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Show fS .. s. It is hard to keep alto- gether alive to opportunity without reading The Tribune Want' Columns. VOL. 103, NO40. SALT LAKE CITY, TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 24, 1921. PAGES FIVE " CENTS 22 , ARDING PLEADS FOR INDUSTRIAL COOPERATION; EMERGENCY TARIFF BILL SENT TO WHITE HOUSE Exiled President Adds Ex-Kais- er .Again Takes Part in Public Affairs Holland, May 83. (By tha Praia.) Although tha de. former kalier, who preaaed after the death of tha' former empress, has by no meant emerged from thle depression, he hat begun to teak diversion. Last week he made several trips About the neighborhood. Early In the week he visited the Bantlnck family at Amerongen to thank Its mom. bare for their marks of sympathy during the Illness and death of hla wife, and last Saturday he went - to Amerongen a second time te Inspect the electric .plant In pltal which ho gave that village. He' dresses m brack,' except ar am ner, when he appears In full uniform, with a - mourning band around the Postcriptto Gotham Speech 2J. At th con. his prepared speech President Harding departed from hi tonight snd said: think It I fair for an adminia.t tratlon to opcak lit confldonco to tho poopl It eokt to"arve, I would Hko ""you captains sf Industry, you loaflori of commerce, you commanding figure m flnancs, to know the aspire, tlonof th's .present administration. have on outstanding with for -- tha administration, and that Is to Inaugurate tho era of understanding. I want understanding between tho DOORN. Announces Government , j tention to - Use Soldiers In- - - to Allied Quell High JL. Disturbances. Commission Dispatches Delegation to Intervene in the Rows. LONDON, May 23. (By the Associated Press.) The government has decided to send troops to Silesia at an early date. It was announced today. The decision to send Ihe troops resulted from Interchanges between Great Britain and France, and the British force will he sent to reinforce the allied contingents In Upper Bllesla in the near future. The sixe of the force was not Indicated in the .announcement, but It la understood that not less than four battalions, probably from the Rhine forces, will go. (By the Associated government note delivered to the French foreign office today say the German government has no inPARIS, Press.) May 13. A German fluence on the measures of taken by the population of the Upper Silesian territory, which Is under the administration of ths Interallied commission. The note adds that the commission is solely responsible for- of law and order In Upper Silesia. (tmltnano Intervention Undertaken. PARIS, May 33 (By the Associated Prtsa.) The allied high commission In Upper Bilesla has sent delegations - to intervene with bath the German and the ifVokm In an endeavor to obtain the cessation of all military operations In that territory, according to French official dispatches today. In French circles the situation la rethe garded as mostongrave, following the front Grosstelner- attack the Polish Strlebenaun-Kremp- a against inGer-.m- an Unas. The Poles, according to French formation, retired from this line. The' German attack, although regarded as very serious, is not considered in French official circles as a casus belli, as It was carried out by Irregular forces. The allied ofliclals In Berlin will call on Dr. Wlrth today and ask him to close the Silesian frontier and take all possible .steps to prevent intervention by other volunteer forces. COMMISSION HELPLESS TO PRESERVE ORDER 1A NDON May 23. The correspondent of the London Time in Opfln, reporting German 'irregular' ..military operations Vppee iliar declared thav .have been concentrating forces and making preparations for a fortnight. Indications, the laid, point to a determined efdispatch fort to recover possession of Upper Si jerla 'from the Poles. The movement is regarded by the Times' correspondent i far more serious than a mere reaction of the German population against the insurgents. He asserts that the interallied commission was unable to prevent the outbreak of fighting and Is now just as powerless to intervene. Apparently the Germans have regular army reserves at their disposal. Tha PAishinuniete"eeor4iAg' dispatch, have been steadily consolidating their position and extending their control over the industrial districts of Silesia. They are reported to have succeeded In work again in mines, foundries starting and factories and now are sgueeaing the out of the towns thev authorities allied stiil occupv In order to complete their hold on the railway between Kattowit and Oleiwits. Kvery sort of pressure is being employed to compel the surrender of these No food is being two important towns. allowed to enter them, but, as this has not the water and electricity effective, proved supplies of Kattowitz were cut off yesterday. Police Attack Pores. - arm. Mother of Notorious Slack er Is Involved in Clashes With Her Inquisitors. YVASHINGTION, May 23. Mrs. Emma C, Bergdoll, mother of Grover Bergdoll. the slacker, again went to the bat today with the house investigating com. mittee. " After a Mrs. Bergdoll came up smiling, for the committee refused to send her before the bar of the house for not answering questions bearing on her burled gold. There were tlmea when tha witness, rising from Jter jchalr and slamming the floor with a parasol, denounced tha inquiry as another persecution. Johnson, i U was while' Representative Republican, Kentucky, bad the witness in hand that ths clash Occurred, which caused him to offer a motion charging The committee, her with contempt. best to decide this however., thought session end ten in executive question minutes Taler the doors were opened and was told she might return Mrs. Bergdoll home. While making no attempt, as he explained-, to find where the woman had buried 15n,000 obtained from the treasury in 1919, Mr. Johnson drew from her that it was on the Bergthe statement It was doll ' farm near Philadelphia. while he, was trying to learn who assisted In' hiding It that Mrs. Bergdoll flew Into a rage and declared It was a shame ter' members of congress to be Mr. Johnson replied that he so nasty. was trying to lay a foundation tosee if she was telling the truth, at which Mr. This Bergdoll launched lino a 'tirade. was checked by Chairman Peters. inforto other refuse give you any mation about the gold, ehe shouted, Abe 'table with her parasol. "I hanging am sick and tired of it. You ought not to be so nosey. It's a waste of time and I don't propose to conaole you by answering." Mrs. Bergdoll declared that git of tha gold was placed In one hole, that nobody knew where, and that if she died it never would be found. Republican, Representativeto Luhrlng. know if she would dig wanted it up and let the committee have a I -- look. "No I won't, she exclaimed, "nor my rhildren either. I would not put that , cemptat loo in vour. wa. Aaked how Grover had been named for Mrs. President Cleveland, Bergdoll shouted. "He has got as good a chance as anvbodv here of becoming president. "How many Liberty bonds did you buy? Luhnng asked. she replied. None, that's how manvt 'All the posters had In big words 'Kill I m not the Huns,' and willing to kill anybodv. And how many pid you buy and how many did the president with hla But Chairman Peters bg alarvthebuv? outburst. stopped found 's commute from Mrs. The books that a year ago Grover Begdoll paid income tax amounting to 3533d and 1137 for the current year. The slacker, she said, was worth half a million dollars. The hearing will end tomorrow. -- 'irial. $ Continued lOehuaa Tift Your.) Tear Mondell recently announced that there will ha nbpublir hiuldlnghlll passed this session, to the King bill will necessarily go over until next winter. tiv 1 . Mav 23. (By noon today. The police casualties were not given out; It was officially announced this afternoon that twenty-thre- e persona had been killed and 132 wounded. The official communique says: "The trouble started between Greeks and natives In Anastasia street. Ths indiscriminate fighting and revolver shooting spread to other districts. The police and Egyptian troops quelled ' ths disturbances by 3 a. .m. At 7 o'clock many incendiary fires broks out, but all were quenched or controlled by .noon... At 3 p. in. the total casualties numbered twenty three killed end 130 wounded. Including three native . policemen seriously wounded. "Firing from balconies by Europeans xml hatiVea continues. "The general officer commanding Is issuing a proclamation threatening to open fire on such places with machine guns. "The police have made a large number of arrests. low-cla- ss -- Cause of Outbreak. LONDON, May 23. Many parson are repotted to have been killed in an in Alexandria, Egypt, where native attacked European, say a Reuter ilutpaich from that city, British troops have arrived and taken charge of the town. It is rumored that the outbreak arose from the killing of a native by a Greek, whiclf led to attacks by I ft natives and students on Greeks and other European. Ambulances were busy all night taking the wounded to hospitals. Many fires were started and in one district It was reported that people were burned alNe. Mobs during the night smashed windows for hours ami this morning ail business establishments are closed. Before the arrHal of the soldiers this morning Europeans had gathered at the government office, demanding protection or lemtifrslon to protect themselves. They greeted the troops upon their arrival with great enthusiasm. oat-bre- ak Dead Left in Streets. May 23. A dispatch from Telegraph comCairo, to the Exchange lvlng in the pany reports many dead One report states streta of Alexandria. were drenched with the Europeans that and bunted' in the streets. petrol 1500 of A band armed Bedouins, said ths Cairo message, is reported to be advancing on Karaleh, five miles northeast of Alexandria, do participate in a general revolution which, but for the presence of the British, might succeed. Cairo, adds the message, is In an excited state, but no disorders have developed there. Mav 23. The Immediate LONDON, "cause of todays rfolihlTlfi" AleimndHif. to which disorders In Cairo were a prelimin official circles he. e inary. was explained tn the fai t that none as having Its basis of the Egyptian Nationalists aa chosen on the official delegation coming to London to discuss the future of Egvpt, The premier had refused to appoint toe or Nationalist leader. Said Pasha anv of his supporters as members toof the delegation which now Is going - want uiiderotandlng amongthe And Twaht our'AmerIC to have nothing to do with any na tlon that la not willing to alt at tha table and coma to an understanding. want understanding between tha captains of Industry and those who make up tho tolling forces. .1 want understanding with thoa, who com to our shorat to participate' In the benefits of rcsldonco In America. I want them to com understanding that there are obligations as woll ao privilege of American citizenship. And I want It understood a man must give at wttl as that roceiv from tha government which shields him. Nay, mors, I --want an understanding bstwosn those who would pro. servo our form of government and thoa who would destroy It. And I want tha destroyer or tha would-b- e destroyer te know that ho la mad to destroy tha thing that makes hla x. Istence possible. And I want him who would presorvo eur government to understand hla obligation In teaching him hla plao In government un. dor th laws. 1 -- rates. the long debate opponents of Action... by Canada, by South America and by some nations of Europe. Chairman Fordney of the- - house ways and means committee, which drafted the bill, said, however, no protests had come. The house vote was 245 to 97 and it came after less than thirty minutes' debate. Representative Garner of Texas, a Democratic member of the ways and means commutes, qjleclared that the Republicans had taken care of all of their industrial Intsrssts, by Including compensatory provisions and building a barProvisions Strickrier against Imports by use of the antidumping and dye control eeotions of the en- From law. Chairman Fordney of the ways and Bill Long Struggle. means committee announced that the considnow under tariff bill, general eration by his committee, would Include ' ' to Tlie Tilbufir. provision for the American valuation of Sprrlal Mav 23. When WASHINGTON, the imports. senate this afternoon by a vote of 40 to 30 rejected a provision in the nawil bill BUSINESS WARNED a new base in the 8n establishing BY SENATOR KING Francisco bay at Alameila, It paid tribute to. Senator King's .ability as a debater 3. Businas men and a real WASHINGTON, May guardian of the treasury. In of th country were- warned today b fight, which began Senator King, Democrat, of Utah, that the if they keep on trying to destroy last sisxion, Senator had as his 4 a- - hulnaaa-U- y h. wm chief lleutcnant henRtOf-'Bora-King bine which challenge the right of conSenator King's fight, which ended vicsumers to live, they will have socialism to face. toriously today, was begun last session The senator. In an address in the sen- w)ien the naval bill was brought up. Ills ate. urged congressional Investigation of attention then had been called to the lobbies in the national capital and par-- ti ularly of efforts which he said er Alameda question, and he demanded that being mad by dye interests to get tariff the Item be laid aside while he could go legislation. said the Utah into Its merits. This he did most thorWe are confronted senator, "aith a gigahtic conspiracy on oughly, with the result that he fend Senthe part of combinations and monopolies ator Borah, largely' on account of this to dominate absolutely the markets of one Item, forced the defeat of the naval the United States to maintain prices billon the 4th of March, and made neces unbearable levels. We are at, JHjgh and sary its reTntroduetlon this session. going to see fcere the reign of conspirators, trusts and monopolies. Thev are here, and they will be here by toscores, Joined by Borah. write demanding their pound of flesh, King went to much pain to the laws that will enable them to op- getSenator at the bottom (acts, amt when he conan intolerable decree the to press the wai 'fully informed suming public of tills republic. want to av to the American cap- situation to n Senator Borah, who joined him in determined attack upon the italist, the American bus. ness man, that with hen Senator King Alameda project. CcatmuM n Page Your and Senator Borah this aesHicm exposed (Columa Two.) the entire affair, nineteen Republican senators. Including some- large navy adthem in striking the vocates,'?' joined provision from the bill. The Alameda provision had an innocent It called for the appropriaappearance tion of only H.bOU.ono Tor the establishment of a naval supply baae. if it had been adopted, the government would have been committed to the expenditure of something like $10,000 000 at Alameda, and the scrapping of the Mare island navy yard, which has cost the governAside from the great ment $10 000,000, expense involved, the Mare Island navy as Senator King showed from ofyard, ficial reports, is the most efficient shore & to her amhnraga amid 'ih salutes of establishment maintained by the government. hundred warcrafi fn Then. the latching in the throat a he arrived in Hoboken at the bivouac of the Really Quicksand. dead, entered the piers which served as To begin with, Senator King divulged a temporary tomb fpr the thousands of the Alameda site was really brave lads whose coffins athe fad .it flat covered with an average covered the floor, row on row, and laid of quicksand about twelve feet of water. Although upon the casket of a humble, private from borings of 150 feet to the depth Michigan the first American killed on been made, no solid foundation had have been German soil a wreath that served as a found. a solid With the cost foundation, smbol for aft. the country's war dead. of filling In the flat would have been cheer later the of welcome And of per acre. The navv department s Children voices the voice of 'tens of of children watting to greet plan, Senator King showed, called for thousand 5noo seres, and as a result the gov he motored to Brookljn through over him ernment would have expended at least the East side. . , in securing ground at the Then a quickening of the pulse when $.'0,000,000 which to erect its buildings. upon n the Taent.v-thir- d regiment armorv in site was no reason there In that contending n saw he Brooklvn survivors of the foe the establ.ahment of another has l6th awing bravely past him at a on Senator FYancJsro San King subbay, rev iew to show that with And f.ualiy ill lavthg aside for a mo- mitted official repons ooo.oon or $1O00o.Oo0 of an expenditure ment- of the emotions, to lav before his needs of the nevF Pacific fleet audience the problem that face postwar the entire end for th lower be at could provided America in her reconstruction period. The senator simply of Mere Island overwhelmed senators with Information Crowded With Activities. source to sustain his The president's day waa so crowded from an Inofficial Even Senathe controversy. a moment of rest position that he had scarcely of Illinois. McCormick who had tor until hb again boarded the yacht late origiriailv proposed the resolution by to return to Washington. tonight was to been sehave another base New York gave him air enthusiastic which Francisco San lected for bav, jojned ti eU am -- Great crvwda ?euRtor JCtnc ttr protesting" atfamsU th w here. r of the Mameda provision. The greeting that reached hi heart, parage The entire affair Is regarded as a clear cut clean personal victory for Senaand CDtnu4 oa Tar Fm tor King. (Galuma Four.) Alameda Appropriation After u 1 N President Wishes the Nation So Righteous Wars Terrors Will Never Again Engulf It YORK, NEW 23. May Press ) amU so A (By the nation just that so we never be called on to make war ao long as God and men ruin g together, was the prater (if President-Hardinaa late today he reviewed survivors of ths world war at a regimental review in Brooklyn. "It. must not be again, was his declaration earlier- - today when he attended a memorial service for 6000 war dead on the piers of Hoboken. The same theme spoken before the living and before the dead brought tears to his eyes and to the eyes of those who had followed him through the day's At a luncheon of the Acadproaram emy of Pohiiial Science and at a din-of ner celebrating the 125ih snimebeary exthe New York Cormnerotal, he had pounded the need of putting theof governreconment on a business basis and nations business and instructing It tha was at the inilltarv function dustry. stir-e- d the emotions of his audithat heAnd varied must have been the ence. of the president. emotions -- Pays Tributeto Valor; 1 First a thrill at thfToar of hav guns as tha prctodaniial vaiht. Mayflower, steamed into the harbor and came "" i s ' on. r d war-tor- chec-red- . , dw- lUEBEE Lays Wreath on Casket Judicious Aid to Properof First American Sol- ly Conducted Enterdier to Die on German prises to Be Expanded," Soil at Declares, Ceremony. Executive l nation." WASHINGTON, May 23. The long battle In congresa over the emergency tariff bill ended today. when the house adopted tha conference report to which the senate had agreed. The measure was teht to the White House, where it Is expected to be signed' soon by the president. The emergency measure passed In tha closing days of the last session was vetoed by President Wilson, but Immediately reintroduced In tha present extra session. It carries tariff duties on thirty odd farm products, together with compensatory duties on articles manufactured from them. It also empowers the secretary of the treasury to employ penalties In staving off dumping of foreign-mad- e goods, continues the wartime control over,1 transportations of dyes, and operates to clarify tangles In the assessment of duties which result from fluctuating exchange During OF. vernment-and-the-people. Mohs RuivRiot in City, Do NavalJBill ,Fight Resumed ing Damage to Property; in Senate; King Warns Are Troops Employed. Against Socialism Threat d mine-throwe- rs )- - -- Berg-doll- Portuguese Government Have Reported '2 J.TB OlsAoctata' IfliOIi It is not expeoted-f- n official rir- Press Natives Slain, and Many of Great Majority Secured on Both Races Wounded in Adoption; Path Cleared Outbreak in Alexandria. for Permanent Measure. 1 two-ho- 1 My 1 ALEXANDRIA. Egypt, I YORK, of txt the Associated Press.) Five Europeans were killed and seventv-tw- o others wounded In rioting here Sunday night and this morning, it was announced at 'BERIIN, Mav 23 Reporting on tha German operation In Upper Silesia, the ' "Montaga Poat today announces that German plebiarlte police atormed Annaber. to rolisli had held for . which the Quit Insurgent three weeks. The Poles lost three guna. The Germane, adds the report, alao 23 LONDON. The May Evening New occupied the strategic point of Groasteln, Spain, correspondent says today .unrtheast of. Annsberg;. ..capturing two Vigo, the Portuguese government-resigneand seven machine guns. that Saturday "to avoid the . death of Its members. War Criminals on Thou taking part in the revolution, ths -- PARIS, assert. Include machine May 23. Germany has begun correspondent gun troops Companies of the republicompliance with another of the demands can a batterv of the guards, and In ultiallies the London guards biade by the are protecting tha matum of May 5 the trial of war crim- cavalry and infantry to a dispatch from Lelp-si- c presidential palace and the ministries, he inals according declares. The announces that measage today. tha high court organized by Germany for MEETS WITH MISHAP. tills phrpose had Instituted the trials demanded by the allies, beginning the proLOS ANOKI.BS. May 23 Captain Edceedings by placing on trial a formerGer-ma- n die Rlcken backer, who left San Diego nopcommissioned officer. Sergeant todar tn an airplane In which ha waa to start tomorrow from Oakland for New .Hevne. The defendant is accused of of prisoners of war in the ramp York, smashed the propeller of the maat Heren, in Westphalia. chine In making a lending here. He waa forced to abandon the Journey, Mud China-Germa- n Peace. ott the landing field caused damage to -PARIS, May 23. A state of ppm be- the rnachtne. Captain Rickenbacker was tween China and Germany has been de- notHeinjured. to reach New York had planned clared, according to advices received her. Mav 28 to attend a banquet. He had exAn agreement to this effect was neces- pected to reach Oakland tonight and sary, a China as not a signatory of the then proceed via Cheyenne and Omaha. and uh an agreetreaty of VerwtiHe. ment between the two nations, it Is said, BILL INTRODUCED.' was signed at Peking May 20, ft puts an - ' end to the state of war and reestablishes Special to Tlrt Tribune. mv 23. senator King diplomatic and commercial relations. Washington, has Introduced a bill appropriating 150.000 to purchase a site" and erect a public Conference Deferred. PA NEW , - jvVV KTnw'sikTir M With these solemn words, dent Hardin gtoday laid a wrsath on th coffin of th first American soldier to dla on .German soli, at a funeral ceremony for 5000 war dead at the army piers In Hoboken." Ilia" votes husky and his ees brimmed with tears, th president gaie.l at the rows and rows of coffins. Then h said: are 'One hundred thousand sorrow touching my heart. It must not b aealn. God grant that tl will not bs. "I do not pretend that tha millennial days have coma and that there will be no more war. I would wish a nation so powerful that none will dare to provoke Its wrath. Then In th great army shed on the shore of ths Hudson, with lit stark, whitewashed ws.ls, there fell a Hence profound and deep. Mrs. Harding- could be seen weeping softly as sha looked upon coffins of those who had the given their all for their country. Then the president continued. "The republic will never forget tha sacrifices ihese min hate made whether they lie' in tha eol of the homeland or th crimsoned soli of the battlefield. When the ptt'dent had finished hi brief address he stepped forwaid. stopped" tn front of the coffin1 that had been selected to symbolize the army of dead surrounding him and laid upon it his wreath of roses and orchids. 1 Fre.M-- N $ flag-diap- Michigan Hero Honored. 1 YORK, May 21. Th cocperu- - flotTof every f.iHbrof '"Amcrlca'i business and industry to put the nation's house ir order after the dislocation of war was bespoken by President Harding tonight at a dinner here celebrating the 125th anniversary of he New York C Agriculture, labor and business man.' agoment. he dularcd, must stand together In the confident purpose of reconstruction He asserted that although' the CnUcd States d'd not want to live in istlation and selfishness its duties to the world could best be performed by giving its attention first to the rehabilitation of its own resources. Mr. Hard'ng promisd that government Interference with business would be reduced to a minimum while government businesses would be expanded. He declared his purpose to reverse th tended' y In some quarters "to regard business as dishonest until it- should prove itself and to regard bigness in business as a crime." N mtm-rcia- i. " -- Farmer Needs Help. Kmphas z ng the fui ilauiental importance of agriculture, he asserted that Lie farmer was entitled to "all the help the government can give him without htjus-ttc- e ttr-oh er. For the wj a 'cai ne r m asked sufficient compensaiton for comfort, education and a margin of savins, while for every other element in Industry he urged a fair opportunity to do it part in reconstruction. , Mr Harding also suggested that the nation s loans to the allies bs put in a. more tangible form, that faculties of exchange be bettered, and that all thejirttn-cia- t polii Tea of ihe reconstruction period bo to formulated as to piotect the ao.u . standard. "Assuming that these things may be laid down as fundamentals, he said, "it I for us all to get back to work, tv must pave confluence Wat things; wlli come right We have dealt with Uw greatest problem humanity ever con. In fronted the war. We will have no pioblem hereafter greater or more d.flt. cult than that was. Therefore, we are entitled to every confidence that we wiU cope successfully with the problems ttui lie ahead. The president's address follows in part; r 4 - There was another mannsit of silence. It wsa as if ths great piers, bustling with Jlfe a men went forth fo death, had been turned to a tom6 after th return of those who had survived. On the coffin decorated by th presidential hand was a plat chronicling the tact that Joseph Guyton of Kvart, Allch.. 'a private in I company of the 134th United States Infantry, had given his Ilf for hi. country on May 24. 1918, in ths Utldwllder sector In Alsace. Th president had motored to Hoboken, accompanied by Colonel F. W. Galbraith, Jr., national commander o th th American 'Legion, who was among great throng to greet the chief exerhtiv when he landed from the presidential yaiht Harbor craft saluted and Mayflower then a salute of twentv-wi- e guns roared out from the great (lest i overs which arrived last week from tbs south. At the armv sheds at Hoboken the Text of Speech. president bared h.s head in the presence "The New fork Commercial wsa foundof the bodies that were brought horns ed when the - yumig republic wa last week on the transport Wheaton. by a division of opinion (oncermng In hla Hoboken addresa President Har- our relations with Europe. The not ding said. a Washington was being lampooned and traduced because his administration was Text of Address. lOmmlttid to the Jay treaty with Great TfteTfSfrowff Of! m the realization of Britain?- ttrat of (be natio'e-vmnerethe unusual character of this occasion. covenants. H represented an effort to These poor bodies are but th clay tene- escape embroilment In the old wot id ays- -, fvhich tern, and in Ihe period when we were too ments once possessed of soul flamed in patriotic devotion, lighted ntw weak to sustain a foreign conflict, it served to postpone that disaster. Bui m,y on of civilisation the battleground hope and In their socrifites apd on to accuse to postpone it, for, with every wish to auiocracv before Ihe court of eternal jus- preserve the peace, it was tmpoasiole. tice. We are not met for them, though We fought wars with France and we love and honor and apeak a grateful as Incidents to the French revolutionary ' . tribute. It would be futile to apeak to and Napoleonic upheaval "it baa been .too often assumed that thoad who do not bear, or to sorrow for our involvement recent to in or acnee exalt the trouble of those who cannot It, those who cannot know, but we can Europe marktd a new development in out it was an old story. Vt e Iirtart, speak for country we can reach those affairs. svera orrow--&uand never- - will b to eoi4Wed through their never But our pait and our services; who suffered through their giv- maintain isolation are international strikaffairs ing; who glory 'with the republic through plnce in their heroic achievements; who rejoice in ingly changed. OOr rise in ptwer and the civilisation their hero'sm preserved. influence lias Imposed new responsibiliEvery funeral, every memorial, every ties. tribute is for the living an offering in ! compensation of sorrow. When the light ( New Methods Required. of life goes out there fa a new radiance "Today our itrei.gih in the Industrial, , tn eternitv and somehow the glow of It om world, relieve Die darkness which is left be- iluancial toand commercial produce, our ability tu exit Hi capacity hind. which where can not give aiut Newer a death but somewhere a new credits peoples 3 ry life; never a sacrifice but eomewhere which hravc put unfortunate make it neceasaiy that an atonement; never & service but some- we need all thesenew shall adopt commercial tnethoas where and somehow m achievement. posr.We These had served, which is the sumetne whereby to insure thef fullest the civilization, to service bespeak help in earned have living. Inspiration They of understandof intelligent, every organ which is the sueverlasting gratitude, to enable to the nation business meet ing in dying. preme solace , , these demands. "it has been Said ntny times, but It Dying for the Republic. . be too often repeated and emcannot "No one mav measure th vast and phasized, that in doing this we will be various affections and sorrows centering ulike a duty to others and on this priceless cargo of bodies one seizingdischarging an opportunity tor our own adliving, flghlmf for, and finally dying, vancement. There have aeldnm been for the republic One's words fail, hia more convincing proofs than we see H understanding Is halted, hts emotions are around us now of the essential Interdestirred beyond control when contemplatof all Paris of the wot Id lie... dead. I pendence ing these thousand of beloved who displays the broadest spirit of brothfind a hundred thousand sorrows touchand true charity will erhood. helpfulness ing my heart, and there Is ringing in moat sutely be casting his bread on the my ears like an admonition eternal, an waters. Insistent call It must not be again. it must not be again.' God grant that World Duty Presses. It will nol be. end let a practical peoOur duty to the world I pressing, with God to the ple Join in cooperation but we will equip ourselves best to end that It shall not be. "I would not wish a nation for which unwaverlnglv helpfully if we-amen are not willing to fight, and, if need loval to ourselves. The most Important 1 is our constitutional do America to wish a nation where thing be, 4o die. but svstern. Inseparable from the founds, it is not necessary to ask for that sacrifice. I do. not pretend that millennial tlon of a more perfect union, the condata have come, but I can believe In the stitution tough t to establish justice. True, attained the perfection of possibility of a nation being so righteous we have not as never to make a war of conquest, our ideals, nor has any other human soand a nation so powerful in righteousness ciety done so. Justice, like charity, must that none will dare Invoke her wrath. begin at home. ourWeownmust be ofjustall.to our. Tin first I wish for us such an America. reives and to In placing the wveath on the casket, is not selfish, (or selfishness seeks mote fair than zhars; we seek onlv that the president said: "In the name of the republic I bestow wmrh t rightfully our own, and then to this tribute on the casket of the first preserve that to ourselves ami our possoldier who perished on the soil of the tal tty. "W will do well to keen in mind the enemy. This opportunity is not chosen the suggestion of hatred in fundamental importance oi acre ullure. the American heart, for there Is no and in every possible way insure tusti hatred in the American .heart, but I have to IL The farmer is entitled to all the chosen it because 1 Jim offering the trib- help the government can give without ute to ona returned whoa death on Injustice to others, because it it of the enemv soil marked th day when our utmost impottanrjr that the agricultural .be fomented and jirnyiernua civilization .sent facel forward and the community rfvlllz&tton This mu- -t he accomplished, not at the assauTT on oiir preaeht-da- v knew it bad failed. Mv 24. 1914, is th evi ense of anv other section, but hvpro -- ed I - -- c- -- -- rer-for- m re -- Coattmil ea Page Two (0laaa A ! teatinn-- d on Pag Two, f Columa Thres.) 0 V |