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D 4 TliF OGDEN STANDARD OGDEN. UTAH. IHLKSUA1, UhCEMBLK 4. 1919. J If hc HandavtL Entered as Second-Class Matter at the Postofflce, Ogden, Utah. ESTABLISHED 1870 CD Member of the Audit Bureau of Circu lation and the Associated Press.. . SUBSCRIPTION RATES fcity $9.00 per year Wall $5 40 per year ft An Independent Newspaper, published .every evening except Sunday, without a muzzle or a club. MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press Is exclusively en titled to the use for republication of any news credited to It not otherwise cred ited In this paper and also the local nevs published herein. COAL STRIKE FELT i LOCALLY. j j ' Not until today -were the people of gden directly reminded thai a great -coal strike is on in the United States. iFires have been burning brightly in bgden stoves and furnaces and no one iiad even suggestd economy in fuel $Now the government regulation lias invaded Utah and Ogden is tc begin .in feel the restriction which has put B'out fires in eastern cities. Every lump of coal in the bins of ;Ogden is made more precious by rea son of the forecast of a shortage which jnay become acute. Thirt;, moe days of a close-down of the big mines ''throughout the country and Ogden homes will be burning screened Sashes, wood and any other material affording heat. Will FROM A NICKEL TO FOURJMTS. On Sunday the Salvation Army was rout on the street in force. Tambou rine, cornet and drum were in serv ice and a captain of strong voice could j be heard a block away. ' l''i ; The crowd that gathered was not : Jjlarge, but when the big drum was i placed in position to receive R shower -of silver, those who were near throw 'nickels and dimes, and then a soldier I cast "four bits." 1 There was a time when the Salva- 1 tlon Army was poorl recognized; -when the lassies had to search high and low for the nickel. Today the change in public attitude Is noticeable and it all comes from the heroic rec- B'll F i ord of the Salvation Army workers in .the battle zone of the great war. The nil M v soldier boys regard the Salvation Arm with respect. No organization operating in welfare work behind the trenches in France gained more by j I .reason of extreme sacrifice than did 2thc Salvation Army. UiV a nn INDECENT DRESS AND W DANCE. j Serving notice on tho women of Paris that they must dress within the bounds of decency or be excluded from church, the archblnhop cf Paris ha sissued a second warning, as fol lows: "Our repeated warnings have fallen upon deaf ears. Mothers are now even dressing their young women in a man ner contradictory to Christian decen cy. Women tell me that unless they dress according to the latest fashion they are unable to enter society cir cles, but Christian women must organ ize to purify society if such is the case. Women must also positively cease to Indulge in indelicate dances. An- ,aitempt to reconcile mmoral dancing with religious practices is de plorable. The pope has exhorted Cath olics to form a league against inde cent fashions. Our blessings have j been given to a similar loague in Paris. We now urge it to work active ly against the banned dances also." Seemingly the German invasjou was not less difficult to meet than tte etis- . toms America inflicted on the French. I Our girls went over in short dresses, silk stockings, high shoes, and low necks, and our soldier bnvR ragged to i he music of their Jazz bands and France female France yielded. Now the church is seeking to correct this innovation in dress and the strange .motions In the dance, but so fat there seems to have been no real response and warnings have been necepfary, If the church succeeds in making the women of Paris forsakw the pre vailing fashion, then the church will prove to be a power greater than any force aimed at fashion's reform in the in United States. In America no one would undertake to Issu" a mandate against the things in fashion Which had won woman's admiration. oo 1 APOSTLE IVINS ON MEXICO. No man in Utah is better Informed on Mexican affairs than Apostle A. W. Ivins, who has lived in that countr twenty-five years. In discussing the possibility of armed intervention oy the United States, the apostle, in ad dressing the Commercial elub in Salt Lake yesterday, said: "If by exercise of patience, the great, ast country of Mexico can bo brought to friendly feeling with the United States, think how much better it will be than settling our difficulties by lorce of arras. Armed interven lion will mean the loss of tens of thou sands of our American boys, for the will be brought face to face with fe er, pestilence and sickness and will, be compelled to fight in a country of ! desert waste where water is scarce and poor. When victory does come I to the United States for this must 'come eventually it' we go to war with ' ! Mexico It will result in the utmost j bitterness and hatred among the na 'tives of that country, even after they1 are conquered. This will exist for 'years to come. I sincerely hope that jreason can effect a settlement, but In 'order that this may be done od prej-' udlces and policies must give way to the light of reason. I urge tnat you men present do all in your power to prevent war, and, by use of reason, aid in the settlement of difficulties, T.et us sit down and reason together. The j situation is serious, but not so ee-j rious that we cannot talk it over." That is good advice. If there is 1 hope of an understanding being ar I rived at, by which outrages shall be Btopped, then patience should prevail But how is this country to be assured 1 that crimes against Americans along the border and in the hecn. of Mexico will not continue as they have since- When a telegram was read at the Commercial club, stating that Senator Fall of New Mexico had introduced a resolution calling for intervention in Mexico, Apostle Ivins said: "Senator Fall has long represented, as attorney, some of the largest of , Mexican landholders. General Ter- J razas is one of these, and this man has lhed at the home of Senator Fall. ' General Terrazas Is one of ihe lare est landholders, not only in Mexico, but in the world. He controls thou sands of square miles of land with the villages and farms which are upon the land. Terrazas, Apostle Ivins said, refers to the peons on his land as "my peo ple,"" and exercises a mastery over them through the company si' res to I which they are kept in constant debt, i Apostle Ivins told of occasions when these peons had been literal!) '"bought" fre from then peonage b. the payment of their indebtedness to I the company. Our own opinion of Senator Fall is not favorable. On more than one oc casion, the senator from New Mexico ihas been accused of gross exaggera tion and his sole cry in the part eight I years his been, "War." Ho is for blood and, as Senator Ivins states, he is the paid attorney of a slave driver who, since the days of Diaz, has been facing the possibility of having his im mense holdings divided among the peons who have slaved for him with out getting beyond rags and wretched-, ness. This country will be following a mean leadership when It places Sena tor Fall at the head of our foreign policy and accepts his program. uo MILITANT SUFFRAGIST WILL DEFEND CAUSE SALT LAKE. Dec. 4. Mrs. Em meline Pankhurst. leader of the Eng lish militant suffragists, will be hou orded at the Bonneville club banquet in the Hotel Utah Saturday evening, according to George 0. Rolf, secretary. The affair will be directed by women, With Mrs. W F Adams presiding. Mrs. Pankhurst will explain the English militant movement and give reasons for its rapid growth Mrs. Pankhurst has completed recovered from her illness, caused by starvation and imprisonment In England, and Is touring the United States to promote the suffrage cause. "Bmllo when you can," Miys a. poet. That's all riyht, but why didn't he con fer an everlasting favor on humanity b tolling us how to smile when we can't? ! f Knitting Yarns I Jlffi . rW We UBt rcelTed a shipment of knitting fllu'rfB1! yarns We have & rorapletn assortment 'J EHsK1 l98Sk. f colorp W re xrPtlonally fortunate 8 - 1 receiving auch a large shipment. It is Wt almost Impossible to buy It. We have the WL following colors: Peacock Blue, Belgium j ! "Kai3p. Blue. Navy Blue, Baby Blue, Pink, Wild ' '81 Rose. Old Rom, Cherry, American Beauty, r SppwBPP Burgundy. Harvard Crimson, Flame, Mixed TJ I mf ft Gray, White, Black. Gobelin. Yallow, I l Wll Shadow Lake Green. HI Silk Fleece Yarn Shadow Lake and Silver, Flame and Silver, Rose and Silver Orange and Silver, Olive Drab and Silver Now Is the time to buy your yarn. Next year it may be higher. II Stafford Millinery Co. 24415 Washington Avenue. 1 - II CITY OF PARA HAS PERENNIAL M 1 L D WINTER PARA. Brazil. Nov 4 Athough only f) miles, from UlC eQUator 0r city of Pnri enjoys a peirennlal climate of what miKht bo culled mild summer. There Is a show er cf rain nearly every aftrmoon through- out the year which topethcr with liio welcome trade windfl hlowinsr In from tho Atlnntlf- temper, the Intense heat of the mm and chc Para n climate that for evenness rui equability cannot prob abl h surpassed. The mornings .iirl evening are always cool, and the mid-day heat never ap proaches that of a "regular" Aiiguat day In Now York or Chicago Sunstroke is entirely unknown There Is no record of a case in th entire Amazon Valley. Schoolboys Play football In the open Hty spaces during th- hottest hours of early afternoon and laborers, naked to tho sralsl toll sweating on th- docks m the blazing sunshine without any apparent Ill-effects. Si raw hats an worn the cai rouno In Parn, and a sun Ivlmet would b reganled with :imn.ii as much curiosity on the AvcnH da Republics hert as it Would on Fifth A.venu The clothes worn by men arc also a matter of surprise to the foreignei visit ing this equatorial city. Brazilian pro fessional men, doctors, lawyers mi n gfneerSi invariably wear HolheB such as nro worn in New York in the spring or fail. Government officials senators and deputies favor the conventional "cut away," and in official rails on tho state governor, for Instance, this cry untrop iclcal garb is the ru! Business hit and especially foreigners however, adhere to the cool -looking white cotton, linen or duck. In the matter ol evening clothes the citizens of Para ar very formal. In the days of the rubber boom when public- departments were m rule and not, as now, the exception the conventional full evening dress was always worn by them. JKJ Heavy Drop in Rate of Exchange NEW YORK. Dec. 4 Exchange on England, France and Italy dropped yesterday to the lowest points of de preciation ever recorded in thi market. Btedllng fell to $3.87 1-2 to th pound, against tho pre-war quotation of $4.86 5-8. This represents a dis count of sliphtlv more than twenty per cent in what for srenrrations was re garded ae. the most stable form of in ternational remittance Francs or bills on Paris fell to the point where it took nearly ten francs to buy nn American dollar, represent ing a depreciation of fully fifty per per cent, while the lire, or Italian change, valued al 19 3 cents before t he war, fell to a level where it took 12 2-3 of Ihem to equal an American dollar Dealers In exchange stated that a large part of yesterday's pressure to sell, especially of French and Italian bills, came from commercial interests hefe and abroad who offered their bilh almost regar.ilr-ss of n-v. - -Detained. Cables from Loudon quoted Amor lean exchange there at $3.88 for a Pound sterling, vith predictions that the huge debt of England to tins coun try would precipitate a further slump. AMERICAN LEGION BOXHG SPORT Ogden's boxing fans are promised one of the best boxing matches that has ever been arranged locally for next Monday, when Pat Gilbert. Salt Lake's favorite, will meet Al Youns. the popular Osden boxer. The eveni Is to he at the armory and Is being arranged b Herman Baker Pom No 9, American Legion. Ten rounds to a decision Is the plan for this bout, the winner to take part in the next contest staged by the le gion, for there will be a series of elimination contests to decide on the western lightweight championship The two preliminaries are expeoted to furnish considerable entertainment particularly the ml windup between Red Hogau or Ogden and Joe ' op" Fhnn of Chicago. Flynn has been ,-seen In two Ogden matches and has gained considerahle popularity whilo Hogan is known as a real mixer. Senator Smoot To Select the Convention City ' SALT LAKE. Dec. .--Senator Reed Smoot will attend th quadren nial meeting of the national RepubM can committee in Washington, D. O, December 10, according to word re ceived from Will H. Hays, national chairman Mr. Smoot will represent Utah as national committeeman. Hen ry Welsh, state Republican chairman of Utah, will speak for Utah at fh meeting of the Association of State Republican Chairman, to bo held in Washington the following day Delegates will fix the time nnd place of the next Republican conven tion. It is expected that Senator Smoot and Mr. Welsh will both use their influence to have this conven tion held in San Francisco. The meeting will begin with an open session Wednesday morning, Decem ber 10, at 11 o'clock. Addrees by several committeemen and r.tate -h::ir men will feature the progr?m. All delegates will bring messages from their respective sections. GASOLINE SUBSTITUTE. NEW YORK. Dec. 4 Progress in the use of kerosene, crude oil and other substitutes for gasoline, were re ported at the annual meeting of the American Society of Mechanical Engi I neer. WOMEN are proud to have beautiful "Wear-Ever" in their kitchens the quality-utensils that are in keeping with the finest home furnishings. Because of their shining silver-like beauty, the daily convenience they afford and the better cooking they make possible, "Wear-Ever" utensils are most welcome Christmas gifts. "Wear-Ever" I Aluminum Cooking Utensils I give enduring service. They do not "Wear-Ever" utensils are the most chip or scale. They are made of economical utensils it is possible to metal so thick and strong that it with- buy. They cost least in the long run. stands the hardest usage does not A complete "Wear-Ever" equip rea dilyd ent or bend. "Wear-Ever" ment saves the bother and expense utensils are made in one piece, with- of constantly buying new utensils to out joints or seams in which food can take the place of utensils that have lodge are pure and safe. worn out. wear-ever Replace utensils that wear out weaever with utensils that "Wear-Ever" Sfes SDgpJ aTajminTTM TOAttiuj Look for the "Wear-Ever" trade-mark on the bottom of each utensil eIam The Aluminum Cooking Utensil Co., Dept. 3681, New Kensington, Pa. Lj, , p Killing of Former ! Yanks Declared j Planned For Weeks CEXTR LIA, Wash.. Dec 4 An of in In I tiitement by the mayor and city c-oniiniioners ihfiued on ihe nhojtinK and iwis here armistice day, says the industrial Workers of the World at . tack upon former Boldiers was planned six weeks In advance and was nupro V Oknl The plot, according to the statenie-nt which was in (he- form of an affidavit, wiiH treasonable" and was "conceived in hatred and vengefulneas which for diabolical plan and execution is with out parallel In the history of tho United States " The statement says high powered arms and ammunition were collected In advance to an extent which made an arsenal of the I W W. headquar ters and from the nature of the firing J it "is evident there was a pre-conceiv ed plan to kill ex service men of the U. S. army." oo Probe of Federal Trade Commission Ordered By Senate WASHINGTON. Dec. I. Full insti gation of the federal trad commission was ordered yesterday by the senate, without a dissenting vote on a resolu tion directing a general inquiry by the interstate commerce committee Into the commission's activities and also into the charges by Senator "Watson, Republican. Indiana, that some of its employes have been engaged in radical propaganda Hearings probably will not begin unll January as loth senate and committee are busy with railroad bjclsliitlon. A ojb-rommlttee hoadud by Sf-naior Watson will b appointed next VMk, however, to conduct the Investigation The resolution piovld for an Inquiry of wide scope. As originally proposed by Senator Watsoo. VILLA MAY HAVE BEEN CAPTURED JUAREZ, Mcx, Dec 3. (By tho Assoi iatod PropR ) Vigorous efforts v. ( to made tonight by civil and mill i tary officials here to obtain official : information regarding the reported capture of Francisco Villa near Parral, I announced m a message received by P, V. (.'aballero, superintendent of the National Railways erf Mexico for Chihuahua, who is here on an inspec tion trip. Dp to 7:30 o'clock no con Ifirmallon of the report had been re J ceived The first word of the reported cap I ture was given to the Associated Press by Senor Caballero Later If was ex ' plained that tho report had come . from a telegraph operator at Parra!. j by way of Jimenez and C hihuahua , City, and tlu-nce to Juarez I(?nacio Bonillas, Mexican ambas sador at Washington, telegraphed An dres Garcia, Mexican consul-general at El Paso, asking confirmation of the rumor. Senor Garcia replied that he w.is pushing strenuously to obtain of- j tieial advlCM, and that he would ad vise 'he Mexican embassy as sonn as I he succeeded. General J. Gonzales Escobar, com- i mander of the Juarez district, said that he had dispatched a telegram to General Manuel M Dieguez. com- mander of military operations in the north who is now reported to be in Jimenez, Chihuahua. General Dieguez has a force of 17,000 operating in the northern zone, it is said. "If Villa has not been captured now and I have strong hopes that he has been he Will be caught soon within two months at the outset," General E---.ro bar said Baby Coughs require treatment with remedy tint con tains no opiate piio's is mild but effec tive; pleasant to take. Ask your druggUt for PI SO S British Rule In . Ireland Denounced At a Meeting SALT LAKE, Dec. 4. Conditions in Ireland under British rule- arc i qual ly as bad as those in Belgium after the German invasion, said Patrick Coyne before the Friends of Irish Free dom in the Hotel Utah last night Mr. Coyno was formerly with the Ameri can expeditionary forces and was granted a detail to England. T. H. Maginni?. state chairman of the Iri.-'h Victor;, fund bein:: rai-d In America, also spoke outlining the puiv pose of the fund. This campaign, he declared, is being launched to sell bonds to support the Irish independent government. A resolution appointing a committee to assist in the drive In Salt Lake was adopted. nn "JOE" CRAMER AFTER HB0TSI Tiger" Joe Cramer llcht heavy-' weight wrestler who arrived in Ogden! last evening to prepare for his match! with Jack Harbertson on Wednesday! December 10, commenced training this morning when he hiked to the Hot Spring! and back. Cramer declares that road work is one of the- essentials of wrestling, not only to reduce weight 1 but also to keep all the musqles in good trim. This afternoon the grap pier started on the other angle of train Inc with a workout at the Eagles" gym nasium. The Colorado grappler Is accompa nied to Ogden by his training part ner, Charles Kodot. who will work out with him. But. the wrestler expects that several Ogden men who desire Rome vigorous exercise will also be j willinc to go through tho prelimlna ri's with him. Ogden wrestling fans who met Cra-j f mt-r stenhn d- elite ilia' Harbison is to face a uey style ui wrestler when . ho inrc-ts frame! In Un roped arena at the ( irplo uni 'ram r is lithe. that'- lii-' r.-asiiii n. has been nick- , nam-d Tiirer." !,. aggressive anl he Is strongly built In height neap pars shKlitlv l.irgrr than Harbeitfon JJ 'and triers Is nothing of the stock) na- 1 ture about him (Turner is 26 years j of age but he has met and dcfea'.rt w a doz.-n of Hi. .-oun'r' - t"';' wr'ler. IJhe He declar. s his rhiH' ambition is 10 i defeat Harbertson. iv nn I " HENRY TILFORD DEAD. J4j: ' NEW YORK. Doc. -H--nrj Mw- 'gan Tllford. one of fhe prominent fig- i ur.-s In Standard il companv for J many years, is dead here. It JJJ i mated that he leaves an estate of -" i.ooo. He was boin in Lexington. J Kfe Kv , G2 years ago. .a J. At various times he was the act) tif head of the Pacific Coast Oil conipan). the Central Oil company of rper, , H and a doctor of many subsidiaries Oil the parent organization. Some mm ll? when they attempt t stnnd up for themselves. J i la Mil MfflS Be Better Looking Take Olive Tablets . 1 If your skin is yellowcompjoPj , pallid tongue coated appetite pow s you have a bad taste in your moutn a lazy, no-good feeling you shouw take Olive Tablets. - Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets- sub stitute for calomel were PP?"1?? j n Dr. Edwards after 17 years of stud v. V Dr. Edwards'OlivcTabletsareapureif ve?ctablccomrx)undmiA'evuthonoi'- j You will know them by their olive cowr Tohaveadear. pink skin, bright e no pimples, a feeling of buoyancy " childhoaidaysyoumustgetatthew . j Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets act W the Uver and bowels like calornei-ycv have no dangerous after effects. I They start the bile and overcome con l j rtipation. Millions boxes areJ ; annually at 10c and 25c Take one or i wo nightly and note the plca.nng result Advertimeflt.MS