Show ’ ' IS - ' - v to readeri finish notices When you ®W5JJT readlngthls nano on this notice a place stamp same to any postal employee ana It win be placed in the hands of our soldiers or r sailors at the front 1 No wrapping —no addresses A 8 BURLESON Postmaster General ent 4 y ' V - '' v v-- ' It's Fair and Square v ' r V- - ! : ''a- - ' " m Salt Lake Smelter Settlements m Silrer 79c os fTnTATfi Copper (cathodes) 24425c It Lake Herald' 13 SALT LAKE: CITY UTAH THURSDAY AUGUST Ne BrideIs Swept RAGIUCIW i i Rescued Unharmed - v V’ v Special Herald-SspnbUcs- n ! : OGDEN- Aug 1—The bridal trip Tremonton residents - nearly had a disastrous ending yesterday when the bride 'while pos- -' ing for ' her photograph ' fell from the footbridge ' across the' power dam In Ogden canyon was swept over the dam and slid' down the spillway Into the 'whirlpool below ' She was rescued ' from her predicament bruised' frightened and wet-' but she was ‘able to proceed with her husband after a short ' rest at the home 'of CA Porter caretaker ' at the I Utah Power ' & Light company's dam ' Names of the members ' of the Party were not learned They had - ' ' v - How Attacks on American Expedition on Its Way to France Were Defeated Told by Admiral Gleaves ' ' ONE SENT U-BO- AT - V : TO BOTTOM OF SEA motored to' Ogden from Tremon- ton it was stated Germans Thought - to Have Been Informed of Sail- mg of Troop Ships and to Have Lain in 'Wait Proposal for Submission Constitutional Change V States Passes Senate a Vote i of 65 to ' ' s of to by mans From Belgium and 20 France After Long Figlit f - '' s 'm BOTH UTAH SENATORS TEUTONS FEAR VOTE IN AFFIRMATIVE BASES MAY BE TAKEN U-BO- AT 41 o Measure Contains Provision Limiting Ratification Peri-o-d to Six Years —House Yet to Act Upon Question Russians Are Baling to Defense of Fortress and British Continue Their Successful 'Africa Drive UU ASHINGTON Aug 1— The battle of pARIS Flanders which Ang 1—--A resolu- tion for submission to the states of a prohibition amendment to the federal constitution was adopted late today by the Senate The vote was 65 to 20 eight more than the necessary - 1 : -- '' ‘ - WASHINGTON Aug I — Details of the attacks by German sub marines upon the 'first expedition of " two-thir- American troops sent to France known for the first time todays when the report of Bear Admiral Gleaves commanding the naval con-v8500 Brotherhood Members was made public Daniels Threaten to Quit Work s mf The first attack was made on" Admiral Gleaves’ flagship leading the Next Unless Saturday first group of the expeditionary force and at least two submarines were inCompany Settles Trouble dicated to be engaged The admiral stated the belief that the U boats had SANratoCC(VA - trainmen knowledge of the coming of the troop ' were-owatch for them of the Southern Paeifie have voted to ships ’The second trroupof transports' also go on'a strike' next Saturday bight was slacked byfwo submarines one unless grievance claims against the of which apparently was sent-tthe railroad company are ‘ settled it ' bebottom byva bomb dropped from an ' " came known here today American destroyer 'The trainmen: affected are the engiThere a disagreement among officers of the third group as to whether neers-firemen conductors and they were attacked but much evidence brakemen employed on the Southern Is presented to Indicate that they also Pacific lines from El Paso Texas to were assailed' Portland- Oregon and on the Cen Keport Laid Before Senate Committee tral Pacific line from San Franrisco ' Secretary Daniels made the report to-Ogden" Utah public with certain military InformaW R Scott vice president and gention deleted after he had sent an uncensored copy in confidence to the Sen- eral manager of the road in a letter ate naval committee members of which sent today to members of the tive board of the general committees recently Inquired as to the truth of of - the four unions '"Involved: procharges in the Senate that the official be mediated differences the account' of the attack phbllshed July 3 posed that Newlands under the the government by V was greatly exaggerated mema to board of five act or be left The report was prepared by Admiral ' combe’ two the selected to by Gleaves while' at a French port and bers was submitted to Admiral Mayo in pany two by the labor organisations' to be elected by these four command of the Atlantic fleet who for- and a fifth were unable to agree tbe fifth If they' warded It to the navy department Its member would by the fedfull text as made public follows: “1 About 1015 p m June 22- the eral judge In this district The letter made an appeal to the first group of the expeditionary force men’s patriotism-and- ' pointed out that of which the flagship was the leader was engaged In Important encountered the 'enemy’s submarine — the road service N’ Logitude In Latitude W government' transportation contentions of number a are “There1 2 At the time it was extremely ' cases between the company involving dark the sea unusually phosphorescent1 of a fresh breese was' blowing from the and the men relating to construction conditions northwest which broke the sea Into schedules and working are In procThe condition was ideal which are unadjusted and white caps said Air of today” ess negotiation for a submarine attack1 not “We do apprehend any seri“3 (Paragraph 3 gives the forma- Scott of opinion” r tion and names of the vessels together ous differences was in communihe said Scott’ Mr with the speed they were making and brotherhood trainmen's' method of proceeding and nothing else cation with ' '"V': ‘It is therefore omitted for obvious rea- - headsV'rT be-ca- me oy y-Secretary 7 : ' 1 - - - - ' co-ope- ra d : - : ' J 7 4 sons) '4 y Flagship first s Many Ogden Trainmen ' Attacked Shortly before the attack the Helm of the flagship had jammed and the' ship took a ' rank sheer to star-hoathe whistle was blown to Indl-- ’ In a few ihlnutes the cate this sheer was brought back to the course ship At this time the officer of: the deck and others on the bridge saw a write streak about 60 yards ahead of the ship crossing from starboard to port The at right angles to our ‘course t de- was 90 run off Immediately ’ship starboard I at full speed grces to: was asleep in the chart' house at the time' 1 heard the officer of the deck admiral' a torpedo say ’Report alarm has crossed our bow General was sounded torpedo crews ' being alWhen I reached ready at their guns the bridge the A and one of the transports astern had opened fire the' forOther mer’s shell fitted with tracers vessels of this convoy turned to the right and left In accordance with inB crossed our bow at full structions turned toward the left col-- : and speed direction of the firing unm In tho was 5 At first it thought on board tho flagship that the wake was that of it torpedo but from subsequent reports from other ships and In the opinion of who was on the the lieutenant X ft was the wake' of the probably bridge iC h "v rd 7 to-th- e - - 1 ' " 'V tf "" i ’ SpecUI1 IHemld-Republicm- n — Nearly 700 trainmen Ogden Aug with' homes in Ogden would bo affected by a Southern Pacific strike Local leaders of the trainmen are all 'In San Franclsca conferring with the general 1 committees of employees Railroad men said the trouble is long standing and that one of the issues Is W R Scott general manager' trainmen say has delayed grievances which' should have been adjusted months ago ? f Senators opposing the resoolution ' I : were: r “ Democrats: Culberson Broussard Gerry Hardwick Hitchcock' Hustlng James Lewis Phelan Pomererie Reed and Underwood Total ' Calder Republicans: Brandegee France Lodge Penrose1 Wadsworth Warren and Weeka Total' 8 jiV Voteafor Resolution ':' '- - ' It: - - ALIEN DRAFTING PLAN APPROVED BY SENATE if " it' Washington Aug 1 —Senator Mc-- 1 Cumbes resolution 'requesting the President to negotiate with the allies for 'an agreement to allow drafting of their' alien nationals in this country was adopted Rate today by the Senate ' ' BRINGS DOWN HIS FIFTIETH AIRPLANE Paris 'Aug' l—Capt' George -- tii a - 'f ‘ - ’ : -- ' v - - Senators voting for the resolution " were Vjsv Democrats: Aehurst Bankhead Beck- ham Chamberlain Fletcher Gore Hol- their were stopped ' lis Jones: of New Mexico Kendrick King McKellar Martin Myers 'New- Germans Claim Success lands Overman Owen Pittman Rans-de- ll Robinson’ Saulsbury Shafroth in Resistance to Drive - Guyiie-m- er - ' : s- in mi I n W ' ‘ - ’" - " - - - : ‘ V' - Kel-log- - Mo-Cum- ber - - ' e: - ter-rlto- ry - -- -' : onZ-Fag- ffl E - e A EMiD-REPUBLICA- PJ -- 1 i PUT TO DEATH es n a land The present battlefield between Dixmude and Liserne was are Agitator Taken From Lodgmonths within whose borders lay marshes and morasses which In winter still stronger by Impassable This formidable natural barrier was rendered the canals Tne ing House Early from waters Moming the inundation of large areas by the release of mo rar swung a for footing land of dry Germans and allies alike seeking bits Masked' Men apart In eome ' places that’Ah'o distance between the lines was nearly three by miles “t Below this section "opposing lines followed either bank of the Tser ca"1 From Road Trestld Hanged holdGermans tho face with but to on face salient went and then the Ypres V section j The DIxmude-Ltxern- e ing the dominant high land about the salient dotted farms deserted and of the front Is a wilderness of partly inundated ditches WARNING TO OTHERS with pools of brackish water'apd cut Into strange shapes by drainage n land a In this habitations civilian There are but few remaining flats tbe rose above church roofless IS PINNED ON BODY' occasional an and walls Crumbling cottage AlDuke Since aor a trench raid' Neither side fearedsurprise attack by brecht’s Wurttemberg troops were" swallowed up in the ‘flood let loose cross to tried not had 1914 the In enemy October sluice gates opening up the in the Victim Was Prominent - Ivi the marshes nor had they tried to get over the Yser since the Belgians bridgehead the spring of 1915 after sanguinary fighting flung them back across v ' Labor Troubles Arizona at Liserne preas eouldbe a problem The Ypres salient itself furnished as nasty and the Gerand Had Denounced U S sented to an attacking army The country here Is saucer-shape- d dish low-lyithis wlthln land All tho aucer mans nad held the lip of this had been dominated by- the 'enemy who could send a stream tf shell and maGovernment and Axmjj chine gun fire Into the troops and supply columns advancing across the salient — the within the presence The situation was rendered still more difficult by saucer of a large number of waterways that must be' crossed by means of Mont Aug 1—FranS TU by gunfire This difficulty pUTTE bridges which might at any moment be destroyed British tie member of tbe executive board engineers who threw however was overcome" by a brilliant feat of the Similar terrific face of of the Industrial Workers of tbe World gunfire seventeen bridges across' the waterways In the French engineers who wore and the done work by and equally remarkable ' yti prominent in labor trembles forced to bridge the Yser for their attack Arizona was taken from a lodging-hou- se "no-ma- in and '' i -- & “no-ma- - - i -- ' ' in - ng Its - m Heat Claims 115 Lives in REVELERS MAKE MERRY IN SODA NY POP CABARETS in Day r : - Hundreds of Others Pros i Prohibition’s First Day Has trated Parks Turned Into No Terrors for Nightly Sleeping Quarters : “ : " ‘'Pleasure Seekers '“Hie V - - - ’ ’ 77 K 1 $10000 Morrison who spent-aboare basing the confitting up the place duct of their business and their expectations of success on their experience In Seattle 'where a' similar establishment “went big” A ut 13 SAILORS MISSING - nd -- ur Ducc Fleer Enlarged FRANCE TO LIMIT BREAD CONSUMPTION BY CARD SYSTEM Paris Aug 1—Bread cards ' willbe Introduced Into France SaturThe Journal Offldel It Is day announced today will on that day where each adult-anpublish family head Is to receive a card entitling grown persons to 500 Children grams of' bread dally under 7 years will be allowed 200 This ration majr be augmgrams 200 grams If' a holder ented-by' of furnishes sufficient rea The Lodge had no monopoly of the trade for at the Utah and Newhouse hotels guests thronged the cafes and perforce since' no Intoxicating liquor was to be had they got along on J’ milder substltutea The Wilson grill after an extensive enlargement to enable many couples sons to dancs will have its formal opening next Saturday evening according to PEOPLE OF LEIPSIC Harry H Leavitt the manager The be enlarged‘ so as to TO DISCUSS PEACE dining room 1 to give additional floor space 100 feet IN MASS MEETING Distinctive j wide long and CO — among the elaborations which will Amsterdam Aug 1 —The Volks cost more than $7500 when finished — of Lelpslc announces that two will be a fountain and a candy booth great mass meetings ' will be held in tomorrow to discuss the questhat Although Its present cafe attracted tion city “Do the people want peace?” many guests last night the management of the Newhouse hotel will InGREEKS DEAD stall what' I believed to be one of the most pretentious dining room founBULGARS RULE The Utah so far as WHERE tains In the west not mhke any altera known now will Paris ' Aug Forty thousand tiona been starved to death In have Greeks geleees Cell ! eastern Macedonia since the Bulgarian changing their occupation began according to authenWhile cafes were some of the tic reports received by the Greek govchief characteristics ernment saiTs a Havas dispatch from adapted themselves to — or Page 2) Athens i - LOST AND FOUND lavalliere ring and at Saltalr valuable check stand Please return3217--and be rewarded Call " Hy HELP WANTED LOST — A diamond MALE HELP land f FIREMEN and brakemen beginners $150 monthly experience paid 1100 to eight-hoFor other advertisements In: this day permaunnecessary nent positions Address Railway care classification read Want Ad section ? Herald Republican FEMALE HELP with YOUNG man IS to 18 Alklre-SmltfoidoverailiT MrsTBywaterT h parts knowledge of’ Ford M I Overall factory Auto Co ur W - -- - ' 2L-- C For 'other advertisements'-Iin thli For other ' advertls’ementssection classification read Want Ad section this classification read Want-An d i does your business need new life? v USE THE WANT AD PHONE MAIN 767 "roBxsroBUA'nbs a b v'" 5 'i t ft Zel-tu- 40000 I-- ha-loo- ns prohlbl-(Continu- ed - 1 rangement Without speaking the ' men quickly broke into room No 20 on the ground floor Light from an eloctrle torch showed them the room was unoccupied Mrs Nora Byrne landlady of the he tel awoke when the door to room No ‘ 1 " ' i pendL The figures ar ethe eld slgst of the Vigilantes in Montana Tho custom of the Vigilantes was to send two warnings to a marked man tho third and last warning being written1 The warnings were usually In red numbered as “first warning “second warning and “last warning Abdacted by Masked ' M Seven masked men in an automobile drove up to the front of Uttle’s hotel at 5 minutes after 3 One stood upon the sidewalk In front of the rooming The others entered the house house Everything worked by seeming prear “2-7-- 77 - - ’ - - - s it Little in a recent speech here rei ferred to United States troops as “Un " cle Sam’s scabs in uniform” Sines his arrival la Butts recently from Globe Arte Llttls had mads a number of speeches to strikers la all of which he had attacked the government and urged men to chut dowa the ‘ that-kicke- such-harmles- who identified ’ - London August 1 —The American steamship Motano of 2730 tons gross was sunk by a Teuton submarine on July 31- Twenty-tw- o survivors have been landed1 ' The Motano sailed from New July 2 for Queenstown Ire-laThe vessel was In command of Capt L 8 Stratton and carried men of whom crew of thirty-foffifteen claimed American citizenon her before the ship when signed ' United States commissioner of shipping ' early today by masked men and banged to a railroad trestle on the out skirts of the city The body was ent down at 8 a m by the chief of police Jerry Murray tlgatlon by the federal authorities whose atteutlon had been called to his activities On the other hand the report was current that Little was la the employ of a prominent detective agency and one theory was set up that ho was the victim of the radical element of whom he appeared to be a member On Little's body was a card bearing these words: “First and last warn Others take notlca Vigilantes” ing The card was pinned to the under clothing on his right thigh Ip bore in red crayon letters the inscription: ) “Others take noticeFirst and last j LDCSSW T warning A circle was about the letter “L" The letters were Inscribed with a leag ' - the tippling calendar From the first dry night evolved a brand new cafe—the Lodge located beneath the Kenyon hotel The' grand opening of this place featured Viola Vercler a violinist and was made resonant' and lively by other Instrumental and vocal entertainers Several hundred persons held forth at this place concoctions as sipping and the menu offered their fancy chose dancing between quaffs and apparently enjoying themselves as completely If not so noUlly as they would have done under the’Wet regime ' The- proprietors of the Lodge Edward J Margett and - mines of the Butte district He was bitter In his denunciation of the gov- ernment His record was under Invest EW YORK Aug L— Heat ‘claimed the lives of 115 per Salt Lake knows how to slake a ' s6ns In Greater New York today thirst In a’ soft drink saloon and make while hundreds ' of ' ' others ' were In a cafe drink soft merry prostrated' The maximum temper- -' Learning how was perhaps the most ature was $$ novel experience of prohibition's first Physicians from the board ' of day of It here yesterday Scarcely had were stationed in health the' corks confetti and other flotsam the municipal ordered building station of and jetsam of Bacchanalia’s flood tide the subway the most crowded spot been swept out of the cafes than orin the city where scores of pros- chestras atruck up again last night and trations occurred the revels of the ’“Denatured Draught' Many stores shops and factories were on' Patrons merely switched from closed at noon and earlier after to the stuff that the stuff many of their young women era- quenched —and revelry- by ' night went pioyees fainted from the heat on again merrily The “keep off” signs were rerAre Merry Oonii from the grass plots in the moved V If crowds In the various soft drink parks by order of Mayor Mltchel cafes were smaller than usual that who announced that all parks fact might readily be ascribed to rewould be open to tbe public day action from the night before when and night during the heat period thousands of citizens reached a pitch been prebf hilarity that had 'never “ AMERICAN STEAMER here Many of them viously witnessed were still recovering from the “mornSUNK BY SUBMARINE — on after the after” last morning ing d Want Ad Market Place f Ypres-Comin- - ' Shields Simmons Smith- of r Arkansas Smith of Georgia- Smith of of Enemy in Flanders South Carolina' Stone Swanson Vardaman Thompson ' Trammell L— The In Berlin Walsh' Williams and Walcott Total Flanders 'Aug In a wayfighting that prom began : lsed success to the German arms toRepublicans: Borah Brady Colt says today’s army headquarters Cummins Curtis Ferald Frelixighuy-se- n day statement and the further batttles Grqnna Hale- Harding Johnson of which must be expected ' are looked g California Jones of Washington forward- to with confidence Kenyon Knox La Follette The entente: attack It is 'declared McNary Nelson New Norris was Intended 'as an annihilating blow Page Poindexter Sherman Smith of at the German submarines The GerMichigan Smoot - Sterling Sutherland man counterattack which lasted all and Watson Totah'39 day yesterday either drove the attack' Amendment Effect of ing forces out of the fighting cone or " The proposed constitutional amend- back to the foremost crater field the ment la the first initiated by Congress statement adds'4 since that providing for popular elecThe text of the statement reads: tion of ' United - States senators ap“Eastern theatre: Army group of 1911 Is in time the first It that proved Crown Prince Rupprecht: The great either branch of Congress has approved battle In Flandera has commenced It a constitutional amendment for prohi- Is one of the' most tremendous of the z bition third year of the war which Is comAs adopted the resolution which was ing to an end today with promises of ' submitted by Senator Sheppard of Tex- success as Democrat irould add the following “With masses such as never have articles to the federal constitution: been ‘used at any period of this war not qveii in the east by General Brus-sllo- ff The manufacture sale or trans' the English and In' their wake portation of Intoxicating liquors' within' the importation' thereof the French attacked yesterday on a kilometer' front-- ' between lnto'or' the exportation thereof twenty-fivfrom the United States and all Their Noordschoote and Warheton ' one' was to was intended a the Jurisdiction aim It lofty subject thereof for beverage purposes to deliver an annihilating blow to “the li ' which from the coast of hereby prohibited V- This article shall be Flanders Is- - undermining England’s inoperative unless it shall have been ratified mastery of the ses as an amendment to the constitu“The densely packed attacking waves tion within six years from the date and ' the closely placed divisions folof the submission thereof fo tho states by the Congress lowed each other and numerous tanks The Congress shall have power to and' cavalry units took part In the batenforce this article by ’appropriate tle V legislation “After a fortnight' of artillery prepSome Wete Vote for Reaotatlon which in the early'mornlng of aration On the final roll call several senators voted the to for fire the said oppose prohibition yesterday Increased to drum a on (Continued Page 2) (Continued 2)‘ Sheppard e ' v f As adopted the resolution contains a provision that the states must he asked to ratify the amendment within six years- - The House still must act f v on the resolution - one of France’s leading airmen “Two torpedoes passed close to the has brought down his fiftieth German Continue! ab Par a vi submarine boat itself' ' jf Would Be Affected V ds hegran with the ' French and British advance yesterday it is believed will be the biggest of the war and may last for weeks or months The results already achieved lead military- - observers to say that it i? not too much to hope that the Germans may 8oon he cleared out of France and ' Belgian Flanders After the magnificent' success of the French and British In Belgium yesterday the entente troops In a torrential rainstorm consolidated the positions which they had captured' thie war office announced today After several days of artillery preparation thie Germans this morning attacked the positions on the left bank of the Meuse river In the Verdun region which 'the French had captured from' them 'on July 17 The French- official statement says the Germans wqre only able to reaeh certain advanbeelo m'ents of the 'French first line wbCTe - 4 1-- HK LITTLE n - i A Welsh Whip Kaiser’s Regiment BELGIUM troops elsh Attg RITISH FROXT IN FRANCE AND added a hew star to their crown for it fell to one of their regiments to administer a crushing defeat in General Haig’s great offensive on the Third battalion of infantry guards which was Emperor William’s crack body of troops The terrain in this new battle rone presented tremendous difficulty for ' thie attacking troops canal crosses Between Dixmude and the point where the Flanders : Conflict Expected the lines on the lower part of the Ypres salient the two great forces had to Result in Expelling Ger- been imbedded for three years and this portion of the line had come to he looked upon as impregnable for either side Fell From Bridge While Posing for Photograph Zatermountaln Republican Vol it Ne 11 PBICE FIVE CENT8 f en - 2' 1917 Flower of German Afmy Wilts Over thesSDam in - 88c 2inc (St Louis) 1 ol IS lie (Lead ng 30 wiks broken In “We are officers and we want Frank ' Little” one of the men told her Mra Byrne got Into a bathrobe again went to tbe door and opened It The leader of the masked men poked a revolver into the opening “Where Is Frank Little?" he naked’ ' “He Is in room No 22 answered Mra Byrne The men ran down the hall and tried the door to that room Then one of their number gsve It a kick that broke the lock and they entered Hanged From Treatle The body was found hanging on the north side of the railroad trestle Little wore only his underclothes when taken from his room Hs Is not known to hgve made any outcry or do- manded any explanation The police said he might have been gagged with a toweL Little Active L W W Gov Sam Stewart at Butte accord-in- g to dispatches yesterday declared he had nothing to say relative to the lynching Attorney General Ford aald he had requested a statement of facts In the case from the county attorney at Butte W D Haywood secretary of tho I W W in Chicago expressed regrets on receipt of news of Little’s death Ho (Continued on Pegs 2J ' |