OCR Text |
Show CITIZEN THE MIM88IMIMIMIIMlf8aMM88MliaaMBMialiaMI8MMM8M8aaM8lMa88MI8SB80 More then oyer before, ueeettful business requires Banking Service of the broad, perma- nont character we give. VISITORS INCIDENTS IN THE LIFE OF MINING ENGINEER. By E. T. Carthy. E. P. Dutton & Co. A Mc- The volume contains the record of a life, wherein the author in his professional capacity has traversed practically every arid region and not a few of the moister areas of the globe. He has dwelt intimately with almost every aboriginal race now extant, and he has faced uncounted perilous situations from the Gold Coast to Vancouver, and points between and beyond. As a storehouse of facts about the natural scenery and the human beings of the strange lands which Mr. McCarthy has visited we recommend the book to all authors present and to come. To have lived such a life with, CAPIEAL SNI SUIPUUS HSSUBClCe ESTABLISHED ISIS eyes open constitutes a high achievement; to relate the events of such a IJIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIJ life for ones fellows is an act of rare m 2 generosity. I Every Dollar Paid For When Mr. McCarthy says that the I Moonshiners were a secret society Insurance in formed after the civil war we suspect that he is confounding them with the Ku Klux Klan, which, if reports be true, was not wholly averse to moon1 f shine. The student of political science 1 might read Mr. McCarthy to his own profit. In fact, we recommend his I book to the German foreign office as I of Utah s a valuable tract on colonies and prop5 er conduct in foreign lands. The book might have saved the 8 German empire if taken in time. As x 2 it is, it is another demonstration of the fact that an Englishman, even if in partly Irish, can be an Englishman any part of the known world and The Agency Company get away with it! ; HCie22B(& CoJlAtsno The Guardian Fire Insurance Company j j Stay In Utah Managers 334 South Main Street SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 5 TiiiiiuiiiaiiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiisiiiiiiiiiiisiiiHiiiiiiiiiBiiiiiiiiiiia man Tel. Wee. Apen All Night UNDERTAKERS AND 861 EMBALMERS S. D. EVANS Modern Eetnbllehment New Building 8elt Leke City 48 State St. luniiuiiiHiiiiiuuuiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuii'i No One Can Touch Your Valuable Papers If they are securely tucked away In one of your safety deposit boxes. courteous custodian in charge is always ready to serve you. We have the box to suit your personal needs. Modest rental. A g i MAltt McCornlck...........Pree. pseudo-dem-ocra- 5 IHININUHIMIIUniMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIIIUIIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIItllllllllli- - con-celvab- le. TO SALT LAKE STOP AT Newhouse Hotel Main and 4th South a Combining all the advantmetages of the high-claropolitan hotel, with the comfort of the best managed homes. ss - ment: But there were other peoples who, a minduring the war, were living on imum ration, and who lost weight under it, and were exposed to all the consequences of malnutrition. With all the efforts of the commission for relief in Belgium, most of the ten million people in occupied Belgium and France especially France were underfed through all the period of the war. Their food shortage began within a few months after the war did began; Germanys food shortage not begin to be serious until a year after theirs. Yet no one would have been less inclined to ascribe to the imBelgian peo- -. prisoned and in will power a off serious pie falling and mental capacity and moral balance, in one word, morale, than Governors-Gener- n von Bissing and von Falken-hauseand their staffs, to whom control of the Belgian people was intrusted. The underfed Belgians maintained a spirit through all their marthe discouragement tyrdom, under all news of continuous bad carefully provided whether the real news was bad or good and all the humiliation and and all the posprivation of soup-line- s sible hopelessness of resistance that is beyond words fully to make known. On the other hand the underfed Germans had all the encouragement of the long period of German military successes, AFand of the continuously exploited asAND WAR THE IN GERMANY surances of ultimate success and an TER. ensuing grand orgy of eating, drinking, By Vernon Kellogg. New and being merry at the expense of the York: The Micmillan Company. Allies. Every department of news in Gerfeatures One of the most difficult many was handled by the censor, and unto of the great war for Americans every newspaper was furnished with a derstand was German psychology. lengthy list of the things that it alThe German point of view was might and might not say with precise imwe as might most as perplexing instructions as to its general attitude or Martians of toward all occurrences, actual or prosagine the viewpoint us to if be would other planetarians pective. At the same time the fact of with it. touch we should come in a censorship was one of the things tries In this work Vernon Kellogg that must not be mentioned. Such a are1 Germans to tell us what the system could not have succeeded in which thinking of the changed order any other country, but it succeeded in vicallied of result the as come has Germany: Under "Zensurmassnahmen" it was tory and Teutonic defeat. to print any news concernMr. forbidden of aide an as he 1915 was, In the ing any measures taken into enforce the face of, In a word, Hoover, escorted about Belgium by censorship. and by means of what was notoriously wearied who W, Graf the most radical and criminal censorHauptmann ever Instituted it was attempted to the of ship him with endless praisings cover up the fact of any censorship at Kultur, etc. all. German government, On September 22, 1914, just after the America, he said, should be governed first battle of the Marne, the Tress staff. Note Conferenz gave out to the newspapers by a kaiser find a general and the people of Germany the followW Graf in ing announcement: Hauptmann the change "The general military situation In or backwrought by the defeat and the setting the west Is good. No retreat as a result has taken ward ' place push up of a new government in Germany: of any tactical advantage of the enW. had learned, emy. Our movements were entirely of But Hauptmann Grafa new boast nature for the preparation of strategic quickly surprisingly to be the new successes and were not forced by was now really going a the enemy." has she got because nation greatest new government, a real demOn the next day this general thesis splendid a was repeated with certain Interesting ocratic government, notwhere the Preslike America's, an autocrat (Continued on Page 11.) than of more ident was Ger-ma- a Anthon H. Lund... 1st Vice Pres. A. Smith.. 2nd Vico Prea. George Cashier F. M. Michelsen Asst. Cashier D. E. Judd W. Europe, but the any king or kaiser indemocracies most real thing in My astonished C. R. B. friend stammered out a question. Do all the officers at great headquarters and all the other officers say this, too? Do they all think as you do?" But No, not all; some are fools. 60 per cent of them do; and the other 40 per cent well, they dont count." This seems hard to understand. But W. very I know the Hamptmann CTraf him. like It others and many well, was the acceptance of authority, the The kaiser had run cringingso to power. had some of the general staff; away; the others were rapidly changing their for mufti. clothes, doffing uniforms The real democracy" was in power; This Is hence, knuckle down to it. not to say that there are no Germans who believe in democracy and want It. not Only the Hahptmann Graf W.theis real one of them. He accepts democracy if it can give the orders. German privations were very severe, says Mr. Kellogg. We do not know yet how severe- they were, but we can not accept them a san excuse for German outrages at the front, nor for the palliation of those outrages at home. Moreover, the German soldiers were well feu almost to the last mo- cy life-sustaini- VIOLINS ng half-starv- Whether for beginner or professional we have just the instrument you want at a price that means true economy and greatest value. ed call wont obli- gate you in the least. Come in and look over our A al ny stock. Low Terms Weekly or Monthly Old Instruments taken In Ex- change at full value. Consolidated Music Co. 13 ti 19 East First So. Salt Lake When Buying or Selling Stocks Phone 1373 or See H. B. COLE & CO., BROKERS Salt Lake Room 1, Stock Exchange Bldg. WE PRINT THE CITIZEN OUR CRAFTSMANSHIP SFEAtl TOR ITSELF Century printing Company . W.G ROMNEY Q. RYAN CENTURY BUILDING 231 EDISON STREET Phone Wsastch 1801 Printer. Binders, Desifners, Liaetypers |