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II THE OGDEN 5 I AINDAKI J : OGDfc-N, UTAH, TUESDAY. JUNE 24. I'M? , J I PEACE I CHEERS IT People of Liile Cheer I and Other French Cities I Are Celebrating, i PARIS, Monday, Juno 23 Celebra- i tions over the German decision to sign I1 the treaty of pence without resecra Hons were nowhere more enthusiastic I than at Lille and olhcr cities and! I, towns wrested from the Germans. Newspapers printed special editions, rheerins crowds paraded the streets I and the houses were dcked with al- lied flags. A' Toulon. Brest and o?h- I r naval ports, warships announced the 1 news lo Tnr people by firms salutes I of 21 suns. In all the cities Kovern ment buildings were illuminated. High carnival reigned in the boule vards of Pans fur into the night and W scenes enacted at the time of the ar mistice were repeated and indeed in tensified. I Sinking of Ships PARIS. June 24 The council of three has referred the question rela tive to the sinking of the German fleet in Scapa Plow io a commission Of ex peffs which will determine whether the armistice conditions were violated. I REFUSES I 10 SO H Dr. Von Haimhausen Has Resigned to Escape B Responsibility. I WEIMAR. Monday. lime 23. (By B' ;Tbe Associated Press ) Dr. Hanil on Haimhausen, who was on Sunday designated n the German represpnta live to sign the treaty of peace, has Ielegraph-1 lus resignation from Ver- j sailles rather than attach his name to the Instrument PARIS Tun-: 84. No word has been received from Welniar relative to the new German plenipotentiaries at Versaillies. The date of the cone mony of signing the treaty has not as yet been fixed, but the belief is gaining ground that it will occur Thursday or possibly Friday. I ISOLATION FATAL, SAYS BRAZILIAN 1 President-Elect Wants Brazil and United States to Work Together. WASHINGTON, June 22 - Necessity for l he Uniled States and Brazil to work together for the building up of the world in the age in which iula-, tion is fatal to nationalities was point-1 ed out by Dr. Epitacis Pessoa, pres'-' dent-elect of Brazil, in an address to night at a dinner given in his honor by Secretary' of the Treasury Glass- "The simplicity of this course and 4he advantage to be derived from it, j the Brazilian president-elect added, "are clear when it is a question of tvc such countries as Brazil and the Frit ej States, united by so many moral Trinities and such close bonds of sym pathy and friendship." The dinner came at the close of the j busiest day spent by the distinguished I "visitor since ho arrived in New York last Friday from Prance, where he represented his nation at the peace conference. At noon a luncheon was ." ; ; -siven In his honor at the Pan Ameri can union by the Brazilian charge, J during the afternoon he visited the sen- ;. . tite and house of representatives, both I of which recessed, while Dr. Pessoa I was presented Later he was the gneit H at a reception attended by members sTtjS of tho latln-Amertcan diplomatic ,V corps. I 'V 00- I ATTENTION GIRLS Why I look for a new job all the time? In a few weeks you can learn a "Trade" that will jl employ you permanently, the iM year round; short hours, satis- $$m factory conditions, and WE s PAY YOU WHILE YOU mm LEARN. Apply John Scow Wm croft & Sons Co., Mfg. De- oartmenU 4466 WITHE WORLD Ciemencea.ii Tells the Nations to Keep Their I Powder Dry. I i PARIS, Monday, June 23. "'We have waited 49 years for this moment," exclaimed Prcin"-r I lenienceau as he; opened the dispatch announcing 'hat Germany would sign the treaty, at the meeting of 'he council of three his aftrnooD "For forty-nine years," be continue.! "the mailed fist of the rci tre (German trooper) who has gov erned German; baa menaced the wi rid Whether the man's name was M.s ' marck or William II, it was still the same retire of the middle apes sur-: rounded by soldiery and drunk wib pride "Be careful; keep your powder dry , Re careful. Remind the world that it (a living on a barrel of that ponder. This reitre'a dogma that migtu la r:ht, tha; a state's only obligation Is J ta own interest that treaties do nui j iexist when they clash with the inter 'est of a state and get rich by any means. We know from witnesses wio were at the side of William II, tho I n hen lie learned of the Sarajevo trage dy, he who posed as a keeper of the peace cried 'The hour has struct I Now we shall see what an army " I . . nr PRESIDENT OF THE i IRISH REPUBLIC De Valera Emerges From Se clusion to Make an An nouncement. NEW YORK. June 23 Edward j(t)amonn) de Valera, president of the jSinn Fein "Irish republic" emerged i dramatically tonight from the seclu-1 jsion In which he had kept himself J 1 sines his arrial in the United States I i In a statement to the press at the ; (Waldorf-Astoria hotel where he was greeted b wildly enthusiastic fol!oAr iers, he declared he had come to America to speak for the Irish 12-' , tion." Mr. De Valera. a tall, smooth faoed. ! clear-eyed young In-hman. was boi.i in N w York in lSh2 but said he "tf jnounced" his American citizenship when he became an Irish soldier He declined to tell bow he contrived to reach America but said he came here from Boston several days ago. It wis. stated that during his stay in New York he has been living at the Carme lite priory in Ea.s Twenty-ninth strait. His Bet retary, H. J Roland, said rhat While in Boston de Valera endeavoied I to arrange an audience with Cardinal ,0'Conneli, but did not see him. Prior 'to that, he said, he was in Phlladelphn where he saw Michael J. Ryan, who I was R member of the Irish peace dele gation and Dr Patrick .1 McCai'in. He declared de alera had visited Bal ;tnnore, where h saw Cardinal Gibbons und Washington, where he met sev eral United States senators He Raid 1 1 hat he also paid a visit to his mother In Rochester, N. Y oo GERMANS ARE TO SIGN THURSDAY' PARIS. .June 23. (By The Associ ated Preaa). The signing of the peace ;treatv is not likely to take place, be- fore Thursday, possibly not until Frl ; day The announcement was made to night by Premier Clemenceau and Sec j retary Dutasta. Statement Is Made. PARIS, June 23. (By The Associ-I ated Press). In declaring its lnten tion to accept and sign the peace. terms the government of the Ger man republic has Bent the following note to M. Clemenceau, president of the peace conference, through Dr. 1 Haniel von Haimhausen: "The minister of foreign affairs has instructed me to communicate to your excellency the following " 'It appears to the government of the German republic, In consterna ! ttion at the last communication of the allied and associated govern ments, that these governments have decided to wrest from Germany by force acceptance of the peace condition-, even those, which without pre senting any material significance, aim at divesting the German people of their honor. " 'No act of violence can touch the toonor of the German people. The German people, after frightful suf- f-rin ' in (huon lost vcor.u kav. . . I means of defending themselves by I external action. I " 'Yielding to superior force, and , without renouncing in the meantime I its own view of the unheard of in i Justice of the peace conditions, the I government of the German republic, I declares that it Is ready to accept and I 8im the peace conditions Imposed.' "Please accept, Mr. President, as I Burances of my high consideration. (Signed) "VON HANIEL." oo LIBERTY BOND FINALS. NEW YORK, June 23 Liberty bond final prices today were: 3V4's, 99 32; first 4s, 95.00; second 4's. 93.90; fir?t I14'S, 95 40: second 4'i's, 94.24; third t1 ?, 96.12; fourth 4Vs, 94 24; Vic tory 3Vs, 100, Victory i 09.96. wffl Profound Distrust I Is Shown and Treach 1 ery May Be Expected. I LONDON. June 24 Profound dis- trust of Germany la the predominant note in London press comments on the German government's derision to sign the treaty oi peace, it la contended th- Germane proved themselves treacherous thrnuchou' ih war, the latest Instance being the sinking of their Interned fleet in Scapa Flow, and, therefore, if would be premnture lo celebrate p?ace until Uie treaty la ac tuall) Blghed. Even afterward, it is said, the allies must be continually ion guard until the last penalty la paid. Humors thai the Bauer cabinet lias resigned under pressure from the re actionaries, although unconfirmed, I cause some apprehension, for. if true, lit would involve military enforcement I of the allied terms. ! The Herald, a Socialist organ, sav- " Germ any cannot and will not keep I the treaty, because it is based on force, ' instead of Justice " on TIGER TO END CAREER Clemenceau Will Quit Public Office When Treaty Is Ratified. PARIS, June 24. Premier Clemen eeau has expressed his intention to resit;1- from office as soon as the treaty is promulgated, feeling that he has accomplished the task for which he assumed the premiership, Bayi Marcel Hutin in the Echo de Paris ' It is expected that parliament would I ratify the treaty late in July. oo RAILROAD MEN TO j JOIN FEDERATION Union Men Are to Demand a Forty-four Hour Week. j ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., June 23. The American Federation of Labor at I I the closing session today of its an- f , nual convention, pledged itself to ob-! tain a general 44-hour week for work-' ' ers in all crafts throughout the United I States and for emploves in the gov- i ernment service. The demand was ! E 'based on a determination to prevent t 'unemployment, which the delegatea j j declared Is one of the two primary it causes of industrial unrest The other ( i l . .-. iv 111 A t cnT&n tif mimhfl aim or I power of the dollar. Manufacturer and employers were urged to ' bridge the gap" and increase wages "without any controversy." Samuel Gompers, president of the federation, was greeted with a roar of cheers lato today when he announced' three of the four great brotherhoods the engineers, conductors and train ! men had applied for charters in the federation. The fourth brotherhood the firemen he said, was considering a similar application. If the firemen J decide to affiliate the ranks of the fed-j eration will be increased by 600,000 men. Delegates were of the opinion that, with the entry of the brotherhoods, the federation will back the demand of the railway men for government ownership and control of the roads. The convention also pledged its 1 1 support to the btriking commercial ' , telegraph operators and appointed a committee to confer with Postmaster .General Burleson in the hope of ob taining for the telegraphers the ame concessions which have been granted to electrical and telephone workers. The report of the committee which had been studying the question of the 44-hour week was adopted unanimous- ; ly as expressing the convictions of j the convention It said in part: "It muut be realized that during tho war five million of the most active young men wore taken from indus tries for war service. Despite this the production of the country' during the war was greater than at any other given period in history. OI course, this grear production was materially assisted by the introduction of women into the factories, and to a large ox tent by the elimination of the liquor industry and taking over of people Victrola Records 1 voice the mighty power of the worlds greatest artists To speak the language of music in the sweet est tones that spring from human lips, or are charmed from an instrument by the skill of a master's hands that is the province of Victrola Records. A jjj They are true tone-portraits inscribed with1 I the priceless art of the most famous singers and instrumentalists this generation has produced. The genius, the power, the beauty of every voice and every instrument all are inherent in Victrola r fi Records. They present a stupendous musical review displaying the diverse gifts possessed by I the greatest artists of all the world. A privilege ? exclusive with Victrola Records a distinction L; conferred upon them in recognition of their M I,,.,. absolutely lifelike reproduction. I I There are Victor dealers everywhere and they will gladly play t ! V any music you wish to hear, j j s fcjP'C -' ' Victors and Yictrolas $12 to $950. jl fl ' BByL-' ': 'JlV Important Notice. Victor Records and Victor Machines arc scientific- 4nBnp9Ll5 fj' ' n" 7 coordinated and synchronired in the process of manutacru re, and their ' JM&HA' i "vi ' U?0, nC V1C otcr' '5 absolutely essential to a perfect reproduction y iSKpK3l5f't jy iTfett Nw Victor Recordi demooitrtttod rt aJI deilcm on the lit of each tnontb y ' irJSaB7 Jl ' i ''Victrola" U the ReRiitereJ Tridcratrlc of the Vlcror Talking Machine CptOf J Victor Talking Machine ; previously engaged in that work for war production. 'Labor organization? for many yoars have been fighting to secure the eight-hour day, once known as the shorter work day. This eight-hour day means 48 hours of labor prr week Because of the changed conditions brought about by the war, a number of the industries have been able al ready to Introduce tho 44 hour week, continuing the eight-hour day with a half holiday on Saturday. "Only twelve years ago the Interna tional Typographical union expended more than J4.000.000 in securing for its members the 48-hour week in the printing industry. Now that organi-1 zation is negotiating for and will prob ably receive the 44-hour week through conciliation and without the expendi ture of money. "The garment working trades have succeeded in securing the 44-hour week. Other industries have done or are doing likewise. We believe it will be but a short time till the eight-hour day with half day holiday on Satur- Huv mimnlmr a 44-hniir week Will be ' the universal hours of labor and adopted in all industries. "While this is most desirable and i the executive council has used all aailable power to assist in bringing about a 44-hour work week in all crafts this convention should go even further than this "There is at the present time a . large volume of unrest among the j workingmrn on this continent. There can be no doubt that there are two ; reasons for this unusual condition j first, tho high cost of the necessities of life; second, unemployment. ' Until wages are so adjusted that tho earnings of labor will buy the sume amount of the necessities of life that could be purchased by thH earnings previous to th' war. this un restful exhibit by the working people has a foundation for its existence thnt cannot be set aside. Previous to tho war the dollar earned b labor would buy a certain amouiv of a certain quality of food and clothing The (dollar arnfd at the present time will also buy a certain amount of a cer tain quality of food and clothing, but it will not buy the same amount of tho same quality goods of dollar dollar earned previous to the war would buy. Until this gap is bridged and the wages increased so that the same amount of the same quality of goods can be bought with the dollar of today as was possible before the war, tho conditlon of the laborer will be less desirable than in the pre-war j period. Manufacturers and employers; of labor should recognize this fact j and increase the wages to this point i without any controversy." oo SAILORS ARE SHOT BY THEIROFFICERS THURSO. Scotland. June 23 (by The Associated Press ) The German1 sailors were shot by their own officers when they attempted to obey the com mands of the British officer- to r tuss to their ships and shut the sea cocks This statement was made by Lieu tenant Nuttal of the steamer Alautte. who reached hero today from Scapa Flow, where the German ships were sunk. oo Wage Increases of Western Union Date Back Year SAN FRANCISCO. June 5 The Western Union Telegraph company in tends o make its recently announced wacc increase's retroactive as from August 1 191S. ins'ead of January 1,1 the date determined on by the sovrrn j (bent, M T Took, general manace- of! the Pacific division of the company announced today The increase ranges from 5 to 13 per cent Increases granted by the government ranged i from 5 to 10 per cent. The company will meet the margin of Increase between August 1 and Jan uary l.from its own funds. Cook said. Coast Strike of Telegraphers Is Now at an End 5 A N FRANCISCO, June 23 Repre sentatives of striking telephone oper ators in California and Nevada and telegraphers here moved today to bring their respective strikes to a speedy conclusion. The operators and linemen officials served notice that they intended to call out the locals of the northwest in an effort to speedily adjust their dif ferences in the event the telephone company did not grant their demand.-t today. The telegrapher officials urged the installation of striking girl operators j as pickets before the Postal Telegraph company's plant here. Careful consideration of their re-' quest was promised Operators and linemen officials wait-j ed today for an answer to the demands presented last week. Officials of the company held a conference, but m:.ue no announcement Bakerrtfield telephone operators were reported to have quit their posts t day. oo FETTERS IN SEATTLE. SPOKANE, Wash., June 23. Lie" teuant J M. Fetters and Sergeant Owen Kissel of the army aviation s:r ice, flying under government order? to stimulate recruiting, landed -cro today. The aviators started their day's flight at Walla Walla. They Htoppod at Ritzville for luncheon Read the Classified Ada, I MURDERER FACES i JURY OF SEVEN j WOMEN, 5 MEN . REDWOOD CITY, Cal.. June 23. A jury of seven women and five men will try Dr. Ephriam Northcott, San A Francisco, physician on a charge of having murdered Mis: Inez Reed, an army nurse. They were selected to day. A body, afterward identified as tha' of Miss Reed, who served as a nurse at the presidio at San Francisco, ana at Camp Funston. Kansas, was f0""" in canyon near here last March. The prosecution contends she was the vic tim of an illegal operation. lEIGHT HOURS AND WAGE RAISE. Spokane. Wash Members of lM Root and Shoe Workers' union ein ployed in the repair shops have been (granted an eight-hour day and an ad- vanc" in wages, covering all shops in the city. - Used for 70 Years Thr.i its usr Grandmother's 7" youthful appmrance has La . remained until youth has voS become but a memory. .JjWi The soft, refined, peariy &hBBB white appearance u rmt renders leaves the joy Ball of Beauty with yo EBSQ Hiv for m n HbV years. E