OCR Text |
Show y - THE DESERET A. THE DESERET NEWS bit Corasr of South Tomplo ad Tempi BUsslS. Salt cur. Utah. ILBttCWfTION PIUCEa. ! 5! Now. por year Jturdr J!m rwi,h Hr Mar.... . StBft Copl.o Coot Foreign poo tag extra. Address an buslnaas wfflmunlntloni and 11 M' vr. we. mittaace, tub dkieret Salt Lk City. Utah Correapondonco and othar raadlns matter tor publication abould ba addressed to Iba Editor. Mambar Audit Bursa Circulation. eElBnay, Eastern Representative. i; Yr.?fflc- - 1,4 Fifth Avanua Chicago Office. 11 South Michigan Avon B,Brad at tha poet office o Salt Laka City. ot Copgroea, ceor4,n March ' . ! i ' 1 tilTn'Ur i SALT LAKE CITY, TOE COMMONER e Jt JUNE 29, 1920. IN TOE CONTENTION. IN th proceedings at the Democratic nations ' convention thus far, Mr. William J. Bryan has not created any of the sensations for which he is famous, nor was there much opportunity for him to do so In the perfunctory performances of the first dsys session But he will be assuredly heard from and effectively it is hoped if the platform makers undertake to debase and degrade the great party by a weak yielding to the clamor for a quasi alliance with the outlawed liquor trade. He baa declared and he ia rated aa a man of his word that if ths cohorts of evil come to San Francisco with the intention cf making the party pass under the yoke of a beaten and discredited Iniquity, he intends to meet them with his friends and raise the slogan of the Marne, They shall sot pass. " It is not to be seriously reckoned against the eloquent Com- -i moner that in this peroration be slightly errs in hla geography. It wu the slogan of Verdun, not of the Marne, which he quotes so aptly. 'But none save the hypercritical will dwell .upon the lapse even the worthy Homer , i ; s ! i sometimes nods. Mr. Bryan will do well to bold, or try to hold, his part' to the true covenant on this great moral issue in the 'event that an effort kail he made to cause it to step backward. He confesses that he owes to the Democratic party more than any other living man, then why should he not seek to serve and save it from so fatal a blunderl In three elections the party has given hfm something like eighteen million voles, a larger number of votes than any other man, living or dead, ever received. Of course he would have been better pleased to have received these votes all at one lime, instead of at intervals, but none the less he has a right to feel under obligations - to do what he can to show his gratitude and save his friends from any disgrace ' that may threaten. Hi efforts in this direction will he diminlah in frequency. Aa axula, though-iialways, of courts, the accident ia due to some disregard pf caution, either on the part of lb driver or of tha padestrian who Is hurt Something will have to ba done to Impress both with the seriousness of the irresponsibility. In the canyon there are unusual sources of danger to motorists or other passing that way. Th roads see narrow and in soma places the grades are sleep. But the chief neec for earefui driving is created by the many abrupt curve. Even if regulations were no Imposed requiring it common Judgment an due regard for safety should Impel a driver to alow up and to sound his siren when he approaches one of these curves, as a warning to anyone approaching from the oppoaite direction. It is common knowledge that this ia not done. As in a great many instance each other at high remit, niany cars pome at is a unless and there steady hand at each speed, wheel and a good brake, a collision results, or a car and its occupants goes over the bank, with injury, suffering and often death as consequence. But the canyons are not the only piacea where caution is needed. The city street afford constant opportunity for accident, not only in live business district where traffic i heaviest but out in the residence districts and uburba as well. Special points of danger ara the intersections where the view of the streets is somewhat obscured. With the rapid growth in the number of automobiles, strenuous efforts will have to he put forth to protect citizens and to keep the list of accidents as small as possible. If all drivers were as careful as they should he the problem would solve itself; hut many are not careful in fact, they show, a woeful disregard of the safely and comfort cf others. These it la against whom the traffio laws are aimed, and it is to be hoped that they will constantly e invoked with a severity sufficient to meet the evil they are intended to correct. THE , 1 i I $ watched with the liveliest Interest PROSPECTS FOR TEACHERS. at least the situation as to the shortIN Utah is on the improve, according of teachers age to reports that have reached Ue office of the state superintendent of publlo instruction. Nearly all of the superintendents are assured a full list of teachers for next year, these A few resignations may reports indicate. 'naturally be expected, between now and the opening of the fall term, but as this is always the case, no special concern need he aroused. To offset this, there are always those who, until the autumn approaches, do not decide to accept positions in the schools. This stale has shared in the general shortage of teachers that has prevailed during the past year or two, and it can not be said that the crisis has altogether passed. There is encouragement in the assurance, however, that improvement has been shown, and with the opporlunily for getting teachers which will be afforded by the coming convention of the National Education association, in this city, Utah should be about as well provided next season as any state. There has been in recent months a widespread movement in favor of higher salaries for teachers, and in most instances school hoards have found a way to Secure additional money for this .purpose. Teachers salaries are not yet all they should be, hufn eggiparison with some other vocations, they arCTOT&er the new schedules, more promising. Should a period of business depression come within the next year or so, as ha been predicted, the school teacher with an assured salary would he In a more favorable situation than many of her sisters in other ' t I j lines jbf work. Aside from considerations of salary,' however, it is pleasing to reflect that many teachers are determined to remain loyal to their profession, hopeful that at ome not 'distant time the remuneration will he made adequate. That is si It should be. No one Should be a teacher for the money he or she can make; nor, on the other hand, should the moulders of our childrens characters be constantly hampered and harassed by the worry of inadequate pay. 1 I- - TO PUNISH CARELESS DRIVERS. A LL thoughtful citizens of Salt Lake will commend the step taken by Sheriff Cor- Iess and by Judge Wilkins of the ciiy court in their respective moves toward reducing the number of automobile accident. In a recent MIRROR OF HISTORY." YHETHER or not history has an Invarl- - of repeating itself. It at least is always prolific of lessons which are deserv-n- g of profitable study. Take, for instance, the question of prices and wages during a protracted and expensive war, and following its close a suggestion which naturally sends the mind hack to our great conflict between the there slater in the W. In the years was a general rise, wholesale prices climbing higher than retail, hut retail higher than wages. In 1864 wholesale prices experienced their sharpest rise, reaching the peak in January , 1865, while retail prices and wages continued to advance steadily and in about the same relation to each other. In April, 1865, the war ended, and there came a sudden drop in wholesale prices by midsummer, with a later rally as the year drew to Us closer Retail prices and. wages, however, continued their steady rise throughout the year, not yet being affected by the ending of the war, In the year following there war a marked variation in the trend of the three. Wholesale prices fluctuated violently but the trend was generally downward, which continued. In spite of occasional rallies, for six years more, or Just before the great panio of 1873 when they were only figure, slightly above the pre-wi This glimpse at the past, affords several aspects or viewpoints from which a useful study of the present may be undertaken. Experts will not agree as to how much of a parallel ia warranted as between the two periods, or a to the deductions that may now be drawn. But there will hardly be any dispute on one point in the lesson namely, that when the present changeful, dubious anc troublesome days are over, those people will be the best off who have denied themselves luxuries, have not spent their money as fast as they have earned it, and have put away for a rainy day something in the nature of U. S. government bonds or other .securities nearly 1861-3- -3 ar as good. DEVELOPMENT IN CHINA. of the vast development taking gOMETHINO may he gleane from the fact that within the past two veaithe Chinese have bought 30 American coxton mills, and are reported in the market for more. Similar strides have been made in other industries, modern industrial plants springing up rapidly Hankow and other in Canton, Shanghai, Modern centers. department tores, strategic housed in six and seven-stor- y buildings, are beronvlng common in the larger cities of China and according to a recent statement of Commercial Attache Julian Arnold of the American legation, these atores and many of the other large enterprises operate tinder Chinese capital, Chinese management and personnel. In this rapid growth and expansion of Chinas, industries some Americans see a portent of danger to America and, indeed, to the a whole white rare. Greying strength-i- n nation of o large population, territory and other possibilities threatens, they declare, white supremacy of the world. Within few years, these people fear, the yellow peril" will become an actuality that may mean complete domination by the Orientals, especially should China and Japan decide to unite in such an enterprise. Those men, however, who , have made statement the sheriff 'devotes his attention primarily to traffic in the canyons, and Judge closest study of the situation set nothing in Wilkins announces that hereafter he will the outlook at which to take alarm. On th impose Jail sentences instead cf fines in cases contrary, they urge, that the best thingfor where accidents are due Jo carelessness of the all concerned to do is to assist in the developpointed drivers. ment. of the Oriental countries. It Automobile accident seem to he growing out thatChina hat apiple room for expansion rapidly in number. Scarcely a day passes but among the Chinese people in their owti counand unpopulated there Ire frera one to half a dozen such in or try and in undeveloped Asia. of With Central th inauguraof ord. In laws, nances, near thia city. spite region nation of modern methconthat these tion and throughout mishap warnings regulations tinue to occur, and they increase rather than ods and device, an enormous increase In pur- NEWS V- - TUESDAY JUNE YOUR MOVE. (For Til bNrt Kii by Pc. Freak i Cron). (With Apologia U Van AVurfh.) your move. If you'll Just romambtr that. It wrlll e you no and of frloilon, elaah nd htortburn. "Do unto othar aa you would is thorn do unto you," la tho wall known Coldaa Rula. It work 11 right whn It got tartd, but moat of th tlm It 1 apollad by th Into docld which on ability of th parti la to do It flrat. ar Th children cf thla world, w Inlormad. nr wlaor than tha ehtldran of light. Th rul of th worldly wit 1 otatsd "Do th oihor follor by David Harurn a ha would Lo you, but do him fuat." Exactly ao, tha only way you can got any aaaraga oatiafactlon out of tho Ctoldan Rul la to bo th flrat to bogln It. When you wait for th othar faUow.lhal la not a Ooldan Rula, It la brass. When you oro good to thoao who ar good to you, and after you hav found out they hav bean good to you, you arc a good Indian. And look what happened to tho Indiana, vn th beat of them. An Arnb remember a klndnaaa, ao doaa a Chinaman, ao doaa an a'aphant. Of court It la batter to b grateful than ungrateful. It Is well to b polite and kind and helpful to thoae that ar th ram to you, but that' another atory. It la not th Ooldan Rule. It ia a good rula, but not ' Oold. Th real gold stuff appear whan you ar quick enough to aea that it la Tour Mot. Tou must take a chance. Tou moat make an Investment hi th dark. Xotblng venture, nothing gain. Perhaps you may loa. and tha on you hav boon good to will turn around and do you a moannosa But what of It? Tou havent loot anything aftar all. In fact you hav decidedly th boot of th bargain. At that, you would rather b you than ha. (Or do you say him hero?) Tou faol roay, ba fool yel- It to-b- o, THE AEOLIAN-VOCALIO- , N The Only Thonograph Possessing the cArtistic and . Wonderful Tone Control ( , f thegraduola n has been upon the the is few it a today recognized as the years, of its type, not only in this country Aeollan-Voeafio- THOUGH leading but also abroad. This is because the Vocalioa offers everything possessed by the best phonographs of ordinary type, and adds its own exclusive and important advantages as well; For example: You may search the market over and you will hear no phonograph with so rich, mellow and beautiful a tone; you will see no phonograph that reflects such genuine art in the simple elegance of its cases; and you will find no phonograph that allows you the great privilege of taking an active part in the playing of its records. low. an sxoellent thing hi Th Golden Rul fam Ills. It work wall In tb shop and factory. It la a bualnooa getter in th grocery and th offic. It la to b highly recommended for school, churches and lodges. It la equally useful In th playground and tha workplace. It 1 good In prisons, courts; legislature and conventions, lit is first class In society and politics .And It would even help In International relations. But only If, whan, and aa you keep In mind That It la TOUR MOVE. la i VOCALION PRICES Conventional Models from $ 60 ( with Craduola from $163), Period Styles from $280. Convenient Terms (Copyright, 1110, by Frank Crane.) TWENTY YEARS AGO. From the Files of Th Deseret Mew. 13 to 19 East 1st SoutK JCXB 19, 1900. (Deputy Bhertff Ben Tt. (Harr lea said a friend of Butch Cassidy had told him tha outlaw was in Salt Dak and willing to glv himself up, provided Governor Well would promlao not to honor requisition paper from th governor of Colorado whera Cassidy waa wanted for breaking jattVDeputy Harries said h did not doubt that Cassidy waa her. Butch Cassidy's criminal caraar began In Oregon, whera he robbed a number Hla' operaof banks and eluded capture. tions in tha intermountain region were connected with th Robbers Roost, when h led In the robbery of a bank at Montpelier, Ida., and in the robbery of tha paymaster of th Pleasant Valley coal company at Castl Gat. Th realdenc of a woman believed to b hla wife waa being watched by th police and sheriffs force. A warranty deed was filed conveying a place of land facing north on North Tempi street between Main and Stats streets from James Jack and wife to Loren bo Snow, as Trusteo-ln-Trua- t. The property waa to become part of the alt of tho D. D. S. business college. Word waa received that Prof. O. F. Davit, formerly principal of Hammond Hall, had aecured a divorce In Omaha from hla wife. The atory ran that Mrs Davis wanted to open a music atudio In Boston and tha minister, professor, being an ordained could not consent. They agreed to get a divorce, he filing the complaint uncon-teste- d by her.. L.V. VsvJ'.'O-- ! -- C2- N. ifiSB m ( I . It wka reported that th Peking relief expedition had arrived at Tien Tain and that the foreign ministers to China were not with it. The apprehension that they had mat with foul play was greatly augmented. chasing power and enormously increased wants will be developed among the Chinese people, and this will mean & mammoth expansion of our trade, to say nothing of th widespread benefits in education and higher standards of living that will be established among the millions of Chinese. And, as Mr. Arnold points out, the love of the Chinese for their own land is one of the strongest safeguards With yellow periL" against the almost unlimited stretches of territory in which to expand, the development of the Chi- nese will naturally follow those courses, and there need be little fear that many of them will wish to leave their own country to come across the seas and threaten us. Meanwhile, as a matter of principle and right, Americans should do all they can to help lift the great mass of the Chinese people to a higher level of endeavor and ideals. BRYAN'S FIGHT AT FRISCO. It rests with Congress to tamper wflh the prohibition law, even to the extent, it seems probable, of legalizing tha brewery and the saloon. To that end the liquor element that Mr. Bryan is fightirg has decided to make a determined effort-t- o capture the Democratic party at San Francisco, and the stouthearted old warrior, nothing daunted, has taken up their insa'enl challenge. Thia is an issue that transcends partisan nee and affiliations. All earnest friends of prohibition will applaud Mr. Bryans resolute purpose to hold his parly to an honest Interpretation of the Constitution and to acceptance of the existing' law for the enforrefnenl nf real prohibition. Spokane 1 Spokesman-Revie- w. - ended corns forever in this scientific way" Millions have said that about Blue-jaOther tried it and told others the same story. So the use has spread, until com troubles have largely disappeared. If yon have a com yon can settle it tonight. And find the way to end every com. or a Blue-ja- y Apply liquid Blue-ja- y plaster. The pain will stop. Soon the whole com will loosen and y. come out Think what folly it is to keep corns, to pare or pad them, or to use the old harsh treatments. Here is the new-da- y way, gentle, aure and scientific It was created by a noted chemist in this d laboratory. It is ending millions of corns by a touch. The relief is quick, and it ends them completely. Try it tonight Coma are utterly needless, and thia is the time to prove it. from your druggist Buy Blue-ja- y world-fame- Blue Plasterbr jay Liquid Scientific Corn Ender BAUER 4k BIACK Cbicaga Nw York Toronto Makan of Sunk Swaleai &moii aoj ABiod DoJocla Skin Troubles - Soothed - With Cuticura AUSTRALIA lm, NraZoslan l Honololo, NL t!g paananxar rtaamaro Tb Palatial -S. M. M. Sakan Maa' I to --Tons a OS Tana UliOill iXTUUSU MTU lo, Ball from Vannoovor, B. C. ao Mlllutl apply to Pali. Per faro or aa ataamahp ofan'a or to Royal Moll Seymour Sir oat, Voaeoyvor. Uitt, B. U 44 Tobacco JIabil Dangerous Ray Doctor Connor, fortnarly of Johns Hopklna hospital. Thousand of mm suffering from fatal dlsaates would bo In porfaot bsalth today wero it not for tha deadly drug Nlcotlna. th habit now beforo It'o too lateStopIf a almplo proeeoo to rid youroeT of tobacro habit In any form. Just go tc anv drug atoro and g-d:--s aome Mfotei tablets; taka them aa In, and reeted the pernlrloua habt Drurtista rVfunl nihe. quickly ihe money If they fail. l aure to reol and announcement be' large Intareating Doctor Connor, soon to appexr in paper It falls of tho danger of tun. tins poisoning and bow to avoid It. In the meantime try Mcotol will ba surprised at th rttu th' th' tieemeoL WANTED $25.00 Reward Offered for Re torn of Maxwell Roadster Automobile, State License Number 2768, Model 1917. .Motor Number 135747. Taken June 17th from Country Home In Cottonwood. HEBER J. GRANT & CO. 22 So. Main Street TeL Wasatch 2262-- 3 |