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Show i r-- THE WEATHER. unaattlad; not much 6unday and Monday change In temperature. Local Settlement Price. BUmc Pome tic. S M foreign, .. .. I -- - c; ,..L70 .Lead Copper (cathodes) VOL. 104, NO, 128. SALT LAKE CITY, SUNDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 19, 1922. Senate-Hou- Row! Over se -- ' Five-Da- y Day, Six-Ho- ur Week, Demanded Against Counsel of Union Heads. tariff " Fordney Wams Upper ' 2500 Damage House Members That He Will Fight; May Controversies Developing in Block Bill This Session t i NEW YORK. Feb. 18. Charles won verdict for 12500 against the trustees of 8L Raymond's cemetery today for the loss of the body of his wife, who died in the influensa epidemic of 1918. strike of Testimony showed that 'grx.vedlggers'' cauaedan. ' Accumulation of nearly 100 bodies, all of which eventually were burled, by health department order, in a trench Scooped qut with' steam ehoVetl The cemewere held to have been tery Official negligent tw fat Hng --to kesrrt hetrrc- ords so they could Identify Mrs. Se. grists body. Mora than a score of coffins were disinterred tn a march . for It. - . . a WASHINGTON, Feb, 18. (By the Associated Preee.) A row between th house and senate tver American .valuation wax forecast today after it became known'that Republlcah members of tn senate finanoe committee, in rewriting th permanent tariff bill- - had agreed tentatively on continuing the present principle of baaing dutiea on for' elgn market value. , Chairman Fordney, . of the bouse way and mean committee, declared that if thla kind of a tariff must be passed by the senate the bouse .would writ 8 new biU with a reduction valuation clause and 'let th senate try again. - It this should happen,' it was .sata, there would be little prospect of a tariff bill at this seAslon unless congress remained on th job throughout most- of the congressional election campaign. Declaring . that . the house ways and means committee bad written a bill on Marks-Tim- e th American valuation plan only after full agreement with all of the Repub II can members of the senate committee Commit-tee- " except Senator La Follette of Wisconsin, G. Representative Fordney said the abandonment of this principle by the senate the . Monday. committee majority was a thing comgentleman df the ways and means i mittee would not have done without consulting th finance committee. WASHINGTON.rFeb. 18 The soldier Fordney Makes Threat. bonus situation had simmered 'down y Tf they send a bill over here based reperceptibly following . the first on he added, "they valuation, action from President Harding's sugges- mayforeign expect that it will be sent to the tion that ths adjustod compensation be which wUj and means Mmmitt fins need by a sale tax or that the enact- way on American valuation, ment of the legislation be postponed. - TU never agree to any foreign valuaThere .Was, however, no apparent slack-em- if tion and I do not know of any Republiof the determination of Repub- can member of the house who will, or who wants valuation. foreign lican house leaders to Mss the measure Th valuation, as framed in the house . at this session,-- bill, was abandoned some time ago by Majority members of the house ways majority members of the senate comwho had been considering two and mean committee ware called to meet mittee, based plans, largely on the recommenMonday to tackle the whole problem dation of President Harding in his anagain. They were expected to .pas upon nual message to congress last December. The executive then said regarding ths leglglattars provisions of the measure American that there Could not before going into the question of ways bo ignoredValuation "the danger of such valuaand means of raising funds.tion' making American tariffs prohibiIn the light of th president's poProponents of a sale tax seamed, con- tive. sition it was suggested that if the house fident that the Republican qommltteemcn and the senate disagreed on the valuawould decide on this form Of taxation to tion' question the matter might be reraise the approximately 8800,000,800 nec- ferred to the executive in an effort to about aa agreement before such essary to cover the cadi payments aa bring si that suggested , by Mr. now provided for in the measure. ft an Impasse was (certain, however, that th sales tax Fordney would be brought about. would not bo voted In without sharp Begins RewritingIRates. fight It was said that any sales fax adopted The senate committee majority began A manuwould not bo a general one, today th rewriting of th ad valorem facturers' tsx. similar to that proposed rates In the Fordney bill on the basis by Senator Smoot Republican, Utah, and of foreign valuation. Senators said that rejected bj during consider- many of the rates were being scaled upation of the lax 'revision biU, . was one wards since the original figures were U was predffctpd upon an assessment of dutiea of the suggeetlons advanced. claimed that this tax at a rat of 1 per on the basis of the value of articles procent would raise the amount of money duced In this country, .comparable to those imported. required. Several other forma of a sale tax are The' valuation plan - as tentatively knowntQ ba under consideration and .upoiu known as theu fimoot jfian. Is not expected that there will be a agreed carries provisions designed to meet un, them. as of to decision It any hasty tn world usual condition now was learned . that treasury experts re- trade. These previsionexisting include procently had prepared a form of sales tux. claimed American flexible , valuation; which Us framers Contend ywn be easily rates within a radius of fifty per cent of administered and cannot be .evaded. fixed In the bill and a dethe figures Whether a bonus bill with a sales tax currency provls.on. There also attachsdcould be put through the house predated or sections to prevent unfair still seemed doubtful, some leaders de- competition Indesigned Importation and discrim claring that the situation In this respect tnatlon against American foreign comMeantime, merce. defied analysis at this time. - . ' , , farm organizations continued their attack on this tax. Gray Sliver, Waahlng-lo- n Final Vote Delayed. th American Farm representative of It was said today that a final vote on Bureau Federation, addresaed a letter to each member of oongreas, - protesting the Smoot plan wqa being delayed pending further information from the state raxee are" already, exceedingly high, department as the depreciated the leUer said, "and a sales tax would currency provisions Would be in violation aver-ag- e on burden ithe mean further "favored natton" clauses of exof.th only Individual and when we stop to con- isting commerdal treaties. There is sider that ths average Income of each soma doubt In th committee now on that country score and this provision may have to be man, woman and child In this modified. Whose tncome in below th Income-t- ax American 8538 the a year, level is only Under the other valuation plan which Farm Bureau Federation believe It would th committee members --have been conrevfor some weeks,, duties would be a rank Injustice to rales furthermetlt-odsidering 5 have been based enue for the soldiers' bohus by this upon the wholesale sellpeoIt would take away from these coming price In the American markets at accumulating a articles. Thla plan also the Imported ple any prospect of how email and would contemplated - the bolstering petence. no matter, provisions bettering .their, con- la the Smeot amendments: It was blight-- 4 hxin. hopO-P- t. urged ditions." by members of the tariff commlsWon and th court of customs appeals, but was opposed by officials of ths customs diviBonomi sion of who held out for . th Smoot plan. T of Some of the proposer tenproponent - j. tatively agreed upon have argued that ' ROMEl, Feb. 18. This afternoon Pre- the was bill present designed ea a "permier Bonomi, tn accordance with his pre- manent" one and that it would not be his arise to adopt a principle framed to meet viously announced Intention, handed conresignation to the king, who began existing conditions which might be references with th political lead era In an moved within a few years. effort to find a man who can command diffiMany other arguments, a parliamentary majority and form, a culties of administration, including were cabinet. th American market value urged against proCommenting upon th retirement of the posal. Bonomi ministry - the IMessagero eays; "Signor Bonomi makes a nobl exit, without offering to make a vein, halfhearted attempt at a compromise. Our PLANS government just now needs a man who, in addition to being honest, is strong, imperious and firm, with muscles of steel, WASHINGTON. Feb, for battle. ready for additional government The Tempo declares ths chamber of hospital construction In various of deputies convicted the ministry of abuse th country for former servicepartsmin of royal decrees, of framed by a conference of specialism on 1q the, employment Inability to units the diverse parliamen- mental diseases were made public toelements, and of being a governtary Th pro. by the veterans bureau. ment of expediency only, .with- no serious night tntH of posed program would' include " . active policy. 13,004 beds needed for the care of mental patients. Location of a hospital of 500 beds in the western part of MassachuGlobe setts to .receive patients from Vermont. New Hampshire and northern Connectitowna was recommended to replace cut . ii th hospital now In us at .East Norfolk. 18. The soanlc charms Maas., while the use at Fort Porter at CHrCAGO, Feb. and Industrial potentialities of the Pa- Buffalo was suggested. cific northwest were presented yesterday Increase in the capacities of the s at PerryvIUe, Md.. end Gulfby Frank Branch Riley to th members and their wives of th Executives' club port, Mis., were recommended, together at the Hotel Sherman. with the construction of e new Institu-lo- n Mr. Riley, who is a lawyer of the Paof 500 bed, to be Increased later to 000 beds, In district number seven, comcific coast, was chosen by the legislatures of Washington and Orfcgon and ths prising Ohio, Indiana end Kentucky. Disparliament of British Columbia to tour approval of the us of the hospital at the country in ths interest, .of the de- Maywood. III., was eajSfeeacd and f,.v velopment of th northwest. hospital of 1000 beds, to be increased to If any on of several attractions In 1500 beds, was urged for district number my country were in southern Franca," eight, comprising Michigan, Illinois aad said Mr. Riley, "no wealthy cltlsen of Wisconsin. A new hospital of 500 beds, to be InChicago would fee I that bb' oould talk Intelligently unless h had oesn It. It Is creased o 1000 bed, was urged for dle-trtnumber nine, comprising Iowa, Misacths duty of Americans ta become souri, Kansas and Nebraska, to replace quainted with the Paolfld north west," th present institution at Knoxville, la. A hospital of 500 beds was recommendMake on ed for district number ten, comprising Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota ! A hospltal-o250 beds, tn and Montana f be Inr'essed to 500 bed, was suggested number for district thirteen, comprising CAIRO. Feb. 18. (By th Associated which Oregon. Idaho and Washington, Press.) An attempt was mad today would car for from the weaterii patients R. Ilfs of conAlfred th upon Brown, the of tenth district and northth troller general of th Egyptian ministry part of education. lie was elruok by a reOaetiBad .1 Par Three i volver bullet and seriously wounded, . (Oelaau Th- -' Committee Likely to De-la- y Action on Ratification HardingTo ReportTTiaVNa .Minutes on the Four Power Pact Were Kept ' INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Feb. 18. Renewal of the demand of union coat miners for a meek, a proday, flve-da- y posal that was made before the 1918 strike mas adopted today by the conventof United ionAmerica as a part of the policy the union will seek to have included in new wage agreements, effective April 1. . This demand (tad thb united opposition the union's .leaders, including all dla--. I trlct presidents. The convention action or the shorter working day, however, wai the only radical change in the wage policy proposed' by the union's scale committee, which centered the unions policy proposals toward retaining present basic wages for soft .coal miners, and gaining increases for anthracite workers under threat of a general strike. The strike and wage proposals by the committee were adopted by overwhelming votes. The strike for its declaration, however, provided submission to a referendum vote of the union membership before any walkout Is ordered by officials w afx-ho- ur fthe ers Mlns-Work- Committee Overruled. . In declaring for day, the committee recomdelegates overrode the dayronder-groun- d mendations for an eight-hoand also voted down a proposal limiting actual work time to geven hours a day. Bitter criticism of the union's officers Was made by delegates lq urging day, but several adoption of the officials took the floor, appealing for fa--" vorable action on the committees elght-'hodemand. But the delegates argued that the proposal meant more continuous work and called on the officers to "carry out our wishes." Whether th day demand obtains for the anthracite districts was an unanswered question. It was pointed out . that the anthracite workers were not preasl ng t he-- proposal. President John lx Lewis said he was unable to advise the delegates aa to the six hour day aa affecting anthracite workers. A Me from the action of the six --hour day, the delegates also recorded an intention to stiffen up some of the minor demands recommended by the scale committee by substituting "demand'' for where it appeared in (he "recommend . committee report. six-ho- ur six-ho- ur six-ho- -- Other Demands. ! other demands, as adopted, included the foliowing: "Removal of inequitable differentials In wages, which would result in increased wages in some fields; pay and one-ha- lf for overtime work; double pay for Sunday and holiday work; elimination of the auto- -' matte penalty clause of the present agreements providing for fining miners or operators. for violation of contracts, snd all new contracts to obtain for two years, beginning next April 1. The official vote rejecting the pica of Alexander Howat and other expelled Kansas miners for reinstatement in the union, by a vote of 2 (ITU to 1955, was read amid disorder, which subsided somewhat of the whew Prank Farrington, president Illinois miners and the a t (administration leader, announced that all Illinois n-- m Oc&tlnvftd (Column 0a.) Tv , Eire of Unknown Origin Causes Damages at Paul PAUL, Idaho. Feb. 18. Shortly after of a meeting of the Paul adjournment club In its rooms In the Commercial i block-lastnighL. lira was discov. ered. On account of the dense smoke wae .impossible to locate the fire, which ).lt did considerable damage to - the building before being extinguished. The Paul Store company occupies ths lower floor and .basement, and Its stock was badlv damaged by Water and smoke. Both the building and the store company's ' stock were fully covers by Insurance. The origin of the fire is unknown, but caused been to have Is by deIt thought . fective wires. -- Half of Wilson foundation Fund - ReportedSubscribed Mors than 500,. JTEVT YORK. Feb. 18 half the amount which will make up the fund, has been subscribed to the Voodrow Wilson foundation, It was today by Franklin D. Roosevelt, chairman of the national Committee. The February 15, 'halfway mark, wak passed and the amount since ,Mr, Roosevelt said, contributed has not been recorded. , New York state leads in money subscribed. but North Carolina is first in 000, ( Student Dances Denounced Wisconsin Educator MADISON. WIs.. Feb'. 18 "Licentioushaa corns Into ness and luxurlousness the schools of the nation through student dances, which must be curbed If there Is to be a solution of the moral probDr. Jay William lems of the coun-tiyHudson of the Unlvera.ty of Missouri declared today In addressing a teachers association meeting. "We have come upon a reign of moral looseness and debauchery,',' Dr. Hudson said. "Students dancs as people were not allowed to dance In the worst resort a twenty years ago. There is a ' heathenish trend. . Massacre Of Christians by Moslems Reported ' i i Universal 8erv1ce Cable.- LONDON, Feb. 18 The red scythe of the TurklsKTCationalists Is again cutting a swath of death, cite thousand Chris, tian women and children are reoorted to have been ruthlessly massacred in the region of Sazsua by the Moslem forces, according to ah Exchange Telegraph from. Constantinople. dla-pat- Pending 0. P. ing of Members Mrt. -- ' ' - ' e Jt Again Tenders Cabinet Resignation ' r- SOLDIER HOSPITAL APPROVED R a!!od - 76 Perpetuity of Irish Nation Jeopardized by Opposition of De Valera to the Treaty -- Secures . , Looms Likely, as Result of Action by Committee on Valuation Policy Wifes Body Lost, Man Referendum on Suspension of Work on April 1 Re solved On by Convention. -- emergencies.' $13,315 M1NERST0V0TE Tribune Wants afford aii effective and inexpensive means of meeting WASHINGTON, Feb. 18. (By the Associated Presa) Despite the Treasure of both Republican and Democratic senate leaders for prompt action, controversies are developing within the foreign relations copimittee whlih may lead to a long committee discussion of the arms conference treaties before any of them are brought to the senate floor for ratification. Some members of th committee predicted today lhat 4the'ffort t6 eeur X detailed explanation of the negotiations Pacific treaty leading to the would In Itself mean considerable delay. Afterward, at least four proposed reservations to thla treaty,-- which Is first on the list, seem likely to come before the committee before It goes on to th other seven conference agreement that await genets approval. Partv leader on both sides of the chamber are satisfied that the dlsagree-m- n brand-delay- s ne encountered wlll-l- n of the way endanger ratification of any - evidence noIs treaties. Thus far there that any closely knit antitreaty "bloc has been attained. The first teat of strength In the committee may be during the coming week over a proposal to pursue further the quest for detailed information regarding th treaty negotiations. four-pow- er four-pow- and no d.fference tn tn , social policy. Policy td Divide and Rule. er th. 1 . Suspect Points ta to "Actions as , Indicating He Had 4 T ' i - ' Ths Tribe. . BAN: BERNARDINO, Cat.- t Mld-Ur- u ? republic," Pres) Peace seem for the moment to have again descended over northern Irekid- land, the retease of the .remaining nsped Unionists, announced - yesterday, tending to ease th tension. Neverthe-lris- h lee both sides still hold prisoners, and It is understood th south la determined not to iwleaee th special constable captured at Clone until th Monaghan football players' or freed by th Ulster aur thorities. Moreover, ther is th question of the four Sinn Felners held at flathfrytand, chargod with "tumultuous aaaeinbly." thla growing out of disorders In Connection with republican funeral two week also that of Ah arrant of th agorand three Irish republican army officers at Newry. Despite repeated northern- assertion that the footballers will be held unless they apply tor bell, veer is rumor that they may he treed as an set f gnu Within few hours, .A joint liaison commission Is expected to func Hon over the week-en- d and to prevent a clash between rival forces akmg th Part aa Friends. ou Friday, February Wa" bud . dinner together at a little restaurant on Beeoad Mouth between State street end Second East- - Wi parted friends end I can't Imagine why he xhoutd such a story that 1 was Implicated In th roh bery or the murder. 1 never talked holdup with Brighton at any time and didn't know he wes In that business. I rnef him- about two years ago, ( goes, aa a street car conductor on th Murray nari Hoe, when 1 ucd tp go out lo a. t Mis8 Viola Peterson on Crystal avenue, Twenty-sixt- h and TFnty-svnt" Soutn. "I saw Brighton about town frequency. I aaw him on February I. but didnt eo hint on the 2nd, and then w had dinner together on Friday, Thats the I saw of him. I wasn't doing an; thing particular about -- Salt Lake City, ' Jimt around. hanging "About 8:30 or 8 o'clock on Frida v ntgt't started from the Miners' exchange on k agent street and walked out to Warm Hpnnga and took a gwtm, arriving there between 7:30 and 8 o'clock, I left there about 18 oclock and took a car ' tor town,, T getting In about 10.30. ( ; tll - en !) EMIT Lt , f Woman Held as Writer of Threatening Letters It Robbery of Expre and Passengers W. in Colorado. Questioned and Released. - "I met Jack Stroud, who ta not Chick Weatherby, as th officers think, ln Milt Lake City, at the Cosv pool ball on Second South between Main and West Temple. This was about 10'50 and- we thn We started te , walk toward Midvale. got Into Mldvwle about 3 o'clock hi tho moro n and stayed in the depot and left there about noon for Provo. -- whoro the sheriff end a deputy stopped us and questioned , ua We . the went on : to Yermo. get a job on a ranch, and we were Sgaln arrested. I want to get back to Salt Lhke City and Clear thla matter up. If Frank Miller I the man Salt Lake wants they don't want me, for 1 never went under that name. Chick Weather-b- y Is 'Frank Miller. " Donnell sell his home wax Sheriden, Wyo., where his mother Uvea. He claims he Is only 20 years okL but took older, rttroud denied that he I Weatherby snd - -- , -- . well-kno- Coast Man Shoots Himself Hotel in n Oeatiswed Page riftsss (Cslwaa rival Carelessness About; Fires Is Criminal bu-dl- The United States is far ahead of every other country in the loss caused every day by fires. An average of 1300 fires "occur t every day in our country. The loss in lives and money - Is actually appalling. The worst feature of thig that nearly every fire is due to carelens-hcs- . '' The one thing' that will check this enormous loss is the exercise of ordi- . nary care. - teach your children what precautions should be taken about matches, kerosene, furnaces and stoves, gas and electricity, god th score of other sources of disastrous blazes. Teach them, and learn yourself, how to eombat a fire once it breaks out. , Capital Theaters Are Closed Order -- - ' ,j "The l.Ut rime I saw Brighton was -- ' Tbcq-mo4mportanMimotfter-fi- r is discovered is the first five minute. What is done then may determine whether your house is Koinjt to be saved or destroveiL-Ou- r nt Would Erect Tomb and Lighthouse as World Memorial to Columbus 8ANT0 DOMINGO, Feb. 18. the, Associated Pres.) Consideration of the plan of William E. Pulliam, receiver general of customs of the Dominican republic, to erect a (Treat tomb and lighthouse here in honor of Christopher Columbus, was formaltv resumed last night. A Vfoup of prominent Dominican leader met with Pollikm and discussed plant for a formal organization tq yarjor out the A number of speechea were made describing the projected monument at memorial to the great discoterer. a noble Intense interest iq being shown by the Dominican press and public generally. n . The movement for the erection of k Columbus lighthouse memorial in Santo Domingo, where it is contended by many historical authorities the remains of Columbus lie, was originated before the War by Mr. Pulliam and his wife, but the project was temporarily abandoned on account of the war. There has been much discussion at to where the remains of Columbus really lie. Many authorities, particularly those in Spain, have contended that the bones were removed from Banto. Domingo to Havana in 17B5 and tbence in 1898 to Seville, Spain; but other historians, with whom Mr, Pulliam has declared himself in agreement, say that these were remains either of Columbuss son, Diego, or bis grandson, Luis, and that a leaden casket unearthed in the cathedral of.Hanto Domingo in 1877 containing human bones has been established through inscriptions and historical record as the , . coffin of the discover er.. j -- - - T' r " iter. Poll s. Including the New National and two of the principal playhouses 'n the national capital, were ordered losed tonight by th board of commls-Voner- a. the governing body at th District of Columbia. The order was issued after an in spec-Io- n of plavhouaet In the district had been completed bv a board of fir engineer. The Inspection grew out of the recent collapse of the Knickerbocker theater. which cost the lives of nlnety-oigpersops. Other theaters cloned were th Columbia, Maryland and Foraker, notion picture houses; and the Cosmos, vaudeville snd motion pictures. The Metropolitan snd the Columbia are two of the larger downtown theater, v 1 e former Is owned by the Crandall comwnd th Knickerpany, which , bocker, -- Washington Information Bureau will secure for any of our readers, entirely free, a copy of "Safeguarding th Home Against Fir,n an invaluable booklet Simply fill out and mail the coupon belpw, enclosing two eents in stamps tor return postage on the booklet. Be sure to writ your name and address clearly on the lines of the coupon. ht Metro-nollts- n. Frederic J. Raskin. Director,' The Salt Lake Tribune Information Bureau, ' Washington, D. 0. I enclose herewith two eents la Stamps for return postage on a free copy of the Fire Booklet, . ilo REPORT IS DISCREDITED.- ROMS. Feb. IS With reference to report recently circulated her that Cardinal Gaaperrl wax to bo replaced as papal aecretarr of atat by Monalgnor Cerrettl. now papal nuncio at Paris, a semiofficial Vatican atatement today aald-"l- t Is superfluous to state that euch a report is absolutely unfounded. Cardinal aesperri haa not displayed any intention of leaving hla hlrh office and he enjoys the comp.ete confidence of Fop Plus as trfm the past enjoysd that of Pop Bene- -, diet. " .... ' Feb.-- 18. t LIMERICK, Ireland, Feb. 11 (By th Associated Pretx ) A proclamation waa today oh behalf of th arick brigade of the Irlah r tbllcan army, refusing to recognise th (yeent heed of the army or th pro lelonal gov. existing - If Brighton said I shot Faus be Is aj liar, Roy E. Donnell declared 'In the county jell here tonlghL He wax shown' a telegram In which It was stated that! Brighton accused him of having fired th shdt which caused th death of CV-- V Faus In Salt Lake the night of .Febni- Donnell was plainly worried about sry Brighton's charge. Fear entered hU eyes,, but he appealed for Information regarding .the time of the arrival of.th fcalt. - .. Lake sheriff, v , , T want to get bock and get tills cleared up at once, Donnell sold, "l id I act like A guilty man" when I w roie-- a letter home to n friend, told him that I w os at Yermo and signed bolh my. name and the name I wax going under,' Roy Dean'T I wrote th e letter to t- -, car D, Saupdero, Company 1. Fifty-thir- d infantry, at Fort Douglas. That's how I" the officer found out where I wan ' "I knew about the murder, because officers stopped me at Provo, questioned me about It and then later relcksed me,, and I continued bn my journey. , TI at waa Saturday. ' ' Limerick Brigade of Repub-- ,, lic&n Army Will Stand by Exit ting Republic, rrat -- - I peels I te TO FREE STATE , ! No Part in Faus.Tragedyv t hoe-pltal- - dou--ide- -o- - BANDITS HOLD UP n Life Attempt of Egyptian Minister PccJ.arc Hc . Parted With Brighton Before Murder. aid, " wife routd be got for four tl Now the price haa spearheads. n-has eight. In- - the topay cattle country It used to be four cows; now the price I seven. England's Idoa was to make Ireland an j English province. For her purposes the J o.villsoUon was to be completely' blotted out. The Gael was to go. Our lands were to be confiscated and given to alien our Industries were to be efthat Everything fectively destroyed. No Minutes Kept. tended to retain our Irish outlook; everyus Indistinct a to President Harding Is expected to keep thing that helped form the senate Monday, In response to people; everything that tended to keep Its resolution of Inquiry, that no min- oiive tn us memories of our Gaelic Irish nat.onallty. freedom and utes of the negotiations were kept; but It wax - Indicated tonight that such a prosperity, were to be obliterated. reply might not be acceptable to some . Her method even then was to divide In committee members, and that an effort order to rule, setting chief against ch.ef, ss, later, she set rsllgloh against reOOatlansd a Pic Plftesa t i ligion. (Ooluma 2n.) Th.s policy could not succeed whH w had a land system whereby men's rights tn land were secure and Impregnable, By means of the wholesale commandeering Of land, -- the land " wax - take" from tenure people, and the feudal system, system admirably suited for th purpose Ulster border, i . , of bnaavement, was imposed. Resumption of the British evacuation i , CspHaosd a Fog Tws Serfdom Follows. ' , , . (Colusa TkrseJ . The freemen of Ireland, whose rights had been rooted In the soil, became tenants and serfs of the usurpers, end war completely at the mercy of their new who gratefully masters, the landlords, , Joined with the enemy In th policy of ' , ' Ir sh people. and the robbing exploiting Miss Nellie Fits- Feb. CHICAGO, had succeeded lnuprootEngland y,rwpYhenthe old Irish ing system, of land tenure, eld by the police at Grand Rapid under which everyone securely enjoyed land td cultivate and common right to Mich , according to advices rece.ved here, the writer of the letter recently reon D. & grazing, she had taken ,the- bggest step ss ceived by Mary Garden In which th lattn our subjection. Police believe th was only In eo far a It attempted ter wax threatened. It R. G. unbalanced, to reverse that subjection that th land young woman Is mentally campaign of th Davitt jper.od was jus- the report said. tified. , Some historian yet takei up this GRAND RAPIDS, Mich. Feb. 18 Miss aspect of the land strugg.e and discover 18 Two the national spirit seek.ng to manifest Neill Fttsgersld, former school teacher, ALAMOSA. CqIo , Fb. Into detained pending an Investigation masked men robbed the express car of Itself, In apparently strange ways. Were It not for Iht th land war would the origin In Grand Rapids of a number an eastbound Denver 8c Rio Urafide West- have been a sordid struggle. Were it not of threaten Ing letters, among them one ern train about two mile east of hyre for thee, the kl.llng of landlords would to Mary Garden, Chicago opera star, wax taken to the university hospital at Ann tonight, shot express Messenger Gomez have been murder. The people undoubtregarded It this way. The landlords Arbor for observation and treatment In Gomes edly when he resisted, and ( escaped. were the agents whe hod taken away the the psychopathic ward. Is thought to be seriously wounded. Miss FMsgerald, wba Is 35 years old liberties of the common folk, and the The two robbers are thought to have oommun folk, hit at the agex whom they taught Tor s x year and waa dismissed boarded the train here? .When the train recognised as the r Imnfli-- t. date enemy. last June. According to the authorities, some of They took the first thing 'They did hadproceeded about twomiles from I he Job wlfich- - was4mmedbftuly to theur ths- - notes were found fastened to the end broke the hand door of town, the robbers through cltlsen' homes. , . In our feneration w woud' no longer atof the express . cor. When Gome as landlords for shoot landlords, they It is were then known have mostly gone. In tempted to resist they shot him. believed Gomes is fatally wounded. The the same way w hope that the next genNew York in will have no necessity forf shoottrain, number 118, consisted of two ex- eration for the enemy will have an enemy, ing and three cars mall and passenger press John-t- -.gone. ri.'KW,VORK.Ffh-4-A Mrrla coaches. who gave his address ss the Phelan The amount of the loot taken by the Pan Francisco, was found In e The-- . bandit a. after Enterprise Destroyed. robbers is- - unknown et the Hotel McAIpIn today with filled the'r some policy, the room In furtherance of shooting Come, hurriedly d threw gh hts head. Bearm with pacKiitro. putted the belt rope, suppression of our jhe wo also a butter-wounlndustr.es Mm-w- as sidea new rifle with th price eUiwed down rwheh traln the U off &s U to be desire Britain's jumped necessary attached. Still At th Bellevu hosA poeseundee Sheriff realized. and disappeared. It was doubly necessary. Our tag h would probably ress.d pursuit. too successfully pital It was John Baumaster has started tn 8:15 manufacturers competed " - ' The robbery occurred about p. m. with her and It was to be- - our pr. vlkge cover. s. Gomes was alone In the express car. After to exist, not as an Industrial people, but PAN FRANCISCO IS Feb. D. their John had work, Irolber completed the for the purpose of providing England with -The engi- an abundance Morris, 38, stepson of Charles P Week of food. they pulled ''the bell cordr back end Francisco San went Franleft Ban neer stopped the train architect, destruction of our democrat c GaeHe found licThe to see what had happened. social system, the discouragement and cisco for a trip to Paris two months Gomes on tre floor of the express car prohibition o' all enterprise, leaving us ago and may have returned to New York, Gomes, whose first only Wave 1 fe on the Island, and the im- accord ng to Information given out today In a pool of blood. office. No Information had through the position . upon us er an alien language, at Weeks' name Is Marquis, was shot where-hbeen- - rcc etved ; ho we ver,tKA I ' Morris was At an 'AlkjnoKflr-hnsp'ta- t breast alien law and alien Idea made our said bullet had was the at the It McAlpln hotel Mr that he Is the liras taken .complete. bone and llttk! York lodged under the breast Our economic subjection was no less same Morris mentioned In the New waa out. Gome held dispatch. hop for hla recovery necessary that we might learn to forget Is wife lives married Morris and Hla his jin wife's Durango, free-doaddress married. Is our "former national and economic t to the Informaand acquiesce and, grow passive In is unknown, according -COyt: O. Melcht, railroad agent here, anseiwKude. And we learned our lesson. tion from Weeks' fflce. number of railroad pay our nounced that bur freedom. We forgot our worth several W forgot We cheeks and securities forgot our own native Seven 1 said language. thousand dollars are missing. AVe forgot Our Irish love and Irish way there was no way to fix the exact value by Official Oeatlnusd se Fag fm of the loot until complete check up has been made. (Coiums Twe.) Trotters Urged to' of Northwest Charms See et Man Arrested in California ev- ' By MICHAEL COLLINS of the provisional Government of j . Ireland.) (Special Cable to Bolt Lake Tribune ) (Copyright In Great Britain, and th if Jib Free Btate.) (Copyright In U. 8. by the King Feature l Syndicate, Inc., lft2L DUBLIN. Feb. 18. Ireland is n ancient fiatlog - which,, from the earliest times, had a d.stlnct civilisation. Wha; mode Ireland what sh was was that her people livdd wholly within the Island ae a separate and distinct community or nation, by virtue of a common system of law, culture, tradition and ways of life, and not depending upon any particular political conslltut.on. , , While this lasted, strangers who came were absorbed, and the national. ways were not . Interfered with, being by their attractiveness such as to enebls strangers to become Irish easily and thoroughly. the JingIlah Interfere nce Then cam and England's policy "ct robhery snd exploitation, and when she had conquered" us suff clently, she began to carry out her policy to use us to teed and enrich herself. But. bavin complete nationhood of oor own, which Britain had to acknesledg or trample out of existence, end hav.ng a social system which suited us and which gave our people security In all their rights hS? graphical propinquity, a tea easy task In In the co. Ireland than in her colon1 "CENTS VE HE CAN PROVE r Continued. Disunion and; Profiteering Boosts Price of 'Sudan Wives Factional Strife, Sure1 LONDON, Feb. 18 Lord Dewar, at a meeting of the Le)sian mission here, to -- Wreck Hope and .said that profiteering had spread erywhere s nee the war, even Into the of Button, People. the price ofwhereIves.it had extended tu Aspirations ft! end PAQES-FI- i ,, h ame Street City j ....... State 4? ) . |