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1 TODAY'S METAL PRICES t )t A rfYf ft S ifti T WEATHER FORECAST NEW ORK-Copper e.ectrolyfc 21c; led firm, II I I 1 fl I Ffllilrll T I l II 11 I wth. indication. for O.den . vtctnlt: M 6ST':Cbd: spelter , Vf B J V JaU J4fcT U V7 Z3) VV bT -P A Tonight and Wednesday partly cloudy, warmer in ' S JP " fJ south and castoortions tonight. L O FEARLESS INDEPENDENT PROGRESSIVE NEWSPAPER - -Fo7ty-mnvear-No. 263. Price Five cent, QGDEN CITY, UTAH, TUESDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 4, 1919. LAST EDITION 3:30 P. M. jffl til fil UTAH MINES WORKING AT 90 PER CENT CAPACITY I - m Bolsheviki Claim Victory Over Russ Army I Kenyon Introduces Resolution Seeking to End Labor Trouble; Lewis Says Will Be Simple Matter for Government and Operators to Re Open Negotiations; Garfield Taking Steps to Bring About Settlement; Utah Mines Reported to Be Producing Normal Tonnage; Mines in Other Districts Running With Small Capacity. WASHINGTON, Nov. 4. A special presidential com l missicn to attempt arbitration of the bituminous coal strike jj was proposed in a resolution introduced today by Chairman I Kenyon, of the labor committee. Without discussion, the measure was referred to that committee. ;J INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Nov. 4. Breaking his silence here for the first time since he was served with the restraining bc order horn the court of Federal Judge A. B. Anderson last Friday, John L. Lewis, acting president of the United Mine m Workers of America, gave ou? the following brief statement Jj in regard to government efforts to end the strike of approxi-' m mately 425,000 soft coal miners: "The machinery of the joint system of bargain in the ; mining industry is intact. It would be a simple matter for the government and the coal operators again to set it in motion to negotiate a wage agreement." . i SETTLEMENT OF STRIKE WASHINGTON, No . 4. Efforts Kr. J P --iM i : . li iiH-ni nf ill- I utrike of bituminous coal miners wen r ir?.fhr, ; -, ri , ( ,,,., f.n(.,- re between I Federal Fuel Administrator Garfield I 'nd J w. Morrow, president of the I American Coal association, an organ I ballon of the loading coal operators ' 01.1)1 fY KjPr Garfield returned early today I froia a visit to Kentuck) and scon aft I wards . ni iu conference with Mr. I Morrow, v.i0 uas ,m official of Ihe j '-'! ' :.ami-nllti, ii .liiiin. i i ' war ! i.n.n, .a. i . . .. Mu to make wen nol dii dosed in ad I '.mce of the conference. UTAH MINES RUNNING. I SALT LAKE CITY. Utah. Nov. I I yrlh coa' min''' continue to opi I I ,ta nearly complete crows and it is r?'"naiod they are woi king at ap Proximately j.i per cent capacity. At " ;' '"' ,'i'i' ial.- (J. . ' .1 a irl HI a17"1"1' ''ondi,,ns Previ il in ev rj nip and say the s , . ason oi I I h 'h thsr)atehinK of additional uoops from ( nnip Kearny. Cal . to t '-tab fields "' officials report a normal ' "nerd of oal r,oin -he m men bin 'I' h. 1,1 a I I XV , "i ar i attempt to distribute the supplv ! luaiij and in accordance with the fenc (list Issued Saturday by the I Ullao administration .B, MINERS WORKING. LiiRl1DURG' ' Nov 4 - Re-I Jf"; -r-'ived a. ,h, depart m. nt 1 btu?nS 'day fr,Jln Jnspectow in tit" f S "S rield 'icated that many! I land r V ork.n:- , v.. -.. .. ,'' I 'Vnt, 'r"Dr' uFayo,u' and Somerset iB oTh' and that mo were v. orking other parts 0f the .Mate thaurr,s "l sr"'r'r;" msp' '"'or, Wf.r 1 S , -:in incllna'io" return to! rr". ' waichin the rl, ,elop i RmTRrRnE.A" PRODUCTION. ' Cni f ,0, IA"Nov- i - - Record I ftiues in .k Production in non-uujon i 'Wed lr district v,as Sa lead y Pert0 while i VorffR dJ',," of (oo United Mine j "ince the strike was called COLORADO MtNEO OPEN PEN'VER. Colo . Nov. 4. Hcports r---ccHed at the offices of the Colorado Futl & Iron company here today indi cated an increase in the number of men working in company mines, compared v Ith yesterday. At Walsen Dear Walsenburs. whAro troops were dispatched late yesterdav, 18a men wore working this momlntr. while only 10 worked yesterday, accord ing to the report. The Fremont mine in Fremont county, had 2t mui at worl; and was operating today. Yesterday this mine was closed, no workers reporting; Other properties, except Ideal, report- ' ed Increased working forces. At Ideal j the force at work was two less than . st' rdii', the company said. no DANIELS WILL NOT DISCIPLINE SIMS FORNEWSARTICLE WASHINGTON, Nov. 4. Secretary J DanielB indicated today that no steps, m pe contemplated to discipline Rear Admiral Sims because of statements in recently published articles detailing the admiral's experience in Europe, during the war. Daniel Connell. di-, roctor of the Irish National bureau, has written Mr. Daniels demanding that the officer be called to account for alle. d n Flections on the Sinn Fein party in Ireland. 'Admiral Sims was granted permis sion to write a book on his ezperl ences In Europe,'' Mr Daniels waid In, reply. ' The department did not en BOr ii and is not. responsible lor any statements in it." on TO SETTLE FIUME CASE. PARIS, Nov. I (Havas.) France has taken the initiative in prresent to: the Washington a new proposal for Settlement of the Flume question, ac cording to the Echo de Paris. The newspaper saye the move has the sup port of Great Britain Electors Ballot for Gov ernors and Other Stale Officials. INTEREST IN OHIO Popular Vote on the Eighteenth Amend ment Constitution, j NEW YORK, Nov. 4 Electors in ; five states went to the polls today to1 ballot for governors, while election of! lesser officials and decisions on con j Stltutional questions favored the vot ers of several other states. Gover nors are beir.R elected In Kentucky Maryland. Massachusetts. Mississippi and New Jersey. The elections in Ohio are heme watched with interest by "wet" and "dry" advocates, as there, for the first lime in any state, a popular vote is I being taken on the eighteenth amend ment to the constitution This is he ing accomplished b a referendum on i lie legislature's action in ratifying th amendment Ohio also is taking a ref erendum vote on the prohibition en-' forcement adopted by the legislature and is voting on two proposed consti-! hilinnnl omanitmanti tnimfifnr r.n rm. hi bit ion. Kentucky. Massachusetts. New Jer- , sey, Virginia and New York are elect-1 ' ing legislatures. Constitutional ques- 'Hons confront the voters in IllinrH.s Nebraska and Texas. Illinois and Ne-j braska are electing delegates to con I stitutional conventions while Texas is i I passing on a call for constitutional j , convention and on six proposed eon-' stitutional amendments. I. PANDOLFO'S HIGH IN II. S. COURT CHICAGO Nov 4 Ralph Olson, president of the First National bank of St. Cloud, Minn., the home of the Pan Motor company was the first wit ness today at the trial of 13 of the motor company official.-: charged with using the maiis to defraud. Mr. Olson testified concerning a transaction whereby John Barret ' placed Pandolfo'S personal note for1 $500,000, together with a $1,000,000 Fan stock certificate, made out to Fan dolfo, in the First National bank of St. Cloud. The transaction took place on May 31, 1918, and it was cancelled in December. 1918. At that time the papers wore withdrawn an' the bank, received a release. W. T. Maxwell of Little Rock. Ark .i a state bank commissioner, the next ' witness, Identified an application of the Pan Motor company to sell .-.lock In Arkansas. nn CHILE GETS OUTLET. WASHINGTON. Nov. A Chile has civ.-n Ihlivia an outlet to the Pacific ocean by ceding a strip of land north of the province of Arlca. according to official advices received here todS UU ' JAMES WOODS GREEN DE D LAWRENCE, Kan.. Nov. 4. Jamet Woods Green, known amcng the stu dents of Kansas university as 'I ncle Jimmy," dean of the school of law for more than forty years died here ni morning, V Sheriff's Squad Attacked by Women With Bricks and Stones. YOUNGSTOWN. Ohio, 'Nov 4 Hrick and stones flew while deputy sheriffs fought with enraged women when a crowd of 150 women this morning t tempted to prevent workers from on teiing the YouhgStOWn Sheet nnd Tube companj plant here. Five men and four women were ar reted, charged with rioting. No oni was seriously Injured. Phots-, were fired from 4 street In the Ohio works of the Cnrncgle Steel company plant this morn- I Ing and mill guards returntfl the fire. No r.i.siu. ; 1 1. s wen- reported." CHICAGO. Nov. 4 Union pickets j wefe withdrawn from the streets of ;:ir.' and Indiana Harbor, Ind., todav for the first time since the stmt of I the steel strike six weeks ago Work r? J entered the great steel plants unmo- I leafed. Colonel AW S. Mapcs, commander ot the troops In C:ir, Is investigating let- ' tors he obtained urging th- strikers to "lay low" until the troops are recalled. He Satd the withdrawal of the picket. probably .-ts In line with this policy. oo CABINET OFFICERS LEAVE CAPITAL TO CASTBALLOTS WASHINGTON. Nov I Withsev-; oral members of President Wilson's Cabinet In then- home towns today to cat their ballots, ttv cabjnel did not hold its regular Tuesday meeting It wa expected to assemble later in the week, however, to discuss the coal strike and the appointment of a com mission on industrial unrest. ( abinet officers absent included At torney General Palmer, who was at his home in Stroudsburg, Pa., and Secre tary Gla.ss, who was In Lynchburg, Va. Secretary Baker had obtained an absentee's ballot from Cleveland and oted by mail. For the first time since he has been in the White House, President Wilson was unablo to go to his home in Princeton. N J.. to cast his ballot. Secretary Tumulty said the president "w.?s in fine shape" this morning and would be permitted to receive the elec tion returns "provided they are good." The house of representatives was not in session, having recessed so members from stales where elections were being held could return home. The senate, however, continued its discussion of the peace treaty FOR CLOSED SHOP. MIAMI, Fla , Nov. 4. Moie than ninety per tent of union men in Miami have voted in favor of a general strike to uphold Ihe principle of the closet shop The strike committee today se; next Mondaj for a gvneral walkout More than 3600 union men will be a l fected and two million dollars worth of; building held up. 00 - JOY PARTY ENDS. f NEW YORK, Nov. 4 The cruise of U. S. S. Joy ended today when her skipper, "Lieutenant- Commander" Harold E, Joy was arreGtcd for impersonating a na- val officer. I f "It's all my wife's fault," he I said. "She bought me a yacht i and this uniform with wound and I service stripes and told me if I didn't wear it she'd leave me." f j Joy waa taken to a police sta- I tion at the instance of a naval In- J telligencc officer. He is 20 years old- 4 i . ' . ." j ARE ON DUTY ! . Arrive From Fort Ni agara With Equipment for Long Stay. BROWNSVILLE. Pa.. Nov 4. United States troops entered Pennsyl vania on strike duty today when a eomnanv of Infantry arrived here trom Buffalo. The troops in command of Colonel E. 1 Eans. arrived from Fort Niag ara early in the da . They number ISO nu n and carried camp equipment and supplies for a long stay. It was reported that another company would arrive later in the day. Brownsville is on the Monongahela river, the center of an important min mc field with about forty mine? em ploying some 40,000 miners It is on the edge of the non-union mine coun try. Many mines are closed by the strike, but an almost equal number not controlled by the United Mine Workers are to be kept In operation under the protection of the troops, it was stated today by the operators. ELECTIONS IN THE GERMAN AREAS BE ACTED ON PARIS. No 4 November 10 has been fired by the supreme council as the date when the plebiscite commis sion created under the i;erman peace treaties will meet in Paris to discuss the elections in the various areas, the political affiliation of which is to be settled by popular vote. The United States will not be represented even of ficially at this meeting Holland has been advised by the council that it adheres to the decision provlouslv reached not lo recognize the duties ownership of fJerman ships purchased by Holland after the open ing of the war The council discussed the'Hunearlan situation, but made no great progress toward a solution of tho problem of dealing with the Rumanians who are still occun in'; a considerable section of the country France aus Italy have both been charged with lukewarnmess in supporting the position of the Inter-1 allied mission at Budapest and some! reports of today's council session had it that there had been no perceptible strengthening of their attitude in sup port of the mission. There were said' to be looking at the question from; separate viewpoints and not to be in harmony with each other. Radical Changes i In U. S. Foreign Trade Reported WASHINGTON, Nov. 4. Radical changes In the foreign trade of the United States in spirits, wines and liquors due m national prohibition leg islation are reported by the depart ment of commerce. For the eight months ending with August, I91, the value of liquors es ! ported was nineteen times as great as ihe imports while in the year 1914 1 the value of Imports was five times! he value of the exports. Intoxicat Ing liquors imported during the Oral igtit months of the present year to talled 516,214 in value, or at the rate if 774,324 for the complete year, while :n 1917 the Import trade oi the I nited States in this eommoditv amounted to 17.G79,132 and in 1914 to $20,347,546 Exports for the eight mouths . nd ng With AUgUBl amounted m 9,989, 58 as compared with $5,S.S3,013 for Q HOSTESS TO ROYALTY ik lllj ! V SWfiS THOMAS . R MARSHALL I WASHINGTON When King Albert and Queen Elizabeth of Belgium visit Washington, at the completion of their tour through the United Btates, Mrs. Thomaa K. Marshall, wife of Vice President Marshall, will rocoivo them - a hostess. the corresponding period in 1918 and $x,417.17S In 1917 Continuation of i his export trade is expected by the department of the greal quantities of liquors now in bonded distilleries and i 'customs warehouses. oo WOMEN AND GIRLS WELCOME FRENCH TIGER' WITH KISS STRASSBURG, Alsate, Nov 4. (By the Associated Press.) The solution I of the many problems the world is now facing may be summarized in the sin gle word "work," Premier Clemence.iu 'declared in his keynote sneeeh for the government party In the parliamentary elections campaign, delivered here to- i day I The speech also was his farewell i message on the eve of the retirement i from politieal life which he conteni j plates. His address, he declared, was not a message meant for Frar.ro alone, but was an appeal to the enure world to renew its labors as they had been per formed before the war and produce for the world's needs. STRASSBURG. Nov. 4. This eity, the capital of reclaimed Alsace, extend ed n warm greeting this morning to Premier Clemcnceau, who came here io deliver a speech intended, it is un derstood. to set forth the program of the government party in the parlia mentary elections' campaign The premier was met by Alexander Mllle rand, the governor of Alsace, and oth or potables, and was cheered by thousands of the populace as he passed before the guard drawn up in his hon or. A picturesque feature was furn ished by Alsatian girls In national costume tossing flowers as the pre mier went by. "This is one of the greatest days of by life," the premier exclaimed "It was worth living for. Now I know I have not lived in vain." Brushing aside M, MlHerand and others near him, the 7S-year-cld pre mier mingled With the crowds of Al satians who had broken through the cordon formed by the police, who were not too insistent in keeping them back Pretty girls virtually mobbed the "grand 'old man" of Prance, who save every appearance of enjoying :he experience immensely. The girls and women welcomed him in the Al satian dialect, which the premier does not understand, but their re sounding kiss on his weather-beaten cheeks, needed no Interpreter. TWELVE KILLED - IN WRECK OF THE SIMPLON EXPRESS PARIS. .Nov 4 The Siinplon ex-, press, while ju a standstill between Pout-sur Tonne and Sens, (about 60 miles southeast of Paris) al io o'clock last night, was run into by a train bound for Geneva. Twelve persons were killed and about thirty injured The authorities have gone to the scene oi the wreclfc II I "REDS" TRAP ARMV5 0 Bolsheviks Claim the Yu- v, denitch Forces Are jjj Surrounded. I HI FINNS REFUSE AID. 4- t IH IIULSIN'IFORS, Kmland. Nov. '',31 4- 4. (By the Associated Press.) IH The Finnish government inform- m ed General Yudenitch today that it was unable to co operate with 4 H him for the .deliverance of Petro- - i1 4- grad. f 1 1. 4- (This Is the Finnish reply to I jffi teh appe.il of the northwestern " Russian covernment for assist- 4- ance coupled with a recognition : ui 4- of the independence of Finland). ir M- LON DON, Nov. 4 A claim that .ne northwestern Russian army of General m.h( Yudenitch, which has been attacking Petrograd, has been surrounded by ihe iQij bolsheviki is made in a soviet gov ernment wireless dispatch from Mos cow dated today. ' 1 t. The claim to have effected an en Circlemem or the northwestern Rus- ian army is presumably based upon IH the successes of the bolsheviki agaiaSi the petro.urad I,i:a-.- skov railway, by , . -which the southward railroad commit nirations of General Yudenitch on hi - ijjp) Ralfic sea base are tut. The capture of Luga and Pskov and ,-' a comparatively short advance to '.he southern end of LaKe Peipus, a COB Blderable body of water reaching from ft'SH the eiclnit oi Pskov to within tblftj IH miles of the Cult ct Finland, would j j iro'- :ho;u hir to a ret i r- ni -n t ,t: southward by General Yudenitch ifQ Noihing, however, has been received f , to Indicate that :h - Lap between Lrke !' j; PelpUS an dthe ailf of Finland lias , : been closed or even that operations threatening Genera Yudenitchs cum munications in this ngion were in pro ; REDS AGAINST CHRISTIAN NAMES STOCKHOLM, Oct 15. (By The !Lt- i , sociatcd Press.) Leaders of Russia'. IH BOViet BOVemnint hav.- b.inn-d th-1 criv- LIJ ling of hnstnoi nun.., lo ctuldreii it ih lepertcd, because they are considered IH r. ilnl-.-'n of tlv n-i. nonary system." 7m It i expected nn order will bo issued soon forblddtri; tle.n usi- .-nml"i . ore t t to be substituted. Thus three children Stj1 of ,-i f,n;,l! n jne.l l'.-tkoff ma in I yf tun- I- known I. iko.i one, two ind 44 three." respectively. To Sipport Yudenitch. HELS1NGPORS,- Finland. Monday, IH Nov. 3. The Pinnish cabinet was In IH -( - ion di- u the letter of General IH Manni eini formerly commander oi the Finnish army, in which he urged i hat Finland embark on blstilities j,JjB against the Bolsheviki to support the IH campaign ot General Yudenitch againsi Petrograd The le tor has caused Wmj greal Interesl throughout the counti. Tho recognition of the independence ()ff-, of Finland by the northwest Russian povernment offered as a return for Pinnish assistance in the campaign IM against Petrograd Is otherwise' with- IM oul i ondltlona Hifl .Mi Gulevltsch, the representative of the northwestern government at Hep rji ingfors through the Pinnish govern H ment, has called upon all Russians In ing in Finland to Join General Yud 4-44-4-4-4- 4-4- R SUGAR FOR VOTERS. 1$ NEW YORK. Nov. 4. A three- I pound package of sugar was glv- 4- Rj en today to each voter in the 17th II 4 electiop precinct of the second 4- assembly district on the lower H -f i-st side by "Jimmy" Kelly, Dem- jjf 4- ocratic leader. The gift was made II1 4- without regard to political pref- -- HI 4- erences of the voter. -4- I'pM tt4-4-tt44-4-T4-t.