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Show s FOREIGN V DESERET EVENING NEWS. NEWS, SOCIETY. NEWS SECTION THREE SAT I ItPAV XOVEMHEH I.' 1 1) 1 1) MUSIC, THE DRAMA. AND SALT LAKE CITY UTAH UTERATUR2 EIGHT RAGES Nobody in Ireland Who Isnt Dissatisfied O'- - in Jutt Around 'h'ni Seem Unable to Find Anything to Pleate Them in Pretent Situation Nationaliih, Southern Unionist , Sinn Feinert and Thote of Othef Shade! of Futu'-A- cr0" "N American Journey From Dublin Cattle, Stronghold of Britith Rule In Dublin, to Head Fein, partem of AccompLthed Without Mithap-Belf- atft World beating Lot of Enthu.iattic Worker , For Cau.e of Unionitm. Who Love Statittic. and Hate Idea of Home Rule. ftej0ntjn V. Z!r lui UBL1N, Oct. 21. 1 bevn run pld) and moved away a block or ae to where me nlng around Ireland for several whom Sinn Fein U anathema, meet day looking for a man satisfied and talk and shake their heads in gloom. I found with something connected In m gloom la a newspaper office, more of it la a fine mansion way wuh aoma phase of the Irish 4Jl Vuaatwn. I on one of Dublins most attractivo residential hart not found hint still more In aa institution where werk-ar- e Tusiw I have aought kirn in Dublin, 1 for Ireland's weal sit at desks and dictate to hara aought him in Belfast. I h vs gona . .Inta, , tka Stenographers and wonder how tha deuce things are Nadonal-laheadquarter. . of - Iruh In search of him; Into tha lair of tha going W be edaxed lldhg without aothr eiplo!bn. Sinn Frm; I was getting Into suck' a depressed state Min tha atronghold of Ulster L'nioniam; into tha myself that I expected to find a crlsie sitting opposite to me st nkoda of Southern L'nioniam; into placti hrs tha partisans of Dominion Rule and tha my hotel when I returned for lunch and a deadlock partisans of ciouching la the passage outside my room ea my way nothing in particular do moatly congregate. But he to bod. waan't there. Tha Nationalist ware diaaatuflad bacauaa But then the spirit of paradox that pervade they hare juat bad a had beating at tha Ireland asserted Itself. Look aa I would, one X from poll tha Sinn Feinere, aa a mult of which their dialika had got out of the placet where the various manifor the Sinn Fein, who walloped festations of the Irish Question are poked and die-rte-d, them, and for tha Britieh government, who made it I could find no sign of a crisis. The streets possible (so tha Nationalists aayV for the Sinn Fein to the city of two governments, ware brim- -; Dublin, tf wallop them, are about fifty-fiftful of life and feisty. Ciria with the most roguish The Sinn Ftmera, in of their aucceaa at the polla, were diaaatiafiadepita tf eye and reddest ft cheeks swung along , the bacauaa tha' police pe rail ted in aidewalkt, their minds aparently at remote ' from raiding tholr quarter! at more or leu regular intervale (from recent newa the Irish, Question aa from the political pussies agiit looke aa if they wouldnt be allowed to maintating the Eskimos. And children who would have tain any quartan at a good chance for prises at any beauty show played all); becauae many of their and laughed and glanced op at the ejmbef were in Jail; becauae their f ture waa stranger with to aay the leaat; and confiding brown or gray or blue eyee Dublin is becauae, in the apecific cau of Mr. Arthur Griffith, simply full of beautiful children, many of them, of the Irish republic, whom I found in the barefooted and with smudgy cheeks,' all Dublin Sinn wholly Fein lair, the government had adorable. And that evening found the streets! juat held up hia mail for a week and then dumped it on him filled with people and aoldiers chatting cheerfully (another Britiah atrocity) all in with Dublin girla. e .Jump. gittin)r at h.a desk, partly concealed by the mau of mail, AMONG THE ULSTERMEN. and looking deeply aggrieved. So 1 1 The Ulster Unionists are dissatisfied the train for Belfast next morning in -because a happier frame of mind, which was they go to sleep thinking 0f the Improved by1 possibility of Home -tho charming scenery full of thatched n Tvivh republic becoming realities, have cottages and horrible nightmares ,n which bright green fields and bright blue rivers and funny they find Ulster squat hills rising abruptly out of tho landscape and part of a Home Rule or independent and wake up next morning at on ever their shoulders as ,lf to glancing say, just that much more ferocious. The Southern Unionista-wme I Faith, an Oim a mountain!:: at Th ho are Irihmen not residing in Ulster who believe eight of Belfast, a humming, throbbing tnoiem city, . in whoso waalU juet stuck out on anion with England are dissatisfied because every hand, fur they ther cheered In. So ft was in a really gsy fram always have in their minds the picture of what their kit would be if Ulster thould be of miad that I walked boldly into th jaw of UJ- separated ator which Unionism, hlf-iptin- g Would deprive them of the Ireland, to be told that reports t moral support of the people in the north Ireland of problems were exsgge rated, fhr who have tyrifk the same political ideas aa themselves. Belfast at least was .tod. busy making 'money This makes the Southern Unionists, who are bother with the Irish Question. . of conlargely ciliatory , At the newa that I was an American journalist, the Ulster Unlonieta rushed at me from all typ, very very gloomy. Some of them can see abquar- -' solutely no way out If there is one thing that deter. They leaped from inner .rooms, simply briat- presses them more than the past and present it is ling with statistics. They popped up from behind the future. desks, pounded tables, rqn their fingers through their ABOVE At Left, Po., Office. Dahlia, AA racket la Ika IrUh What do you think should be the solution of hair. They talked by actual count, three of tha BfvLOW Aerll ISIS. It StaaSa Teay Esaetly as at tha Ea af tha At Left i Belfast's Mass If! oeat City Hall, tha Mast the Irish Question? I asked one of the most promFlghttag Thrca Striking Ball. leading men of the Unionist party in Belfast werw aaS a Half Yeara Age. Ik lUeh Metre pells af inent among them. ' Irelaad. s t . to me at the earn time within an hoar of talking , AT RIGHT Sackville Street, Dahlia's Prlacieal ", It is insoluble." he groaned. And he V' .' Tharaachfare, aa the IS1 from the peaceful landscape between my emerging AT RIGHT relapsed laterler af Belfast Cltj H)(I.Te Laxsriea Traawwtattoa Ela- Rebel lloa Left It. Today the Raised Area Oa the 1 into gloom. Rlekt.la Sarroaaded Dublin and their city. Pert rays (Heat Wealth af the stroackold af lister raloalats. by a Hick Peace. UUSLIN AN IRISH PARADOX . They painted In agonized accent what would full of pretty girls and those absurd jaunting-car- s, then I got to Dublin I had a sort of subconquately explained military reason, were uncomhappen to Belfasts prosperity if Home Rule or th FileqTof the back numbers of several Sinn Fein which take the place of cabs, and only groups of scious idea that, since the British Irish republic ever got hold of It. They told m fortably prevalent in the immediate neighborhood. government, with papers which had been suppressed were ; there unarmed soldiers to make you realize its genuine Number 6 Harcourt Street was its infantry, artillery, cavalry, tanks, machine to climb the City Hall Tower (I had full of rebels wildly with for all to read; the ones I guns were full of the already been meditating doing something of the - nd aeroplanes, hadits headquarterathere. the character. But then, I reflected, this is Ireland rebellious hair- among whom I sat rather un- - doings J and sayings of Deperused, kind) and of Valera, president and that explained a ffcod deal. r must necessarily be hidden in a rotn comfortably, especially when one emiiingly remarked-t- o - tho Irish r'ew the biggest shipyard in the world, the. United StatesAnd, in repubtic..in IN SINN FEINfi LAIR. cave in the suburbs or under a bed or another that there would probably b) another his inner office, Mr. Arthur Griffith, said by eom biggeqt spinning mill, 'the there were several something. Sinn Fein headquartersare at No. 6 Harcourt The eat of government of the Irish repub-- , This notion was strengthened by my first walk a! er biggest things, among which they might hare to be t)ie rea! head of Sinn Fein (De Valera, I was rtf; mg street Ail there were elaborately pretending that Jic in Dublin had been raided about once week told, was Sackville street, Dublins leading thoroughfare, nc,ud h only a figurehead! sat, half hidden by for some time before my visit And I wondered what his where I waa confronted with the ruined post office they didnt know there wafe any other seat of govmail, and peered out ta a highly unsatisfactory ' ernment in Dublin. To them the Irish republic was American journalists, casually visiting there, were and numerous other reminders of that bloody Easter - v tistice about the greatf numbers of Belfast men wf 'world. -i. a reality; the soldiers in the streets (a squad supposed to do when monarchists and republican Week of 1916 when Britain and the Irish in the war, the infinitesimal number who.' republic Th. atmosphere o dissatisfaction dogged me fought marched right past while I was there) were the bad their little weekly parties. However there was r ran'.... ,) ... . grins. rr-'were paupers. ter I emerged from the SinB Fein lair (still won minions of a hostile powjbr, who- for some not ade- - no raid. ' W The post office is nothing but a shell. The outall tho produced aeroplane doth for all thV dering whether I should meet a raid on tho thresh- er walls are standing intact and so is the portico Allied armies, said one, jumping In front of me with its big. pillars, but the inside is a mass of "We produced fifty per eent of all Irish oats. walls all shot tq pieces, the windows are said a second, getting around th first onee right just gaunt openings, and everywhere there are shelf and bullet flank. , J ; marks, though many have been plugged 'with putty "And forty-thre- e per cent of all Irish fruit, and made to look as neat as possible. There are still 'chimed in a third, attacking ms from behind. ! a aeore or so of vacant lots In the immediate viI never saw such statisticians. ' , Statistics war cinity of the post office, partly hidden from view to them what "how do you do? is to other people. I by high board fences, but through knot-hole- s you take tf my hat to them. Ulster has the most ef can see more smashed walls and heaps of debris, - flcient and workers for a cause in th 'it rem that the 1916 street battle oc(Special Correspondence.) According to the new plan, the Orfront Berlin to' Budapest, will lose of 26. Oct. The list ient Express, instead of running front ONDON, wucR of their importance. curred only yesterday: On Sackville street and Paris tJfroughGerrnany, will go across waa loquacious and gesticulatory, .. He f by also be deprived of much, of the Irishman things Germany has lost Germanys loss of Importance on l he .nearby thoroughfares there is active rebuilding most vital trunk railways of Eugope t through traffic from England , v Frefich.ferrltory to the Italian frontisnt. - Compared to an Ulsterman talking on Ul plunging into war grows day will nor be confined going on now scaffoldings are everywhere so it Sweden, Norway, Finland, and North-er- a solely to the OriThe lalest items are ier, through northern Italy and th by day. sters version of the Irish Question he is a clam. -( ent Russia. Express seem, for anoth soon may. .look as it did before the followers of new Jugoslavia to Junction with the several routes of express railway traver plan contemplates the alno deflecting to lose stands Germany the They were too active and forceful to aow , Pearee and MacDonaiigh made it their battle-groun- d old route, and thence through- Sofia ' route taken before the war by the celel to which, before the wan, she congreat through express route along the anybody tc et ebrated Nord feeder ran to (Constantinople. gloomy in their company, but it waa Express, which from As a but when I saw it I got the impression that the Sinn it bank f the Rhine-gtributed the vital central link. If Switzerland, of Paris through Cologne and Berlin to to which Amerlcountless a see thousands have in the state- of the Irish Question on would that line some ef Entente from easy running Fein battie was a very recent affair indeed and plans nowjnjsontemplation Petrograd. , Instead of running through cans. and English travelenLJmillel -- that in Jugoslavia to the Danube to ( north ermany,-Hhus the route or the point reach lands maturity, particular day both . Themselves in . pre-wa- r (it has a complete change throe This fmtng days. tuning to the Irish most connect with the Rumanian railway r the pockets and tickling the overweenroute will, to alt probability, yield Brat times caily) was causing them disquiet- important European expresses republic must be extremely scarce in Dublin. of They ing prMe the Prussians, it is system, thus providing communication place to that through' Belgium and will no longer be through Germany, Sinn Fein and Irish Nationalism and !h to have this trainvbear eastwardplanned from "1 1 corper and saw a Strasbourg, now once mure French, with Odessa, the great metropolis of , over the old -- oute of the Orient large or, at most only for a stretch far Paris, to and thence; to all points in 4 many shades of with great v- , southern poster with the words Vote for ltussia, and other important' Express through Strasbourg. Stutts-ga- rt .the Basel, (Kelly, I shorter than before the war. .Swiss lake and mountain paradise - kpmenne were but and Kussian from far route cities. Munich, they think his name was) and strike a blow for thence which Neither via main satisfied. or line that is such a prime favorite with Prague, The first great railway complete feeder would run for a single mile capital of the 'new republic of CzechoWhich brings me back to the tourist. It is proposed to alter in such a way independence. And, in a book shop within a stones starting point of and a over slovakia, German .across the . of., There is mournttig and apprehension railway, j territory a no have kis will Germans article; nobody in Ireland, apparently, is satlonger The thenew Poland, to Petrograd, with a in Germany at the prospect of toeing throw of the ruined post office, I saw in the window for this substitute for that, project Orbranch southward to Moscow, wits' of the the former route of the Orient Express pristine railway greatness. One of the isfied. In other complicated questions ther is often a book about Pearse, the president of the Irish share in it is thatBefore was carefully worked out during the collapse of the old route of the the war, this the underlying reasons, it is said, for the an underdog who is dissatisfied and an ient Express. war Nord will Express French by The of much republic!1 who was shot after the Easter Rebellion route disappear experts. upper dog, holding of the Frankfort Import fair surrounded by a glamour attrain, the between tremendous Bf who ia not Not so in Ireland. ffed-ce and ,a Paris,, this fall, and for Its contemplated repConstantinople, It la a amsl) body which seemed to be largely high praise of him. ers. the Frankfort-Berll- n and through Italy rand Jugoslavia, has no taching probably to no other train in etition twice yearly from now on. Is , t entirely surrounded by a jigsaw I rubbed my eyes. I took another look at the expresses. missing link, considerable the universe, ran from Paris to the that the Frankforters. and with them work of grhdiifgrand ballasting would The Germans, apparently, are also other Oermsns, are alarmed at that nobody can master, and notf only surrounded ruins. I walked back, in a daze, toward my hotel. .frontier of Germany at Avicourt, and many have t? bg dope to fit It for the great to lose the quick rail rute which their the dark nrohshirtl', concealed to - by it bat saturated with it, And then, on a street only a few blocks from the then continued over German soil permeated by it, lying oa . between Engto -- .line used present-da- y railway protects In Ent come dm e If It became doubtediy subir-Strasbourg, Stuttgart, land through tente countries, and are seeking to the ground with tha thing sitting on its chest. It Bfore th. Castle, the stronghold of British ..rulf in Dublin, stitute for the old Orient Express com England desirous of stave off threatened disaster. Frankfort, and Munich to the frontier of Geris incredible that so small a place can have so line. For the Rumanla-Russi- a only a few blocks from ruined Sackville street, I big feeder one .of Europes principal railavoiding sea travel could cross to some whence and Austria-Hungarmany a a problem. It aeems as insoluble as Dublins Gae--li-c section short of track would have to continental port, and then, availing read over a doorway the sign, in large letters, "Sinn In Junctions one the has of way past be built, from some point In Jugoslav--it went through Vienna, Budapest, themselves of the finest railroad stations .to the. street signs, which look like Russian with AftUf Fein Bank, and ascertained that, right over. the-Fo- e Belgrade and Sofia to Constantinople; to the Danube, Where connect Ion -- Germany, retchexpresses through north Copeifhagen, ths Dan-- " t world, and shivers at the thought of and Yiddish be would made already-existin- g with leanings, seem to the stranger. capital, entirely by land except for lh seeing this gnsd emrow, crumble hdauarters of Sinn Fein Itself! As will be noted. It ran for the last Rumanian rallwaye. short passages over Inland straits.' to decay. On the way back from Belfast to Dublin th very I had. come from one camp to another. On my part of Its Journey over a section If this plan bears fruit,' Germany But. given ths prejudice against being , In the meantime, modest Rtuttgtrt ad through- - ; will not. only cease to provide the to Germany even for a fewJhoura far away In the south of Germany, is train passed a station called .Mate. It must have ; No Mans of ihe Berlin . link central in great the rout of the which by ths war. It is more than brushing up in anticipation of having been named after the Irish Question. . Land without knowing jt! no... must say thaf , route, the ambition to control Orient Express but two line formerly the reformed Nord Exnress run probable that the bulk of travelers one of the contributing causes of feeders of HOBART RAMS AT. ...s that great from Ham Dublins Ne Mans Land is a mighty cheerful place. war route, from T. It YBARRA. , England will " steamboat 'through It. burg through Berlin to Vienna, and . across the North eeagoandbyland Germany's downfall' at the ) (Copyright, 1919, by Edward Marshall) (Copyright "nV m t V ' - ac-ua- Ire-Un- d, .k S !' Mat-the- f ' - ter , -- - -- 7''" ---- - - FAMOUS ORIENTAL EXPRESS MAY BE LOST TO GERMANY best-equipp- :r 5vS23I,Jil;rl ' t -- - - -O- betwixt-and-betwe- So-and- en -- far-fam- ' I! y, U . 1 - . h-- - , Il ,r j |