OCR Text |
Show v r 7 r" vv y t vr t fry yf i THE u $e3 She Si CtHrit M BIOT. Published Dally except Sunday Member of Audit Bureau of Circulation. ' week One month One Tear Blnfle Coulee . The shore rates aPP'T to Utah iaho. N.vadS end Wyoming, other states by mall, per moeta, On ? 1.0. to Bend rem'ttances and buelnees communteatleP THE DESEP.ET Salt Lake City. Ltah. Address correspondence and other matter Qbllettion tl THE EDITOR- - tr Cone Hunton Woodman, Inc Advertlal ng Representatlre. New Tork fltv. !2S Sth Avs. , 1 30 Jf Wells fitr. Ch'cago-, Detroit Kit f.lghner Bid SOJ Victor Bldg Ksnsas City. !W fonMtntion Bldg. Bt Louis. Victoria Bldg Ban Prandeco, 1081 Monadnock Bldg Loa Angalea. 21 Trust A Savings Bldg. Cltjn Iis Entered at tha poatofflcs at Balt second elase matter according to Act of Cong March , H7I. Ik 'I le exclusively The Aeeoclated dlspa tnh the use for republlcatlon of all newe in or not credited to It ptherwlee creOUad newe puo.ieneo the local newspaper, end aleo of specialof herein. republlcatloa right patches hare r also reserved. Prcee ? .- -4 DESERET NEWS gard to the Turks. It la safe to say that the British are beat informed on the question of Mohammedan discontent, and the rest of the world can well believe that that country knows wbat it Is doing. In America we can have only superficial judgments in the matter. It to not a question about our preferences for the city on the Golden Horn Great Britain has adopted the policy of safety first." Is It not reasonable to think that the rulers of Great Britain know best the wisdom of the course they are pursuing? Washington Evening filer. haa Iona been a fashion of wit to la flippancies at the oxpeoeo of Although the proverbial chin whls-koof the Bon. Hiraae Holruln of Hlok-vllhave long wince dlmpprared from tfreleo of reputable tbo glboa at report tho men elected by the people to eerre tha interest of tho people survive. Sustained, effort at levity on one pertieo-l- ar gople noon becomes perfunctory and rapidly elnka to the level of irreoponnlble abuse. However Juat may be some of the criticism of the United States Senate, baaed on suspicious conditions attending a few elections to ltwmembotahlp, tfaesq criticism are Invariably directed against an Individ- ual wbooe caoe beoomee notorious because of a violation of custom, and these Individual senatore are not to bo treated by tho critic as typical and representative. The representative branch In any con a try ayotem of government la entitled to the deepest respect. It la the element of government for which people have fought and suffered; tho medium of expression of tho popular will. It utmost purification to to ho sought with enduring patleooa but Its Indiscriminate mil tfleatlon. cither In terms of serlou discussion or of popular Jest, can only work for harm. s-e Con-STo- oa ra lo been circulated of the MANY stories have some of t Jl . x Both-Grea- of the more famous Russian crown Jewels in various' cities of the world. The famous Orloff diamond has been reported to have been on sale in Paris, London and New York. The history of this atone, which is said to weigh 191 carats, would fill a book that would rival any work of fiction. Some say the diamond was one of the eyes of the peacock over the peacock throne of Others claim it was one of the eyfes of a statue of Brahma in a temple on the island Aur-ungze- I 4 t pur-poel- es light-head- ed ed j TUESDAY OCTOBER It 7 "N TWENTYjy EARS AGO. the FOee of tbo Deseret Hewn. SEPTEMBER 10, ISOS-- , Announcement was mad la Salt Loko City that on January j, the Oregon Short Xln and. the Oregon Railway A Nariga- -' tion companies would be merged, and that H. Bancroft of the Oregon Short XJn Would be general manager. David Wilcox, vice president and general coanxel for the Delaware A Hudson Railway company, seat to Pretfdent Theodora Roosevelt a letter demanding that the federal government proceed against tho miner organisation on the grounds that it was a conspiracy to prevent Interstate commerce. Tho third hearing on motion for a new trial In the case of R. Is King and James lynch, convicted of murder In the first for tho killing of Colonel Godfrey Pro wee In tbo Sheep Ranch gambling house, began in the Third district court. Indian Agent MaJ. H. P. Mytea left Balt IAW City with 179,000 In bio possession for disbursement among Indiana of the White Rock agency for land taken from them for settlement. An eooort of cavalry accompanied Major Myton, At the final asset on of the annual reacting of the Grand Army of the Republlo, la Washington, D. C General T. J. Stewart of tho orwaa elected commander-in-chie- f ganization for the ensuing year. Checks in payment of a dividend of $t00,-00- 0 were dlttrlbutsd to shareholders la the Sliver King mine. It was the tenth dividend of a like amount, paid by the great mine. long-cloak- ed tf A 1922 TT- - Vrouk -- S 10 rr CONGRESSIONAL CRITICISM RUSSIAN CROWN JEWELS. of Seringgham, India, Most connoisseurs agree, however, that it is undoubtedly of Indian origin. "Very little is definitely known about any 1022. 10. . OCTOBER SALT LAKE-IT3- L large collection of jewels, and perhaps least'of all about the marvelous crown jewels of RusCONDITIONS IMPROAED. sia. In fiction precious atones are usually asT is pleasing: to note, from ihe report of the sociated -- with deep plots of murder'and in- United State employment bureaufTBaTUtSh trigue. Mention any historical jewel and it ia keeping pace with improved industrial and brings up visions of crouching figures, shadowy Inbusiness conditions throughout the country. walla of pagan temple, heathen gods, show which greater deed, there are few aectiona priests and the rattling of Throats,. The stimulus. Not only are men In practically all rulers of Russia are said to have been insatitha industries employed, but there is & shortable seekers after jewels; it Is reported that Indiage of miners, as welt as unskilled labor. their agents have. continually eeourwd the cating clearly that no one need be without world la aearch of hidden Treasures. Many of the jewels of the famous collection had been ploymenl If be elects otherwise. gince the settlement of recent strikes there acquired aa gifts, some were purchased and baa been a pronounced Improvement in all others secured by conquest. The crown of lines of business activity. Here m Utah the Peter the Great to set with The Eye of Tamerabundant harvest has contributed largely to lane," reputed to be the pigeon blood largest tbia improvement while the sugar factories, ruby in Europe and whose acquisition is said which are beginning their season's run, will to have cost scores of lives. keep many in agricultural aeotiona employed A photograph has been recently sent out until after the holidays, when it will be from Moscow showing the great collection of nearly time to begin planting again. The coal Russian erown jewels assembled together and normines are reported to be turning out above as still being intact. This picture has served mal production, while the metal mines, includto dispel the rumoTT that . the Soviet ruler, force ing the great copper industry, have large whose rapacious tendencies have been taken at work and could employ more. Some of the for granted, had disposed of part of the colsevon strike went railroad shop men who put lection, and seemed to verify the report that eral months ago are still unemployed, although the accumthey are guarding and tha strike is regarded by the railroads as a ulated historic treasure preserving Russia as jealously of thing of the past. There la also considerable as did the crar and his predecessors. building activity, many contractor reporting work enough under way to keel, them busy the READING AND READERS. greater pari of the winter. On the whole, therefore, the outlook is considerably improved over the student and the seeker after knowlwhat it was a few months ago, and in a short one of the chief pleasures of life is edge time bids fair so to develop that the calamity found in the realm of books. That man to forhowler will have to change Ida tactics or seek tunate who discovers this one of lifes pleasB more congenial clime, for there will be no ant places and finds delight therein. Lincoln place for him in all of Uncle Sam's broad do as a lad discovered this realm as he lay prone main. on his face on the hard, rough floor of his fathers cabin, reading by the light of a pitch CHRISTI INS AND MOHAMMED ANS. pine fire. Robert Collyer, the son of a blacksmith, himself a blacksmith, discovered it, when Middle Ages there be debated with himself whether be should SrNCE the Crujades of the not been, perhaps, such tension between spend bis first small amount of money for the Christian and 'Mohammedan world aa at candy or a book, and the book won. In this howpresent The world is not confronted, two moment he began the climb which led him the of demerits and merits the ever, by step by step from the anvil to the pulpit, and great jreligioua classes. There is as a made him finally a teacher and a preacher of matter of fact little reason under present wonderful power. Many another boy has made circumstances why these great religions the important discovery of this realm by means the of Out should be in conflict of a borrowed book which he has thought unfathomout of somewhere, would pass away an idle hour. Thousands today mysterious able, reasoning, there are growing religious have become interested in hooks through the animosities In the Mohammedan world that broad minded liberality of Andrew Carnegie, remay bring a crusade again Into action. All who has distributed libraries ail over the land. port that come from Egypt Syn end MesBut no matter how or when, be who once beopotamia' indicate a religious hatred for Ihe comes loyal to this realm of books, rarely loses to- English and the French. Great Britain rulos that loyalty and In his library, be it ever so nation other Mohammedans than more any day meagre, he finds one of the chief delights of of the world, and Great Britain has foreseen life and an important means of education and the necessity of making certain concessions to culture. . the Mohammedans. As might be expected, tne attitude of difThe English know better than anybody ele ferent classes of people toward books and with whom they are dealing and the dangers reading differs widely. In Greece and Rome, and of a gehud, the uprising of a religious war. for long years after these nations ceased to They have given the Egyptians their freedom. exist, the treat majority of people could mot They have also established in Mesopotamia the read at ail. Today, notwithstanding the genKingdom of Irak, an Arab independence. The eral enlightenment of the world, there are French withdrew from Cilicia, which they large classes of people who read only under could hold only at the risk of a probable war a sort of compulsion, if they read at til. They with the Turkg. They have eonCmed them- do not like reading. They do not choose to selves exclusively to Pym south of Atoxan- - read. With this class, "ignorance to bliss and tia dretta. The leading Christian powers of Europe folly to be wise." It ia scarcely worth while to knew that they had to make some concessions deal with them, except to hope that of their to the Moblems in view of the agitation of the number there may be here and there one who lallr. may accidentally stumble onto something that The present conflict in Turkey is not gov interests him, and so become an earnest erned hv European questions; niM'lur does it reader after a while. have its limits between the Tuik ami the There is another large cis-- f reader Britain and Trance have who stand a step above the class Christians. mentioned just been oblqjPiTto make copcessions hitherto to aod who read merely for amusement Practhe Mohammedans. That is precisely w hat they tically all the of this class is light, reading are doing in yielding now to the Turks. trashy, frothy stuff, that cannot by any stretch A question now arising that reflects tha of the imagination be classed as literature. future peace or otherwise of Europe is the These readers seise upon anything thdl comes enlistment by Trance of black soldiers from m their way. the more sensational the better. m Africa. She is taknorthern her provinces 1 hey flit like swallows, hither and thither, ing over 80,000 of these young colored Mohamand aimless, and of coursS they get medans to be trained in Franca, It will hot be nowhere. There is no intellectual quality about many years before Frame will have trained such reading any more than there is in whisa million of these Mohammedans to fight. In tling or whittling. It is merely the easiest wav matters of war ihpu of that religion do nit to pas away the time or to satisfy a morbid have any conscientious, scruples, especially desire for the sensational or the salacious. The when fighting Christiana only salvation for this class of Just how deep-seatthe present agitareadeesfs that by the merest chance, one now tion is against Christian Europe we do not and then may light upon some book that witl know. However, it has been deep-seatenough make an appeal to his intellect, and that by deto cause Great Britain to concede a number grees he may come to recognise the intellecof Mohammedan demands. It has made France tual Integrity of his mind. taka notice. Lord Heading sent home from InAnothfriarge and Increasing class of people, dia a warning to his people to be careful about like Lincoln, read! with some purpose. They realtheir treatment of ihe Turks, and especially not ize that here and now history is being made, and to disturb the Caliphate in Constantinople. Genso they read fust of all the daily paper, to eral Townsend, a British hero of Kut-- o keep m touch with wbat is going on in the has sent to Lloyd George a warning against the world. There are great questions of war and dangers In the Near East; he strongly advised peace, of government, of social and political the policy which.lhe premier adopted with re- - J problems, of Industry, of religion; matters of . A T' rr $ A ri Amencan Chicle CW presents the v.- j .4 . A,'' . j. . cl s - v T os A . .A r vr trrr s ), ee , in QUALITY GUMS Wintergreen flavor l'A . . Beemans Pepsin Yucatan Peppermint flavor 1 Licorice flavor . . . Black Jade Tutti-Frut- ti flavor . . . . California Fruit ! such vital importance that no intelligent man EDITORIAL PICKUPS can afford to neglect. Here it may be well to say that it is not necessary or wise to read RIGHTS OP HEX. everything that is found in ones favorite newsTh action of man of Syracua H. more ia than it T., in uln a rich widow for paper, any necessary to e&t $10,000 h Jilted dm everyth jpg that ia on the bill of fare at a hotel him on th for thoir wedding, tbcuo dy to should sufficient clda be read th subject of on Interest table; but pro keep man well and truthfully informed as to what to Ins discussion of ths moral, if not man to recover for legal right- - of going on in the world and the right and wrong injured feel logs and other things which women claim accompany rein human affairs. fund to honor an agreement to merry. MAY HE ALW AYS BE PRESENT. It ia altogether prohahlo that the Syracuse man would not have conSenatof Smoot has served notice in the sidered It worth while to do more than make a mild protest if a fiSenate that in future he Would refuse unanance without money had cast him imous consent to permit printing in the ConWhen a matrimonially overboard. gressional Record of political speeches of senamen' feeling are hurt money wil. tors not delivered in the Senate. Hereafter sena th provide healing beyond power ators w ho ask leave to extend their remarks in of almost anything else, and In this the Record will have to wait Dll they see the reeoect man not unlike woman. There will be no difficulty In unUtah senator going out of the door. The savderstanding that a wealthy widow ing to the government will be tremendous and runs no particular risk, matrimonialit may be that it will be poaaible to lay off a speaking. In diacardlng one or any number of employees from the Government ly reasonable number of men. for she Printing Office, btorage apace will be conis quite certain to find to served and the burden On tho mails greatly welcome the opportunity somebody of helping relieved. These are practical considerations. her spend the money probably acThese speeches neither add to nor substraet quired in the main part by a former that fact anould not frorp h .ccrr of hmnan knowledge. Nobody hoaband. a Even rich widow to Jilt a man prompt v ? ..tt;i anws' out it will certainly who doubtless had mads tentative fret those crossroads statesmen who will here on plans for using a little money own cam after have to pay for pnntm-the- ir ilmsalf. materia men be able Ths will only way paign It is quite possible that It may have a to ascertain their rights In such matters is to test them in the courts, boomerang btfect in that the senators will aad Syracuse man appears tp insist on actually delivering these speeches in have ths th courage to make the test. the hope of cither getting them into the Rec Eves if hs does not get any money, ord that way or else tiring Senator Smoot so be may provide a little profitable enthat h will go out of the room and make it lightenment for men who may be inclined to seek the collection of money possible for unanimous permission to be obfrom women who Jilt them. Canton tained New York OmmerciaL 1 Do ws want an irmf of ghosts to follow ths first jingo into war! Does ths nation nesd nny accessions of th ranks of those wlo pick their teeth In the streets, on busy corner, advocate ship subsidy in th Interest of th fargn-splinfinitives and hairs aril blame their wives for the cost of ' living Unless you can make them mentally, doctor, better let the sleeping dogs apj humans lie. WiJay-drl- it chita Eagle. y EXPERT JURORS. A Pittsburg'cqroner has coma out in favor of Jnrie of newspaper men. I The plan was firkt tried In an effort to clear up th burning of a round bouoa on th Pennsylvania railroad in which a numbej- - of met death on the Wight before labor strike-breake- day. Sensationalist the theory that Immediately spread the! fire was the work of strikers, but this coroner decided that h would empanel a Jury of reporters to uncover all the truth. Thle jury went Into the jwhole matter exhaustively and explained everything LOSS. It is an error to speak of the "cost" of a strike. Use of that word implies receipt of value in one form or another.. There isnt value in any form from ajtrike. There to enly Journal. ny For dnving an automobile while drunk, Buffainnian has been sent to the penitenbad his license revoked and tiary for ten da had been fined tioo. The punishment to not either Buffalo Express. I BID YOU KFFF SOME FEW SM ALL a-- ve, DREAMS. I pny that yoq may never have The things you lung for most For he who gratifies desire Must pay a pnrcely cost. The doll I wanted ax a child Seemed trangev wonderful. Until I held her in mv arms Then she was jj-- t a doll. The world that stretched beyond my. door, It spelled romance to me; I spent ten years in travel now Theres nothing left to see. Mv heart that quickened with desire While love was yet ahead. T Now wakes not at his word t whispered Nor stirs not atr Lis tread. The things we long for give to life : j; i The purpose and the gleam; The Dungs w get, however f)ne, ' Are never what they geem. Oh, rather would I bid you keep " A few small dreams m trust Than see you havts the things you want And watch them turn to dust. O' In New York Herald. 1 night. The coroner waa so well satisfied with the work of this new kind of Jury that he haa recalled its member to sit on an InqueM of those who loat their lives in the collepso Of a i theatre. It ia no wonder that reporter should be successful in solving prob- -' which baffle other people. Tbs reporter Is a trained Investigator and haa obtained his education In a com petitive school. Every (mystery since the first reporter prenlt out on the street ba been a part of the education of the brat unofficial detective In the world The reporters have run down the clems neglected by the constituted authorities and very, haa turned up very often, a repo-te- r w'th the solved, given hie store of lnforn ation to tne chief of police, and onl asked that his paper x get the cred l of a scoop A Jurv compoeed entirely of reporter ought to bet th world at finding out. Boston Globe. can be obtained at' very small cist in some by using of its eighteen pretty tints, over th present gloomy old wallpaper or cracked paint .DEAD DOGS. "Let elocplng dogs lie. is another maxim that must go Into th iruwverator. .Tea. even though Fldo be sleeping the eternal sleep of death, he ia not to bo per' mltted to lie still and continue his long-honor- nap.--- MAY THE MOVEMENT SPREAD. verdict. Th facts dug up that ths fire could only be the oil waste thst had in and about the buildlong period It waa not lodge tired men at attributed to accumulated ing during a the place to The'cheery walls the doctor orders News. ALL In its allowed - Dr. Thomas J. Allen tells a Chicago group of scientists that bo can take a dead dog. or one apparently dead, and by certain manipulations of heart and lunga, cause him to rise and walk. The dead dog caa be made to act Just like any other dog. except that his brain apparently doss not function. The learned doctor believe th .me methods may be applied sucto dead or cessfully people, apparently dead people, whose organs ar pot wornout . But will the doctor confer a great blessing upon humanity bv applying hla methods of resurrection? The dead dogs were mads to function in every way except mentally. Ths trouble with our world now is that we have altogetherright too many people functioning that way. Do we want to raise up the dead to vote According to th most catchy slogan? Is a eood thing for the health of the family, lit kills disease germs, and Its bright cheery tints also kill grouch germs end blue doils which are often quite as comes In packages costing only 70 cents and covering 250 to five-pou- nd 300 square feet of ordinary wail, (t doesn't even require hot water: water right out of the ftpwiil do. TUe - Store Creeo Front McGinnity Co. cpKEE VasJ27- 21-E-isT- 0- ?w cnnD 4 T ri- - 0O r |