OCR Text |
Show 6 i E Petersburg stretches as far as London. , y of Buck, compactly, la ths condition Europe today. 1 submit to ths reader that SSS common In a fair is stateemnt of facts it knowledge. This is not the Europe-- f the diplomatists and publicists; It is ths Europe of reality and the common man. It la a process of decline and fall, going on under our eyes, swifter and more extensive than the decline and fall of the Roman empire in the fourth and fifth centuries It immediate cause to .the destruction of tbs monetary system unburden of war expenditure and der Is Des war the Officers Economic debts And ths only possible hope It that may be arrested Ilea In s prompt' and vigorous world conference to put an ' Resolutions to war expenditures including even end the French war expenditures that M. Brlsnd'a admirers find so justifiable, to on Closing Day. on Nations, Wells S ays. extinguish debts and reinstate stable and money in the world. trustworthy S3 to no evtdenee yet that ths WashThere (Coattaned from Par On,) conference win take up this task ington TribOM. iJMTtal to I orwfil - even con template BOISE. Idaho. Nov. 26. The Idaho healthy industrial life and social security. find myself in the trough of the waves, an of find State Teacher association closed Its confident less outcome, ths Us restless nil today troubled is by Italy nual session here today. The reports oj I even the limited outcome, of things here. a Whooping, - the various committees, including the crew of posturing adventurers, without I am increasingly doubtful whether the the of nomination officers, occupied or any genuine love of coun conference will get a far In the direcof the members at the closing foresight tion of a stabilized pacific as I had hoped try. business session. Is done 1 would give Germany a few day ago. If Nominations were made for officer for aboutnothing six months and north Italy two the ensuing year by nominating com before a revolutionary collapse oc- Ccpyrght, 1921, by the Chicago Tribune mittee as follows: Prssldent, Mrs. Caro year and the Free Publishing Company cur. - line W. Flood, Bonner county, and Miss (New York World); all rights : Dora Thompson, Boise: vice president. Erance in .Danger.t reserved, Howard. Albion: treasures-- . J. E. Turner, This new rhetorical And France? T&vette, and Mrs. Gertrude Nunsmaker, France which, remains pearefully armed Pocatello. which builds new while no man Mtsa AHc Beach of Montpelier, sec- ship to fight threatens, nonextant Germans, arms term fast for a was elected year retary. armies and guards- itself against the H(f three years. The officers- - will -- 'be threats of long dead German generals Is.the elected, by postal ballot, January one of M. Briand-- s heir-ra- ts mg quotations sue of the Idaho Teacher containing the t to be found In the Encyclopedia Brit. ballot to be voted. be nnd must tanies twenty years nearly X particularly interesting - report -- on stale ths renascent French which jostles teacher shortage and teachers' aviaries against Italy and England and hulleves . given this morning by O. F. Dienst, that It can humbug Amarlca for good chslrmon of ths committee on those sub and all. While it does these thlngs-wll- l contained a review" of it pull, through amitlBt the .general dis" jects. The report conditions In 1918 and 1929. as well as aster of Europe? Will it achieve its man(CeatUnd from Fife One.) this year, the same committee having ifest ambition and remain dominant in made report two years previously. The Eutope, the dominance of the last? surreport this year covered... twenty-eigvivor, the eoolt- upon-- the dunghill of' a and death but chopped leave and weed .. counties and nineteen Independent schoo general decay? I doubt It. with which they make a kind ot bread, ' 3120 Included. teachers being Watch the rratia'tipon ths exchange as causing another kind of death, and some districts., were the true meaning search bluish chalk which they swa.ow to fill The report showed that 365 of French; lhk new to the profession, while IS95 were for security dawns sigxtn ths world. their Btomachs, though it hurts them Of the Watch the subacriptioiy to the next new to their present position toted number, 152 were new to the state. French loan to pay for more submarines horribly., There la a shortage at the present time and more senega may prove to Are Snowbound. of one per cent, aoeord.ng be too dlfflcuU a feat after all for Franc Villages of one-ha-lf should know these tilings unless I same the remained Salaries to' to the report. to wreck the rest of Europe, destroy I had seen not them. Now, coming back, as commerce by aestfo5dng'ner customhs laat vear, with few changes. out I the look . Resolution were adopted: Indorsing the her ahlp'a windows at the ers, and yet to save herself. When France white landscape beyond the banks getIdaho system of education; the, Washingshe msy break very to break, begins we near Kazan, 1 think as ton conference on the limitation of arm- quickly. Vnder the surface of this ex- ting flatter villages away, out there, ament; recommending that all teachers uberant French patriotism runs a deep of the wooden thickly scattered over hundreds of mil, recognize the present financial stringency tide of communism, raw and red and In- lost In this white loneliness, divided from . and encourage thrift among their pupils; sanely logical. other by a few versts, where, wltpin each not be Americanism of the saner, teaching graver France, that We talk of tha , limited do civics, but enlarged, and that the substantial Franca, that in masked by houses el 111 ueat and mean, many peasant and mothers watch their chilfathers association Idaho of d the the teachers tha rhetoric of M. Brian and the French nationalists, of a France dren weaken,or or it groaning in their join the national educational associations. own sit very quietly, waiting agony, generous enough to help a fallen foe and or for .almost inevitable .death, . great.. enough to think of the welfare i. SPANISH I have only been into a few of these I wish we oould hear more of MADRID, Nov. 26. (By the Associated mankind. villages, end it was hard going over the France. And so on. I ran see enow i Press) Captain General Prime lie Rivera that saner for a pair of horses, but the things and orator warlike a of Madrid was dismissed from that office nothing but leading Franc empty and all 1 saw there are far worse than anything today at a meeting of the cabinet as the mischievous, seen In war; more horrible, more I seehave not I that do Europe to destruction. result of an address he made In the senate he expressed the be- it is possible for a France of armaments heartrending.farther from the river are In yesterday in which Villages lief that North Africa had no military and adventurers to dance along the edge worse stats, I am told by everyone, j value from the Spanish viewpoint. Ths of the abyaa without failing in, those I reached.' If they are worse than comcaused widespread general's speech they will soon be cemeteries, for everyment Military circles displayed much an- England Is Dependent. one was hungry In those 1 saw, soma noyance over his utterances, demanding When we pass out of the continental at the last gasp. . ' the abandonment of Morocco. to the Atlantic system and consider ths The boat on which I am making for case of Britain, w find a country with Kazan is one of the last up the Volga. POSTMISTRESS APPOINTED. a stabler exchange and a tradition ot In a week or two at most all traffic Special to The Tribune. social give and take, stronger and deeper will be tied the snow. Already A. than that of any other country In Europe. many landing up by WASHINGTON, Nov. 26. Maude stages have been drawn coun- In to Barton has been appointed postmistress But aho Is not a from being broken them prevent at Meriden, Wyo vice Ethel E. Kessler, try. her millions live very likely or over- up. That means closing the great highsea trade, she Is helplessly dependent ways of rescue for these Russian peoremoved. upon the prosperity of other countries ple in the famine area. Ail transport and particularly of Europe; the ebb of will now have to be by sleigh, and the at American relief administration which is prosperity abroad meant ebb forso her acutehome. No other country feele providing 150,000 dally meals to the chilly the eoonomlc prostration of Germany, dren of the Kasan province, which has so greatly from suffers no other child population of nearly one and a country ' the restless activities of France. halt million will hare to obtain 3700 Bhe Is struggling along now with unhorses for the sleighs they will use. As the peasants are out of oats and precedented masses of unemployed workers and the stats of affairs abroad offers the horses are dropping dead, that will That Is,. Impure, Impoverished. no hope of any diminution of this burden. not be easy. It will be a wild adyenture, Devitalized Blood. The housing of her population has de- anyhow, for there are no roads, and the war began: some Journeys will be as long as 300 Probably 75 per cent of the ailment generated greatly since are an due to abnor- she cannot continue to feed, clothe, nor versts, or 200 miles, over snowfields with of the bumatt race used to do, Un chance of wolves on the way. Imagine as she her blood people educate the of mal condition thin, poor, less the decay of continental Europe is the desolation fast closing now around anemic. 1 do not know wbat political n arrested. vilthe hunger-hunte.This face and the further fact that form of expression a great distress In lages.' Hoods Sarsaparilla purifies, enriches Britain might taka The tendency to of Already the snow and th and revitalizes the blood, by creating a wards revolutionary violence is not very the river traffic has cut off stopping the way of British temperament, but escape. Abruptly the tide healthy appetite, aiding digestion, pro- evident in the slow to move are often of folk fleeing from the famine has been moting assimilation and thereby secur- people towho are The alow violence of the dammed. stop. ing in full all the benefits of eomplete slow Some week ago the Volga towns, like expression in revmight not find nutrition, must impress ths thoughtful English not and expend itself in- Kazan, Tetlushl, Simolrsk, Saratoff and olution might with the wisdom of giving this great ternally. They resentful about Samara, were congested with these refuget might medicine a good fair trial. France and perhaps Germany might be gees evacuated under government control Hoods Sarsaparilla is greatest merit feeling resentful about Franca, too. But or moving In noraadio groups 'withuut . plus greatest economy the most for the I wtll confess that I cannot yet imagine authority-- It wa ths first thing I saw Britain distressed on an might acutely entering Russia across the frontier money. Get it today. (Adv.) what at Sebeeh, where a few red soldiers a trainload ot refugees. guarded They were ' packed into Tcloaed trucks, where riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin they had been living for weeks in th Journey acroso Russia toward Lithuania, and through ths doors I saw them huddled together, hunting vermin on their bodies, , A tali, bearded peasant cams to my train and. to my surprise, spoke to me In English. He was clothed in rags of 3 sheepskin and rabbit, fur. but he had a kind of dignity. He told me he had come from Ufa, where everyone waa starving, and had traveled most of the way on foot, for five months. Once he had been in the United States, so he had learned English. Branch Exchange, Was. 160 Opposite Salt Lake Theater Are Nomination for Made and f SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING NOVEMBER 27,. 1921. jHE . as - credit .1$ good. Supply your every need. Pay a little down and the balance a little entire community are centered on this phenomenal event . . Strain tined to Work Harship 3 Your Remember The eyes of the time. . ' . n Adopted - -- this--tas- Li flag-wav.- - , Garment prices sent to - in our determination to rock-botto- m of outdo our - wonderfully successful $100,000 Purchase-Sal- e ' last November. We entered the markets just prior o -- railroad --- doubly-anxiouwere manufacturers strike, contemplated to unload, and we took the fullest advantage of the situation and. boughtat virtually oufown price. Our two floors axe virtually' strained under the weight of these gigantic purchases. Ever visitor to this - store marvels at - the low prices. Come' in Monday, "'as youll encounter hosts of garments fresh : from our stockrooms. to-th- -- V unbe-lievab- s ly . . r 1 Men' and women within'a buying radius ,of this great sale should not deny themselves ,the priv- ilege of sharing to the limit in these money savings. Plenty of salespeople to serve you promptly. hl s. S3 : ElS Purchase ol j. COATS i Choose from plain tailored jioats or., gorgeously fur trimmed coats. jChoose from., assortments wonderfully complete and. choose these coats at the lowest prices of . . the past several years. , . , flag-wavi- CAPTAIN-DISMISSE- D. Bolivies Evora Velours Plushes Normandies Pompons Yalama Suedine Frost Glow v Kerseys , - Involved Are Coats That Would Sell Up to $98.50 lf s1- W 53P W W , Womens and Misses Tailored SUITS Most Ailments Due to One Thing d, Rack after rack of stunning stylo Fall and Winter Suita, developed tn all ths wanted fabrics. Rich fur trimming. Ths most phenomenal values In this wonderful zale , Values to $95, in Three Lots sr $19.90 ; $24.90 $29.90 typhus-stricke- slow-creepi- I 0- r Buy Dresses at Lowest Prices of the Year And buy them on the easiest credit terms possible. Youll be astonished assortments, the beauty of styles and the richness of fabrics. . Canton Crepes T Crepe de Chines Trico tines Georgette Boushnere Velvets E3 at tha Satins -- half-clos- s i Nomads Drop In Their Tracks. QUALITY OUR FIRST. THOUGHT and Nevada We chip to all parte of Huh, Idaho, Wyoming MANE YOUR TRUTT OAKES, MINCE MEAT AND PLUM PUDDINGS NOW ah ottr new' stocks ere now In candied peels, raising, currants, g laced fruits, nuts GROCERY SPECIALS FOR ANOTHER WEEK, COMMENCING NOVEMBER Perm Eggs, dozen, New Conft ., each 60c , Dozen, $1.09 for dozen c Fancy Cranberries,- 25c hlack or white Stewing QQwOC - Fig, fancy. 2 lbe. Evaporated Prunes, 2 lbs. 3 lbs. fancy Head Rice 2 lbe. Green or Yellow Split Peae 2 lbs. Green Peas, dried Fancy Country Gentleman Golden Bantam Dried Com, ss Campbell can.. 35c 25c 23c 23c 2 lbs. bulk Sago 2 lbs. bulk Tapioca GOc Citron Peel 40 o Lemon or Orange Peel 45c bulk Coffee, lb.. 40c Golden West Teas 30c Instent 60c Instant Postum Postum Salted Peanuts, R lbe. ,10c Sunklzt Oranges, - E I 39c I 25 Grape Fruit, 'i Soups, - C any sort, 10c 2 for 25c w 40c jar Marshmallow ......... Hlp-O-Lit- 60c ..34c tall can 41c 44c 43c 23c 40c Asparagus... 66c can Tuna Pish 60c Tabasco Sauce 30c can Ripe or 21c 22c ...22c Olives 60c Liquid : Veneer, 25c can Chloride of Lime 36c pkg. Savex or Hydro Pure...... ,.42c .:.&4c 19c 29c 30c 24c 35c pkg. Gold Duet ...38c ..34c ...25c 43c ...35c Palmolive Soap, 3 bars , Dozen bars, 89c Ivory Soap for Flakes 15c Dutch Cleanser, can. 3 27c IQc r Racks and Cabinets Heavily Laden With This Your Credit 13 Certainly Good Hs is but one of the thousands, ths hundreds ot thousands, on ths move from th famine country, and hs' is luckier than some, who dropped on ths way, dying ot exhaustion, like one man who lay dead with two dead children In his arms on the road from Kazan to ths river. In th Moscow station I saw a dense crowd of railway these Nomads. They sleep there at night, and it was at night that I stepped between their bodies, holding my breath because of th stench from these sleepers, lying close together, men, women, children In one tangled mass. Outside, whole families camped like gypsy tribes huddling close for shelter to the station walls. All along th railroad track, at many waysld stations In this great flat limitless Russia, I have seen these refuges trains and camps. Out of 25.000,000 people in the famine area the soviet government has evacuated 50.000 worker and 27.000 women and children to Petrograd, Turkestan and Siberia. But In Petrograd there is not much food A CHARGE now, and in Siberia I am told it is no ACCOUNT paradise for refugees. But people move away from their own district to any other In the hope of better things, and tome of NORDS at these Nomads It is an old racial habit seen only . In famine times pas each a Is other, some going one way, some th other, though there to the same hunger at Convenience each Journey's end. Now their movements are. stopped by snow. Famine doe not stare one in .the face until one gets to the villages beyend ths Volga. In Moscow th people on the whol look well fed though as I know there LHII!ll!il!!lllll!iIIl!i!!i! are many hungry even there and the markets are stocked with every kind ol food. watchful eyes and clawlike hands. They are being fed now once a day by th Children Left to Die. British and American relief. Hera are a few brief glimpses of the Careless Observer begin to doubt th things I have seen. They are enough famine if Moscow is all they see, and tor to begin a study of ths fsmln tn Rusaom time I had my own doubts. But They are not enough, alas, to reach there to one evidence ot enormous trag- sia. the Imagination of overfed folk a long edy even In Moscow, petrograd and way who have not seen with from other towns outside the famihe region. It me thssa Russia fine, peasants these brave, is the evidence of abandoned children defrank-eye- d folk weeping a they serted by peasants who are not cruel simple, the or filfn their show pots, empty the; to their offspring, but, as 1 hare seen, eat, or their dying children. very kind. to H but other write will I only things, In Samara, Saratoff, Simbirsk, Kasan power of words beyond my reach and hundreds of other places are children tom of world the the heart which may touch left by parents who cannot feed them any and arouse it from deadly, damnable Inmore. In the Ufa district there are 22 000 million a of to the fate difference tn abandoned children; the Samara disEven then this famine la too big for trict 28.000, most of them picked up with oven th marvelous but a few rag about them, starved as vate charity, birds who fall from the nest to the fro- work of th American relief administrais th biggest chanco of reszen ground. tion, which Th Russian people have made homes cue, can touch more than th fringe of for them, they have washed the filth It. Unleta th world power act quickly, disease-stricke- n their rom' bodies leaving politic aside In on greet, genlor humanitys sake, death .though at Samara for a time they al- erous effort these hundred of peasant lowed them to lie in their dirt) and they to many of I Inevitable. of them thousands food little warmth a not and much get will be punljihsd And western Europe of either. In one home I entered these deserted children wore nothing but a by pestilence end will deserve It. ragged shirt or slip end were huddled close for warmth exactly like monkeys, lopyright, 1821. by th McClure New. with little grey, wizened faces, grave. , , paper Syndicate.) MEAT DEPARTMENT d d Lnmtnnt)toaiiimini Men and young men, come down Monday .buy your suits and overcoats. again will you have an opportunity to share in such savings. iI i I 1 g I II .Never - ss: $19.90 $24.90 $28.90 $34.90 $39.90 1 d, pri-N- ot BUY WHERE YOU CAN RELY ON THE MEATS All our meats are selected and bought for your choice, where others buy them In job lota, of any sort, because they get job lots for much lose money. Only the beet of corn-festeer beef, milk-fe- d veal, real and dressed pork and poultry. Freeh oysters and lamb, country-feDab at all times. TWO DELIVERIES DAILY Purchase ol Ellens Suits and Overcoats ' 23 florid Strictly fresh Poultry $9.90 $14.90 $19.90 $24.93 $29.90 S' Up to $85 Is the Actual Worth of Garments in These Five Lots Select Little Anything During Pay ments This Sale and 1ml Charge It Nation-wid- e ciq7iG Ml ffj Plot to Rob Uncle Sams Mails : Moves Government to Employ Marine Guards Tribune-Sal- t Lake Tribune Ltaari Wtro WASHINGTON; Not. 26. A nation-wid- e plot to rob the United States mail disclosed thiz winter, it wa today, moved the government in it decision to s guard mail trains, mail wagons and Chicago post-office- with United States marines. Details of the plot have not been made public, but Edward H. Sbaugh-ncss- y assistant post master general, in charge of the railway mail service, is authority for the statement that tne 2000 marine 'now operating with the mail service were not of Chicago second called upon to fight a few bandit who might take it into their beada to rob tho mails, but to prevent the execution of a gigantic plot The marines only went on duty in the nirk of time, according to the belief of officials, and their vigilance will be the one great factor in stopping the mail robberies. . E " Inspectors of the department have information as to the' concerted action planned to rob mail trains and truck throughout the country, and believe they have in custody in New York one of the member of the postal mail robber band. Five attempt wer made in New York to pull off" the mail robbery which- - resulted finally in a haul of more than a million dollars. The man bow in custody was arrested for another crime, it is understood, bnt later is said to have confessed that he had attempted to rob the truck before and had been thwarted on each occasion. Postmaster General Hava has considered the letter of protest from Governor Blqine of Wisconsin against the action of 'a marine in shooting at mea who attempted to ride on mail ear in that state; but it is understood that for ths present it it not likely that the depart Weekly or rs Monthly Will Do .... ment will take any action in tha matter. -- The position of the postoffice de partment. It was learned from official todsy, is that the marines high are working under orders of ths navy department and the commandant of the marine eorpe, and that the postoffice department, with the Information has as to plans for concerted and deter-it-' mined efforts to rob the mails this winter, can do little in the matter but mark time. It is felt here that neither- - Governor Blame, perhaps, nor anybody in the country, except postal officials, realises fully the seriousness of the situation nor the menace which threatened tim until the marines took charge. NOW, AGED 80, WEDDED, Not: 2s- - Elbrldg Gerry Snow, ,,T9R' who Soon will be 80 end Mrs. Fanny 45. of jd, Augustine, FTa., Joyce r;4. here today. Mr. Snow- - first wlfeTwhoS he married, in 186, died In October, 120, Mr, Snow ns been president of th Home Insurance Company since 1888. |