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Show TIIE DESERET which builoei uiuklly enjoy from tha hr-ve- it cf ths moil Important crop In that lectha country will not ba experienced thia of tion r d r.M eaion. In many imtancei tha farmers have Salt Uk cur. luh. The period ubcJTjption rules , . .. loam maturlnr t barveet time. .. Immediately following the itle of new wheat W Fitf, ttMMMMltMIM (aturday Kiwi, par yiar 1 In tha lummer monthi la utually activa In ... Mr general buiinrtl, bcu tha proceed! derived foreign inIiii aura. from that crop are ipent In buying neeeeiitle Addrita gi pudnwM rommunlrttlan and all and luxurire. But this hirveit leaion flnda THE DKUEHET NEW. Salt Lek CUT. Utah country bankera, aa well al city bankers, Comipordinre and athar reading martaf for unable to finance large purchase! of wheat publication ahould ba tddraaaad to tha Editor. from farmer, while the producer himself Buraau Clreulallon. eannot go to a bank and borrow any important y,JTb'r J. P. MrKInnay, Kaatarn ftopraaantattro. amount on his crop. Country banker cannot Vw York Office, lit fifth Arenu. Chicago Offico. Ill south Michigan Avans. lend to the producer because they are already Enrarad at tho poatofflra of Halt Lako City. loaned up on 1919 wheat and other crop. So ecor4ln Coagr, the producer, while happy over the generoua March harvest in light, will have to be content Th Aaaoclnted Pri to -Ht1d to wheat 8r repsblleatlnn oftc"v1v nowo alt dtipatchaa with the aallafaelion of a good season without credited to or not Mharwl.a eradltad In thl being able temporarily lo spend the money It awwapaa nd wa rnb'I.V-- d 1o haraln. of rapuMiratloa of apodal dig right would1 bring. Tha spending will not come until oatchaa her art alao ytiarva. ear for the after railroad furniah mor SALT LIKE CITY, - JUNE 28, 1920. movement of griln. And more car are not in sight on the scale required by the southwest. GIVING TIIE ALLIES MORE TIME. THE DESERET NEYS crr (Tor Tha , X e jem.-Wok- Ijnttr !.! ... WHENEVER a debtor finds himself unable ANNIVERSARY an obligation al its maturity, one of the first and one of the moat natural things for him lo do is to ask for an extension of the loan. It will not be surprising If the Allies, finding themaelve unable to meet their debt to the United Stales when it falls due, ehould gsk for more lime. Nor need there be any great amount of excitement or apprehension should thls.develop. Of course, the United Slates could use the money, and delay payment may mean some measure of inconvenience if not hardship, but If the debtor really can not pay, the creditor must make the between beet cf the situation. the two will result to the advantage of both. - Unofficial advices from Paris are to the effect that al the coming interallied conference at Bruaaela the subject of a proposed "moratorium" of the Allied debts to the United States will be broached. Assurance la given that there Is no intention lo repudiate the ten billion dollars which is owing to Uncle Sam, but the plan, it is staled, is lo adyiao the United States that the Allies will be unable to meet this debt when it fails due, some of it nexk October, and lo ask for a renewal of perhapa two years. By that time, it la hoped enough money will have been collected from Germany under the reparations arrangement lo settle the debt to America. If conditions are as represented, undoubtedly the renewal will he granted; cramped though w: may be for the money due, there would be no honorable way out of extending within tq the Allies ' whatever concession reason they may need; Of course, there must be no trickery and none ie expected on the part of the Allies; if they have the money, or can raise it by any legitimate exertion, they should meet the debt when it matures. If they can not, then the extension must be allowed. in-it- s -- MHO IS THE PROFITEER? , industries throughout the country. But inasmuch as these figure represented , the profits on grass sales, not on Invested capclaims consideration. A ital, mere hint1 fnty content himself with. a modest profit on his sales and may maintain reasonable prices to his customers, yet if he "turn over" his cepital repeatedly during the year, and thus make an aggregate large profit, certainly he Is likely to show a larger Income than the merchant, with the same capital and lees frequent turnover. But thia can hardly be called profiteering;, and the economic atudy above referred to actually found that- the most economical management grocery yith had a Turnover of 15 tq5o times a year, and .that the general rule was, the higher the turnover. the lower the prices. Pushing to the last analysis the question of the high costs of Ihlng. there appears to he no escape' ffoiti Ihfe conclusion, that the cost of raw material and labor are .the controlling factor in price, and there ia small hope for a favorable change so long as there is a continuance of the shortage In - -- -- enolhen-akment FARM CROP FIN .... strlkea There a deal that ia sound in this book, and perhaps after all It will reach th unbalanced (who comprise th larger part of th population) all th better for being tainted yrlth class Insanity. . If the gospel is too purs they wont listen. Bald R. I Stevenson, "Man aha!! not live, by bread alone, but also by (Copyright, me, by Frank Crane.) 1m DISTINCTIVE MAN. PPOINTMENT of Mr. Oscar A. Klrkham of this city as morale officer. for. the three hundred American Boy Scout who will take an excursion, to England, Belgium and France, comes as a distinctive honor not only to Mr. Kirliham himself but to the City, the Slate and the Church which he represents. The trip of the Sooute is the most important in the history of their organization; only hoya of highest rank will participate, and they will meet In the finest lads competition, in. scout exercises, ' After their Jubilee in world. the over all from and England they will visit. the battlefields and Belgium. Other places of Interest in France The men who will go in charge of the manhood- and boys represent high types of and interest activity at their By leadership. their ability to home they have demonstrated of confidence and love the won lead and have there Doubtless cere. their under the boys re, hundreds of these men, throughout the United States who would have been glad and of duty proud lo have been called to the poet amt honor which Mr. Kirkham will fill. The callto him from the national Scout officials By his cam unsolicited and unexpected. the with work by boys, and earnest untiring bis love for them and the winning personality their-lovjend conthrough which he gain. and hie hoe vkwrth, fidence, he had proved tribute and recognia as come appointment tion in which all hla peighbora and fnenda, indeed all citizen of the' city and slate, will taka pleasure and pride - -- SOUTHLAND. THE SHAKE IN SUNNY Freak Craoa) contains th actual juice of roots, barks, herbs and berries. It makes rootbeer An Event That Has Appealed to Discriminating Men and . . Shrewd Women THE CHAXLU E. MIXES COMPANY p. w. Sharpens Vision hs ead-ne- ae The Deseret News celebrated its seventieth birthday the other day. May the reliable old Xewa be able to borrow all the time she cares to uaeIron County Record. catch-phrase- ." TWENTY YEARS AGO. work-strain- ed INSTRUCTIONS o Css mat and hold far fatnra use. t IF t YOD HAYE A BACK ACHE if ye sis nbject to Dal paisa la th betA. DIsilBwe, HirroesDees, ere languid and feel Uied all ewe. get a .Mekoire ef the o'd telleble fas-d- e Bother treT-AROJIATIO-LKA- P, the toaus Rediciotl Tee. to bate many te.0. IaMlve it bee so equal Aik for Mother Orey-- Aroaetle-U- af el (trng- elite or emt by mil for e eu. gemtue FkAS, ASdreee, Mother Oray Oa,L Boy, t. Easy, (lx TWO GROUPS When x JUNE 28. 100. A Jury In the css of th Culmer-Jen- nlngs Bsvlng company against Balt Lake City returned a verdict In favor of th plaintiff for judgment In tho sum of Th company sued for K.IH.1S. balance due on a paving contract, which th city claimed it had held back aa a guarantee that the pavement would be kept In repair for to period of five years. It wesf, believed th city would appeal. A force of men started work on an to ths etage at th Balt Palace. An offleiel estimate of th number of sheep In Utah placed th figure at 000. , j- Will! Vogteman, 14, years old, was killed by a Tlntlo train near Parson. He was driving, a milk wagon from Paygon to the Benjamfn creamery. John O. Woolley of Chicago weg nominated at th convention In that city for president of th United States on tn Pro--' hlbttlon Ucket. . - Tom 6harke!Kwa knocked out ty Ou' Ruhlln. It was said te be the first time-Sharey had svar suffered defeat In hla ring career. Official Washington feared for tho safety of tho foreign ministers in China. ' A, Berlin dlspateh said It was learned from a Veil- . able source that tho Russian war tnlnlstrF had sent to. all tho military and - elvlo authorise sferet order for mobilisation. Nino Filipino insurgent leader. It was reported, had" taken tha eatb of allegiancei, under th term of President McKinley's amnesty proclamation and had been glvon - BEECHAMS PILLS Year swath ia a good iadieatioa of tba coo ditioa of tba atomech sod bowel. . AT Kuppcnheimer Suits Included. - After you eat always use GROUP NO 2. ATONIC AT-- KM25QSHS3ISED one or two tablets eet like candy, I njtantly relieves Heartburn, Bloated Gassy Feeling. Stops indigestion, foodsocring,repeating,headacbeaad the many miaeneg caused by EATONIC Is the best remedy, it take tba harmful acida and gase fight put of the body end, of course, you get well. Teneof thousands wonderfully benefited. Guaranteed to satisfy or money refunded by your ewo druggist. Coat a trifle. Fletie try it J . $78.50, $75, $72.50. Suit Values Kuppenheimer Suits Included The Balance of Z.C.M.I. SUITS H OFF ' WANTED $25.00 Reward Offered,Tor Return of Maxwell Roadster Automobile, State License" Number 2766, Model 1917. Motor Number 135747; Taken June 17th from Country Home in Cottonwood. HEBER J. GRANT & CO. 22 So. Slain Street Tk Waaatch 2262-- 3 DBS. SHORES & POX Office, Mein SL - Salt Lak MoSIcIna, Organotherapy, MoSor EIei write. tr laity, ate. ASviea fraa. Catarrfc,DaOMa, Head Our ipecialtlaat. Aatbma. Rheum, Noliea. Hay Pevar, ' Dlabotee, PHea, tltm. ' Brlght'a Oleeeee, an ether ehrenlo Eesema Ooltre, EpUapay. Olaeaaee ef the Nenit Skin. .Blood, atohiaeh. Bowel, Heart, Lung, Bladdir, t Kidney and Llvdr. Hur Bing. ? t g; B- dVS. 'W U. 4 CiUr tv. -- M'e do not think the earthquake will W heir liberty. frighten folks away from Southern California. for And tha to that was serious not enough It folk there, 60 per cent of whom' probably were remains' r'ep,t the effort to forge L Spokane Spokesman-RevieWi hri tabllahed pat ink visitors traveling in search of new experiences, bureau and r represented t the event was doubtless nothing mor than one D. C2. by aa attar, Washington. LINCOLN ON EARNINGS. of the thrills they deslrfd. The percentage bean In who has ney for mere tha tl year. practice thil liyea there the year around may find in W are in pnaltlnn t obtain to teach to them lake I it a lesson build to leave etch best Is that it for the eeuprence TRADE PATENTS. jetler, and not to lake everything for granted.- man free to acquire properly ss'fast ss he can. AND COPTRIOHTft in a marks, prompt Rome will get wealthy. I dont beltev in a law San Francisco ChreniclrV r and at moderate fen. -manner Please send a a draertn, lo prevent a man from getting rich I it would of yovT Invention deerrtptte do more harm than good. Ro while we do not SrElXH PUT TO FOUL USES. and we win have' with we do war wish any upon capital search made, at the tn'trd Ptatea propo There I less excuse' for Impure speech to allow ttrgj humblest man an equal chance to Parent Offm and furnteb yon with complete report. than for tlmosk- inr other aert of ronversn-tionWhen one get rich with everybody else. delinquency. Sudden provocation may starts poof; as most do m the race of life, free reverent man into momentary prothe society is such that he know he can better puh as when PATEhT B111CAI Wgsbrnklon-mrachis condition; he knows that there Is no fixed th Amerfanity, ica coward at th battle of Monmouth, condition nf labor for his whole life. I am not City or imnwned advantage may make tlie ishamed to confess that 25 years ago I was a 'L. truthful man deceive and fatsify.- But vulgar hired laborer, hauling rails, at work on a at words hive no such plea of mitigation to any poor U.V Dl.SU- just what might hapi-eIn fold mans son, I want every man to have hn ettemunw. Theijf ullerer off-nWd are thd ploneera In Job Prtt-tnWood. Hi aim is Were tmuemeniat best; chance m which be can better ht condition, sometime wilful pollution of th sprint of when be may look forward, hope to be a hired and Book Binding In tha state life.' The, mischief he makes is unmeasurable. laborer hia year, the next work for him-el- f, Oar facilities ore tbs best for hand, He taints the memory and the Imagination, too and finally hire men to work for him. That ting ai.y ctaea cf work, no nal.tr i oftrt) irremediably and forever. No redress is tho true system. large or bow irnaU. ! I1': Men's Pants, a big. life to ' -- All of bur. Boys School Suits, blues included. Sizes 8 to 18. Regular $12.50, $14.50, $17.50, $20 $22.50, 25, $30. Boys Spring Overcoats. Regular $6.50 to $12.50 Children's tnvaatlgmt. - f Values. SHORES THE RELIABLE SPECIALISTi MEN AND WOMEN t Year Expert enae. Z.C.M.L BoysJ ! 11 . 1 $87.50, $85 Suit Values - $90, UiMtSdiifAwMiAUiihlkWall Slid swr here. Is Ums, 10Ue. -- LNCLNt GROUP NO. . )(,-J4S.- j , Remarkably Priced your mouth taste like all Ihe meea things you ever did mixed together, then you need . WBsr ef tqyatilie lyn 1 W Hum Acid-Stoma- ch Frem th Files ef The Deseret Neva . give quick relief to aching, itching, burning, and watery eye. Beat drug-CXm reeomtnen'sfind guarantso or will reiuod your money. Bon-Op- to Goth Suits. j select from. All sizes and colors. Regular $4.00, $5.00, $5.50, $7.50, $10.50 $12.50 up to $22.00 values. Mens Black- and Blue ( - Pants. Serge Regular $7.50 to $15.00 values. Sizes 2V to 8. Regular 7.50, $8450,' $10.50 and $12.50 values. The Above Included In the Z. G M. I. Youths single long pants. SALE Regular $3.75 to $12.50 values. ( ONE-THIR- ONE-THIR- OFF D SALE Wash 1 8 Vi sizes to Suits, Extra special, your Special line of choice OFF D Boys Waists The Above Included in Ihe Z C. AL L - PATENTS er. in the United Stales furnishes FARM history for the situation at presenf precedent ' existing in the southwest wheaLsection. The harvest is already well underway! with millions of bushels of the old crop still on hand, and with a ptr jhortage- which renders it Impossible to remove this' accumulation in order ' .to'make room for Ihe new crop, or lo move, with n --ops ary facility the', new crop ILm If.-- . The advicl everywhere gi"en the southwestern wheatgrower, lo arrange to store the wheat op 'the farms, has therefore the. appearance ;ef both auperfluou and ironicaL. Of eoulre, it mean that the , impelpg - Saint their religiou Sunday recalled that that day wa the snnivenury of the martyrdom of the Prophet Joseph Smith and bia ' brother, Patriarch Hyruin Smith. On June 27, 1841, those two leader of the Church met violent death atihe hands of a mob, at the little jail in Carthage, Illinois. After having suffered almost untold hardship and persecution for the cause they had espoused they were at last called upon to pay the supreme sacrifice for it. Literally did they aeaj their testimony with their blood. The annlvernry of tba martyrdom a it recura with the cycle cf the month can not hut bring a feeling of aadnesa to adherents of the faith for which these two good men lived end died. In contemplation we of today live through the sorrow and pain which the tragedy brought lo the little body of worshiper whose leaders were thus suddenly and ruthlessly taken away. But there come with the another thought and feeling a thrill of pride that these meriyri were not afraid lo die for their cause. - It wa to them far more precioua than life itself. The price they paid was great, measured by the standard of mortal thing; but their glory and their reward In the life hereafter will make up many, many times over the suffering they endured. Their followers today are uplifted by the thought that they were willing to go even to their death for the gospel which they knew lo be true. Their example shines with ever And increasing lustre as the yean go by. in their sorrow of the with feeling m!ngled heroic sacrifice, there ia a great and abiding died Is being joy that the cause for which they , earth. In the justified vice GOOD WISHES. - man-pow- or Jesus Chrial of MEMBERS of the Church serin A these days are so tantalizing FEW questions What .is profiteering, and Who is .. profiteer? Perhaps the second of these quee-answered, and liens may be broadly correctly Everybody who can. The first i not so easy to answer, though it i certain that many wrong or at least Inadequate definitions are offered and accepted by the general run of people For example, a middleman whoao average profits are under 2 per cent; a retailer whose average profits are under 7 per cent; a manufacturer whose average profits are under 6 -. per cent, cannot fairly be accused of profiteertheseYet extent. are to any Inordinate lng the figures obtained M a result of a wide survey lately conducted by the economics section of one of our, most prominent colleges. No doubt there were striking exception lo tho general rule here indicated. Certain articles were advanced enorqiouely In price, and certain firms, monopolies or combines" made fabulous prices. But the facta as staled seem to be typical of by far the larger number of OF THE MARTYRDOM. HONOR FOR LOCAL by Dr. le plont!y I C Drt Nii John Haynes Holme has written a book with the above title. It will ba a good document t put Into tha hand cf thoae who conceived ef r have mor the present Industrial confusion M a fight between Labor and Capital and have attached themselves to Labor's eld. Because Mr. Holmes mind Is not unHie point of view Is net Judicial. biased. ' II has taken Labor'i eld with considerable heat. This wni render the book very useful Lordon-Cpto- a reading for the Db-Jc- k Sinclair type of person. And It will do him good, because Its main contention Is not only true, but the author ha glimpsed the everlasting truth which will eventually eolv all things. To wit: that vlolene always doee more harm In the long run to tho causo that nose It than to that causes op' , ponents. Thl. of eonrse, la the whole meaning of Jesus In a ntiuhelL But Mr. Holmes has glimpsed this truth only ss Moses to as it were the hinder parte of Jehovah. . He still regard Capital a vast, mena great acing- somewhat, and Labor a shindy ss Cause, and the whole world-wid- e a Cl battle. Thl U nonsense, but nonsens whloh obfuscate the vision of probably nine-tentof the world. It U tho Ureat Delusion. That truth U that capitalists, laborers and nil are Just human beings, enL only as they realise that fact will they find any "way out. All reasonings that assume the reality of class end In the same out d sac. ' Most laborers and capitalists would bo fair If they would only lot themselves be human being, get together, git down and talk it over, and forget the ancient flapdoodle ef Claes. Class to Class, nobody ever gets anywhere but to destruction; Man to man, miracles are worked easily. What our author says of the folly of vlolene la true: It cannot kill Ideas; It eannot atop reforms; It solidifies opposition; and kicks wore than an army musket, reacting . t harm Its user. No truth has more abundant historical proof than They that take the sword shall perish by the sword." But Mr. Holmes cannot see that violence Is a of cite. ' Running a government by two artificial classes, or political parties, is the most .wasteful and stupid thing Imaginable. Trying to com to an Industrial understanding by the whoop-l- a of labor agitators on the one hand and a vicious effort to suppress opinion on the other ia about as bad. Men dont hate each other. They bate each ether's dlae. They dont shoot at each other, they shoot at each other's uniforma Men don't fight by nature. They tend to They are naturally friendly. . It la only th devil' Invention of seta ellquea races, parties, sects, and the other variants of class mania, chat make man "play such fantastic tricks before high heaven" as yrera religious persecutions, race . riot and " i. Hires Household Extract IS VIOLENCE THE WAY OUT?. tru, tmi JUNE 2S 1920 MONDAY NEWS Your choice 75c Each A few of these exceptional Waist values remain. While they last, your choice at ...JjjQ , 51.93 al - Deseret News d belf-Inter- Dxm rpoxB'ig SOUTH MAIN 111.114 Salt Lako ot at ST - ds ,r flat-bo- JOB PRINTING g THE DESERET NEWS 11 Us Bid on Your Work V . |