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Show 1 $ ; THE ) SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MUKMNG, OtTOBEK 23, 1321. WELLS WORKAT ARMS - CONGRESS Worst . Wind in The announcement that H. G.' Wells was coming to America to report the Arms Congress ia Washington met an instant approbation not only from student of international affairs, who hailed it as a valuable contribution to the work of tho congress, but also from leading newspaper publishers the country over, who, through their sense of public service, desired to participate in the publication of the Wells articles. . The account of the deliberations of the Arms Congress which Mr. Wells will write for The Tribune exclusively lu the intermountain section will appear as well in the following American newspapers, with others to bo added to the list: j Tho Kow York World Rochester Democrat and Chronicle St. Louis Chicago Tribune Baltimore Sun Cincinnati Enquirer Erie Times Philadelphia Inquirer ' Pittsburg Pres Minneapolis Journal Boston American Seattle Times Portland Oregonian Washington Times Atlanta Georgian Kansas City Star j r Richmond San Francisco Examiner , Lot Angeles Examiner Raleigh (N. C.) News and Observe York (Pa.) Gazette and Daily Syracuse Herald -Buffalo Times x Omaha News Detroit Time 8pringfie!d Republican In addition to these American newspapers, there will lie internatiosi.il publication by the leaders of the press in every part of the world. - Arrangements have beau made giving the rights throughout the British irtipiro to the Northcliffe press, including the London Times, finilv Mail, London Evening News and affiliated newspapers in all the British dominions. South American publication rights have been granted to La Xacion of Buenos Aires, which will distribute the series to other leading newspapers in ? Brazil, Chile, Pern and elsewhere in South America. A franchise for the publication of the Wells articles in Japan has beeif given to the great Japanese daily, Asahi Shimbun of Tokio, which also bus been commissioned to distribute them throughout China,- -' It can be said without exaggeration that the Wells articles on the Arms Congress will be the most widely and internationally distributed single nevfs feature in the history of newspapers. The Tribune Is proud to have obtained the service of Mr. Wells for its reader Years Strikes Ship Conveying Delegation to Washington i.' ' i - , . HAILED AS REAL PUBLIC SERVICE d : ?''v 4,v ' iw. i a - - n . - -- , ,V . - 0" $ 'Post-Dispatc- h ABOARD KA8HIMA STEAMSHIP MARU, Oct. $2. (By radlq to The Associated Press ) A terrific cyclone char- acterized by the ship's commander. Captain Itsuno, as the worst In his thirty years experience at sea, Thursday struck this ship, carrying among other passen,. gers the principal delegates of the Japanese mission to the Washington conference Prince Tokugowa, head of the narrowly escaped injury when a tremendous wave smashed the door ot his room to spdnters snd hurled fragments of the broken mirror in hie bureau compartment. flying about the Seas 120 feet- - high, towering sixty feet W l above the uklta'a flitlwai . hsi1 ITS . aooard, demolished furniture in the othei and and cabins, sent trunks the decks articles spinning across wrenched the chairs in the dining ealooh from their fastenings and tumbled pass,1 engers into the scuppers. Captain Itsuno drove his ship almost into ths teeth of the wind in his effort to flea to safety from the swirling storm that was dragging her toward the vortex of ths disturbance. Today the vessel finally broke from the cyclone s grip. 1365 miles out of Yokohama. ' With the danger passed. Captain It-suno addressed the passengers In the saloon today. He declared that the temp- est was the worst in his three decades of sea experience. In explaining hie course to break from the cyclonic area, he said he first fixed the center of the storm, sent a wireless message to the Canadian Pacific liner. Empress of Asia, which wis on the same course between America end the far east and then began hip struggle ' to reach safety. The course was altered repeatedly in the ships battle again the wind, and when the danger finally was over today, the vessel's head again i was pointed for Seattle. The passengers aboard passed a resolution, commending the superb seamanship displayed by Captain Itsuno, hie officers end crew. Prince Tokugawa, following his special fad, began to collect the autographs ef his fellow passengers es a souvenir of the occasion and everybody followed suit Today the delegates to the Washington conference ere wondering If, in view of the threatened railroad strike In the Tnited States, they will be forced to ravel across Canada and xthence By steamer to Washington. . dele-gallo- n, se-lo- A J 1 Sends Notice to Hotels Prohibition Director J." E. Richards yesterday received instructions from Commissioner R, A. Haynes of Washington to notify the management of hotels in the Utah diatrict that they will be held atrictlv accountable for riola-tionof the Volstead act occurring on their premises. Letters were sent to a y ,vK the hotels calling attention to the order. The prohibition commissioner stated that hotel attendants in all parts of the country have greatly increased their earnings since the prohibition act became effective bv engaging in illicit liquor dealing. The action to put stop to the practice is based on a recent decision of the United States court for the western district of Missouri which an injunction was granted clos inig a hotel for one year on account of alleged liquor violations Failure to Pay Alimony ' Husband to Sends t Jai i K.eep Tliese Thoughts In TVlind VTien Buying Y our Fall Glotk es - lit Special to The Tribuna. WASHINGTON, D. C., Oct 22. By reaeon of being on the retired list ot the army, and drawing retired pay ot about $3000 a jear. Colonel E. G. Dhvig, whoee home Is In Boise, has been barred by ruling of the comptroller general, from accepting a $7500 Job under the of Justice. department the war Colonel Davis was restoredDuring to active and worked with the ludge advocate duty, general at Washington, but after the close of the war he ent again on the retireu the finest footwear direct from the WiChert fashion made, center in Brooklyn, at only $12.85 a pair. These sell ordinarily at $15. The reason is obvious. It is .customary for many exclusive shops to mark' their best patterns exorbitantly high at the beginning of the, season and then close them out later at absurdly low - ' Then price. - Kimball Clothes Designed and manufactured by a .con- -. cern of sixty-fiv- e years experience; all wool fabrics; f a m our for fine tailoring; low prices. The values are there for men of middle age as well as fqr the youth. a; Come end-of-the-seas- overs. in and Look Them Over Utah's Greatest Clothing Store I Gardner & Adams Company SALT LAKE CITY 45.1 A account In the sum of life, but, when of the working folk, on manipulation, on that has been done, my reckoning of Ger- the government printing presses Inflating many ia that her financial state it thor- paper money and on the expert underoughly unsound, and before long she will cutting of other trades by a fictitious face a desperate financial crisis arithmetic. There are ways in which she may partIt is not healthy nor real. 'If pursued ly avert this. On way is to increase on the same lines as now, it will lead to the national revenue by an International disaster not only to Germany herself, but loan and bv taxation of the Industrial to all other countries. Berlin Waiters Strike. 8o far the profits of the big trusts does not reap enough benefit from (Copyright, 1921, by tho Bed indicate, state The ftret sign of thia new J crisis an private wealth and and the lnc. seen by Ihe sttike of waiters tTuoughout export trade. Dr German chanBerlin. It has been an extraqrdlnary cellor, Is endeavoringWlrth, to this arrange hy demore a for which is city experience forming a coalition of all the parties in pendent on Its hotels and restuurant the with the support of industhan Ixindon or New York With a few trial state, Be Tomorrow magnates like Hugo Htlnnes and exceptions like the Hotel Adlon. which August Tbyssen, for a higher basis of immediately agreed to the n, w aoale of taxation. Wallace Rhead, the chauffeur who wages demanded by the waiter .11 these closed and, pi, krted. I could International Loan drove Joe Alexander, L. K. White, Fred places wereroom Suggested. In any hotel and am bilnot get a Templeton snd Fred W illiatns about Another method which Germany will Balt leted for a small boarding house, where Lake for the perpetration of sevI am charged eighty marks for a room. "it Is if wise she the adopts Imposition eral holdups, pleaded guilty of conThat la cheap for Berlin, but my land- of of Her all dutlee. export underselling lord told m. that before the war he cealing a crime when arraigned before charged onlv four marks for tho same countries by ths low value of the mark City Judge Ben Johnson yesterdav room. He explained to me with a great in Sentence- - will be passed toexchange will arouse a hos- morning. deal of detail regarding taxes and the tilityforeign of world traders and governments morrow. off better root of living that he was fai - White- ,snd will inevitably put tip a barrier of , Alexander, Templeton marl-now. four than he when charged traffic against her Imports, in which case Williams were sentenred Thursday and to when he charges eighty, and I believe her commerce will be set back. Great terms him. in the stats' prison. for instance, is growing alarmed indeterminate At the sjme time the Germane have Britain, Eckert not Jeff pleaded guilty to a because German manufacturers are killa great moral advantago over otner peoburmany of her markets. Germany needs complaint charging ple Their defeat made every man among ing of the nations and cannot glary. His case will be heard Octothe good-wi- ll "Lilian to risk a commercial boycott So easy to drop ber 28. bef.re the war, whereas-ou- r victory afford In any case, Germany will have an im'made men expect a higher standard of mense over her commercial advantage or which is Impossible, ow'ng to the Cigar. livlrgj Chewing Offices rivals, because her people are willing to 'oss of world wealth. a low wage standard and a low Again, the Germans lived the last year endure Accounts has helped thousands to of the war in a state of hunger and pri- scale of living, whereas tha British and No the Americana will struggle to preserve break the costly, tobac- vation, wnereas tne victor peoples lived wages until ths general poverty of Candidates for nomination As comco habit. Whenever yoq have' a long- well as long at the war lasted. Ho that high There is them back Germans, comparing their present the world forces below missioners and city auditor filed their smoko or chew, just place a the , which even Gera ing for a No-Thowever, slave-however much tt pinches, with point, Bac tablet in your theii war condition, find It far more tolharmless man labor cannot exist, and that point final expense statements with W. A. baa been reached mouth instead. All desire stops. Chort- erable. Leatham, city recorder, yesterday. is be as a also The amounts spent to date by the vaseems to habit that Everywhere throughout Germany durIt le the completely broken, and natlojt will be a rious outwinter the there a more of ing coming meager off enjoyment are get better they mentally, plivsically, you aspirants, as taken from 'their bv for the workers loud clamor life qg higher sb easy, so simple. Get margin above the bare necessities For commissioners. Dr. iinaneiallv. of the falling mark and reports, follow: because a with the do bigwages, than English people a box of No To Bao and if it doesn t reAll this proJlglous activity M. R. Stewart, $291210; Commissioner Their climate, prices. rising margin. ger gardens, lease yon from all craving Cor tobacco cities, municipal theaters snd opera and industry which ode gres in Ger- A. H. Crahbe, $152.89; John Hendrickin any form your druggist will refund houses enable 'them to get cheap pleas- mane and aU the apparent prosperity is son, $54 25; Charles W. Lawrence, W. Boats, $53.30; Berkley OIbob, jqui mon without question. . (Adv.j ure. These things must be taken Into based on tbs low, miserable condition facturers, with the inevitable consequence In the mark Thia will mean trouble with the workers who will find, as ihy are already finding, that their wages are worth less In purchasing power. They will demand more wagra to keep pace with the rise In prices. -- that a further depreciation will follow. Chauffeur for Bandits to Sentenced $151.42; Alex W. Christensen. $285.1r Charles Pedersen, $24.75; W. W. Baivl . ton, $96.25; Janies Beveridge, $137.10; Charles W. Lees, $100.25; N'e, L. Commissioner! $134 05; phi Morns, Arthru F. Barnes, $259 B6. For auditor-Robe- rt J". Dt ighton, $43.25; Alvin Ked dmgtou, $93 65; H. and Henry F. Crittenden, $26.75. f 47; - SPEAKER ANNOUNCED. ' Nephi I.. Morris, president of the Salt' Lake stake, will be the speaker in thf Eleventh ward chapel tonight. , -- a - manu- third-degre- facturer. buy and sell on a close margin of profit to insure volume-busines- Cigarette, habit s. Candidates for City File Expense To-Ba- e tt 'S--e leckrwaa's is bsttsr than msdloine trawl, it ray Impart put Ilfs into sluttish sorsnsss, sxbaustlsa - Butte-Activ- 29 Hin?sd!hiiniaM,s i Main Street. Branch r Idaho Falli. Its $60;-Fran- J V J t t jfrcuiu rhu rta4 by ratay from Ntrrmu dr pt uttortag Dtwrdrn. Notiralfte. i 8iomck, Hurt h$m of Femalo Leva. Compiftiau, Nourltl H!h Blood Frown uro Gout, ConiUpoUoB tadl nerve-shatterin- - r. 1 e on Then, too, both" we and 'the P : -- - Contrast this policy to ours. We order in limited lots to maintain the exclusiveness of each, style and to avoid loss from left- 118 . eut-thrs- figures. - r Oh. low In spite of the booming trade? On. reason is simple. To pay Indemnities, Germany has had to bu foreign money and. in so doing, ine exchange Immediately rises against hci. Another reason Is that tha increase In export trade at ig not sufficient to balance the iniprices, rease in national expenditures. Worst of all, in order to balance account, Germary makes up the difference by speeding up the printing for new lasuc of paper monrv Uve-that i done, the mark drops., Jnd time the cost of living rises in proportion, because the money will not buv so n,u, h East week I mentioned the new agree-mebetween Germany end pv which a part of the Hcierin;; Krinre V ll ITT paid hy Germany, not in money, but In material for northern France. That reconstructing aeemed to me, and it seem still, a good arrangement Certainly it is good for France, because sho will receive real wealth in solid things Instead of money, which is onlv a sv mboi of real things. This agreement will help make better relations between tho two countries and so promote peace in to some extent I believe. But it will not tend, I find, to stabilize the value of the mark, for Germs ny will use s her printing again to pay her own people for their labor and to pay manu- - You- can buy 91 VL CFamous for fine CTailorinq, KEARNS BUILDING Caattm. rriB .IS' consider well what you get for the frice That calls for clothing knowledge. Kincaid Lowest Prices Highest Quality Satisfaction Guaranteed - Exclusive Footwear at Reasonable Prices 4e3 To men who know!! as well as to men who confess a lack of clothing know- ledge, we confidently offer Recently Attorney General Daugherty selected Colonel Davis to do some special legal work In connection with tne Investigation and prosecution of alleged frauds in army contract, the colonel being familiar, with war department procedure aa well as with the law, but the question of compensation came up and the opinion of the conptroller had to be asked. The attorney general inquired whether Colonel Davis, during his eerv-Ic- e on investigation work, oould relinhis retired quish army pay and the $7o0b which the department ofaccept Justice was ready to pay, tha ruling of the conptroller is to the effect that Colonel Davia ia still an employee of the United States, and Is merely off the active list of the armv. Under the law, ths conptroller ruled, an office drawing retired pay In excess of $2500 per annum, cannot accept civilian smplo.i merit under the government, and he also cited a decision of thi supreme court to the effect there can be no agreement between the government and officers to deprive right to pa. Apparently Colonel Davis-caonly perform thia special work by order of the president, restoring him to the active Hat and assigning him to the department of Justice Whether this will be done is not known. t During a recent senatorial primary campaign in Idaho, Colonel Davis was a candidate for the Republican nomination and at that time the question- - of his retired pay was a factor in the contest. the best and yet insist on economy . A ' From Doing Special Work list For those who demand, pONSIDER well the . Comptroller General Rules Colbnel E. G. Davis Barred i For failnre to pny temporary alimony, Dominik Valerio was committed to the county jail by Judge A. R. Barnes of the Third district eeurt yesterday. Mrs. Guiseppina A. Valerio, wife of the prisoner, alleges in her divorce suit that Valerio is her uncle, and that she was forced to marry him. Hearing in the ease was continued un til Tuesday, at which time the court will determine whether any money has been paid. C Jcr. ' - Prohibition Director -- News-Lesde- 'r' guarantee. 4 Order yours today. BELT RAOtUM 60. ri 1 U. S. Spreckelt Bldg, San Diego & California money-bac- k V '! 22 If ;;: A |