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Show i I irTtfr J4 t r i to rm m I THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, TUESDAY MORNING, MAY a year and n amendment pro vtding for purchase by the government of 6100.000.0u0 of farm loan bank bonds, were eliminated on points of order. One provision approved would permit the treasury department to , spend any part of the 611.600,000 appropriated last session for additional hospital facilities tor disabled service men In the Improvement of existing facilities. The or.gtnal bill provided that 616.600,000 Was to be expended for new hospitals, nrn r 24, 1921. 610 000 rut On. Continued from Nebraskan Give Views as , to the Course Democrats Should Take on Questions COLUMBUS. Ohio, May SS. William J. Bryan brought a message ft hope and cheer to members of the Jefferson club at their picnic today. 1 "If anyone can preach the gospel of hope. It la the man who has been resurrected so many times that death seem he said in .reference to commonplace, his appearance? "If the Democrats take a firm stand for the rights 6,f the common man, the man who pays, tor the wars and fights them, too, the they cannot help but go back into power with a bigger iand- elide than they went out Turning to the subject of peace. Mr. Bryan eaid he felt that the problem would not he ae troublesome as taxation, stating that the people were solid against heavy armaments. He have just corns out of one war In which we were 'prepared' and. we don't wgnt to be 'prcparodljEay another One," he said. "Here again the Democrats started off with victories. In the first place we hs'e killed universal military training, which was sponsored by the Republicans Again, we have reduced the standing army from a proposed 175,000 to 150,000, and that against-- a of Republicans in the house." majority It was- - then that Mr. Bryan unfolded his Idea of the stand the United States should take on disarmament.! "There are three thoughts about disarmament. he said. "The first class, which Is very small, does not believe In disarmament fnr this country, even if every other nation In the world disarms. Thank God, this class Is not large. "The second class, and It Is a very large one. Is composed of those who believe we should disarm as and If the other leading nations disarm. T believe, and there are a few others who believe with me, that we should stand for disarmament by agreement If possible and by example If necessary.' ' ds -- Party of Geologists to Explore Lava Beds Special to The Tribune. It I not only bis duty to his country, but It is his duty to his own business Interest, to see that the laws of supply and demand are not set at naught by -- t these activities, Federal Doughnuts MONEY IS WASTED, PERSHING ASSERTS Give the June Bride Always have some on 23. General May WASHINGTON, Pershing, experience Breaking from gained In Franos end the Philippine told the senate poet roada committee that money appropriated to build roads for NAVY which maintenance was not provided was He added that the wasted. money IDEAS United States might well take a lesson from the French In the upkeep of roads, The general said that. In his opinion, WASHINGTON, May 6 Reports India central cating that the British navy la considerbody under the federal governing two essentially American naval ordsuch as the highway commission ment, nance ideas have been received. Experl-menIn the pending Townsend bill, provided have been conducted by the ad- was necessary to copllnste the hignway miralty, according to the reports, to test construction. the AmerUan svstsm of mounting three Replying to questions from Senator main battery gtibs In fioturfet, and also Oddie, Republican, Nevada, who sought naval nflb whlih Is being high mounted In a'l the American new major ways shoukl be undertaken at once ag a ships and heretofore unused In the Brit- defense measure In event of hostilities In ish navv the Pacific, Oeneral Pershing said he Could jiee no great need for such roads, According to the Ininformation the British remount a used three guns In view of the existence of four great single when firing tests transcontinental railway lines conducting cently Baden. He minimised the suggestion that In against the battleship have been the event of war enemy spies might put Good results were said-tobtained. those railways out of commission, re Information from Great Brltalnthat marking that spies did not blow up our tho admiralty contemplates arming the railway! bridges In France. four new vessels of the Hood class with gunk. The first Hood, de- Vote Gomes on Thursday. eight signed aa a composite battleship-battl- ein the WASHINGTON, May 23. An agreeguns cruiser, mounts eight on the noml main battery. Naval officers do not con- ment to vote nation of David H Blair of North Caro will new Hoods sider it probable that the to be Internal revenue commissioner embody both Ideas, the general opinion Una gun Is adopted, was made by the senate today bring that If the in a two be will mounted the weapons turret design Will Confer With Obregotr. turret, .and the three-guWASHINGTON. May 23 Georgs' T. Inaugurated inthea later class. has been the gun Heretofore Summerlin, councillor of the American standard main battery gun of the- British embassy at Mexico City, was on his way It la reported that the- BritishIn to Mexico today, bearing instructions for navy. guns mounted a number of conferences with President Obregon which followed by lha monitors fee voastrbomtivrdment work, lata off trials hyre haps- In the war. rscognltlon of the Mexican government On the basis' of available data, naval by the United States. Af fleers believe that the six great battle Administration officials refused today to for the United comment on the summary of conditions cruisers now building guns, upon which the Harding administration States, each mounting eight would b individually superior to the new Will agree to resume formal diplomatic British vessels of the Hood class, if the delations with Mexico. The central feature' of the memoranBritish ships were equipped with dum, It Is declared. Is In the Insistence . guns as was planned. that the Mexican president sign some document which will serve to assure the MONEY IS GRANTED United States of the genuineness of the Mexhan governments promises to guarantee the safety of Americana and American Interests in Mexico. After heated Would WASHINGTON, May Develop Alaska. discussion of the prohibition Question WASHINGTON. May 23 Legislation to was during which Commissioner Kramer make available revenues from Alaska for bitterly crltlclaed and aa vigorously da the development of the territory was ad fended, the house today voted an addl vocated today by Secretary Hoover In a At tional 6200,000 for enforcement of the talk with newspaper correspondents. present, he said, receipts from Alaskan Volstead act until July 1. the Into Representative Volstead proposed the fishing and sealing Industries go Increase In the total of the deficiency treasury to become part of funds avails' appropriation bill ofto700permit retention on hi fop current government expenses. federal pay rolls prohibition agents who Mr. Kramer had announced 'would Sterling. Bill Favored. be dropped for the remainder of the fisWASHINGTON, May 23. Th Sterling cal year because of shortage of funds which would repeal the more sedition The amendment was adopted, 77 to 31, rigorous till, act provisions of tho espionage was of the house memless than sedition law of 1817, the and restore Sots but another bership being present favorably reported today by th can he demanded before the bill Is ordered senate judiciary committee. Under an passed. committee, amendment adopted by th Even the member who favored the foreign-bor- n naturalised cltlssns found doubted whether It guilty of seditious sets or utterances amendment, however, would afford relief In time tor he of much would loss their citlsenshlp and be subvalue. Inasmuch as tlja bill, after passto deportation. age bv the house, must odgo to the senate. ject hand for the kiddies. Just' the "bite-to-eat between meals. TO BRITISH ADOPT Vi S. Today Special 25c' ts .Wouldnt She Be Pleased if You A Dozen Surprised Her With a V1CTROLA on Her Wedding Day? 16-in- No degree of sentiment or friendship that may not be most suitably expressed in s gift of s SY5TVH or gAacfties o new home the greatest singers and musician of all the world not Coatlssed from Psgs One. cles here that the conference between Rremler- - Brland .and George, the British prime minister, at will occur before the end of thBoulogne, week. This le because Premier, Brland's presence will be necessary at the sessions of the senate, to follow the debate In the chamber on th governments foreign policy. wrUl-bs- Mr,-Lky- -- POCATELJX), Idaho, Mn v 23 A of Idaho geologists and newspaper party men, accompanied by geologists from Washington university, research workers and numerous reclamation officials, will leave Arco within the next few days for an exploration of the lavs beds north of Shoshone and west of Arco. Several days or .possibly weeks will be spent In a thorough study of the cives, old craters and underground water possibilities of the great lava flow, which' has been called "The i Valley of tlje .Moon, It has been proposed by sevnral.that this unique lava desert, with Its rolls of hardened lava, its craters and Its cinder buttes, may be set aside as a national little known, about the Very park - tntertar of this wasterIs but those" w ho'bavo During the ventured within It have reported moat of the appropriations committee, who op wonderful Ice caves and other phenomena posed the Volstead amendment, said Mr. which have excited the Interest, of many. Kramer had violated penal provisions of law bv mcurrtng a deficit and ''had jail sentsnos " GOVERNMENT STRUCTURES SOLD. made himself liable to to "I want Mr. Kramer obey the law b A8HINGTON, May 23. Approximate- Just as much as bootleggers," he dely 1206 surplus government-owne- d buildtliat 16,800.000 had been clared, adding ings at Camp Dodge, Iowa, have been sold for prohibition enforcement to the Northwestern Lumber & Wrecking appro prlaU'd the current fiscal year, company of Minneapolis for 1351,000, the during Mr Kramsr was defended by Reprewar department announced The sentative Byrnes, Tennessee, ranking bid was the highest and best today it Democrat on the appropriations commitwas said. In all twelve bidsreceived, were re- tee. as a conscientious official doing his ceived seven for ail the buildings and best to enforce the law flvs for individual buildings or small Mr. VolsteadL defended Mr. KramerS groups,. was no administration, declaring there cause for criticism, --ACQUITTED BY JURY. Declaring no estimate for additional for prohibition enforcement had POCATELIX), Idaho, May 23 Attor- funds been submitted to the appropriations ney James Stevens of this has re- commutes, and that no one had appeared turned from Challls, where city he was ensitgaged as special prosecutor In the case In before the committee to explain the secuation, MrtBvrnea said that If the which Robert Gibbs of Antelope valley was charged with manslaughter In con- retary of the treasury had requested funds he would have gotten all be nection with the killing of Ed wanted another rancher of that vicinity. Johnson, Uibbs milled As house the, was found not gulltv bv the Jury. through the The tolav, a provision for the killing was the result of a dispute over creation bill of kVi office of first assistant water. secretary of the treasury at a salary of one-four- th wrangUng-hatmian-Qo- Agree on Budget" Blit WASHINGTON. May 26. Agreement on the budget bill was reached today by consenate and house conferees, and final combe gressional action Is expected to the mea-sufew and a days pleted within sent 6a. the president. rs Grangeville Flood Damage Placed at Near $ 14,000 ' only for an evenings entertainment, but for all time and you ar; range the program to n I. - It brings right in the next-Thursd- KRAMERS POLICE ' VICTROLA. FIGHTING REPORTED ALONG THE ODER BERLIN, May 23. Over crippled wire com reports from Oppeln that the Germans and Poles are engaged in heavy artillery and machine gun firing along the Oder, especially near Krappltx. Both sides are entrenching and the people In several towns are While the general reports from Upper Piles la Indicate a considerable reinforcement of both Insurgent and German sides, a menacing food shortage In the rebellious area and an extension and intensifying of the conflicts, Germany In a note to the French ambassador on May 19, made public today, denies all responsibility for the disturbances and declines to comply with the French request to forward money to pay the miner Th French note, to which th German memorandum Is a reply, charged Germany with ordering at too late a date the suppression of volunteer forces against the Upper Rllestan Poles to prevent the organisation of armed forces at Kreuzburg, Oppeln, Krappltx and Rabibor, approximatingno20,0t0 men. It declared Oermany-. made effort to close the frontier,, aithough the Polish border had been closed, and Insisted that Germany direct shipments of foodstuffs Into the rebel area and Instruct the relchsbank to forward funds for payment of the' miners. In reply, Oermany sas that the allied forces In Upper Silesia can not supply a guarantee, although there have been many promises that foodstuffs would not fall Into insurgents' hands, and that the organisations have been largely recruited In Upper Silesia as a natural result of General Lerond's failure to protect the Germans In that area. 'It asserts that Leronds authority extends only few kilometers beyond Oppeln. It declares that the Polish border has been wide open, in evidence of which a band of 6M) Poles crossed near Rosenberg on May 20 and attacked the Germans at Kostuu. In conclusion, th German note points out that Germany cannot be responsible for a situation over which the allies have assumed complete control. panic-striike- n. suit- - yourself.. " " , VICTROLA" XI double-faceAad ten Records (SO nlectioas) , of ehoosing.' Victor own your $158.50 in and Hear the Newest oeCome EASY TERMS VICTROLA XI ia one of the most popular types, suitable for the home; just a little larger than style X, with a wonderfully morich tonal reproduction Mounted on castors. tor. long-playin- g Other Victrolas, $23 to $1000 VlcffoTaa Exclusively VICTOR Records. l BPOKANE, Wash., May 63. Grange-ril- l, Idaho, was recovering today from flood damage suffered Saturday night, when the town wa itruck by a cloudone life. Damage burst, with a loss of will not aggregate more than 6H.O00, it was declared over the telephone by Mayor W. L. Campbell. On wall of th Lyric theater fell In. with a loss of shout 63000. Mayor Campbell eald. McConnell s confectionery store and factory suffered 65000 damage: two drug stores were damaged 1500 losen Given Post. suffered 61000 damage each, and a bakerwas BERLIN, May 63 (By th Associated caught by. the flood Frees. P. M. Olanvlll ' Friedrich Rosen,' German waters In the basement of his store and minister to Holland, was today appointed drowned. foreign minister in the cabinet of Chan cellor Wlrth. m Phone Yas.3Z75 150 tbb St that you were first on th soil of Belgium. The great boast which Is yours Is that you mads a very great offering in the 'Conflict for pfeRorved civilization and are still well organized today, ready to serve your country. 1 hope you will never be railed. "Somehow there le a- - new feeling' In my breast todav I saw 6000 soldier dead somehow there has been a prajer In my heart ever since that there shall be a nation so righteous and so just that we shall never be called on to make war so long ae God and men may rule together I hope you will never be called, but if vou are I should only ask that the Twenty-third serve In the future aa It haa In the past. "And another Impress came to me welcome you today. WhAt a wonderful gave us. In Brooklyn. 1 don t believe '1 ever dreamed there were so many children In the United State "of America sweet, rollicking, laughing, hopeful. children. I don't believe anyone with responsibility ran ride through such a company of American childhood as we did this afternoon without having a new resolve In hie heart "1 have resolved thgt.I want the children to have the same republic, the same rights, the same justice, the same hopes that wa inherited from thosa who went I want them to have our before ua America, tree, untrammeled, confident of Itself. "If you have ever bad any doubt of the righteousness of the republic, (f you have ever had anv doubt about the wisdom of the founders, I ask you to turn again to the picture of this afternoon an I see those children, garbed ia essentially the same raiment, participating In the same salutations, shining with ths same laughter, cherishing the same hopes, rising In the hopefulness of youth to the same opportunity in Ilf. Ah, let no one Challenge! "It may be true that some of these children are not prepared to embrace opportunity, but the wonderful thing of America is that opportunity beckons to all these young Amerlcane alike. Ask them to enter Into the privileges of the re- And If you want another picture, Fuhllc before me hQW. When 1 was making the Inspection I was not so mauh concerned about the shining arms and tho way they were kept. 1 was not quite so much concerned about the Inslgnta on the shoulders of the service men who served so faithfully In the war. I was rather caught by the blend of racial origin In the faces, f saw In this group the cttisens and defenders of the republic, who, It seemed to me, came from orlgh across the seas that reprieent almost every land In the world. Here Is youthful fighting America, which Is the blend of the citizenship of the old world, standing absolute equality here, ready to defend the republic and its affairs. There Is the In the nothing finer than United States. No other equality land offers th same reward of merit. Let us keep the America we Inherited." In SOCIALISTS TO MEET IN DETROIT, CHICAGO. May 23 The Socialist National convention of 1921 will behW at Detroit, commencing Saturday, June 23, national headquarters of the party announced today. Between forty knd fifty delegates are to attend. The convention is to be financed through th sale of special btamps, and orders have been Issued that no member who does not buy a stamp will be In good standing. A referendum on a proposal to postpone the convention was taken ' recently and defeated, 2926 to 1670. nt RUMMA0E SALE At R B. hall. No. 20 South 3rd East street, Womens Friday morning st 10 o'clock. Clothes, men's clothes, children's clothes. Everything Imaginable. (Adv.) Confers With Mayer. PARIS, May 23 (By the Associate Press ) Premier BrUnd received tnc German ambassador, lr. Mayer, tonight and conferred with him on the Silesian situation. It Is Understood he requested the ambassador to ask the German government to end all attempts at aggression In Silesia, if Germany did not want to expose itself to reprisals by the allies A similar request sta made to Dr. St. Hamer, German ambassador at 1 Coo t isuri f root Pag One. however, was that given by young America the 250,000 school children who llned--throute to Brooklyn. These children, granted a half holiday, stood In a waxing flags and cheerdrisiling rain, ing widly as the car came In sight. The treble of their voice rose in a mighty crescendo that brought radiant smiles from the president and Hri Harding. Th youngster of the lower East Side Once gave him the noisiest greeting. the president ordered his car propped while he stepped out Into the rain and hook hands with several Utils girls "f never knew there were so many children In America." " he said. "It was v wonderful." Another demons'ratlon of youthful patriotism that pleased the president was a- serenade by the bovs band of 400 pieces. Returning to his hotel from the regimental review, he ordered hie car topped while he spoke a few words of appreciation to the musicians. e PAINT! Its the one thing will keep your house clean, bright and well protected the one thing that will save it from ultimate ruin and decay. Dont neglect it. Put on fresh coat now wherever its needed. It means a Save the Surface and pleasure for the whole family and, in the end, the only genuine economy. - We handle the very best "paints and varnishes Lowe Brothers High Standard the kind that gives the utmost satisfaction in finish and You Greets The Wounded. After the military review the president walked across the hall to fifty-tw- o wounded soldiers from the FMx Hills hospital, Staten Island "How are you, boys? I wish I could shake you all by the hand." he said. Mrs Harding stopped to shake the hand of a paralysed soldier and her eves filled with tears as she took a Pink rose from her gown and pinned it on his blouse. Speaking at the regimental review in Brooklyn, President Harding said: "I am Very happy to hav had ths and privilege of witnessing the wake-u- p something of the training of this wonderful organisation. I cannot quite tell you the Impressions I have been having while I watched your maneuvers Somehow, In the. wonderful Impress you left, I felt anew security for the- - republic In that assurance which comes of a volunbe tary military organization which can If I were perfected es. yours has been. aa a resia resident of Brooklyn Indeed, dent and cittsen of ths rcpublio I'd Join ou in pride In the history and In th achievement of the present condition of the Twenty-thir- d regiment "It has a good deal more to boast than That you began In th civ IT war There la a good deal more to boast than Save AH 33-3- 5 HEADQUARTERS FOR PAINTS. WALLPAPER Er CLASS T FIRST south .4 Shares o Swift & Company widely distributed. The map shows thenvmberof shareholders in each stats and has been dotted to indicate the proportionate distribution. art Who is Swift & Company? it not a one man or - Swift ft Company one family affair. It is a company owned by more than 40,000 people scattered over the face of the globe forty thousand shareholders with voting powers and a share in the risks and profits of the business. Most of the forty thousand live here in the United States. But some of them live in France, some in England, others in the Philippines, Hawaii, Alaska. 13,000 of them are women. Nearly 14,000 of them are employee. The average individual holdings are small about 37 shares apiece. No one person or family owns a majority of ths stock. i ; Swift & In fact, it would take 900 Of the largest' shareholders pooled together to vote 51 per cent of the stock! These shareholders are the men and women whose money, in the form of capital, makes Swift ft Company possible. They are jealous of the character and reputation of their organization, proud of what it is doing, proud to have s part in supplying to the world such products aa Swifts Premium Ham and Bacon, Brook field Sausage, Silverleaf Brand Pure Lard, Wool Soap, Swift ft .Companys fresh meats, etc. The executives Of Swift ft Company maintain the high standard of these ' products as an imperative duty not only to the 40,000 shareholders, but to the public. Company, U. S. A. Salt Lake City Local Branch, 336 So. Third Street, West A. Gavin, Manager i |