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Show ' t ' V , i I SECTION THREE SATURDAY JULY 3 1920 ' SALT LAKE CITY UTAH TEN PAGES Will All n 7 i Independence Day Festivities Revived and New Ones Added Long List of Celebrations Tercentenary of Pilgrims' Sailing to be Observed From June to September British Mount VernonReady Sulgrave Institute, Restored to Period of Lawrence Washington, to be Thrown O Elihu of Become First New Guest Chair Root, of of Honor, May pen Occupant American History and Institutions London Crowded With Americans, Who Are Being Found Lodgings by Organization of Britishers Making Their Headquarters in Famous Beaver Hat in btrand bection of London. . Pre-Wa- . r" 1 Juna 23 Aa Kitchener said of Greeks in tha Sudan, yon cant lift a stono in London today without discovering an American nnder it- 1 - TM : - You cant atep around tha corner "Of any London ' street without passing a little group of Americana tall men with ' hats and glasses. You I cant walk without of an evening through Piccadilly i and numbers of rfbt gazing them, stopping, passing ! pointing like visitors from the provlnces,but swinging i along with the assured air of visitors who have been in London before, or, if they havent, are not given to brandishing the fact. You dont overhear them ' asking a London policeman which is the shortest way to Canterbury and you don't hear them remarking about the pettiness of the buildings. You know them i merely by their hats, their glasses and the way they roll their , , , They are spending a thoroughly American sum- -, mer hi England, for England this year is laying it- -i self out for Americans as It he a never done before. societies and luncheon clubs, whose is legion this year, have prepared in London number such a program of America events as has never been - ' prepared in a foreign country before. It is a program which reaches its height on the Fourth of July. From Cork to Constantinople, Europe will know this year when the Fourth dawns, that years ago was of Declaration Independence American the 1 horn-rimm- wide-brimm- Jr r ' i ;:v7 r o (i ! ji fry ct) t. V' f , r rCw' il rvr vr Anglo-Americ- 7 txgrayh rrsTim'B (xrrcncrr bomb or vrAsnmcTo.v rAsnrtr). H. S. lit Dak ef of CnaniM, Hnwnr Preet-Sc- at (mMt, signed. Before the war, the Fourth meant less to Europe than Polands Seventh of May. During the Leyden. war, the news got about in Europe that there was Fearing to lose their British citizenship in such an institution in America as the Fourth, but the Holland, they fmally succeeded in chartering the means of its due recognition were lacking. and Speedwell for Virginia. They left Mayflower with a I remvmber being at sea two years ago on July 24, 1620, but bad weather Southampton Milford to Haven; convoy coming up from Gibraltar forced thm uk refuge in Plymouth.' Hero the and the the Bay Fourth thudding up ' wpasaedthe to be abandon),- - and the Mayflower had. eonSpeedwell the commodore of was who British naval capUin American coast set out alone on September 16. .They finally reach- voy wigwagged his best wishes to the ed America far north ef where they .had intended guard captain who was senior escort officer, but to land and frotn the dfcte of their stepping ashore there were no salutes fired. There wasn't enough on know the rest Rock, Plymouth you ammunition in those days to afford salutes. at Scrooby is today alEven the American embassies in Europe cut . . Brewster's pom-houmost was a magnificent maIt destroyed. formerly down thdr usual Fourth of July receptions during house in nor which had once slept, Cardinal Woisey their of skeletons peacetime the war to mere but now only one small wing of. it- - is left and that ' an ordinary farm-houa- e with great timbers in Taday, however, the war Is ended and the which wal! ot Piu jt Fourth is the Fourth. Wherever an American manTwo miles in tAustorfield away. ? r' lies"m a 'foreign'port' on'the Fourth' this there will be the crash of salutes, and wher- - man church still stands which displays. the birth ,Lt) se - ef-wa- year (William Howard Taft is a descendant of one of these three), ad Leyden, Holland, where the Pilgrims took refuge from 1609 to 1620 will celebrate late in August. Later in the year in October, If present plans are carried out a British delegation will leave for the United States to return the visit of an American delegation which John A. Stewart of New York City is bringing over to England for the .celebra" tions early this summer. The Free Churches of England will celebrate at to 6; Plymouth early, on September where the Pilgrim ships called for. rt pairs; on 7 and 8; at Southampton on Septem- September ber and 10; in London on September lp; in Not- tingham September 17 to 24; in Manchester Sep-17 to 24; and in Essex. September 25 to 30. Celebrations at Leyden, Amsterdam and Rotterdam, Holland, are under the auspices of tha Nederland- . sch. Pilgrim Father. Commissie. are. planned for this summer izj ndr,-m.wmingnehich will help to make this an unprecedentedly veiling brings to a close the long and bitter controversy which raged in the American press over the comparative merits of the Barnard and St, ' Gaudens Lincoln. It was in 1913 that the proposal to erect a statue of Lincoln in England arose.' At a banquet in the Lawyers dub New York City, the proposal was advanced that the American people should present to the British people a statue of Lincoln, and a replica of the famous St. Gaudens status in Lincoln Park, Chicago, was ton-- '. latively decided! Vponr'Laler,"'when the' Barnard ' which was made for the city of Cincinnati, completed, a question was put to tha British- American Peace Centenary committee, which was so- tjje predecease cf the present ,tatue the British preferred ciety( Uig them vhich - r - There en8Ued long nd bltter-- controyer,T " the Barnard statue in America, some referring to it as a monstrosity and others calling it Art The British took a position and expressed to accept replicas of both statues, w Anglo-America- . n' af fmU. Saaratarr aa Salsrav Aaafo-Amart-Sact- Iutitita and dose to the Houses of Parliament, in London. Its unveiling has been delayed through tha difficulty experienced in getting the massive granite blocks to be secured later. The program aa tentatively made out at present, includes a presenta tion service in Central Hall, near the Abbey, a march to the statue, a guard of honor around the statue of American Civil War veterans resident in Lon- don, and the singing of the "Battle Hymn ef the Republic' by the choir of Westminster Abbey.- '' The statue will stand in a select company of statues ef former prime ministers of Eerie and dose to the statue of Canning, the British prime minister who lent his influence In favor oflhe ' . roe Doctrine... f . " Further advantage is to be taken of Elihu Root's presence In London by inviting him to become the first 'occupant' of tbs' Sir IGeorge Watson Chair of American History, which Wes created last December, .Prior to its creation, there was no .chair of American history .and institutions in England, Slr George Watson, however, gave $100,000 to found a chair which would enable authoritative lecturers on Moa-tomb- er ' ' ever to both of these histone sites there will now waiting upon word from Elihu Root, before ean embassy an American Jegation or an American ford, and fixed lor them. Mr. Rwl is eansins will nxt:SeptembeT. in England, 'll being expected that th interest fhttt there wW be:the good old receptions to the '" fc orertoon celriirato the the of and Spiedof the Mayflower sailing is day" would lead British uni veri ties ultimately aroused TheFourth the cotton town being selected as the local AmericansJheone n enthua.asts in Eng- - of Mapchester, well on July is.expected .that a repla of the Hague, and Americanssfnvariablr to found their own chain of American institutions local rri o in the when the stand favor year to make. the. most of his presence. ,4nd to the the Mayflower wUl play a part in the festivities. turns and Elihu Root is to be asked to five at talk unanimously the time the at the of history. and cfXht Narlhxbich Jtjtoolc up yhen gether LINCOLN .STATUE IN LONDON. . Plymouth will conduct a weeks celebration of A good many Americans who live Civil War. The unveiling was done in Platt Field Ires. &r, kvtare kt Lcsdon, I kix dates enable kiss home town. to give three lectures, he will be aaked to give on in X .....The firet of these events is the unveiling of the park, where the Barnard statue now stands. abroad 'may havo saUed from. New York. when ttey. the final sailing of the Mayflower in September. over The little town of Billericay in Essex, the home St. Gaudens statue of Lincoln in London, which Is The SL Gaudens statue wili be placed In the London, one in Oxford and one in Cambridge. last left the States, but when they get together York-owhich New unf of three of the Pilgrims, will celebrate in August now expected to take place late in July. This HOME OF WASHINGTONS ANCEStOR. Canning enclosure in 'front of Westminster Abbey here on the Fourth, it is not y ' town cf which sort of The not! Decidedly talk. they A third event of permanent significance if plan- 6 western middle some prairie they talk is usually ned to take place at the Sulgrave Institute, which town with a conservatory of music located upstairs enthuiiastg hope to' make into a Brilliant-Jew; over the butcher shop. , sort of British Mount Vernon. Here in London, there will be Bpecial dances This is an ancient dwelling which before the at all the big hotels on the Saturday night before Reformation in England was a priory of SL Andrew, w.ihe. Fourth, ,Jhere. will be the usual reception, at - S located nine miles from ' Banbury. In' 1539, when the embassy in Grosvenor Gardens, at which no-- v Henry Vlir dissolved the" smaller religious houses, .ONDON, Jynp ?J, The Right wag elected to .parliament for the insight Into die Ideas of other peoples will .address John .William Davis .of, ..Clarks-- r r,. c .. (Special Correspondence.) was bought by Lawrence Washington, body which of German Of Cleveland division science, vi Yorkshire, t smattering' n OJvDON, June 21. Never In re- -' ahd Louis Samuel. R. He until He of also he became thus a and and made SntoXa manor burg, W. Va as Excellency. There will be pilNorthampton,1 represented lfll. linguist. speaks cent times has London had a C M. Ft, is expected to arrive hts value to British Liberals, French and German', with equal proved house. From Lawrence this grimages to every American shrine In England, and Visitor whose personality has Washington, George in Jerusalem in time to begin his and when Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerma- n fluency and his English is not to be in London. And American flags on every flag-staformed his administration, in been studied more microscop - despised. duties as high commissioner for Washington is lineally descended; the Washington Krassln la now In his prirne-h- e Is on July 1. With bis assumption Mr. Samuel was appointed to the coat of arms, three stars and three atripes a device every other person you meet in Londons street ically or whose motives have ybeen 60 this year and he gives of the home office. of office, Palestine passes from milithe ImwSt be wearing a small American flag ifrhis button assayed more relentlessly than those enwhich the Star and Stripes are thought to be After four years work In this cato civilian administration, , and one who thoroughly from of pression tary Peoof Leonid Boriaovitch Kraaeln, ' cabinet as chanthe he to and activiwhom the realization Zionist of joined life, joys ths pacity, political project bole. It used to be a habit with American schoodescended of are still carved in the doorway, and the ple's Commissary and confidant ties are a source not of worry bu of : under the British mandate for Paies- -. cellor of tho Duchy of Lancaster, and oflteachers on a Cooks tour of Europe before the war ' Lenine, have been from the- moment exhilaration. to was tho In 1910 he bouse still bears the royal Tudor arms above its ; seems to ... tine begins In earnest, Indeed promoted he . - He held of his arrival here. shale optimism. He has brilliant Bines Jerusalem was captured from fice of postmaster-genera- l. door-wato wear small American flags In their button-hole- s British divided the have f dark, blue eyes, a firm mouth, and the Turks on Dec. 17, 1117, by the this office for four yers tnd then lon press more Sharply than the question his grey- - beard Is trimmed carefully throughout the period of their stay in . Europe. But It la th plan o t th Society to expeditionary force of the spent two years as president of th Egyptian under British ministers, of whether " toto th cal adboard, returning been a has goverment He has British Palestine a of army, point. haa way now last year on the Fourth, the British begM to do it which stroking it convert thin old dwelling boughL thd' xuise of discussing the reopening--o- this ministered by an Impromptu mili- office of postmaster --general for 1916 during his talk, and he used hie 5 This trade with Russia, are justified, tapering 1910. Into a museum of Washington relic and to make and year, theyre apparently' planning to do it on a called hands the to Enemy tary Occupied body freely emphasize to as it la put on the one side, going what he Is Jto 191 , he was appointed to the (south), wholesale scale. " Territory administration, saying. ahrine in England. Sir Regback on the prime minister's often revery Important post of secretary of . , it the leading American wss answerable to Viscount which Exiled Siberia. , to in that of is earlier dais But tie Fourth Englands plans only part R. A, the BriUah architect, haa commander-in-chiE. , slate for home affairs and Vacated It peated declaration inald Blomfield, the ol He imbibed Socialist Ideas In his his government "would not shake In the following year to become chairWith-Mr- . Samuel E. F.. In Cario. Tha great A tnsen retained to reetora it to tha period of Law- -' for observing an American summer. Hoviet student days at the Technological In- hands with the blood-staine- d on nv m arrival and the assumption ef his new men of the select committee r emmiasarles." its stitute at American event of the year in- England is the ter- 1917 6 an in of Because tional government 1919, rence Washington.. In July, he expects to hare it Fetrograd, expenditure duties as high commissioner, the adhere them he found But while the actual designs himself in the early British special commUston- anbecoming become of will be formally Palestine ministration the celebration of the Mayflowef -vailing centenary the third twenties arp exile in Siberia. There be of Lentz's, trade envoy r to Belgium at th wid f last year. two large room restored, and these swerable presumably to, th British Bolshvist was set to work on the trans-Siberiin Russia and the This celebration har been divided into scores, of and a program career .Mr. er. has not to been Samuel's ,msn a for Sulgrare pilgrimage colonial office. opened by Presumably" n load Carnot aa be Is alternatively called, railway, and showed such aptitude and , , ihe creeUin of a new In th an exciting one but there has not ministry ambassador American which ts'expected the meetings which began in June and will run on at one are there, in at recogability that within four years he was English writers British government, it 'is not inoproh. been a failure in It. He does things ! by two does but into September. They are being he them to well, Middle very a nizing Leonid Boriaovitch Krassln as allowed to return to Ruiwia. take quietly. administration th part. leading for 7' able, one ef the worlds great organ tiers, Agwin his political views brought He has never been in the limelight, ! n Eastern affair will be crested short- - and society, different authorities-rTh- e All in all, the Fourth of July this year will aa among the ablest members of the him to conflict with the authorities, has never obtruded his own perRussian proletariat, and as a nego- and he went to Baku, where he belpi an organization of which the Duke of Connaught Is sonality, but he has ecored continual- -. mark the peak of tha greatest American summer Mr. Famuel is a leading British Iv tiator wbose wimbleness of wits Is to build the electric power station, because, he has - worked continual-1- v. new dot I he graphis in and Jew. honorary president and H. S. Ferris secretary, is eon-- 1 England ever aaw. There are more Americana in and to run a secret printing press to hard It surpassed by ttatt of Lenin ilia reputation- was never made: on of the most difficult sitwith ples and national the celebrations, . himself. it grew; because of Mr. Hamuel'e spread on th surface of th ducting a series ef revolutionary globe. uations propaganda. England than there ever were before at one tune, not Meantime he qualified as an engif showing, not that he was He is welcomsd on the one hand Th conflicting hopes of tb Zionist the war years. Englishmen are meriiog Mayflower Council of England, an organization set up Pales-tln- e doexcepting was Of as a business man and clear thinker neer, and took a prominent part is he but that man, and th fiyrlaa population with .whom the subject of economic the fetrograd electric power SNieme. work. remarkable situation Try thq national council, of the Evangelical , Free ing them even before their ahipa hare docked and findpresent a desperate k the failure of the revolution f Tb Children's Charter," as it was cels- - . and diplomatic relations w(Ui Russia will call for tb highest adwhich series of a religious is conducting Qmrthes, 7 1I0S he visltsd London, Paris and can b discussed In a reasonable maning lodging for than. ministrative abtlkuw of which any known at tb ttme, which brought to- ' J M- - C. a the number ner. He Is denounced on the other Italy. Unable to return to Russia, of bratiens.' Y, previous is perilsThe Bearer gether Abuilduig.m. capable. human Hut, being he an became an electrician with , the as a schemer who cloaks under iLr'Kamuel la is' years old and tho mintary acts respecting child welfare, solAmerica thousand f E housed which WHO THE PILGRIMS WERE. trend . Incommercial mission of was a plot firm, Piemens in Berlin. When he his greatest triumph snd he vrr'ef his political career is a tale avowedly of it Is the British House dier and sailor durmg the war, ta now ftolitf to promoto Hoviet propaganda in Eng.' was. again allowed to set foot In cf steady progress While still as ver- troduction commons If yon have forgotten your early American his-- . land and to secure tbs recognition hr Russia he represented thmt firm of uni Oxford brought .a chorus Of apat Balllijl in f'Amencan vislodging for score of thousand the allies of th Hoviet government.. Moscow nhd fetrograd. he was adopted aa ih radical proval. He was then under secretary sify, lory (as yob probably have), you wUl not recall the Krassln for many years baa been a" London to Rut bis immense ability la questioned from Bouth for th home offioo and compliments front New York cornea Parliament for word And candidate itor. fhet that the Pilgrims were a small sect at Scrooby by no one. You have only to study close friend of Lenin a though be Oxfordahire. He contested the seat were showered Upon him for th ex-- . crowded with River are North the in th that dlff-vIs said to have ed 1) record to recognise ft. per whn he was IS 1remelv tsar way In which the somefrom him twice. In In Nottinghamshire, who separated from the Church M. Krasein. who once was connectenefl with regard to hi method lie and again In 190S, the what Intricate bill had been drafted. , American watting, after the fire years ef war, of age) years of England and held secret religious services in the, This ed with the Siemes's electrical firm does not eeem to have been prominent young Impressecond time making earns then fire to be acclaimed - peet-bouready t buret onto the firet ship that win earry of Berlin now proves to bp a Rus- , In lbs Hoviet revolution. but took sion on the comyrvative majority. ' of William Brewster until the police ferof a statesman. Tha British House of at are the of Siberian origin. His whole part in negotiating the pence of Brest, Two year a'lerwerd, sian them to Europe. " reted them out. Then they fled to Holland, where Common realized what It had ifr baa tended to eparpea his faml-- . He became ml meter for trade in 91, he wrote Li her aliem. Its PrinciCLAIR PRICE. ever has from which 1911 was for that and Pronoeala for he their widen and and sometime, apart range, Amtie last transport of exiles minister the ple yesr bickering they Spent a year among k for n ou'Jsw from hie own land remained s sort of for since Marshall Edward Fyndvate lae.l (Copyright by the and 11 years at the university towa of sterdam .(Continued os page Enttsh Lifeerei. Is the same year, he many years. Thereby be gained much ?anUt L ff Few-lssue- j . , w Anglo-Amenca- Soviet Envoy in London' Man of Immense Ability t X- - Big "Task As Palestine High Commissioner s t - -- , - Anglo-Americ- -- . 7 JRon-Herber- Fal--est- y. s Anglo-America- - f ef , an Anglo-America- 1 fac-ult- nr H -- 16 . tinder-secreta- ry sa rue-pect- ed text-boo- te) t 4 p |