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Show V eg gpANISH T THE F0RKl ITT- A- .... viock if Uy right of every dewrtpiolff tie clock., CABINET (DECLARES LIFE PROCEEDINQ NORMALLY IN ITALIAN CAPITAL. Government Taking Steps for Confer, ence With Workers With View to Terminating Strikes and Rentor. ing Industrial Peace. Im!i Rome. "lilum-- raf rumors I ) I of a ri- - iiplii'inul I In foreign coiifitrii nil lint ion in 1 in l " id (i lln t.lilii'il in of Mint rnilirl Ion t r-- rim In note Issui'tl oil .''iii'inliir 7, wlilih inkN: Willi tlm exgepllon of the action of Hu1 metal workers, lift Is prmwillng normally here. It Is hoped no miii find ii Hrlllmiriit of this question, mid rvrii t fie workers' organization are crating to this rlid." The employers In tiiidiil factories vvliii Ii have liern seized hy workmen In the iiosetit contest over conditions In this industry have hern (tlvcn five days In which to comply with the workmen's dcmimds, nerordinx to a rcNolu tion ndopted hy the Socialist meinhers o the Ocncriil tkmfcdcrutlon of Should the employers full to yield, u nipld movement toward generul nation ulizatlon Is threuteticd. So, fur the muniifuclurcrs are persisting in their diH'Islon not to enter Into direct with the workers hefoie tin hitler evacuate the factories Government officials will 0ien with the general Iwlustrl nl conference at Milan with a view to sol v I np the problem presented hy the seizure by workers of metal factories throughout Italy. The Sociullst croup in the Italian parliament will hold a meet I m; with the governing committee o the generul workers confederation and It Is expected lliut at this gathering n ml Icy will he acrepled hy the workers relutlve to the present anom-iilou- s condition of Italian Industry. It Is estimated that 400 of the larg-es- t metal wokers In Italy huve been occupied Jiy meclmnics and workers, and the movement is si III expanding, threatening to extend to the extreme southern end of the peninsula. Elaborate steps hnve been taken h.v the government to preserve order daring the period when a general offensive against all Industries la threatened. ii sruil-offirl- co-o- p ' I Polish nttin k on forces hy the Lithuanians with machine guns and srt.llery In the region of Kelny, thirty live aides northwest of tirodno, Is announced la polish reports from the northern front. The reports declare that the attack was unprovoked and that the Lithuanians laid received orders to occupy Atigustowu. The Polish press comments on the Lithuanian action as Inexplicable, its the provisional frontier between Poland mid Lithuania has not yet hecn reached by the Poles, The latter contend that the Lithuanians are occupying several localities on the Polish side of the frontier. It It also amtoimccil that negotiations regarding the trontler and the future relations of Poland and Lithuania have been broken off and that the Polish delegates are returning to Warsaw. These delegates comprise a special mission which went to Kovno about a month ago to confer with the It Is said the supremo Lithuanians. council has been Informed that the Lithuanians propose u new line of demarcation, running through Marggra-hows- , Augualovvo and Bzuezyn. It Is understiMxl the Lithuanian government places the responsibility for tin clash upon the Poles, asserting that the Lithuanians wore compelled to defend themselves. The Poles claim the Lithuanians opened fire first. Wnr-itw.-- MEXICO'S NEW PRESIDENT. War-Ridde- d Paper Clothing on Exhibition. and Washington. Paper clothing other articles made from paper in Austrian factories huve hern placed on Kiv exhibition hy the department of s The exhibit Includes suits, table rovers, collars and cuffs. rSlSL eom-nirn- wotk-men'- vV i . Probing Death Mystery. Neh. Efforts are being Verdel, made to flml out who was for the death of August p. Moran, who was instantly Lillod several nights ao when n stick of d.vnamite exploihd m an outbuilding on a farm near licit. Big Business Miitot, N. 1. Target for : V.;k V . k ' e- f$ ,y f tjrJl V7 - - i . i t-- ' V -- t, yf. . J - j& Rig business was flayed and progreselv Ism preaeliei! h,v Hov enter Cox In n tour on Tuesday of "no miles In North Ihikotu dose to the Canadian boundary. These issues, together with the league of n.it'oiis. wen rmhiis.cd to eight audiences t . i i i 1 dn TEN MEET DEATH AND SEVENTY INJURED IN TROLLEY CRASH NEAR DENVER. Helds That Commodity Rates in Gen eral Ara Not Unduly Prejudicial to Intermountain Territory or Preferential to Coast Cities. Conductor Failed to Obey Orders and It Responsible for Collision That Caused Passengers to Meet Washington. Commodity rates In general, applying to the lutermouutuin territory from all the country east of the Kotky mountains, are found by Kxumlner William A. DLsque of the interstate commission, not to be unduly prejudicial to lutermountaln ter rltory or uuduly preferential to Pacific coast cities. In a tentative report ttuh niltted on September .I to the commit slou In the transcontinental westbound graded rates cases, Examiner Disque holds as above, and recommends that the petftlou of the iateruiountaln cities and shlpiiers for graded rates be denied. At the same time Mr. Diaque recommends that the commission order the establishment of joint through class rates from poiuta In official classification territory to points In intermountaln territory which now pay combination rates based on Mississippi river, Chicago or St. Paul. The tentative report of Examiner Disque will he submitted to the dc fendant carriers and to the commercial bodies, shippers and other and when replies are received, the whole case will he taken up for action by I he commission. While It la specifically announced that the findings of the examiner are not the findings of the couimusNion, It Is a mutter of fact that Mr. Disque has been assigned to many of the important cases coming before the commission In late years, anil the commission has almost hIvviijs concurred hi the essential features of hU findings and recommendations. GOVERNMENT SEIZES PROFITS. Forcible Poisession Taken of $4,900,-00- 0 for Excess Profits Tax. New York. The biggest and most dramatic seizure of money ever made by the government under the excess profits tax law vvus revealed here Sep. temher 4. when It became known that federal agents took forcible possession of .54,1)00, IKK) In the Chase National Imnk, New York, immediately after It had been paid by the Iiarrimnn Interests to II. Fitrqidierson Kerr and A. E. Clegg, respectively president and vice president of the Kerr Navigation corporation. The Ift.ikKMHKI was pa.vinent In full made in bills of large denominations for 4'.UK) shares of stoi k In the Kerr corporation nt $100 per share. It is the contention of the government that the stock cost Kerr ami Clegg S10 per share ami tliut 'lie profit therefore Is $;m per share. rj 0 German Educator Visit America. Washington. The first two educators to come from tlermuny to the I'nltcd States since the vvur will he I'rofo-so- r 0. Asehnffenborg of Cologne and Professor .1. Houser of llerlln. They will arrive In Washington Sep. teinher "0 to attend the International congress against nlcohollsm AV VxJ Apologize to Allen. Kansas City, Kan. The RECOMMENDS THAT PETITION OF INTERMOUNTAIN SHIP. PERS BE DENIED. Their Death. were killed Denver. Ten person uud seventy injured when two Intent cars collided headon on a curve Just outside of Olobeville, n suburb of Denver, Monday afternoon. A special train and trailer parrying to a loud of holiday pleasure-seeker- s reEldorado Springs, a sort. collided with a regular car rewell-know- n turning from Roulder to Denver on the Denver & Interurbnn railroad. According to officials In churge of the (ilobexille station, the conductor of the outbound ear failed to obey orders to wait at CSIoheville for the incoming car. The Incoming car was two min tttes behind schedule and was running at high speed to make up the time. When the car struck they plowed Into each other for a distance of fifteen feet. Most of the casualties occurred on the inbound car, hut few on either enr escaped without Injury. At least two persons were killed when they Jumped In an attempt to suv e themselves. Meet Death in Hotel Blaze. Klamath Falls, Ore. Ten bodies have been removed from the ruins of the Ilouxtoii hotel, which burned to the ground early Monday. It is believed four other lives were lost. The fire started beneath a stairway in the hotel, a three-storframe structure containing thirty-eigh- t rooms, Into which guests estimated to number HHH., mostly visitors here for a Labor day celebration, laid been y crow tied. Three Dead at Niagara. Niagara Falls, N. Y. Two women and u inun were crushed to death anil two men were injured Mondaj afternoon when a slide of shale forced out a bridge leading to one of the stairways In the Cave of Winds, under Niagara falls. A hundred or more tourists who were in the cave at the time had narrow escapes, many being bruNod and cut by the falling rock. GEN. MAXIME WEYGAND .Jit com- mission has voted to tender an apology to Hovertior II. .1. Allen foe a l.ahlir day paradw held Monday, in v Idrh placards were carried hearing the To Hell With Allen's Industrial Court I.uw." Harding Quite His Ohio Home. Chicago. Senator W. !. Harding. nominee for president, Republican stopped over In Cltlengo for seveiul hours Tusstlay on Ids first eumpulgii trip outside of Ohio, amt quietly paid H cull on Major (letieral Leonard Wood, Admiral Charlaton of the British navy, who has bten selected to d th British fleet, which la preparing to operate againot the bolsha vlkl, should trouble eventually occur. com-man- Gonzaleo Forfeits Bond. San Antonio. (ieneral Ricardo Ootirnles. former rebel during the Carranza regime of Mexico, forfeited $JOO( In Liberty bonds of the I'nltcd Stutes when In failed to appear on u charge of violation of passport rulings. iu.'' v V"V V -- Poured Gasoline in Kitchen Stove. Marshalltown. Iowa. - .1 I. Johnson, (!), a foreman in the Minncuixilis A St. Louis railroad shops, um ins jf,. were burned to death when Mrs. Gen. Maxima Weygand of the French Johnson by mistake pourtsl gisohvn. aide to Marzhal Foch, who ha Into the klhhcu stove to Iinriv n army, been directing the operation of the fire. Poles agalntt the Russian rede. Slack Is Out on Bond. Diaz Supporters Begin Revolt A. Stark, wriithv Mexico City. Revolutionary nctivl Lander, Wjo. stockman who shot and ty by followers of Felix Ihaz, ucplm.v killed Paul Irovvn In a roUioiiv. at of former President Porfirto Diaz, has Miles. III., a tew i1i Wits ni. beeu begun in the vicinity of i,, MisanUu, leased Friday on bond fuiuMe-state of Vera Cruz, in cording to pres.' Ids brother. Slides in Canal Removed. dispatches received fiotn Jninpn. San Diego. All traces of recent Only Three States Out. Fearful Toll of Vnsh Riots. Radical Croups Uniting. slides In the Panama until have been Washington - Louisiana, New Jer-seRclfnst, Till t t.v one person, in. Did Union of the Sm mbM and Madrid. of channel tnlehr removed uud the and Mississippi are the only mates Ing three women, ate deni nelnlv ;oq Sjiuli'iite groups is likely soon to rut Is being widened ami deepened, ne In wbiili women may find themselves are seriously wonh'd and 'j:;i come an uccoinpll-tietai l, it k iri, cording to word brought here by the unable to vote m the coming gisier-ti- l lags have gone op In il.uuc.s In ,i,(. on toil Social. st by iiewsi,i.rs Morris, Stutes Celled elutions, in oidttig to suffrage fast lr. the rioting destroyer pi,,gt. UD(j ,mrn. would gather Into one oig.m z.umu leaders here. lne that broke out eight daj ago. over 1,000,000 workingmen. Cltlengo.--Heral- d , , x . r.. d GRa,, e Salt Luke City. At the opening session of the thirteenth annual convention of the National Tax association, on September 7, a total of 223 delegates had registered, in uddltlon to women guests of the about convention The representation Includes delegates from forty-on- e states, In uddltlon to the LMstrlotof Columbia and the territories of Hawaii and Iorto Itleo. It Is said that this wns the largest representation ever had ut any convention of the association. Inheritance tax questions were the main topic of discussion ut tho after-uoo- ti session, held ut Snltalr, and practically the only subject debated nt the round table meeting of the evening, An Interlude wus taken In the evening meeting to permit the delegated to hear from Senator Reed Smoot, who declared that u great necessity exists for reform of the revenue system of the Uultetl States government, and announced his Intention, If returned lo the senate, to undertake that reform. The morning session, also ut Sultalr, was taken up with un address by Governor I). W. Davis of Idaho, on the cabinet form of government; oifc by William Halley, secretary of the Utah state board of equalization, on the Increased pow-erand duties of that board, and one from Frank Orr of Okfuhonm, former chief clerk of the tux commission and now tax agent for the Sinclair company, a big oil concern, on taxation of oil companies. At the afternoon session the annual review of legislation of 1919 and 1920, by Professor O. C. Lockhart, now of the National Dank of Commerce, of New York, proved the nature of the legislation In some of the states to Re a fitting Introduction to the subject of Inheritance taxes, next on the program. Attorney W. M. McCrea of Salt Lake read a paper by Professor Charles W. Gerstenberg of New York university, which proposed that the federal government should be made collector of inheritance taxes, and also suggested that It be used as an agency In distributing the funds among the states In snch form as school supiort and road construction. This was followed by a progress report from William B. Belknap of Louisville, Ky chairman of the committee on inheritance taxes, npiminted by the association some months ago. Mr. Belknap reported that nt present the state Inheritance tax laws are In very much of a "muddle," and be pointed out many problems which remain unsolved. He said the committee was not as yet a unit on nny proposed solution, and he invited suggestions from the members of the association, and also the presentation of uny further problems that experience might have developed in the respective states. A paper by Governor D. W. Davis of Idaho was one of the features of the program, the subject being the results attained hy the cabinet form of government In Idaho. Governor Davis contrasted results attained in his state under the old and the new forms of government, and added : "Our department of reclamation, for example, has solved completely prole letns of Carey act administration which have perplexed Idaho officials for more than two decades; has developed u system of water measurement which will save the stale thousands of dollars, and has been more Hum aggressive In advancing the cause of reclamation generally. U has paid for itself. An adequate stute highway program has been Inaugurated hy our department of public works; our land department saved the state $.170, 000 on a single trnnsnetiom ; the department of law enforenient 1ms almost doubled the efficiency of Its licensing bureau, anti more thun seventeen times as much was added to the permanent endowment funds of the stat in 1919 hy (he department of public Investments, nn1 land department as had been added In the previous ear. William BuHey, secretary of the Utah state hoard of equalization, discussed the Increased and powers duties of tfie Utah board. lie pait a high tribute to the county assessors, and said that so far as he knew, never before have fnm lands In Utah been so well assessed as this year. two-sCor- e S Cox. BOYD pm BOYD PARK BLDj State and From Forty-onTerritories of Hawaii and Porto Rico Attend Thirteenth Annual Convention. Delegate Negotiations Regarding the Frontier and Future Relations or Poland and Lithuania Broken ao Result of Unlooked for Encounter. General Obregon Chosen to Prcoide n Over Republic. Mexico City. The election of Gen-ra- l Alvaro Obregon as president of Mexico la generally conceded, aa a result of tho voting throughout the republic on September .1. Complete returns may not he available for several days. Blootlon day passed eaceful1y in POLES TAKE SOVIET TIGRESS. Mexico City and nearby towns. No report of troublo had been received Noted Russian Woman Fighter Cap- from nny purt of tho republic. tured After Struggle With Foes. Tho vote was light and Dominguez Iurls. After a desperate made a poor showing. Working men struggle with four Polish sol- and farm lianda polled a majority of Ked Rose," the votes, few business men going to diers, soviet Russia's youthful maiden with face of a nun the polls. and heart of a tigress, has been ruptured. And with her removal as "real Straw Gas to Run Motor Cars. general of the Russian legion," accordWashington. Css which possesses ing to news dispatches, has gone the explosive qualities sufficient to drive will to win of the soviet army. an antomohtle a ml which may also be No figure In all the long turmoil of used for Illumination Is being produced Russia has been aa picturesque as that at the Arlington, Va., experimental l.S-ear-old of the lovely y girl, aristocrat farm of the department of agriculby birth, hut now the most proletari- ture from the distillation of ordinary Her atory, which field straw. In an of proletarians. making this ansooner or Inter will find Its way into nouncement, of the deexperts history, la one of almost Incredible fe- partment udded that the possibilities rocity. She is said to have been of slruw gas are not yet fully deterfor more than 400 deaths of mined. her methods being those of a female Judas. Nevertheless, ADMIRAL CHARLETON so potent Is her personality that her very raptors have fallen victim to Iter elm nil and the Russian women and men ruptured with her treat her as a kind of queen. hand-to-han- TAX QUESTI0N8 INHERITANCE MAIN TOPIC OF DECISION AT SALT LAKE MEETING. ATTACK POLES ON SEINY FRONT AND FURTHER COMPLICATE EASTERN SITUATION. s Postmen Want More Pay. Uinclnnntl. I'ostofflcu clerk are di satisfied with snlir.v Increases grmted to them recently h.v eoegrew. Hfnl will take action at tin annual 'invention of the Unltfsl National Association of I'ostoflne l('ks, Fire Prevention Day. Washington President Wilson In n proclamation September 7, urged Mate governors to set apart October ns fire prevention 'lav and to it general obscrv ii,uot i.me b tlio irnblle. Sat-ui'ila- j, .WHEN danger Walk, but Dont Building r lr op RUft K0 I . Cool, When eome one h0ti !5e1" those u likely tot. lhtS'J are thou tnmpede. Those whe and act rationally stand o escaping injury- - rem. recMogazlie. The cry of ently retted In the ba.InL K nd started a stamped, tere. Now, It cannot bt donS the war time frenzied reached Its zenith and tut mV moving downward. It seen, however, whether It attempt to force good, on at greatly reduced price, lnd T " cel orders for fresh ,nppM assumption that produce, cut their prices drastically h . J effort to get from under, ft h noting that woolen, ,hoi ga , 2 ? ft J certain other manufacturer, prL curtailed operation, thu, nfir. gamble to the limit In futun. u. ductlon be curtailed on at! tid otno merchants may find that the cmmIIsUn m overplayed Goods cannot be produced for little time at any tremendouly cost than formerly because ft tt time for raw materia!, tabor, tn and other expenses to fall dnitn. . Tho advice prominently printed New York theater program, ),: case ef fire, walk to th, setrat Don't run. This advice might be worth by the business community u Oi isliii'r.t wear Jvh tt moment RECOGNIZES Its Use for VALUE OP Pat Commercial Becoming Mere Throughout th Furpom Understood World Peat Is extensively ttrd u tod northern Europe and a, ftrUllur the United States. In Damps p i charcoal, coke and numbor of able are produced fra Owing to the scarcity ef ne st rials In Europe, peat and post ft are employed also aa ezbitltutes absorbent cotton In the preprint surgical dressings, for wool vd K cotton and woolen cloth. In thoWj States peat Is utilized chiefly u llzer filler, as stable Utter tad a absorbent for th uncry, talllzed dues of beet and cane sugar In the manufacture of stock Peat has I6ng been ,ed la th smL having been dthsl piled aa a direct fertilizer or well a filler fog commercial fertilizer, ini EX' ysls of tbo peats of tbs United show anr average nitrogen conk about 3r per cent, a proporood what iglier than that found h w comnpbrclal fertilizers. Tlo vale of peat In son ME" tm im la found In Its nltrog and In the beneficial mecMcil fact It produces upoo certati F1 thoroughly decomposed fertilizer for are most satisfactory such peats are generally heT,tf ' more compact and contain nor xnaterlal trogen and less fibrous the brown types. ti DO SC II Vi RE :r,' ittlej -- BBt D d ( Yet to Be Determined Ixindon Punch dKrMannou American uewspuper bo fBjo,i the gruftlng of a tomato a potato plant so as to wltn fll of fruit above ground , low. "But," says Punch, , p the v diesnt state whether o be known as the 'pornato tato. " Unrecognized Gemot The first literary effort, llnck were attended by "j first book of poems he and ogultlou whatever, l polled to print twenty-fhla first play, which wer his Eri gratuitously among r(i Reeemblapce "Owens Is a sort of he h That fellow Why. and gy enough to work pJ "Exactly. Everything charged. 1 f&K na-- i Volcano I a Lighthouse The city of San Salvador. p'W the republic of Salvador, mJ n ' ' a city of earthquakes, for It b of mtJ disasters as a rcult tlons, and even today tho m"I eanoea thivt anrround the IM ' which ha been shattered It time agfiln threaten Hnd gnnhllngs are heard conilnt la supnbsed, from the Izalo vohzw peak cinder-covereTltl 6.000 feet high, ht gradtiallf ItselT up from what was at the base of the Sants Ans etnn. It has long period, nw ( My. throwing up cloud, of wteam In great puff,, belching flames. Sometime Ing effect can be seen far . and the volesno has becorr light10 the coast a, the along Central America. Detroit M ( - 000 Xnjr w H oo cv g mo" 30 o th the' C oi tins, WOfli Hist II ithn |