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Show - J?HE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, THURSDAY CORNING, NOVEMBER 11, 1920. 1 1 TO FIX PRICES OF NECESSITIES Be Nation-wid- e Organization for Selling Products of the Farm Is Predicted. I Bankers Favor Men; to- - Save next time THE a man who see you Livestock Plea the - l has something indefinably wrong about his clothes, look carefully at his collar. Made Is fl Them 1 in Out Windows Industry. BOSTON, Nov. 10. The establishment nation-wid- e q( selling organisations which shall fix the price of farm products if the farmer does not receive "th same pay for the same hours' work that others receive,' wras predicted y by Sherman J. Lowell of Fredonla, YN. - master of the National Orange of the Patrons of Husbandry, In opening the innual convention of tha grange. '.'We are willing to have a fair understanding at values, the farmers receiving the same pay for the same hours work that others receive, no more, no less, but we feel that this is the last tall, he said. "If no attention is paid to this now by bankers, manufacturers, railroads and labor organizations, and if the government continues to use its great power to import raw material free of duty to reduce costs, then-h- e grange .will be the first to help organize nation-wid- e selling organizations which shall fix the price of farm products. to-la- gpiftwood QollarsiSSforts Smartest Zandt, governor of the Dallas federal reserve bank. While he had not received a letter from J. H. Mercer, Kansas stste livestock commissioner, who initiated the movement, Mr. Van Zandt said he would approve a finance corporation to aid livestock growers and beheved It could be Not Intended as Threat. organised under provisions of the Edge "There la no threat In this, we will law. The federal bank In the eleventh have been driven to it in to reserve district, he said, stands ready to aid the movement as far as consistent preserve agriculture. Mr. Lowell rejoiced that labor has been with the federal reserve laws." Mr. Van able to secure a much higher rate of Zandt asserted that livestock notes are considered on a par with notes secured wage, but added: We little by other food and clothing products. that they would turn and demandexpected cheaper food from us without first ascertaining the cost of production, and thereby to proving whether or not we were taking too large a margin of profit." Success The master declared that the great changes that hae taken place since the beginning of the war have been to the PARIS, Nov. 1. Argentina is ready of agriculture and many to do her utmost to contribute to the disadvantage laws and rulings of our national governsuccess of the league of rfUtions. said ment have proven of injury to the farm- llonorior Pueyrredon. foreign minister of ers that country, to a of the We have searched faithfully to find newspaper Eclair ofrepresentative this city last one law or ruling to our advantage and "I am going to Genet a to attendnight. the failed to find it. We have urged for a meeting of the league assembly," he said, fair show, but all our efforts have met "with the greatest enthusiasm. 1 with a like fate." in the success of the league If each nation brings to it good will. And that Census Tihows Farm Decrease. seems easier than the pessimists imaMr. Lowell said the recent census gine. Nationalism, properly understood, Showed a met decrease of 100,000 farms is not incompatible with healthy internationalism. In seven states, and he charged that the Argentina, It is said, did not directly attitude of the men in legislative halls of the and departments of government waa re- contribute to the constitution but this is no reason she should sponsible to a large degree for this con- league, not the take liveliest Interest in it. i dition. "So long as we remain passive this will tell you something that never has been in this matter . When published state of affairs will continue," he dethe supreme council was studying the clared. 1 organization of the league. Colonel E. M. Concerning taxation, he said: Thera is but one equitable form of House, in the name of President Wilson, taxation and that is when every form of asked Argentina to give her views. The wealth pays its Just proportion of taxes. question of a private meeting of what There is no tax more Just than an in- were then neutrals was discussed, but Marcome tax, for it is never a charge against Argentina declined to participate. anv one who has not the means to pay." cello de Alvear, our minister to France, told following my instructions, He spoke against the single tax and Colonel the Idea of plaelnf a government land House Argentina waa ready to give her tax of 1 pcr cent on the land in place of opinion in a public assembly regularly , Both would be summoned. taxing large Incomes Argentina has but one wish, and that disastrous to agriculture," he eaid. to In is do all her power to banish war "Another equally erroneous Idea," he continued, is the one of a heavy tax on from the face of the earth. all unimproved land holdings, for If this was done and they were forced on the Clothes? Business market by reason of such a tax (which le the Intent), it would cause the depreciation of farm lands 60 per cent, from the fact that there Is more improved land than men to work It now." NEW YORK, Nov. 10. Fashionable uptown clothiers who are moving slugBanker Favors Suggestion. gish Btocxs by means of elaborately ad'reduction sales have nothing KANSAS CITY, Nov. 10. J. Z. Miller. vertised in the of business worries on their governor of the Kansas City Federal humbler waybrothers Jr, of the "ol clothes" Reserve bank, announced today that he curbstone market in Bayard street, off was sending a letter to J. H. Mercer of the Topeka, Kan., livestock commissioner of curbBowery, itinerant members a of the today. Despite lively Kansas, commending a suggestion by Mr. ratejeclared war these picturesque dealers Mercer that federal reserve bank offi- cut second and third-han- d clothes assertcials and bankers hold a meeting to dis- In ed business has come almost to a standcuss stabilizing the livestock industry. Mr. Millers letter was in response to still. Some blame the trouble on prohibition, one sent by Commissioner Mercer to which has dulled many a "buying mood " bankers of the southwest, asserting that and others attribute it to the passing of the industry faced collapse and urging , era the of All extravagant buying. that prompt action be taken. agree, however, there is a surprising lack of customers. lines. Stunning Models. $ Todays the Day! A Telling jur 1 telling you, women folks, that you never DID see such perfectly darling frocks as these for $18.75 not in any good old days, not in any age or any century. In fact, I dont ever remember seeing so many absolutely different ducky ideas worked up into such simple yet such absolutely adorable dresses, for which you will develop a longing to the very bot.tom of your new fall p Im Aid Argentina Ready of Nations League bq-iie- For Our Absolutely Unique Sale of soul-dee- oxfords. The price seems absolutely a detail, a side issue, when you get to this thing about dresses, until you realize cents that that price is eighteen dollars and seventy-fiv- e then you close your eyes, take a firm grip on yourself, open them and look at the price again. You conclude that you have gone to sleep and waked up in the land where wishes all come true. Theres navy blue sprinkled over with embroidered dots, eoin size, done in red; theres a velveteen in nav?. simple in line as a , at Quaker dress, decorated only with ineh ribbon run crosswise through embroidered eyelets down the entire front from throat to hem and finished, with perky bows; theres a silk duvetyn embroidered in chenille that fascinates you; theres another little velveteen of sweet simplicity, navy and with moire ribbon in circular bands every so often the full length, ending in a smart little bow at the throat to close together a narrow Buster Brown collar of lace. uOld 125 of Them And, as I say, Im telling you, I have seen, just within the last few days, some of the IDENTICAL MODELS, offered for sale ip this city at ,$35.00. Remember, in our sale last week, the women simply grabbed every dress in the sale the moment the racks were uncovered ONE MINUTE after they were exposed there wasnt a dress to be 'seen that wasnt Badly in the Dumps t , Just Sent on by Our New York Specialist WILL ASK HEARING ADVANCE. Nov. 10. WASHINGTON, Solicitor General. Frierson said today that he DALLAS, Texas, Nov. 10. Approval of would ask the supreme court next Mona proposed bankers conference to plan day to advance the date of the aid for cattle men In disposing of their appeal of Senator Newbefry hearing and others livestock was voiced today b)rR.L. Van Ip the Michigan election cases. . WSevf - we mentioned. tricotine velveteen satin . (On our Main Floor.) songfest AND THE PUBLIC IS INVITED MUSIC 1 - , ,.w. SINGING ...... "Gondoliers' Hons of America" "Let the Rest of the World Go Until We Meet Again"... r . . . .Chorus .Orchestra ... By.. Member of Parliament Taken After Discov-er- y British of Incriminating Notes (MEMBERS OF ST. MARY'S ORCHESTRA) Assisted by Miss Veronica Jenkins Miss Corlnne Maupin Harp Miss Mlldren Maupin .....Violin Violin Miss Luclla Jenkins ....... Violin s Mtea Mary O'Donnell Miss Dorothy Klppe , ess ,,...,Harp Miss Ethel Hogan . . .......Cello Cello Mins Isabel Jenkins . W. Ray Address . . America" Cur-son- s, . Our store family will gather protaptly for this . an anniversary celebration of the Russian described Premier revolution, Lloyd George, Winston Churchill and Earl Cur-sosecretary of state for foreign affairs, aa the equrvy agents of the capitalists. and said the constitution should be changed. To save bloodshed due to the atrocities that are being committed, he said. It would be better to use a few lamp posts and walls. What are a few Churchills and " he dec la rod, hanging on lamp posts, compared to tha massacre of thousands at Amritsar or the death by reprisals of hundreds In Ireland?" n, OOOD GOODS' ... .Chorus .Chorus ....Chorus Service Cable. LONDON. Nov, 10. Colonel CJ P. Malone. M. P., was arrested tonight at Ley-tofollowing the aelsure of Important pnpers at hla London residenco vaster Cay. The arrwt was made hr the military authorities. Malone, who waa recently elected to the house of commons as a Liberal, announced upon hit return from a visit to Russia that he had become a Communist. He la now leading the movement In England In favor of Bolshevism. Errkl Velthelm, the Finn, who was chosen aa a secret courier to Lenlne bear-la- g letters from Sylvia Pankhurst, and wlio was arrestad on November I when leaving Malones home, was today sentenced to prison for six months Malone, who spoke Sunday evening at By Universal n, serge made by kx-- 1 ministers. The Rev H. 8. Hamilton, the Rev. C. H. Cleaves, the Rev. R. J. Phipps and the Rev. C. 8. TOnneU having volunteered for the work. a "S" Inventor of Fokker Plane Predicts Advance in Art NEW YORK. Nov. 10 A. If. O. Fokker, Inventor and builder of wartime combat airplanes, arrfved today from Rotterdam. The Fokker waa the swiftest pursuit plane used by German air fighters on the west-afront. Mr. Fokker, who said, as a Hollander, ha had taken no personal pert In Germanys was operations over the allied tines, predicted rapid advances In tha art of flying in the near future. Within the next five or ten years," he said, people will he able to cross tha Atlantic In less than a day and In much more comfort than In travel by steamer." The development of dlreotlonal wireless, he added, would enable pilots to fly by night and In murky weather as well as on clear days .The most needed Improvement In aviation for the present, he said, was construction of flying machines capable of landing on and taking off from small areas, such aa tha roofs of buildings. m READ LOAVES MAOE LARGER. KANSAS CITY.- Nov. 10. A 10 per cent Increase In the aise of loaves of bread, the second such Increase In two weeks without an accompanying Increase In price, was announced today by twelve of the leading bakeries here. The Increase. according to a statement. Is a move on the part of the bakers to keep step with the general trend in prices end In the espectatlon of the public, This move, the statement aays, was In spite of the fact that labor costs tend upward and that lowre priced flour la not yet a village. - WILL CONTINUE INSTITUTE. Special te The Trlbaae POCATEI-LO- . Idaho. Nov. 10 The community extension Institute, which wee Y. M. C, A. last week by the at opened Dr. Brunner of Chicago, will be continued by a special committee consisting of . E. Brady, chairman; U. B, Tunned, vice president; El A. Kruse man. secretary; H. B. Hamilton, Manas Williams, Oeorge Rids way and C. A. Myers, Meetings will be conduated at the O. H. 1 hops every week, and speeches will he - Declares Rumely in Pay of .Agents of Germany NEW YORK. Nov, 10. Questioning of bank employ sea by government counsel In an effort to connect the alleged German purchase of the Evening Mall with a German bond drive before America s an- t 1 you silk duvetyn georgette .with satin Navy and brown predominating, but greens and some other ors are to be had. Cleverest and most original styles. ARMISTICE DAY TODAY, 8:45 A.M. .. Buyer We would vhate to tell' you how much they cost to make ' probably wouldnt believe it if we did Attractive variation of trimming features. f ar Nor shall we mention any prices as to what they were made to sell for we simply show you the dresses and tell you we have marked them $18.75, as a feature of the second week of our 61st Anniversary Sale. The values and the dresses are the surprise. The suggestion to be here WHEN THE SALE STARTS is the message. If you dont find every word of this true my own judgment is backed by the enthusiasm of every person who has seen them in process of getting ready for the sale dont ever believe me again and that would be a very serious matter to me. Be here on time. 'M Ready-to-We- t Thank goodness we have more dresses this time but every woman who sees them will want them even worse than they did the others. Thats the hint All New A Special Purchase claimed. TEXAN WOJULD ASSIST LIVESTOCK MEN Come join us in a sing-- , ing of patriotic songs in celebration of T P. M. IS THE HOUR - j I - , trance Into, the war featured today the trial of Dr. Edward A. Rumely. former who is publisher of the newspaper, charged with making false statements to the alien regarding Its ownership property custodian In 111?. In admitted this connection, Testimony by tha court eftsr objections by the deto the examination of witnesses fense, led In regard to the fine octal transactions made here In lilt end 111! by Henrich F. Albrecht, Germany's financial agent The prosecution announced It would attempt to prove that the alleged transactions were carried on between the defendants and the German agent through e man employed for the .purpose and that Dr. Rumely received funds from the German agent without actually taking part In the negotiations. T. Raymond 8t. John, a member of the taw firm of Hays. Kaufman 4c Llndhelm, testified thst George Renner, an employee In the German agent's offices, brought sums aggregating 1260,000 to hla office, which he in turn handed over to Walter AttorLyon, the aljeged neys Kaufman and Llndhelm are ta with Dr. Rumely.. FOURTH OARAGE BEING BUILT, pedal te The Trlhuee. Vander-vandDELTA, Nov. 14. William Is building a garage adjoining his automobile anop on Clark street. When it Is completed Delta wlU have four publlo garages. col- . has been arranged for early In' the even-I- 1. Is to be followed the an election of officers and abydance. COUT ARE PROMOTED. pedal te The Trtboae. R EXBURG, Ida., Nov. 14. Troop Na I of tha Rexburg Boy Scouts, representing the First ward, has nine first class scouts. Tha following soouta have recently passed their first olase sxamlna-Hon- s and are working for merit badges: Leland Christensen. Wells Grover, Wallace Petersen, Ralph Johnson, George Romney, Kenneth Bandera. Bhail. John Anderson nnd ReginaldGeorge Wood vine. EVANSTON PIONEER DIE. pedal te The Tribune. EVAN8TON, Wyo., Nov. 10. Peter Jones, pioneer cltisen of Evanston, died Tuesday afternoon at hie home on Main street after a lingering Illness. - He is survived by his widow and Mra James Perry of Olendlvadaughter, Mont. Funeral arrangements have not beea made. a for Celde and Croup. It would surprise you to know the number of people who use and reeomn mend Chamberlains Cough Remedy. Mra J. N. Rose, Verona Pa--, writes: "Chamberlain's Cough Remedy has beea used by myself and husband for a number of years for ooughs and colds. I TO OB4ERVE ARMISTICE DAY. also gave It to my little granddaughter 'te Trlbeee. The Special three and a half years of age when REXRlRO. Ida., Nov. 10. Elaborate he had croup last winter. It broke up recommended plane have been made by Palleade poet the attack attoonca 1 have many of my friends and No. I, American Legion, for tha proper tbia remedy observance of Armistice day tomorrrow. neighbors, who have also used It wHh (Advertisement.) A banquet for all members of the post good results," A Reliable Remedy er i , |