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Show i iHE DESERET France to Russia that certain proportions . should be used by the latte. country for military purposes.Theloans were thought' to be necessary for tbe security : , . of Trance. . When the Bolshevist overthrew tbe Czar-l- st regime one of bis tenets was that Bolshevism wea 4 warlees means of national happiness and security. Tbe Bolshevists repudiated the French loans on the assumption that they were made as an inducement for Russia to fight. France insisted that Ruaeia must receive no recognition by the Allies until she recognized and promised to pay the debts con-- tr acted by the government of the Czar. To get into this conference at Genoa the Russian promised to pay the debts of. their nation contracted at any lime by any Russian government. This promise was made in a manner and was qualified to tbe extent of Russia's ability to pay. Rmsia cannot meet her obligations in full, but France Insists that f she cannot pay all. diplomatic investigations should be made to ascertain how much. Russia can pay. Russia's promise of payment is rather indefinite and the amount altogether uncertain and unsatisfactory to France. Russia's presence at Genoa, especially under such conditions, has been a little more than could be quietly, submitted to by France. In Russia' repudiation of her debts th Allies see a menace lo tbe economic stability of Europe, but Poincare is forced to meet the unfortunate conditions be helped to create. FRIDAY APRIL 28 NEWS 1922 loans made by New? She Deseret Hew Bid. Published s Dally Except Sunday. , Member of Audit Bureau of CIreulut.ou. Semi-Weakl- week . .. . month ... On On On it ... yeer 'W' Single eople The boe apply toUtab.Idabo end Wyoming; other toto by nH. rte Pr 110. Send remittance end bualnea eommun-eotlon- T m01 a tot Address correspondsnee end tk publication to THE EDITOR Cons Hunton Woodman, lnc AdvsrtisinK RsprsssMothrs. Kew York City, 226 6th Avo. ChlcsfO. 7 W. Adams B. Detroit. HI Llghnrr B'dg. Kanaa City, tot Ytrtor phtgrConatltution Bldg. Atlanta. San Franciaco. Hobart Bldg. Log Angela. t'nlon league Bldg. half-heart- m ll r. et the .k Entered poatofflce eecond claae matter accordlpg to Act of . March cfnirVaY 17. to Th Aaeoclated Preao to axelualrefy-wntltlatbs os for rspubllcation of ftll oredHed In twg credited to It. or not otherwleo newspaper, and also ths local aews All rights republlcatlon of special dls herein. patches here re also reeerred, d SALf LAKE CITY. NOTICE 1922. APRIL 28. TO STAKE PRESIDENCIES AND BISHOPS. The great event of the restoration of the Aaronic Priesthood occurred on the fifteenth day of May. 1829. We request that this wonderful occurrence becoiri-Biemoraton Sunday, May 14, 122. by having the Aaronio Priesthood take charge of the Sacramental meeting In each ward on that date. Presidents of Stakes and Bishops of will take notice of . thia ana Ward arrange for suitable program in which conpriests, teacherg and deacon-- shall duct and render the exercise, which, as we have before stated, shall be largely commemorative of the restoration of the Aaronio priesthood. Thia need not conflict In 4ny way with he celebration of Mother's day which the occurs on the same date. No doubt wlt-nemother will be glad to attend and exer- sstheir sons taking part in the ed eise. w' . HEBER j. GRANT. CHARLES W. PENROSE, ANTHONY W. IVINS, First Presidency. gTWKE TROUBLES IN UTAH COAL FIELDS. T: i to be hoped that the situation in the county coal fields, where etrike con- !i Carbon ditions exist, 1 not 80 Mrious 88 In a message to the governor, Sheriff Thomas F. Keller, an experienced public official. that - the strikers, particularly the , reports i foreign element,, are giving the peace officers I considerable trouble. Thursday, he aaya, the . J chief guard, who had gone to Scofield to escort a detachment of miners to Winter Quarters, (but who, it appears, did not arrive, was l attacked by strikers, and In the shooting that ! the guard and two strikers were followed , wounded,' one of the latter quite seriously. The sheriffs message says that for some time past i the strikers have been meeting incoming trains ? ' and threatening miners with dire consequences I should they attempt to go into the district affected by the present turmoil. The sheriff asks that troops be sent in there at once. jWhile the sheriff may feel that troops are 'necessary in order to prevent a serious uprising, resort to armed forces should not be made until all other means of preserving peace has failed. The men guilty of intimidat-lng miners who want work should be placed under arrest without delay and the others should be .given to understand, in no uncer- -t tain terftfs, that while they base a right to strike if they want to, the law guarantees to others the right to take their places if they see fit. Carbon county has it within its power x to deputize as many men as are necessary to assist the sheriff in this work, and it should be done at ones if the situation seems to warrant. But martial law should not be declared except in case of serious emergency, a condi- tlon which the governor and those associated Jwith him clearly understand and will no doubt adhere to. Of course, if a real need , closely i for the state troops develops they will be available and ready for instant duty. I THE GREAT OBJECTION TO RUSSIA. V - I greatest objection. lo Rusia at Genoa THE the repudiation of her debts, chiefly to France. Europe does not like Soviet government Russia's communism. More objections! all is the open repudiation of the obli-- s . than Rations which Russia incurred before the pzar was deposed. There is something to be said of the other side about this enormous indebtedness to France. How many billion rubles it amounts to we do not know. Not very many months before the war . Russia wanted a new loan from France, chiefly for the purpose of building railroads. France was- willing to make the loan providing Russia would build these railroads more for strategic purposes than for exclusive transportation. Russia was asked lo buiid-he- r roads in the west of her empire soTtlist they could be used in case of a war that might' in the future break out between her and Germany. The loan wa effected and President Poincare (square point) made a Visit to the Czar ip order to se that the money was Invested to mod j chiefly the deeds of the dual- alliance that existed between France and Russia. Naturally such . a move would create apprehension throughout the German Empire. Indeed, the Allies were not all innocence any more than the Germans were all guilt. There on all sides strategic maneuvering with in eye to the future. , Generally there was a provision in the nr LOOKING DANCING AND RELIGION. tFSr th peserat New by Dr. Frank Own.) Th 4ve. vn a tbe theatre, wa originally a ceremony of religion. , , Dr. TV llliana Outhri, a clergyman of New Tork. Introduced a dance Into on of hi religion service. Th preaa account' state: sanctuary wa hidden by a thick and attar a hymn to th Virgin girl danced In th chmeel (n the glow pf blue spotlight operated from the balcony - which played upon them a they 11 iwoved. the while th dimly, lighted church at a fragrant with Jncenae which burned on either aid of th. altar. Dr. Guthrie xpln.ned afterward that h bargees beauty "may teach th .pathway to Ood, declaring, Xf w cannot make th dartc th pathway to heaven it will b th pathway to belt At tha end of the performance In the church, th annetuary wa unveiled and tha eerrloe proceeded usual. Stripped of it traditional and theological connotation, dancing la aimply tha ntaf primitive method of expressing Joy. Unfortunately many are entirely incapable to do thl eort of stripping, for their conviction la nothing without lta creed clothings, and their feeling 1 nothing without It symbol. For such, religion must always qppsiet of a creed, an organization or a custom, or-- a 11 three. But for those who are able to think without fearing any traps for truth there la eon-fo- rt in the thought that no universal Instinct to unclean, except lg its abuse. Life to tbe thing. And Ufa manifests Itself in certain ways, old a th human Th Curtain ed a' rac. life, BACKWARD. HE old man, a conference visitor, told T story. conscious life, constats in thought and feeling. 'And these manifest themselves by signs. tbs Tha years ago he was apprenticed to learn the shoemakers trade. JHirlng tbe five years of the apprenticeship, be was in tbe shop seventeen hours a day. Tbe apprentices were out of bed at 5 o'clock in tbe morning, and were allowed to go to bed at 10 o'clock in tha evening. Meals were brought info the shop and eaten hastily. Tbe beds, in tiers, were usually in the' shop. Sunday was the one holiday; but on that day tbe ahop bad to be cleaned before anything else could be done. My present work is not bad," said tbe old man; I work only the normal day of eight hours, and when I feel Inclined to burry tbe world along, I think of the seventeen hour day of my apprenticeship. That always improves m1 temper'. With a twinkle In bis eye ho added: You know, if anyone had talked in my old shop of a normal day of eight hours, we should have thought him crazy. It seemed impossible." , The difference between the candle-ligof our grandmother's day and the incandescent light of our day, is no greater than the difference between the conditions of the industrial workers of half a century ago and those of today. It does good to look backward once in a while, and to feel the warm tense of gratitude for the progress of the world. If the day of toil has been shortened and the day of play lengthened, then the duty of the frorld is to make the hours count for more in the performance of the necessary work of the world. If the day of work has been shortened, it simply means that upon each Jiour ha been placed more intense effort, and upon each worker a greater dignity as a' necessary part of our far flung" Fifty-tw- ht IP KENTUCKY TWENTY YEARS AGO. From the Piles of The Deseret New. April ' Kentucky . has feuds, led , long as, iea. City Auditor Albert S. Reiser refused to issue warrant for th Increase In the pay of members of th city fire department ns provided la an ordinance passed by tbe city council . over the veto of Mayor Ezra Thompson. Mr. Reiser held, as qid ths mayor when h vetoed th measure, that to increase th pair of public officials during their incumbency was unconstitutional. He was acting on the advice of City Attorney George L. Ny and said tha only way to aettla tha question would be for the firemen to bring suit and permit the m ester to go to the courts for final decision. Secretary Sears and members of tbe board of director of th Deseret Agricultural and Manufacturing society (which afterward becam th State Fadr association), with Architect XVar and surveyor, staked out th elt for th first exhibition building on th new fair grounds at Ninth West and North Tempt streets. George W. Heintx. assistant general anger agent of th Rio Grand linso, tendered his resignation to Asst. Traffic Manager 8. H. Babcock, to taka effect a eoon aa hla successor could he appointed. It wag said Mr. Heintx bad been an. energetic advertiser of tho resources of Utah and firm believer in its future. F. A. Starkwater cams to Salt Lake from 81 Pr,ji to take up hla duties as general agent 'of the Chicago add Great Western railroad company.' Assistant General Passenger Agent D. S. Spencer and Traveling Passenger Agent H. E. Dunn of the Oregon Short Una escorted a perty of prominent Salt Lake citizens to Ogden to Inspect the nearly equipped Overland 'Limited, which It wa said was th finest train in th world. law-abidi- ng ated. are gesture; subsequently -- FEUDISTS. - ns (Copyright, 1121, by Frank Crana) citizens will applaud the of Circuit Judge Hiram K. Johnson of Clay county, Kentucky, to rid the Mill Creek territory in that state of its band of militant mountaineers, who for months have defied the law by announcing their Intention to shoot on sight" metbbers.of the opposing gang of feudists now infesting that section. Under Judge Johnson's order warrant have been Issued for 200 of- the clansmen,. and posses have been directed to bring the men in" and make them to the judicial accountable authorities for their defiant attitude. At last reports many of the belligerents had surrendered and the outlook is that before the campaign is concluded, Clay county, of that patl of itjdirertly affected at any rate, will have been purged of its unruly element and those who thought to take the law In their own bands will be Impelled to ponder their foolishness in imagining that in a land such as this the conduct with which they are charged would long be toler- ALL first-sig- com words. Th oldest of all expressions of thought and feeling to the gesture. People talk In stgq language before they use articulate speech. As the oldest expression of grief consists in tears and cries. so tha oldest expression of joy consists in dancing. Ths child to always dancing. He caper about simply because h to full of life. Th most natural method for any on to use In expressing joy.fwhen. for Instance, he hears a place of rare good nan, to to Jump around, prance with his feet and wav hi hands And religion, no matter what It to, ought to he Joy. It ought to he the strongest form of Joy which the human being to capable That being the case, the cxprsmlon of religious emotion by the dance to Strictly logical. v Tha best way to counteract that sort of dancing which to evil would be to encourage that sort of dancing which to good. Some day or other the teacher and preachers of th world will learn the folly of enying Dont and address themselves to tha mors necessary if mors arduous task of tailing people what to do. o CLEANING 7 been noted for its The OnceOver BT H. L PHILLIPS MUSIC ON THE RAILROADS. ar to be Nta thousand porter trained In singing and assigned to quartets for duty in Pullman car, it to announced by the Pullman comIdea to to break th pany. Tb monotony of th longer trips. Entertainment. It la figured, will pteaae traveler at all timae, and be eepactol ly beneficial during delays, accident and wrecks Th later tb train, ths more sing In. If th quartets do their to anticipations, it to xpt-- d many patrons will Insist that Ah engineer get the train three hour behind. schedule Instead of two. Z. C. M. I. Market Will be ready to serve you in just a few days with a choice variety of Fresh Meat, Fish and Poultry? In addition you will find Grocery, Confection- ary. Vegetable and Candy Dept nD-to-- th ng a Gingham Week a Pullman music lover even may be so captivated by an A1 Jolaon number they will request tbs train crew to back th train up and begin tha trip all over again. Tou never can telL . com A large variety of fabrics that are gayf in, colors and as train pulls Into Chi (Observing that Pullman passenger whose New from Tork called ticket (or trip to Chicago to not getting off). Didnt you want to get off at Conductor, eago: Bhee-carg- Shsa-car-g- o! Shee-enr-g- lrT Passenger; Conductor: sir. quaint in are our new o, "Tea sir" 'This spring Ginghams. 'Shee-car-g- Passenger: Well. I ilka th singing well I'm going to stay on and ride through to San Franciaco." , mo Domestics The country to so jazz crazy tha in trodoctlon of music on railroads may make It actually difficult to get young people to leave th trains Railroad may have to put dance floors in all eara Staple Apron Gingham, regular 17 a yard 1C. UU special Dress Ginghams, 27 inch, plaids checks and 17 1 1 C plain, regular 25c a yard, special A.' F. C. and Red Seal Gingham, 27 inch plaids, checks and plain, regular 25c a yard, I vG special , Red Seal and A. F. C. Gingham, 32 inch, plaids, checks and the plain, regular 35c a yard, 07 Cl C special Zephyr Gingham, 32 inch, plaids, checks and J Op plain, regular 60c a,yard, special Imported Zephyr Gingham, 32 inch, checks, plaids and plain, regular 75c a yard, OOp special Anderson's Gingham, 32 inch, checks, plaids CQp and plain, regular 85c a yard, special Peter Pan Gingham, 32 inch, checks, plaids C0p 1 and plain, regular 85c a yard, special Devonshire and Kiddie Kloth, 32 inch, reg- - OOp fcOl ular 39c a yard, special People soon may be riding to tbe Pacific coast not so much for their health as for the music and new dance stepa The railroad that has the beet n tertalnment will get the businesa regardless of scenic advantages or smoothness of roadbed. as for railroad advertising Here's Phoebe Snow about to go Upon a trip to Buffalo; For such a trip as this sh longs Because it to th Road of Bonga Th great danger to that the Pull man popl will serve their songs In aa small portions as they serve their food. If they do nobody will get enough music to do them any good On th other hand it may b th plan to make th singing so bad the customer will hav to go to th din Ing eara to get away from It. Bust nee to busincea. s Thar most be catch In it some where. But th possibilities for de velopment ar cxtenalva A good col red comedian may have a brighter futur with th Pullman company than with th Shuberts Suggestion Jingle: A LITERARY .... Sailor and Sport Hats With Bands to Match in All the New Shades SATURDAY $4.95 Nothing has been done about en tertalntng the steerage classes In the day coach ee, despite th fact they Tan, Gray, Brown, Purple, Henna, Mauve, Jade. Green, Harding Blue and Periwinkle. Regular $8.75 to $12.00 values for at An ezeuse wilt b given for renamPullman coaches, anyway. Look for Mammy," ' Love's Sweet Kiss.Kentucky Blues. She's My Doll Baby, and other title on th sides of ths eara Either ths Pull man company will- - hav to find name to fit th music or ths songwriters will have to writ songs to fit th Pullman ear ing th $4.95 s OCR JlU-ll- l . Q TYLES that woo by their charm and win by their price. The picture tells the story continued in our windows and with a Happy Ending, when you slip a pair on I- purconscience? Tell me the sayings you are wont lo quote, what are your conceptions and I wjll tell you . No further question about Ireland being free she's having trouble with her railroads. Capper's Weekly. LETS HEAR FROM THE -- - . - .irsccIlMiiiorDte Supreme J18 KIDS." The circus magnate predict the end or . circus parades. Why not abolish childhood altogether New York Herald! - Developed in the following combinations Pearl , elk with patent saddle; smoked elk with tan Calf saddle; tan calf with, smoked elk saddle; leather- or rubber soles. Priced the usual Hirschman way. . Why more? of-.lo- PROOF OF IRELANDS FREEDOM. IS AT MAIN M r qoUTH For Dress or Sports Wear - some to u? DOES there literary sentimentwecling have ready something that which is a strong controlling factor in our lives? Do we enjoy quotation, and have we the habit of storing away some .literary expressions to guide, as well as to help form, DRlO STORE Womens Smart Oxfords of truth and beauty a 'guide post. Young people, especially, should scan literature to make selections that are worth memorizing. Memory gems are really companions whose influence we recognize and follow. Here is one: Sow an act, and you reap a habit; Sow a habit, and you reap a character; Sow a character, and you reap a destiny." ' The need of all is conviction, a conviction that in the pursuit or life's mission there i something enobiing to which gll men aspire. A man. without a loving aspifation or a noble ambition is sordid and content- Rest not content in thy; darkness clod. Work for some good, be it evef so slowly;' Cherish some flower, be it ever so lowly; Labor! All labor is noble and holy; Let thy great deeds be thy prayer to thy God," GUIDE.' , ...... ...... Th introduction of South Sea Island and Hawaiian dancer in smoking cars to under consideration, it understood. Th main objection arises through a fear th men passenger will want to rent .seats by the month. need It most. 'IQ - .... particularly among those who. live in almost inaccessible places, and who seem lo feel that because of their isolation they naturally become a law unto themselves. Such characters seem to forget that this country is so organized that men cannot defy the law and, to use the vernacular of the atreet, expect to get away with it. Uncle Sam is jealous of his authority and as loon as the lawless attempt 4o trample that authority under their feet, they find themselves face to face with tribunals which soon put a stop to their activities. Fortunately, for the wild and woolly" west, conditions such as those reported from Kentucky, are little known here, the inhabitants of this section being con ten Ho let Uncle Sam and his authorized agents administer the laws in the appointed manner. pattern-su- ch Mail Orders Filled Shoes Service Values , MAIN STREET: vk Hosiery Of All Kinds. r |