtherance of the 'cause.' TROOPS ACTUALLY PARTICIPAT. ING IN FIGHTING NUMBERED NORMAL LEVELS OF PRICES AND WAGES 80UGHT BY THE U. 8. COMMERCE COMMITTEE. Officers and Mon Discharged to Data v Arc 1,361,528. Battle Casualties ' of American Army in Franco Totaled 240,197. WuKlilngtMi. Completion of the personnel of the Industrial board of the department of commerce, together with Washington. American troops actually participating in engagements against the enemy numbered LS90.000 men. General March announced the figures on March 8, allowing that comprised divisional troops and divisional replacements ; 240,000 corps and army troops, and 50,000 service of supply troops. Demobilization reports made public by General March showed 1,361,-52- 8 officers and men discharged to date, while the number ordered released had reached 1,618,500. Battle casualties of the American army In FftMice, aa shown by revised divisional records announced by General March, totaled 240,197. These Include killed In action, wounded, misting In action and prisoners. There probably will be some slight further revision as final nqiorts are received. Statistics compiled by the war department show that from the date oj die entry of tlie United States Into the war ,to February 21, 1919, there were 339 suicides In the army. Of these, 193 occurred In the United States and 146 overseas. In making this total public, General March pointed out that it was' far below the average per thousand in civil life during the years of Hospital records from the expeditionary forces. General March Mild, allowed 81,231 patients on February 21, a reduction from 112,217 since tlie armistice was signed.' the plans of tlie bourd for hastening the return of prices and wages to a normal level, was announced Sunday through the council of national defense: of Associated with George N. Moline, lll a former member of the war Industries board, as chairman of the new organization, are Samuel T. Bush of Columbus, O. ; Anthony Carnl-nett- l, commissioner of Immigration; Thomas K. Glenn of Atlants, Ga. ; George 11. James of Memphis, Tenn. ; T. C. Powell of Cincinnati and William M. IUtter of West Virginia. To Fix Prico Levels. The chief purpose of the new board, it was announced. Is to bring about the operation of the laws of supply and demand, Interfered with by the process of war. To this end conferences will be held with representatives of the chiefs of Industries to decide on prices to be offered to the nation as the approved Judgment oh a price scale low enough to encourage buying and the resumption of normal activities.'' As soon aa a stable and wholesome scale of prices la achieved, said the announcement, "the cost of living will have so far beea reduced as to create automatically reductions In the price of lHbor without Interfering with American standards and Ideals for the treatment and living conditions of labor and thus the last Inflating element will have been withdrawn from prices. It la believed that Industries will agree that the cost of living must be FIXED. GERMAN ARMY-LIMIsubstantially reduced before labor should be asked to accept lower wages, Allied War Council 8ets 100,000 Men as and thus Industry should stand the Maximum. first shock of readjustment. Paris. Definite steps to put forever beyond the liojie of Red Cross to Extend Activities. New York. Plans for organization military domination ovey the world were taken Honday by the su- of an International Bed Cross, to be preme war council, with Clcmcuceau led by the American Bed Cross In a presiding, Lloyd George present and great peacetime campaign to prevent Secretary Innsing and Colonel House disease, relieve suffering and make .the world wlmt the war was fought representing the United States. The kfixer's great f rmies are to he yor a better plate to Hvl in, wbb reduced to a mere police force and outlined by Dr. Livingston Farrand, oilier steps severer than have been con- newly appointed chairman of the central committee of the American Bed templated were provided for. Tli German government must accept them Cross, at a conference of Atlantic or take the consequences. division chapter delegates here SaturA a result of the discussion It was day. agreed to fix the strength at 100,000, Will Keep Some Drafted Mon. less than half the original figure recommended under the terms as laid Washington. Betentlon within he down by the allies. Germany must army of about 200,000 men, obtained raise this force by voluntary enlist- through tlie drafts and by transfer ment. from tlie national guard, Is planned by the war department In building up a GET TA8TE OF OWN MEDICINE temporary military establishment of the nation. This was definitely innde Hu8 known Saturduy by General March, Red Terror In Germany Chief of staff. Toll of Life, and were killed London. Many Hungary Has Volunteer Army. wnundel is eeriou fighting which The Hungarian governBu(lr-st- , On Saturday, ment has abolished the old army organat Halle, Germany, according to a Copenhagen dispatch to ization. A volunteer army of six diviSpartacans are sions has been formed. the Central News. said to have drowned many students and officers In the river there, and It F. B. HARRISON Is reported that there was a general pillage in the parts of the city where he fighting took place. Government troops eventually gained the mastery, it Is said. TALY IS WARNED ' Ger-man- y Gas Barred From Farms. Washington. Poisonous gas developed in war cannot he used to clear American farms of Insects and rodent pests. Secretary Lane has decided after Investigation. Experience showed that while pests were killed, there wits danger of the pis spreading and destroying livestock and iiersons living near by, In cose the wind should carry the fumes. Channel Tube to be Reality. dream of London. The decades-oltunnel connecting a England and France Is to become a reality at last Bonar Law, chancellor of the exchequer announced in the house of commons Monday that the government was considering immediate Inception of the construction of the tunnel and proposed to employ demobilised soldiers In the work. cross-chann- 8partacans Sentenced to Death. London. A great number of Sparta-can- s were taken prisoner In the fighting In the center of Berlin on March 7, and will he sentenced to death, according to an Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Copenhagen. TO LIFT FOOD BAN TO 6IVE UP SKIPS TOLD VERY PLAINLY THAT USE OF HUN SHIPPING ON SHE MUST END THE BLOCKADE BASIS DENIED THE . RENTAL AGAINST 8LAVIC STATES. BIG POWERS. IS Much Unnocaseary Suffering Haa Bean Cauaad by Action of Italy In Delaying Shipments, la Charged by Officials. Washington. Italy haa been warned that by the American government unIn move- A Demand la Made for a Definite Assurance of Ample Supply of Foodstuffs for Teutons Before 8hlpe Are Released. Paris. It was announced here on March 7 that Germany had refused the proposition for the use of her merchant ships by the allies, made to her delegates at Spa, the armistice commission's headquarters. la made by The the Germans that they will release the German shipping desired In return for a definite assurance that enough food will be sent Into Germany to enable the government to withstand the Bolshevik movement When the allied commission went to Spa It was believed that the release of the ships waa merely a question of days. It waa proposed to the Germans that In return for the use of the ships a rental be paid, this to be entered to their credit against tlielr.food. account. The Germans, however, replied that thlp would be Inadequate and that iie must be a guarantee of a steady, No RRtArupfod I supply of food. country was la position to supply this food, under the German conditions, so the question of credit remains unsettled. The disagreement over the ships began In January, when the armistice commission of the allies and the Germans met at Treves and the Germans explained they had not realized that the ships would be required under tlie armistice terms for food carrying because of the action of the American congress In declaring tlmt none of tlu for food 100,000,000 appropriation should go to supply Germany. If the German proposal 1h agreed to, Hie active agent In the food supply must be the United States. ' less she puts an end to delays ments of relief supplies to the newly and Czechoestablished slovak states, steps will be taken. to cut off the flow of American foodstuffs to Italy. It waa stated Thursday In an authoritative quarter that the Italian government had caused Intolerable conditions by the blockade she haa Imposed countries and agulnst tlie which operates also af dns't the Czechoslovaks. The blockade haa not been wholly effective, but many delays have been caused, resulting often in holding up supplies, the need of which was desperate. Reports from Paris of the existence of chaotic conditions because of the blockade have not been confirmed here, but It la known that much unnecessary suffering haa been caused by Italy. New? from Pkris that repregentatlsBE of Great Britain and France were outspoken in their condemnation of the attitude of Italy had been cabled to the United States, but the action of the American government In sending its warning to Italy was taken before that news came. No reply haa yet been made by the Italian government. The British and French delegates at Paris have been bitterly outspoken in the supreme war council and the economic council In criticism of the food blockade which the Italian government Is maintaining- against Dalmatia, Bosnia, Herzegovina, Croatia and Slovenia. The new democracies built out of the Old Awtr inn empire are relied upon by the entente aa a the Bolshevik Anarchists Bomb Allied Camp. protection against wave, and the food shortage in them Archangel. The BolslievikI took adla creating chaos. vantage on Saturday of the first dear day with the thermometer above the DISCUSS DISARMAMENT PLAN. freezing point by attempting to bomb the American positions on the Yaga Military and Moral Problems Discussed from an airplane. The machine waa at Parle Conference. tlie first one observed to bear the new ' naval and red The Paris. army Identification mark, a military, red star. The bombs fell withaerial terms of German disarmament ' were before the council of the great out causing any damage. Premier with on Thursday, powers CAPT. HUGO SUNSTEDT Lloyd George, Marshal Foch and the full membership of the war council present. Most of the time was given to the naval terras, which were largely settled with several features still reserved, Including the destruction of the large German ships. Premier Lloyd George was disposed to have England take part of these ships, but he yielded this view when shown that it would, involve an Increased naval building program In the United States. Jugo-Slova- k counter-propositio- Jugo-8lova- k sup-prei- - - F. B. Harrison, who has been gov- IAMAIEI Noted Sportsman Dead. York. Martin Julian, who managed and seconded Ills brother-in-lathe late Bob Fitzsimmons, when he won the heavyweight championship from James J. Corbett at Carson City CapL Hugo Sunstedt la planning to twenty-tw- o years ago, died at his home pilot across the Atlantic a giant weaIn Brooklyn, March 7, after a brief pons that haa boon assembled at Bay- ' - onne, N. J. FROZEI, LEAKY, RADIATORS Wc pay trampo Italian on way. HaSamsd Ukanaw. ACKTYLINX WELDING is all Ua bianetaa. Wa aava yon Una and boost. H.&E. Radiator IWtldiBfCB. BBS Utaa BiaafaH I aha CMy.Utafc USE OF PHONETIC SPELLING Has ena Advanced Why It Would Be Well If Ite Study Should Be Made More QeneraL Phonetics la Its broadest sente la ff study of the whole range of sounds, articulate: musical and otherwise. In Its restricted sense It Is confined to articulate aonnda of human speech. Even In this restricted sense It la stilk broad enough to Include the subject the acoustic or mechanical side sad the anthropological or philological stdei It may discuss simply the speech vibrations that canse any sensations on the human ears, sr It may Include an Investigation of the manner and causes of the change tbs articulate aonnda of a language undergo as It develops. Tbe study of phonetics la widely advocated by philologists and by many of the most thoughtful teachers for three reasons: (1) That parsons may apeak tongue correctly through thus learning to know the proper valuation of lta sounds; (2) that they may learn successfully the pronunciation of other languages, to which a knowledge of thalr own la the beat Introduction; (8) that those who wish to study philology may have a key to that science. And the sounds of our bus--, guage cannot be successfully studied! or explained without some use of phoj aetlc spelling. Hundreds of pheoetlcj alphabets have been proposed, hut the only one that haa made progress and bids fair to become general (naturally! with some modifications) Is that ofl the Association Internationale Phoney tlque. This alphabet took form bj tween 1885 and 1889 In proposals medq by Paul Edouard Pasty, a noted French phonetician. par-deni- er 1914-15-1- 6. their-mothe- HOOVER TO QUIT IN JULY. Declares He Will Return to Private Life. Paris. Tlat Herbert Clark Hoover, tbe American food administrator and lately appointed director general of the Interallied relief organization, Is to cease his relief work In the summer was Indicated in a statement Issued Sunday by Mr. Hoover concerning the wheat situation. He intimated also that a majority of his would return to private life. Speaklug of' various problems connected with the wheat situation,' Mr. Hoover said that they would need to be solved by someone else because neither myself nor most of the men In the food administration will be able to continue In the service of tbe government after next July. We, also, most earn a living," Mr. Hoover said. ' Food Administrator BIRD IS WORTH r PRESERVING Deplores the Threatened tinatlan af the Beautiful and Useful Upland Plover. Writer I ' The upland plover, one of the moat beneficial birds of all the winged host that once abounded In North America, has been hunted and shot to the verge of extermination, says Dumb Animals. With the passing of the passenger pigeons, which even now so many frlendi of all birds find It hard to believe pad of which a great many are not convinced, the plovers were marked for wholesale destruction. They were candidates for oblivion along with more than a score af other useful and beautiful spades that could be IU spared from our vast and valuable native fauna. There la a ray of hope that these birds may not be pursued to complete annihilation. The federal law for the protection of migratory birds makes It possible for the plover spedea to rehabilitate Itself, prodded the dosed season be fixed to continue throughout tbe year. The upland plover la a migratory bird and an insectivorous bird. Its food consists of 97 par cent of animal forma which are chiefly the worst enemies to agriculture. The federal law fixes a closed season on migratory Insectivorous birds to continue throughout tbe year with the exception of the bobolink or ricebtrd, but under the law the plover la classed as a migratory game bird and so Its fate la precarious. These birds should not be Shopmen Seek Higher Wages. Several hundred Washington. thousand rallroni) shop employees have asked the. ruilroud administration to increase'their wages about 25 per cent. Tlie board of railroad wages and working conditions hus agreed to , hear their case. American 8chool Near Paris. New York. The American Army university, the largest university In the English-speakin- g world, has been southeast of Paris, in Beanme, opened It was announced here Sunday. Fifteen thousand soldiers have enrolled s course. for a three-month- Colbys Resignation Accepted. The resignation of Washington. Balnbrldge Colby as a member of the shipping board, submitted to President Wilson several weeks ago, has been accepted. In accepting the resignation the president In a personal letter, expressed to Mr. Colby regret and praised Ills services. Americans Wed French Women. Baris. Within the last year 6000 Americans in France have married French women, according to tlie Petit Journal. Tlie brides for the most part, says the newspaper, were country girls or employees of town establishments. -- , . shot Shooting Into Space. The question of whether It would . ever be possible to shoo s projectile Into apace, that la to say entirely off the esrth, has long been the subject of discussion. Tn a detailed scientific d paper on the German gun which bombarded Parla last spring. Major J. Maltland-Addlsowriting In the Journal of the Royal Artillery, ays the requisite velocity of such a gun Is not so very 'much higher than what has already been achieved; viz a muzzle velocity of a mile per second. When we are able to Increase this to five miles per second, the projectile. If fired at a suitable angle, will travel around the earth aa a grazing satellite completing Its orbit between 17 and IE times dally. With a velocity of a bond' seven miles a second, It will move off into apace, never to return. Plotted to Kill Preeident Two years ago in South Bethlehem, Pa... s conspiracy to assassinate President Wilson and other high officials of the United 8tutes government was hutched, according to a confession niude Saturday by Mrs. Celia Fischer. New York. New ernor general of the Philippines for six years, longer than any of his predecessors held- - this position, has returned after traveling 10,000 miles n the Danish steamer Selandia, which waa under the command of hie brother, Illness. Archibald Harrison. Strike. Stevedores Thousand Twenty Former' Secretory of Navy Dead. Thousand Casualties in Berlin. New York. In sympathy with the One thousand persons Tampa, Fla. Hilary A. Herbert, London. strike of marine Workers against priGrover vate boat owners, nearly 20,000 long- were killed or wounded In the fight- secretary of the navy during died here second term, Cleveland's to shoremen quit work Monday,, refusing ing In Berlin last week, according of 85 Mr, to handle freight delivered to piers by an estimate of the casualties made by March 0, at the age feebleyearn. health for In been had Herbert news the workers. Wolff leading bureau, the boats manned by nonunion a number of years. of Germany. agency Embezzler of Million Paroled. California Endorses League Serbia Ruinsd by War. Louisville, Ky. August Itopke, who The assembly 'of the Sacramento. as described was S rhia of York. was convicted New 1910 embezzling In on Thursday California legislature comrain and Dy economic idiyslcai both an $1,400,000 from the Fidelity Trust I. Dublin, a stntlsidni. of adapted o resolution Indorsing the he which for and Louis Dr. Louisville, of pany a of nations provided was sentenced to serve a term of ten New York, Jusi returned from n health 'den of league Greece. Serbia and II shall not InvUve a surrender of of Italy, survey paroled. has !fcn years, independrace." Jugo-SIuvi- SEll IS YOU ed 8heN Shock Cases Cured. New York. Ninety-nin- e per cent of all alien shock coses In the American army In France completely recovered, according to Colonel Thomas Salmon of New York, chief medical officer In charge of such soldiers, who returned on the Leviathan. el MAKERsToF JEWELRY me mam strut Mixuucmr 4 lek Ugh BOYDPARK 1,390,000 MEN. Purpose of Board la to Bring About tho Operation of Laws of Supply and Demand Interfered With by Proceaa of War. coal M long-range- Council to Resume Negotiations. Purls. The supreme war council reached u decision Saturday night whereby the negotiations Interrupted at Spa will lie Immediately resumed at anotlier point, prolmbly somewhere In Belgium. Kills Family as Religious Sacrifice. Rioting In Wales. Casevllle, Mich. Paul Maggie, aged London. From eight to twenty-seve80, was arrest ed here after tlie finding persons are estimated to have been of the bbdles of ills aged mother and to seventy-thre- e killed and from twenty-fiv- e three children. Maggie told police wounded In rioting daring Thane they said, he killed the four officers, day and Friday at the Klmmel milis a religious sacrifice." tary camp at Bhyl, Wales. Raid Upon Anarchists. Convicted of Hoarding Food. Waterbury, Conn. Nearly 200 symMuskogee, Okla. F. H. Mayland, pathizers of the Industrial Workers of proprietor of a grocery store here, the World, Including Alexander Cheer-nofand his clerk, Frits Cracauer. were of Chicago, national organizer of found guilty by a federal grand Jury the L W. W. movement, were arrested of hoarding food nogesallirs. They Sunday. were arrested last June.. n f. It Is easy to Easy. bo one ant of philos- opher." "Huhr Easy to deduce that a nuin'a misfortunes are his own fault" Louisville Courier-Journa- l. Tho Proof. Inanimate things are pugnadona aa well as depraved. How do you mean!" Haven't you ever am a ship spar sr a ballot box. . |