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Show THE SALT"il-K- TRIBU"SUNDATiDlyTKq7 APEm 27, 1921. Potash and Perlmutter Discuss a Partner With Soul Above Business Sf MONTAGUE GLASS. n "Well, Mawruss, Mu Gips of A Gip took me to the Third Annual High Jinks and Follies of 1934 of the National Cutaway Dress Suit and Tuxedo Manufacturers of North America last night., Ah Pot,- - , flu-di- Allied the of an an inch. certainly thought that Harris the head designer for Kudin A Gips, would have had a fit there at at ong the', naat Whatv ahoimi a Head designtnalk' 'well, .Mai Gips wrote one of ths acts er .do when htr boas tries to be Moms by the name 'A Night in Old Seville.' funny eob or something?" in which he roasted the tar out of Perlmutter asked. "At the same time, Mawruss, Glps Daugherty. this here Teapot Dome scandal and the Income Tax. and also for a business man is certainly quite he got in a verv funny dig at the talented at such melses ss them Na- rhis Means Settlement of : on the trousers three-quarte- rs inch wide instead of one-ha1. lf Flsh-berg- i- denew Fall and Winter of 1924-2- 5 tional Cutaway Manufacturers Folsigns of tuxedos for having the braid lies of 1924." Abe continued. "Mrs. Obligations to United States. European Hold Princi-- , idea Applied to Reparation Govern Loans. By WILLIAM BIRD. j by The Salt 'Lake Trlhun PARISi April S. Belief Is widely expressed throughout Europe today that, granted final acceptance of the Dawes report, ths next Important peace move on the calendar Is a general settlement of the thorny problem! of International war debts. This mean principally the questing of allied debts to America, wtaiijti amount to nearly ten billion doHuifo, five plus years Interest. Although the United States government has pot rsried from Its stand that the dbts V must be paid in cash, with interest, President Coolidge only a; few reiterated the refusal to throw them into any world settlement pot nevertheless there is a fewlirvg almost everywhere in Europe that the year 1924 will see a serious begming . toward solution of the problem. ' This confidence appears to be built largely on the Dawes report, which, While it does not mention these debts fin the experts' committee was barred from discussing them), outlined conditions under which large international payments are possible. And, although the American government Itself was not a party to the sommittee's findings much eignifi-eanc- e is attached to the fact that President Coolidge promptly indorsed ths that hea?woved seeming tofnndito Its basic tprindp!ea ; PRINCIPLES OF PAYMENTS. These principles, as applied to international payments, are:-First Any solvent county can pay Its debts Jf the rest of the world will Allow it to. But those debts must be in paid only in one way namely, foods. , Second Payments may be made directly. if such goods are produced wholly within the country, without any evil effect upon exchange rates. An example Is Germanys coal dellv- tries to France. 7 Third If payment Is demanded In cash, then goods must be sold in excess of goods imported. Otherwise, an the Attempt to transfer money across exborder will result in upsetting the change rates. These principles, which afe set down by the Dawes report a fixed-nunalterable, are held by Bureaus to apply with equal force to man reparations and to interallied Therefore, if America accepts principles as applied to reparamust also admit their force she tions. fat regard to war debts. What It al! omen down to is that Europe will pay America If America will buy Europe's goods. Otherwise she. wont, because she can't. (5H)yrlht, rj 1921. i. I j I X r want to carry on your business on strictly modern lines If 1 not a partner with a business head, but a part- w4t with a businses stomach, business kidneys, and a business liquor Mawru n capacity. . support to its decision in advance, said an official to the writer today. And that Bums up the attitude of the other countries as well. Meanwhile, putting in operation of tpe Dawes reparations report is hangfirst, uning fire for several reason certainty about the German elections next Sunday and the French elections the following week; second, the unwillingness of France to suspend economic exploitation of the Ruhr until she gets definite guarantees In exchange. Those guarantees may take one of two forms either & definite agreement with England for cooperative sanctions in case Germany fails to execute the Dawes program as outlined, or an economic alliance with Germany. England in exceedingly hesitant rself to any defiabout committing nite line of future action and is now engaged in flirting with Moscow, so it would not be surprising to see the second of these alternatives prevail. A Nationalist success in next Sunday's German elections at first glance might seem to make such a combination impossible, but the impression is ALL ARE WILLING. gaining ground that the Nationalists fihe should .be perfectly, glad Jo have once in office would like Ramsay the same expert committee tackle MadDonaidbe less ferocious than the war debt question and pledge our when in opposition. 1 Gips says to me the other day that she always thought Max should ought to have been a play writer and that it was a big mistake for Gips to have gone into the cutaway, dress suit and tuxedo (business In the first place." "He dont have to prove that to me by writing amateur Shows, Abe," Morris said. "All I need is a reference from his partner, Sam Kudin, which- 1 sat at the same table with in Wasserbauers yesterday, Sam Abe. and he told the entire restaurant all about his troubles with Max. It seems, Abe, that Max has been so busy rehearsing his act for the National Cutaways that he ain't spent ten minutes a day in Kudin A Gips' store for over a month already. He also said that when Max was chairman of the entertainment committee of the Swamp Ridge Golf Club last year, he put on a Midsummer Night's Revel in the trees between the eighth and ninth holes which practically destroyed the course, and ev evervhodv which was admitted who never seen either show to he as good as the annual Grove Play put on by the Bohemian Club of Ban Francisco. GOOD BUSINESS. "Sam warned Max at that time that if he spent so much time away from the office a?ain,- he would bust up the parte hip on him, and I wouldnt Usefulness That Pays Its Own Way While you are at home in the evening, some other member of the family may use your pass. Maybe youil want to ride ten 'time a day on the cars instead of walking. Uee your ixies as, many times a day ac you want. mt: The more you ride, the less it costs ride. per If you are a merchant, get passes for your delivery boys. Ride home and back as often as you wish without its costing you a penny extra. Theres no bother about transfers. Shop aa long as you want and ride around as much as you want. You dont have to bother about change or ask far a transfer. More convenient than tickets you can buy the pass right on the cars from the carmen; Your wife will appreciate a pass for her own use to ride to the butchers, the grocer's, the bakers, to the scores and Aihops' downtown, to .take advantage f bargain days, to visit relatives and friends. By following the bargain offers she can more than save the cost of a weekly puns. If you are a salesman making oaUe around town, think of the money and tmip you will save by hoiqHng on any car an v time as often as you pleura and without extra col. Buy y,ur pass, every week on Saturday or Sunday and you will have a whole week in which to use it seven fuM days. Be just tike a policeman jurpp on any car any time any where, nde any where no fare to bother about no change to wait for do transfer to ask for. The First Zone pass is good over any line where a single fare w charged. The Second Zone passes are good over any hne in the First (Salt Lake) zone And .the Immediate adjoining acme. The Third Zone pass is good over all line from one end of, the system to the other and for transportation within any of the three zones or aJl three, Enjoy yourself more pet out among your friends more eee the movie town and visit the parks see how the city is growing ride just to rest your nerves- all without extra cost, for streetcar fare. more Read newspapers, buainero magazine1, books you can do this while you are ndlng on th. cars in1 you can ride oil you want to on your weeldv pass. save your strength. Ride Women, from store to store a block or a mile It costs you no extra fare- - if you have & pass. Jf a shower springs up, hop on a car anywhere any tune and ride where you are going. For a car of its. size and weight the good Maxwell could not be more sturdily or soundly built if you paid us double the price. There is no skimping, dnly the best of materials and workmanship. Genuine goodness is built into it. From an investment standpoint you'll discover no financial flaws. In fact you'll find its usefulness costs so little per mile that the car literally pays its own way. TAYLOR MOTOR CAR COMPANY Corner Motor Avenue and Second East Street Phone Wasatch 2187 Twu lug Car 875 F.O.B. Pitwlt be a blMiirprised tf the most honest his work as a orRiolwm Max gets-odramatist would be a decision from a Supreme Court judge that the defendant Gips'did not devote hi belt cotime and endeavor to the said partnership and the name is therefore dissolved with costa to the plaintiff Kudin." "Just the same, Mawruss, the time is gone by when it was thought that a business man, shouldn t ought to have a soul above business," Abe pro"Which it used to was the testedcase twenty or thirty years ago, that if a business man could play the first piano with anything but the yunder-stanfinger of his right hand, of he got the reputation being a dreamer and of being more interested in music than his business, understand me, hut nowaday what with these here High Jinks of ManuAssociations and entertainfacturer ment gotten up by country, clubs, many a business man get acquainted with a good prospect for hut sales s imitaforce bv giving a tion of Eddie. Cantor or doing somelike artistic ,thaf. thing - AN ASSET- Tn fact. Mawruss, if a firm CAPACITY has a big enough turnover nowadays, it don't do a 'bit of harm that they should have anyhow one partner who could be depended on to attend to the social side of the business," Abe continued. "Which since the past twenty years. Mawnts. it aint so much his business which Veeps a business man busy, as attending annual conventions, monfhlv meetings, even weekly and luncheon, not to mention High Jink. Low Jinks and Get Together Dinner. "Then there Is Rotrv Club. Club. Lions Clubs- - an Optimist clubs, not to mention Cuml. ber of Commerce and Jyvj1 ness Men's Associations, all of which mans time and take up a huslne hi ruin digestion,' o that If yon want to cerrv on yonr byiineas on strictly modern lines, Mawrusa. what you need is not a. partner with a twce-a-wekl- v w Beginning Sunday morning, May 4, you can ride the street can a many times as you wish fpr seven full days for $1.25. . , The more you ride the less the ride costs. The weekly pass, a facsimile of which is shown above, goes on sale next Saturday morning and will be honored on any car line in the fint fare zone for as many rides during the following week as you wish. Each week new passes will be issued. There will be special passes for use in the first and second fare zones sold at $1.75; passes for all three zones will cost $2.25. This is the cheapest transportation ever offered here. The passes are transferable and may be used by anyone holding them. Buy one the first week. Try it yourself. You will surely want one every week there- after. Read the hints in the column to the left. . Buy Your Weekly Pass From the Carmen on Your Line Also Sold at Our Uptown Ticket Office No. 2 West 2nd South. UmM Ib!Mand1sjom Kb first-clas- HkG (Hood .Kfidle smd Save ni want ouslness head, buL a partner with a business. But nowadays. business stomach, business kidneys, to fool your competitors about your business plans, you've got to travel to a convention city and spend a couple of night In a Pullman, in order to lfe to them at the windup dinner of the annual convention. That's still another reason why a man should ought to have one of them outside social partners who don't know nothing about the inside workings of the business, Abe went on. sometime There such n air of good fellowship and convenat. annual had liquor them tions. monthlv dinner and weekly Asaocla-tion- s luncheons of Manufacturer that fines in a while a member with a good head for' business but a bad head for Scotch is apt to let slip something to a.fellov member in the way of what prices he is getting for a competing line, with the result. Mawruss. that he going to find himself undersold when he next visits some of hi beat customers. And yet, Abe, I rot a letter from the secretary of .the International Association of Cloak, Suit and Waist ib Max's dress pants." Morris Manufacturer only this morning in "Mark my words. Ah.. iTohlbitlon is which he says we shouldn't fall to atcommented, "before will yet be tend the annual convention In Clevecompletely enforced, they land next month on the groundsvthat platikeeping Scotch whisky in pure num, because bv that time even ster- It was good for the industry," Morris Scotch said, t be wont tilver proof." ling "Pure T know,v Abe concluded, "but FOR LIVER PILLS. aav which Industry, Maw-mhe didn't "Well, that why I say that for because the only Industrie doing business according to modem which are benefited bv annual conthere shotfld ventions of anv other industry are the methods, Mawruea. ought to be at least one partner in and reataurant industry, the cia business concern who doesnt have hotel industry, and. In a smaller way. to worry about ''business, but who gar the playing card and dice industry. should ought to spend his entire time 'Not to sav anrthfog about the that his part- headache ruining his health so remedy industry and the ner could attended to the selling and liver pill Industry." Morri added. manufacturing end." Abe observed. right, Abe, Morris (Copyright. 14. by the Bell Syn"Maybe youre said, "but I cant help wishing that dicate. !nc.) we was hack again In the nineties when business men didn't belong to ACREAGE HEAVY. :mWT associations snd so manufacturers'1 forth. In them days, you could lie Special te The Tribune. R!PKRT. Idaho, April 56. J. A to your competitors about the amount for the of business you were doing, while you Comer,- bead agriculturist were eating your regular lunch Just Amalgamated Sugar company of Ogaround the corner0 from your place of den, Utah, speaking at the Rotary umi a business liquor capacity." And I suppose that such a business partner should .also have talent to get up such ,&n entertainment as Max Gips writes?" Morris- sug. gested. "He should anyhow have t&lent to enjoy such an entertainment a Uip writes,"- Abe corrected, "which it wasn't up to me last night to he to Max and tell him that he should ought to be working1 for Zicgfeld or was there only something, because as a friend and not ss a salesman & Gips. Rudtn doing business with "But next tq me wa sitting Kddy to Who seha woolen Oppenheimer, Kudin tk. Gips. and not only did he Max on his have to congratulate show, but ie also had to drink some of Max's Scotch which Max had in a sterling silver .flask. And from Just smelling that Scotch. Mawrusa, I should judge that if It had been In a plated flask, it would have ett through the metal and burnade a hole modern-busines- 1 luncheon. Thursday,., said that 760$ acres of beets have been signed for the Rupert-'Hafactory. 7500 for Burley and 7250 for Twin Fails. He added he that expected the local acreage would reach $000 acres, he added. The reed beds in this locality are the best he has seen in Idaho. The public affair committee of the Rotary club was Inntiucted to make an effort to induce the sugar company to transact fact the business of the Rupert-Fau- l lory at Paul Instead of at Burley, as has been done for some time past. ul VISITOR FROM CANADA. Special t The Tribune. PJ0AVBR. April Burt, a bishop of the I D. 8. church at Card-ato- n. Canada, has just paid a visit to the family of hi brother, the late William Burt, after attending conference and later visiting 8L George, his birthplace. Mr. Burt is postmaster at Cardston and one .of the leading merchants of that place. While in Heaver Mr. Burt has been gathering the genealogy of his mother's people. He will visit relative at Sallna. Manti and Balt Lake on his way home. FIRE EQUIPMENT BOUGHT. Special to The Tribune. PLEASANT GROVEL April 2. Pleasant Grove ha juwt Invested In new fire Apartment equip. men1. As soon as the hose arrives from Angeles the boy will be ready to cope with any ordinary fire of five miles. within Is ' MOOSE WILL INITIATE. te The Trtbsoe. RUPERT. Idaho, April 36. The local Moose lodge will initiate a large of candidates on April $0. Twin clg Falls lodge will assist and a dance will follow the work. Special s. J ' . e I 8A Pf Walnut Dining V I Wtvtf Special. . Room Set RELIABLE FURNITURE COiSSWa |