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Show L trrJ ' r 3 LXE15T192L THE SALT LAKE TltfBUtfE' WEDNESDAY L RING W. LARDNER E Chief Federation Sensational Convention Will Write Exclusively ' Makes jV4 r for Speech in Denver. 4 jjr The Salt Lake Tribune on the. M CoettaueS from Par On. Dempsey- - Carpentier ductfon, he continued, "If you were suf fering from overproduction, everybody would have boot, everybody would have clothe, everybody would have comfort. Overproduction could only be possible when the worlds requirements would be adequately met. - But a a matter of fact the world was never so poverty ridden a she is at this fight d hangers on Fighters, trainers of the camp will be discussed by Lardner in his inimitable, humorous Their habits and life will way. gome tuider his eye and be translated into humor LARDNER HUMOR and that -- means' the very moment, "Your good are more required at this moment than they ever were. There are more men and women bootless, mors without clothes than ever in the history of the world, and overproduction la not the cause. Ths real causa. Is that over, production la a mors bogy, jf is underconsumption that we are suffering from and not overproduction." Y X beet. STARTS JUNE TOUR PAPER NOW 19-O- RDER British Coal Strike. Success of the British coal "miners' strike was predieted by Mr. Thomas, who declared that th miners had gone on strike "without a bras copper in their - fund. "They are still standing unbroken, Lardner doee not think mnoh of famous sevsntyaevon but he sayi: "Wen, along these lines I haws mapped out a list of 86 question! which I aas going to slip the next gal that applies es a nurse for my kiddies. 1 mar as well explain their ages is 9, 7, 5, and 8 in the order named, but their questions eome in bulk and answers is expected the Edison e questions, ha added, "no man going back, no scabs Imported, and God knows I hops, it will soon bo settled and settled honorably, but whenever It is settled you may take it from mo that It will be a settlement reced ognised, signed and accepted by the miners' trade union." America, Franco. Italy, and every power that was a party to the peace treaty muat bear a share of the responsibility of th miners' coal strike, Mr. Thomas asserted, urging that the people of these countries ' bear your share of the responsibility.'' "1 know today it Is an easy phrase to At repudiate governments," h added. our conventions in London I frequently hear condemnation of governments' resolutions abusing them. You wil have the same hers. But as a matter of common fact that resolutions ar condemnation at It Is perfect bypocrley to talk yourself. about democracy and the virtues of democracy and democratic government and proceed to denounce the government In power. The government is only a i flection of your own Intelligence, and If you elected its officiate you must bear your share of the responsibility.' RING LARDNER. way." p ' L 2. 9, 1. 2. 3. PARENT'S QUESTIONS Do you mind being called an old nut I j . Can you sing abcfut a moo cowl Can you write a picture of a big truck f JOHN'S QUESTIONS Who was the best king England ever hadf Is Carpentier a better fighter or boxerf batters n better why dont they have all left- If batters! 4. If you mike 'more money the more you work, why dont yon work the timet 5. If Dempsey is so good why did yon bet on Willard f left-hande- d haiyled all Result of Treaty. Where Where Where Where Tbs peace treaty, which ha said wae designed to "make Germany pay, gave France 1,000,000 tons of German coal per month, and as result "we woke up on morning In England and discovered that the mines that were taken over during the war, and controlled by the government, were losing 4,600,000 founds per month." "The government In a panic said: "This Is no good to us. we dont mind running mines when ws are making a profit, but it Is shocking bad business when we are making a loss and they promptly gave notice to decontrol the mines'." This action of the government, asserted the speaker, resulted in the eventual dosing down of the mines as the owners were unable to pay a living wage to the workers t Th labor leader skid that hi criticism of the treaty in regard to th disposition of th Ruhr coal deposits must not be onstrued as a ''Justification of Germanys action in the war. ''.No language could adequately express -- joy feelings," he added; "no language wou'd be sufficiently strong to condemn rthe brutal, wicked atrocities that. I know j irf tdo well. 4io language of the historians i (of the future, will do justice to their same r JIMS QUESTIONS Is my hatt is my rubbers! is my four pennies! is last nights funny psperf 1. 2. 8. 4. 5. If 1. 2. Wha dat! Wha dat! Wha dat! 3. BILLS QUESTIONS Uncle Rex is older than you why has he got more hair! Why wasnt you a soldier! ) Why don't we have sisters! Could you murder Dempsey if he was asleep! How old must I be when I marry Jan North! y, DAVID'S QUESTIONS that wages must come down. This, they say. Is the first step In reducing th cost of materials, the exorbitant rentals and other expenses. If th men do not agroo to a reduction, in lina with of cost the reduced living, there will be no building, except of a temporary nature, rental will mount still higher and thousands of workmen will be forced to move to smaller cities op to ths country, Th contractors will insist that wages should not be more than It en hour for e&rpen' ters, brickmasons, and labor of that class, and 70 cents an hour for common laborers. The unions will try to convince Judge Landis that skilled workmen should receive 1 25 or . more an hour and that common labor should receive 1 an hour. panlea Insist In time from a week of forty-eighours Job printing plants by th strike. ht to on of forty-fou- r. also were affected Urged Not to Sign. NEW YORK. June 14. H. H. Ray-- 1 mond, president of the American Steamship Owners' association, late today telegraphed- Chairman Lasker of th shipping board, asking him net to sign a strike settlement agreement with un sHme." engineers. Mr. Raymond asked permission to Calls It Mistake. cord with th board reasons why the I he continued, owners believe such action would be a f p "But In these lomatters," the framing of th yefsrrlng again grave error of judgment. no greater jpaaco treaty, mistake is Earlier In th day New York locals of (made than people allowing tholr heart the Marine Engineers' association had and not their heads to direct their Judgto ratify th proposed agreed ment. Nature never Intended that your Labor Wins Battle. under Protest, but railed for thagreement -I reaignapeart or your stomach should direct your CHICAGO, Juno 14. Union labor won Its tlon of National President Brown. intelligence. . , tv 1th the war favor, fight for negotiations of agreements with with the spirit of hatred, they sat down the railroads by the Federated Shop Recalled Work. Jo make this peace treaty. Crafts, acting for all employees compris( , Neb., June 14. More than The treaty that resulted, Mr. Thomas ing these in a deolqion handed 500OMAHA, crafts, car from Omaha and vicinld, "paralysed the whole of the coal indown by the United States railroad labor ity, laidrepairer off relast have been In winter, our country and the net re- board today. dustry called to work by the Union Pacifle ad t of it wae It wasn't Germany paying, Three test cases were brought May 1, and as many more will bt St was the French and the British miner before the board after a recently number of rail- since reempioved before August 1, to get ears Pho paid, which followed the connection roads had refused to deal with the fed- into shape for handling grain. It was anAs I say between th treaty and this eration, but maintained their right to by officers of ths road's operatrlfce." conduct agreements and sign agreements nounced Mr. Thomas declared th cure" with each craft separately. The board ing department today. only ' r war "Is disarmament decided that an agreement between the ' for Open Shop. "You cannot go on building armies and Federated Shop Crafts and a carrier Sign &T. LOUIS. Mo , June 14. Flfty-elgvie without leading either to y should, If the federation so elected, apply master or exploelon," he declared. to all employees comprising those crafts printers ha vs signed an agree- ment to operate their plants on the open Mr. Thomas, who is president of the In. irnatlonal Federation of Trades union, Vote to Remain Out. shop bast for five years. It was announced today. om which the federation recently with-- i BOSTON, June 14 Newspaper com because of Its revolutionary actlvl es, urged the labor movement to use positors a ho walked out of newspaper (the ballot and eexrclae Its political power office last night and today voted to At bringing about reform in government. night not to return to work until de mends tor a wage increase were granted. aetead of using bullets. Thia action was taken after S. J. Me Bride, president of Boston Typographical Bolshevism. We In th labor movement prefer the union No 13, had told the men they had a mistake and urged them to mad he said. "We prefer the construc-jfonto work. pilot,"way because w know the bloody Michael Wall, who presided, declared (bpheavela never bring statesmen to th wage scale desired had been hop. they merely and Invariably bring the that the to the publishers by a commit presented jfcullle. No. w want this sane way batee, but that the publishers had declined le use we know It is the slow the to treat with them. way, The scale, he said, Sure way, but It is th certain way." for $1.22 an hour for day worker Coetiased fra Pat Ob. , The speaker denied Dress reports, which called II 24 for night worker and for the life said were due to the ' Imagination of lobster shift.v and he expressed himself yespopulation Oour American preae," that he had C9m All newspapers were published terday aa being highly there to pleased with tha to today, evening preach internationalism, of most them but had fewer he was way received her. Bolshevism, to square a private pages than usual Preparations were iueal with Lloyd George with regard to made for the publication of all morning American Beaten to Death. Rhs coal situation, and amongst other elne, BERLIN, June 14 (By the Associated w here in order to render the pos- papers tomorrow. li In PrMi.)w-Loa- ii a statement Newspaper publishers Smydtr of Boctoa wai ition of your president more difficult be- said International Typographical union beaten to death by Polish Insurgents cause of some imaginary opposition I was officials and the local near of the president Myslwlt. Upper May 29, Supposed to have against him. union had ordered ths men back to work, according to Karl Born, 8!lesla, mabut that the large majority had re chinist, who escaped from Hamburg a that region fused. I week ago and arrived her today. showed the rebels an Bmyder American I Fatal to Clash READY FOR PEACE the story told by passport, according Reported. Born, and explained that ho was not inWILLIAMSON. W. Va . June 14. One terested tn th Hilealan conflict, but the I man was two others and wounded killed, WASHINGTON, June 14. An t leader of the Polish squad struck him residents of. th Ltck creek over having been reached with marine tent n th head with the butt of a run and colony of idle miners near William others Joined th etrlke in that iigtneers for ending In the stuck. left as the result of the his Arad, shipping board officials tonight eon arelateheld In Jail on th ground, They body according fight today at Lick creek between to Born. lying (Wore endeavoring to secure the Indorsement of private shipowners to th settle-m- i authorities and the colonists, according Born, who said ho also was mistreated, to state police headquarters. One oi had ent traveled for two days with th No formal announcement was mads to-- y those wounded wae a state trooper. American before mooting th Poles of ths I The fight started after Major Tom of the signing of the agreement area. insurgent last night by th shipping board, Davis, commanding Mingo county under bor department and representatives of the proclamation of martial law, had re- Ready for Concessions. turned to Lick creek with reinforcements Marine Engineers' Beneficial assocla-ioJune 14. Reuters jlearns I IX5NDON, Members of th new shipping board of cltlxen state troopers to arrest about that, while fully malnUlning her rights I but official approval of the two score of th Idle miners and after hit jet today, was mandatory over certain Pacifle agreement expected to be withheld forces had been fired on in the vicinity Islands, Japan Is ready to agree to the Ah til the arrival of Commissioners OCon- - earlier In the day. United States exercising complete con- - I (ubr and Lissnor, the remaining members In I over trol the American cables f th new board, who r scheduled to Conditions Accepted. th Island of Yap to Mindanaotraversing I and to I LA sworn In tomorrow. Guam will be achopes this Radio operators, seamen, firemen oil-- I CAIJARY, Alberts, June 14. A reso-i- (. ceptableand to Washington. plan tton accepting conditions laid down by cooks and stewards will confer with to constd-- 1 span, according Reuters, executive international board of the representatives of ths shipping board and Ith Workers of America was era that, asof her mandat Is one of the jftb department of labor tomorrow it was II Unltd Mln ths Versailles provisions treaty, IfMinounced, in an effort to have adopted at ths opening session of th special Island or mandats can be no crafts I eonvention of miners of district No. 18 lected as an j involved enter Into similar agreements. exception without altering I today. Tha charter of th district, com the treaty itself, and therefor n and eastern British CoAlberta prising out of ths question. U BUILDING WORK lumbia, was suspended two years ago, when the one big union" leaders got UNDER WAY control. , Commission Suspends Full and complete autonomy Is expected result of the action. on JlMie Tribune Salt Lake Trfbuo Leased Wire. to bo restored as aresolution to followed an Adoption of the L CHICAGO, June 14. All parts of ths address by J. P. Whits of Dea Moles, , sjty resounded today to th hammers and Iowa, former of the United WASHINGTON, Juns 14. The Inter. itsawa of carpenter and the machine gun Mine Workers president State commerce commission today of America. manufacturers, through H. W. Prick ett, j tattoo of riveters, a work on many buTld-railroad schedules which proposed showed that they ar la competition with Wgs was begun. It Is estimated that more Still Without :o advance on pig Iron from manufacturers In th middle west, Sporate the Newspapers. men 25,600 efhan resumed work thia morAlabama and Tennessee to Utah common kane end Pacifle coast points; that th ning. Meanwhile, Judge Landis is Iron- -i PORTSMOUTH, N H. June 14 -- This polnu, on protest of the foundries and volume of their shipments has declined Vig sut the differences between the was of Utah, th a without manufacturers local again commission in recent years because of advancing newspaunions and ths two associations of city todav. due to a strike of compositors. holding that th carriers had failed to rates, and they stressed the point that contractors. Th work which per jAuildlng W advance. Mayor Fernando of 212.235 Hartford, publisher Justify the Spoken now enjoys a rat Vwas begun today calls for th outlay of of th Portsmouth Herald, Th proposed rats are mostly group from Duluth and 218.27 from Memphis afternoon dollars and will provide m. paper, and th Portsmouth an fhirty million a rates, that from Birmingham to Salt Lake commlss'oa finds Th Chronicle, that the present .JMoyment for many thousands for a long morning paper, announced, however, that being representative. The 611 rat to Salt rate te Balt Lake yields the carriers I 52 Additional millions will be cut he expected to publish a combined paper Lake was Increased to 219 80 vpprlod. ton net mil mills ton than the per per greater loose for buiklfora held in abeyance for tomorrow. on June- 25, 1919, and 1219.40 onlong August earnings on shipments from Duluth and two or more years, pending a settlement Th action of th men followed refusal 28, last. to carand the Bpokano deny Memphis of labor troubles. by th publishers of a demand for a wage Tha carriers sought to further advance riers th right ,to advance rates to Utah Th heads of construction advance of 24 per cent and a reduction this rate to 219 95. Th foundries and points. I to I Mm Dont miss the"big thing You buy clothes to wear; f but you dontsee wear" ht bank-jptc- Copyright. 121, Hart Schafear when you buy The r style may look attractive; the price tempting; but al I 21-3- Marine engineers I agree-HnSn- forty-eeve- neither means anything unless wear is there You know its there when you see this name in clothes - n. Hart Schaffner &Marx interna-tionalisatio- AGAIN IS Pig Iron Rates Utah Points sus-jend- U j - You get satisfaction or your money back English Lea din Foreign-BoSalt Lake Population not specified. Countries which contributed more than 104 residents to Salt Lake are set forth as fellows; England, 6294; Sweden, 1251; Germany, 2083; Denmark, 111; Scotland, 997; NethS rectal to The Trlbasa erlands. 174; Norway, 179; Canada, 751; Ireland, 174, Wales, 413; France, WASHINGTON, D. C., Juno 14 Mor 610; Poland, 182; Australia, than of Salt Lake City's 19.. 484 foreign-boeltlsens hell from Eng- 112. Hussta, 410, Italy, 496; Greece, 142; 121; Asia, 161; Mexico. 214. to an Australia, land, according analysis Issued toChinas and Japanese are not segreday by th census bureeu. Sweden was the next largest contributor, closely fol- gated. lowed by Qermqnv, In all. forty-on- e na. UNIFORM ttonalltles were found among the popuCLASSIFICATION ASKED. lation of Salt Lake City, with sloven born LIVERPOOL. 14. Jan England. at see end on hailing from a country Adoption of uniform classification ef cot m one-four- th m ton for th world eras urged before the world's cotton conference today by W. R. Meadows, a member of th delegation representing th United States, who ha ootton division of th charge of th American agricultural department, "Universal standards would not only simplify methods of handling ootton. but would tend to higher standards of ethics in the 'cotton business,'' said Mr. Mead own. headlight adjustments guaran-- . teed. T kay or night serv ice. Motor Car Equipment Co., 262 Becond East (Adv.) Accurate |