Show 7 j mn 8 The Tuesday Morning ®EflWM PLEA MAKES WILSON MIS TO ORGANIZED LABOR STATISTICAL AREAKKOUKCED DEATHS at Botlervllle William Butler ef BntlervlUe Tbe baby's twin brother died a week acta services will be held Tuesl5 with burial la tbe South Cottonwood cemetery Everett I far mo a Bead at Milwaukee Wia Sir Read married Mix tiladya Hutchinson daucbier sf W K Hutchinson Ilia Third avenue oa Ja!y 6 After a honeymoon trip the youae eonple were traveling to Bloomfieldof N J where Mr Read was to he manager Bloomfield Brash company Camp Kearney CaL Nor 12 — Com- tbeIafaat at 13s Beryl avenue Satur28000 day: sou Wledler the of review for the Mm C A Wledler 133 Mr and plete of plans ' Ir Beryl avenue oops of the Fourth division at Camp C Watkins need yearn at OgKearney in honor of the notables at- denFrederick son of R 1 Watkins 1137 HerSunday Southwest tending the League of the aveaae Kaneral will be held at the next Saturday were announced today bert Fourth ward meeting house in Osdea Tuesday Butler' Infant M Fky f Mr nad Camp Kearney Sofdiers to Mm Fo-nD- nl Parade in Honor of Southwest League inniiM-KrpiiMln- a by Brig Gen George Cameron In the huge reviewing stand located In the center of the two-milong parade ground will be seated the per onat representatives of the President of the United States the president of France Ine king of Italy the emperor of Japan Gov Simon Bamberger of Utah Gov Julius Gunter of Colorado Gov William Stephens of California Benjamin lde Wheeler president of the University of California and fifteen mayors of the leading cities of the It will take three hours southwest for the troops to pass the reviewing stand Forty airplanes will fly over them as they pass In review The troops at the camp wer augmented today by the arrival of fourteen officers and 4 45 men of the First California field artillery The new arfield twelve three-inc- h tillery brought 420 mules and horses Capt pieces and Jesse McComas was in command of the battalion The tallest flagpole in southern California was placed in front of divisional feet headquarters today The pole 135 OreIn length was brought here from gon on a log raft Old Glory is flying from the top of the high flagstaff and can be sighted for miles on the mesa overlooking the camp Division officers complimented the Utah contingents today for beautifythe grounds not only around their ing own quarters but also around the quarters of various brigade commanders The Utah boys have planted geraniums roses and other flowers that soon will begin to bloom profusely at i o’clock FUNERALS le ‘NEWS WERE SCARCE’ IN DAYS OF 1773 By International News Service Baltimore — A facsimile Issue sf one of the first journalistic enterprises on this continent “containing the freshest advices both foreign and flomestic” (usually about two months -fresh”) presents a real conception of the preponderant odds which confronted our forbears In the first feeble tapping of the resources of North America “The Maryland Journal and the Baltimore Advertiser' of the issue of August 20 1773 represents the first small gun of what is now the Baltimore American a modern heavy battery of Influential editorial ratter and complete In every department The brave attempts and successful to boot to acquire a circuthey weresome lation of few hundreds by means of the post roads only exhibit the enterprise even at that early period of the keenest Journalists in the world The title page contains a column long sxplanatlon for the very considerable temerity of producing a paper “free and of no party' “I shall always publish with pleasure whatever is sent me In favor of liberty and the rights of mankind There are two other columns on the same page both of which go at length In an edttorial manner Into the disA finer gracing practice ofno duelling modern Journal piece of writing ould produce Correct sedate and yet with a “punch that probably left no reader of that more or less calloused an day of fighting Inwasdoubt for ununethical instant that duelling analysis essenmanly and in a final In later cowardly days it was tially Influence of this through the fine that the unlaudable Journal growing was finally made unpopular practise The last page contained an advertisement of land for sale by one George had for Washington Mr Washington sale some virgin land on the Ohio and Kanawha “abounding in fish and small After a careful perusal of game George’s “ad we are of the opinion that the old boy was some little real estate agent — and from all accounts he didn't die poor As a rule they don’t And then there is Jacob Mohler and David Evans advertising that they livewatchmakonly to ply their trade of rattsfactlon Ing and guarantee to give We wonder Just what the trade would if one of their tngenous say nowadays Jourlittle “ads’ appeared in a modern servnal signed “by their very humble ant The paper had only one sheet and It was folded making two pages on the Inside When we disemboweled the ancient sheet we stumbled upon some chestnut tree— gems of the spreading and we found some Jokes that haveim-a ring After suspiciously modern ourselves In the laughs of 1773 mersing we are unholy enough to declare reunder the sun signedly “nothing new The little pioneer makes much of the fact that by a lucky stroke astounding been able to print the news they have old country as of early June from the and the sheet was issued on August 20! Even In those days it was an adventure to “get married” Bight underneath a choice lot of obituaries the conquests of the god hymen are chronicled Maybe the press agents were "elose” with their passes in those a wild and diligent wooly months for ‘after search we are unable to find the theatre criticisms and the cabaret “ads” Lake Kmll and Pa Johnstown Grsylieek Griffin Salt Schick ami Florence E Staurfer O K Grayre Fred n Murray J?rtnn D Slusfcer" Plneville Ky and Katie Josephine Kearn Salt lake McNeil Salt Lake Lawrence Watts ard Laura REAL ESTATE TRANSFER Charles E Bniff to S M Walton lot 1 block 1lH plftt A S M Waltou to Liberty Holding company 2v A k 11S lot 2 Oisr!' K Cruff to S M WaKon lot 3 1® bind lla plat A S M Walton to Liberty Holding company 1® lot 3 block 115 plat A John R Bniff to Liberty Holding company 1® part of lot 1 block fi plat E John R Bniff to lilerty Holding company I® lot 4 block 49 plat A Ernest I- - Smith to Newell Beeman lot 2? plilt R V ford I Webb to Christopher Alston of section 52 township 3 south range 1® part t west lioekwnnd to William Walter lot Alplien 1® 2 Mock la five-acr-e plat A v National Real Estate Jk Investment tot 3S Tayfcw to Mrs Joliann-tblock t Groves subdivision Emigration canyon Fritsch Investment company to 11 Flttsoh-IsaMock A Trust company lots 7 Jto 1 addition Capitol Avenue county part Tidier C Parry to Salt 4 south range 1 of section 19 township W PR ( Investment com-pGeorge Wharton to Granite nr hits 45 auil 44 block 2 Hackett s " AW 11 eom-pan- h n a I® in Edward II lavU to Amy B Davis lot 1 linck a!i plat C Amlerson irt1 Andrew Hansen to f section 31 township 2 south range I® east FtaroLl H irIl to Leslie COvey lots la I® and 14 block 1 Federal Heights to H J Fairmonbt Springs Realty company t Olaon lots 1 and 2 Mock 4 io Springs addition of Arthur E Short to Ellen A Short port 1 section 35 township 3 sontb range 3 west 2 Fall-moun- CLEARING HOUSE 32691 434 14: Co-operati- Between on Fac- Labor and Capital' Advocated by President tions Must Unite in Common Cause to Win War Buffalo Nov 12—The teat of the President’s speech AUDITORIUM the American Federation of Labor follows: “Mr President Delegates of the American Federation of Labor Ladies and Gentlemen: I esteem it a great privilege and a real honor to be thus admitted to your public councils When your executive committee paid me the compliment of inviting me here I gladly accepted the invitation because it sems to me that this above all other times in our history is the time for common counsel for the drawing not only of the energies but the bonds of the nations together I thought that it was a welcome opportunity for disclosing to you some of the thoughts that have been gathering in my mind the last momentous months during “I am introduced to you as the Presi- of Asia Minor I saw a map' in which in apthing wastheprinted dent of the United States and yet I the whole black and other day type wquld be pleased If you would put the propriate all the way from the black stretched — thought of the office Into the back- Hamburg to Bagdad the bulk of Gerpower Inserted Into the heart 'of ground and regard me as one of your man world the If It can keep that she has fellow citizens who has come here to all that her dreams contemplated kept speak not the words of authority but when the war began If she can keep the world the words of counsel the words which that her power can disturb — Mondav'a clearing I25962SC7L year last Comparative data at Salt Lake Cty November 12 1917 6 p m: TFTEMPERATURE was Highest fj Highest in thl month since 171 wa lowest was mom It since 1471 was Lowest this Mean temperature was 4 Normal was - ” P- HUMIDITY - ®“ was Relatlve hnmldity at 4 a mm was Relative humidity at 6 p Inches PRECIPITATION C p m at 24 hour the ending Total for 1 is Total for tlii month to datetide 5 month Aerumnlated deficiency for 1 B datel-to since January Total precipitation Accumulated deficiency since January 1 I 113 ALMANAC FOR TODAY lives at 713 a m ann aet at 513 p Weather observation taken at 6 p tain time Bun --e — r a o 0 e Stations s 1 0 9 i 1 11 Riba H I'iilMiv Helena 56 NW! 4 4 M Ijos Angeles New Trk 64 66: ’V NEil4 SWII SWi 4- - I Spokane Tnnopiill Wlnnemaera Tel lowsfone 332 s' 4fl'5V NW'24 '1632 NW'lOs I4fl £0- - rUlear Tt’looily cloudy wearily 4 Clear 00 NKl2i 4Tinly tvio4! I’nrntello j2 ST '54 54 Portland j 54 '4 Nffi Salt lake NWi San Fra no aeo 4' ' 4f NR!! Tilictit raia 20l'Luly 0" 06 Cloudy Clear WLIcht raia TClooly 01 no Partly cloudy Partly dowdy ENORMOUS HAT PUZZLE EXPLAINED By International Newa Servlea1 BUILDING A CHURCH FOR CONGREGATION colors rnraid-RspuMIra- n Special Moab Nov 12 — Moab has a parson who la not afraid of manual labor Rev It W Spencer pas- church donned tor of the Baptist him to the new his overalls hied CREAK-UP-A-COL- D - pro-Germa- ns ‘ Ill-infor- an - The Weather ? as long as she keeps it always provided for I feel bound to put this proviso In always provided the present Influences that control the German government continue to control It I believe that the spirit of freedom can get into the hearts of Germans an(j find as fine a welcome there as It can find in any other hearts But the the spirit of freedom does not' suit canof the Fower plans and act upon a new platform elevated not be used with concentrated force above the ordinary affairs of life ele- against free peoples if It is used by people vated to where men have views of the free “You know how many Intimations of mankind long destiny come to us from one of the central Clash War Last Might-Rig- ht powers that It Is more anxious for “I think that in order to realize Just peace than the chief central power what it means that the what this moment of counsel Is It Is and youInknow central power know that people very desirable that we should remind that if the war ends as It stands ourselves Just how this war came about win In effect themselves be vassalsthey of and Just what it is for Tou can ex- Germany notwithstanding that their are compounded with all plain most wars very simply hut the populations the of that part of the world and people explanation of this is not so simple notwithstanding the fact that they do “Its roots run deep into all the ob- not wish in their pride and proper scure soils of history and In my view spirit of nationality to be so absorbed this is the last decisive Issue between and dominated Kaiser’s Domlantloa Object the old principles of power and the Is determined that the “Germany new principles of freedom power of the world shall be“The war was started by Germany political long to her There have been' such Her authorities deny that they start- ambitions before They have been In ed it But I am willing to let the part realized But never before have ambitions been based upon so itatement I have just made await the those exact and precise and scientific a plan verdict of history And the thing that of domination needs to be explained la why Ger“May I not aay that it is amazing to many started the war Remember what me that any group of people should be as to suppose as some the position of Germany in the world so in Russia groups suppose apparently was as enviable a position as any na- that any reforms planned in the interThe whole est of the people can live in the prestion has ever occupied world stood at ndmlratiort tif her won- ence of a Germany powerful enough in-to or overthrow them by material undermine and Intellectual derful or force Any body of free men trigue achievements And all the intellectual that compounds with the present Germen of the world went to school to her man government is compounding for own destruction But that is not As a university man I have been sur- its whole of the story Any man In the rounded by men trained in Germany— America or anywhere else who supmen who had resorted to Germany be- poses that the free Industry and entercontinue If the cause nowhere else could they get such prise of the worldIscan achieved and Gerplan thorough and searching training par- man power fastened upon the world ticularly in the principles of science is as fatuous as the dreamers of Rusand the principles that underlie mod- sia“What I am opposed to Is not the ern material achievements of the pacifists but their stufeeling AntebelluM Place le Sue pidity My heart is with them but my “Her men of science had made her r mind has a Icontempt for them I want industries the most efficient In the peace dobutnot know how to get It and world and thel abel ‘Made in Ger- they War 1 Only Way to Peace many was a guarantee of good work“You will notice that I sent a friend manship of sound material She had of mine Colonel House to Europe who access to all tho markets of the world is as great a lover of peace as any inan In the world but I did not send and every other man who traded in him on a mission 1 sent him to those markets feared Germany because take part peace in a conference as to how of her effective and almost irresist- the war was to be won and he knows way to get ible competition She had a place in as I know that that is themore if It want for than a peace you the sun Why was she not satisfied? few minutes “All of this is a preface to the conWhat more did she want? There was ference that I referred to with regard she of that world the in peAce nothing we are to to do If we are what in have and have not did already true friends of going freedom our own or abundance anybody else's we will see that the “We boast of the extraordinary pace power of this country and the productivity of this country is raised to its of American advancement We show absolute and that absolutely with pride the statistics of the in- nobody Ismaximum to allowed stand in the way crease of our industries and of the of it population of our cities Well those “When I that nobody Is allowed etatistlrs did not match the recent to stand In say the way I don't mean that statistics of Germany Her old cities they shall be prevented power took on youth grew faster than any of the government hut hybythethe of power American city ever grew her old indus- the American spirit Our duty if we tries opened their eyes and saw a new are to do great thing and show world and went out for Its conquest: America to this we be what her to and yet the authorities of Germany be the greatest hope and believe energy of the were not satisfied You have one part world then we must stand together of the answer to the question why she night and day until the Job Is finished! was not satisfied in her methods of Labor Must He Free Incompetition There Is no important we are fighting for freedom “While which the in upon Germany dustry see we must to Its not hands among other things that laid government has direct It and when necessity arose to labor Is free and that means a number of interesting things It means not control it that we must do what we have only German Competition Unfair It our purpose to do see that declared “You have only to ask any man whom the conditions of labor are not renconyou meet who is familiar with the more onerous dered by the war —hut ditions that prevailed before the war In also that we shall see to It that the the matter of international competi- instrumentalities by which tion to find out the methods of com- tions of labor are improved thearecondinot petition which the German manufactur- blocked or checked That we must do ers and importers used under the pa- That has been the matter about which tronage and support of the government 1 have taken pleasure in conferring of Germany You will find that they from time to time with your president were the same sorts of competition Mr Gompers if I may be perthat we have tried to prevent hy law mitted to do soAnd want I express my within our own borders If they could admiration of his patrioticto courage his we not sell their goods cheaper than sense and vision his statesmanlike lsrge could sell ours at a profit for them- of what is to be done I like to lay selves they could get a subsidy from my mind alongside of " a mind that the government which made it possible knows to pull In harness The to sell them cheaper anyhow and the horses how over traces the kick that will conditions of competition were thus have to be put In a corral controlled In large measure by the GerLabor Fair aad Reasonable man government Itself But that did “Now to 'stand the ground means not satisfy the German government “All the while there was lying be- that nobody must interrupt the prochind its thought in Its dreams of the esses of our energy if the interfuture a political control which would ruption can possibly be avoided withenable It in the long run to dominate out the absolute invasion of freedom the labor and the industry of the world To put It concretely that means this: by Nobody has a right to stop the procThey were not content with successsucesses of labor until all the methachievement: they wanted superior cess by authority I suppose very few ods of conciliation and settlement of you have thought much about the have been exhausted: and I might as here that I am not talkwell say railway The railroad was constructed In ing to youright alone You sometimes stop ordOr to run the threat of force down the courses of labor but there are oththe flank of the Industrial undertak- ers who do tie same r And I believe so that I am speaking not only of my ings of half a dozen other countries in own experience but of the experience that when German competition came It would not be resisted loo far —be- of others when I say that you are reacause there was always the possibility sonable in a larger number of cases of getting German armies Into the than the capitalists heart of that country quicker than any “I am not saying these things to them other armies could be got there Look personally yet because I haven't had at the map of Europe now Germany a chance But they have to be said In thrdstlng upon us again and again not in any spirit of criticism But In the discussion of peace talks about order to clean the and come what? Talks about Belgium: talks down to business atmosphere on 'both everybody about northern France talks abdut sides has got to transact business and Well those are deeply the settlement is never impossible when to us and to them both sides want to do the square and interesting subjects but they are not talking about the right thing heart of the matter Effective - “Moreover Cfnaaa Power Far Reaching a settlement Is always “Take the map and look at It Ger- hard to avoid when the parties can be many has absolute control of Austria-Hungabrought face to face I can differ with practical control of the Bal- a man much more radically when he kan states control of Turkey control Isn't iasthe room than I can when he pan-Germ- same day “One army Camp Funston 10Kas — hat size J” was the requicampaign of Co II of sition of the commander Sixty-fourt- h Hundred One depot the supto the sent here brigade brigade thinkofficer The officer supply ply sent the order ing it was a mistake commander The back to the company latter stated that he really wanted a hat that sixe developed that the hat Investigationone John Helsit a giant is desired BLUE AND by RED WHITE He from North Dakota was homesteading In that state when CORN IS THE LATEST Norwegian He has always called for the draft and much to order made hats his New had Service Br International from this — resulted has Clarksburg W Va Lewis county trouble Helsit is all fitted out except the has produced patriotic corn An ear grown on the farm of Robert Ingram hat and he is anxiously waiting for has red white and blue grains The his head gear That is on the way grains are perfect and many of each color are distributed over the ear MO A B PARSON BUS Y while some of the grams have all three M a sold in the bad) fee tba Honkqaiebaat an a coldtray Netv Instrumentalities for Better Carl Vernon Larson service at 277 Almvad street Tuesday at 1 p m Henry Hobbs services at Larkin chapel Tuesday at 1 p in instead of 2 p m as previously announce I Burial la Kaysvllle MARRIAGE LICENCES W H" Rhead Coalville’ Utah and Cora M Allison Salt Lake T Hoffman Conway Springe Kan tivir Elrtredye Salt Lake ailW Neta and Beta A fmsland Harfield flab Monroe Utah Johnson and Train Neb Koe L lMfrin omaba Plsrorias Self Lake N C: and James R men should speak to one another who IVarl L Baker Mklva!e I'tati A K Rime Midvale I tab and Jenale Fala-ue- v wish to be frank in a moment more Midvale Utah Utah: and Fe- critical perhaps than the history of the Emil Fred Schmidt Union line Martha Chance Salt lake world has ever yet known a moment Joseph A Woodjard Lo Angeles Cal and Emma Fielding Quincy III when it Is every man's duty to forget William O fanning Llano Tex and Ruby himself to forget his own interests Mortrneen Granger I tali and to fill himself with the Marion F Best Snlphnr Springs Ark nobility of a Marie Thompson Chlcaao III Bralnard Kenahaw and Allylee Richards Salt great national and world conception Ur-eiish- ure church In course of construction and did practically all of the build- ing himself He excavated for the foundation hauled away the dirt and with the help of willing hands laid the foundation Now he is doing the brick masonry in a fashion that Stought to Peter win the approbation of The parwith his golden street son Is making a gocd'job of the edifice and his unceasing toil Is Impressing many a doubter -- Berlln-to-Bagd- ad Berlln-to-Bagd- ad Alsac- e-Lorraine ‘Get-Togeth- ry November 13 1917 Salt Lake City UtaJi Herald-Republic- an er’ in the room because then the awkward thing Is that he can come back at me and answer what I say It is always dangerous for a man to have And the floor entirely to himself must insist In every intherefore we stance that the parties come into each other’s presence and there discuss the Issues between them and not separately in places which have no communication with each other “I always like to remind myself of a delightful saying of an Englishman of a past generation Charles Lamb He was with a group of friends and he spoke very harshly of some man who was not present I ought to say that Lamb stuttered a little And one of his friends said ’Why Charles I didn't know that 'you knew So and So “‘Oh he said ‘I don’t I can’t hate a man I know Hard ts llste Man Yaa Kaaw “There is a great deal of human nature of very pleasant human nature In that saying It Is hard to hate a man you know 'I must admit parenthetically that there are some politicians whose methods I do not at all believe In but they are jolly good fellows and if they only would not talk the wrong kind of politics with me I would love to be with them And so it is all along the line in serious matters and things less serioua We are all of the same clay and spirit and we can get- together if we desire to get together Therefore my counsel to you is this: “Let us show ourselves Americans by showing that we do not want to go off in separate camps or groups by ourselves but that we want to with all other classes and all other groups in a common enterprise which is to release the spirits of the world from bondage “I would be willing to set that tip as the final test of an American That is I have the meaning of democracy been very much distressed my fellow citizens by some of the things that The mob have happened recently Is here and itself spirit displaying there In this countr) I have sympathy with what some men are saying but I have no sympathy with the men that take their punishment Into their own hands and I want to say to every man who does Join such a mob that I do not recognize him as worthy of the free Institutions of the United States Lenlctian Protested “There are some organizations In this country whose object is anarchy and the destruction of law but I would not meet their efforts by making myself a partner In destroying the law I despise and hate their purposes but I respect the ancient processes of justice and I would be too proud not to see them done Justice however wrong they are And so I want to utter my earnest of protest against any manifestation or the spirit of lawlessness anywhere In any cause “Why gentlemen look what it means: We claim to be the greatest democratic people in the world and democracy means first of all that we can govern oursleves If our men have not then they are not capable of that great tiling which we call democratic government A man who takes the law Into his hands is not the in any form right man to of development of law and Institution And some of the processes by which the struggle between capital and labor Is carried on are processes that com very near to taking the law into your hands I do not mean for a moment to compare them with what I have just been speaking of but 1 want you to see that they are mere graduations of the manifestations of the unand that the willingness to fundamental lesson of the whole situation is that we must not only take common counsel but that we must yield to and obey common counseL Not all of the Instrumentalities for this are at hand I am hopeful that in the very near future new Instrumentalities may be organized by which we can see to it that various things that are now going on shall not go on New InntrumentNlltie Needed There are various processes of the dilution of labor and the unnecessary substitiutlon of labor and bidding In distant markets and unfairly upsetting the whole competition of labor which I mean now on ought not to go on— the part of employers —and we must InInstrumentality terject into this some fair thing of by which the will be done all around I am hopeful that some such Instrumentalitiesor may not be devised but whether they are we must use those that we have and upon every occasion where it Is necessary must have such an instrumentalit if necessary “And so my fellow citizens the reason that I came away from Washington is that I sometimes get lonely down there There are so many people in who know things that are Washington not so and there are so few people in about Washington who know anything United States what the people of the are thinking about 1 have to come up away and talk to men who are the real thing and say to them against ‘I am with you If you are with me’ And the only test of being with me Is not to think about me personally at all but merely to think of me as the expression for the time being of the power and dignity and hope of the United 1 - co-op-cr- ate self-contr- ol co-oper- ate co-oper- ate States” PRICES LOWER NOW THAN IN CIVIL WAR By International New Service la — War-tim- e Keokuk prices of foodstuffs today are not as high as thev were during the first years of the civil war Items taken from an &invoice Co of goods sold bj S Hamill wholesale grocers here when the fight for the emancipation of the negro was to R J Jacobs a retailer June staged 22 1862 show staple food products averaged about 129 per cent higher then A student of food prices discovered the old invoice in Chicago recently When compared with present prices arose there considerable discussion men among grocers and commission Sugar in the civil war days sold for $58 a barrel rice at 83158 a barrel tobacco at more than double the present price and tea at 810152 fore a d chest Twenty-fivgrade tea today pounds of the same81890 Coffee also may be bought for was nearly four times as high as at presentsame bill of The groceries andcansun-be dries that then brought 864414 today for 829161 purchased However civilization reminds the for transportation facilities counpublic to coffee tills and tea bringing try were not what they are today twenty-five-poun- SUGGESTS IMPORTING RABBITS FOR FOOD Lewiston Ida — The importation of Australian rabbits for use as food In the United States is suggested by H C Hoyle special commissioner for New South Wales in a communication to the Idaho state game warden Hoyle says the Australian rabbit is yielding his country 815000000 annually as a food animal whereas like' the jack-rabb- it of the Texas panhandle is was regarded as a pest ror-mer- ly ’ BARCJN VON STEUBEN FRENCHMAN IS CLAIM LOYALTY PLEDGE oven for Labor (Continued From Page 1) speech was possibly intended as a message to the people of Germany of Austria and of Russia as well as of the United States He declared his belief that were It not for the the spirit of freedom would find “as fine a welcome in the hearts of Germans as lt can find in any other ' pan-Germa- ns heart” “Power” he said “cannot be used with concentrated force against free peoples If it Is to be used by free peo- ple” Speaking probably of Austria Mr Wilson referred to the Intimations of anxiety for peace that had come “from one of the central powers” and declared lhat it ' means “that the people in that central power know that if the war ends as it stands they will in effect themselyes be vassals of Germany notwithstanding that they do not wish In their pride and proper spirit of nationality to be absorbed and dominated” Of Russia he said that he was amazed that some groups in that country could suppose that “any reform plans In the interest of the people can live in the presence of a Germany powerful enough to undermine or overthrow them by Intrigue or force” Pacifists Are Fa “Fatuous as the dreamers of Russia” were those persons in this country he declared emphatically who suppose that “the free industry and enterprise of the world can continue if the plan is achieved and the German power fastened upon the Iatersatlonai News Service B Indianapolis Ind — That Baron “von” Steuben of revolutionary war fame wat properly named Baron “de” Steubenn and was a Frenchman and not a Prus-slois the claim of A B Gardiner secretary-general of the Society of Cincinnati in a statement made publia here' Baron “de” Steuben was of German birth out renounced' Prussia and owed allegiance to France when he came to America to help the revolutionary cayse according to Gardiner He asserts that Steuben expatriated himself after making a glorious record in the seven years war but says the full reason for his expatriating himself probably will never be known LIVING LAWN MOWERS FOR WESTERN PARKS Denver Colo —Little may be seen in various sections of the Rocky mountain national pafk system next summer If a plan being advocated by those Interested in “conservation” programs is accepted It is pointed out that sheep cata be used to good advantage in the vicinity of Estes park as well as- ir the numerous municipal parks of Denver for “mowing lawns Great expense is Involved in keepbeauing the grass cut In Denver’s tiful parks and sheep are said to be excellent “lawn mowers” The city thers of Denver have also been muciiN Impressed with the suggestion that' snow-whisheep attended by dainty misses dressed as Dresden shepherdesses would greatly enhance the picBo-Pe- ep - te turesque landscape OGDEN’S WOMENFOLK STILL REGISTERING Ogden Nov 12 —Federal registration Is becoming more popular among Ogden women Mrs H H Spencer in charge of the registration in Weber county stated tonight that approximately 350 women had registered today Only 150 registered Saturday Mrs Spencer will keep the books open at her office in the courthouse tomorworld” to give a final chance to those The President directly ‘asserted that row who have neglected to register It is Germany had started the war and said estimated that 1500 Weber county womhe would leave confirmation of this en will register statement to the verdict of history He referred to Germany’s growth to a world peace conference Is made in the “place in the sun” and asked why she annual report of the executive council was not satisfied when she gained that of the American Federation of Labor described answer the he In position to the federation in submitted con today of methods German government’s convention The report declares here Indus of its the competition trolling war the that world “must wipe out all while the “all tries and asserted that there was lying behind Its thought in vestige of the old conceit that the napan-Germ- an Its dreams for the future a political control which would enable it in the long run to dominate the labor and Industry of the world” Through R R m Force Threat Mr Wilson cited in this connection the railway which he said “was constructed to run the threat of force down the flank of the Industrial undertakings of half a dozen other countries so that when German came In it would not be competition because there resisted too far Was always the possibility of getting German armies Into the heart of that country quicker than any other armies could get there” Summing it up he said that Germany Is determined that the political power of the world shall belong to her and that never before had such ambitions been based upon so exact and precise and scientific a plan of domination The President voiced in terms of eulogy his approval of the conduct of Samuel Gompers president of the American Federation of Labor and the he had maniof spirit fested in his relations with the administration “I like to lay my mind” he said “alongside of a mind that knows how to pull in harness The horses that kick over the traces will have to be put in a corral” Thfe President’s references to Mr Gompers were loudly applauded Labor Mast Be Proteeted “While we are' fighting for freedom’ Mr Wilson asserted after these references “we must see among other We that labor Is free things see must to It that the instrumentalities by which the conditions of labor are improved are not blocked and checked Nobody has a right to stop the processes of labor until all the methods of conciliation and settlement have been exhausted” The President took occasion also to denounce the mob spirit which he said “is displaying Itself ' here and there in this country” He declared that “if are our men have not not capable of that great thingthey which we call democratic government” A pledge of loyalty to the government was contained in the annual recouncil of the port of the executive federation which was submitted to the This report convention today to the usual procedure was referred to committees named by Mr Gompers and its several sections will be taken up by the convention as soon as reported back At the afternoon session Secretary Morrison read a telegram from Frank J Hayes president of the United Mine Workers of America denying a report that Ilayes or the mine workers intended to lead a fight against President Gompers or the war policies of the government Labor la Democracy Flgbf Gov Charles S Whitman of New York who also addressed the convention declared that the fight that democracy may live Is the fight of labor labor and democracy being one “American working men” he said “are fighting for the 'working men of the world for it Is not on battle fields alone that this war is being fought “It Is notonly what the working man does it is not only the part he contributes but it Is the attitude of mind and his faith that constitute an important part in this world struggle “American working men will fight the battles of the working men of the world because they are born leaders of human freedom and human progress and when they are honestly in the interfighting for a just cause ests of' labor they are fighting too in the battles for civilization and democracy” Lasdos Asks Labor 4o Help With an appeal to all American working men to place their full and undivided force behind the fighting men at the front and a stirring picture of what labor may expect if Germany wins the war President A A Landon of the Buffalo chamber of commerce welcomed the American Federation of Labor at the opening of Its convention A former labor leader himself who has seen first hand In Europe how troops in the field give their lives and blood for naught when workers at home engage in disputes Instead of all their energy into keeping putting the fighting men supplied Mr Landon appealed ato all labor to sinkto everydo Its tremendous effort thingtoinwin the war part Demand for' “adequate and direct” representation of wage earners at the Berlin-to-Bagd- ad - ion self-contr- ol oc-cord- ing tion belongs to the ruler” Questions raised by the war occupy the entire report No room virtually Is left for daubt that the United States government has the unanimous support of organized labor in the war and it is asserted with equal emphasis that the vital interests o the average citizen demand that he have a voice In the readjustments due to come with peace Optimism over labor achievements during the year Is tempered with a warning that benefits obtained front emergency opportunities must be based on of human welfare and not principles the result of taking advantage or necessity Freedom of expression is upheld but the report says those who abuse the freedom of the press to undermine the nation’s free institutions should be punished as traiV tors President Wilson’s war address to Congress Is Included in the report as is also the declaration adopted by a of union officials last March meeting was seen to be Inevitable that when It the European conflagration would spread to America the-nation’- Mayor Urges Miners To Be Loyal to U S Denver Nov 12—In an letter open to “all men working In and around the copper mines millvand smelters of the United States and Canada” made public tonight Charles H Moyer president of the International Union of Mine Mill and Smelter Workers apto peals to athe loyalty of working men assure maximum production ' and with the govern- thorough ment in fulfilling the country’a needs Iq reference to the recent settlement of copper strikes In Arizona the letter says the government’s action in the strikes “indicates that it settling is willing to do justice to the workmen in our industry and at the same time asks nothing from the owners of these industries that they cannot do on a basis of honesty and fairness” ft reads: Continuing “I believe that the Importance of our” Industry is such a rill that the necessity for the highest possible production of copper during this war time means so much to our nation which Is in a struggle for its life that our patriotism loyalty and fealty to our country and to our government should be of such high character that we should be willing to submit to whatever Injustice pursuing that course would mean rather than to by any act of ours weaken in the most infinitesimal degree the strength of our nation at thi ion time” Welsh Miners Support Britain9 s War Measures London Nov 11 —An Important section of British labor has given a decision in favor of continuing the war until victory is attained The South Wales mining area sometimes called the storm center of British Industry has been balloting for several days on the question whether to strike if the government proceeds with a scheme for “combing out” more men of miliage for service in the arms’ By tary a majority of three to one the miners have decided against the strike ASK FOR and GET KID)irDD©l!ips - The Original 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