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Show rJ r s'V dT 1 A; Aaii.i Il Alta T tadtelsbad Daily i ffTwitir ( iatit u tf rates. tTBBCRIPTlON RATES par yasr Is advance ceptee . C: 4a . . ; . i Cuts 2..u iw rU. un 444 to rowmomcattons beslsas and alttsscu 1HB DESERET NEWS, Bait Lake City. Utah. nw SALT LAKE CITY, OCTOBER 2IMK1. CORN IN PLACE OF COAL. intention of REVIVED reports of thburn corn for fuel farmers to , re-jal- , r . poses. "STEP LIVELY!" V 4 hat difficulty in comprehending HEthewhomeaning of "eternity"-- ' snould board Salt Lake car and ride through the business "district of the city when he is in a hurry. He would at least obtain a fair idea of one of eternity sdefinilio ns :an indefinite or immeasurable expanae of time. And if he is of that turn of mind which entertains any respect or admire- UY . A , k N t " 'AmOmt " baa tawa UeM to tha, Howm st.CmaMH and wUl now b the playmaU of Udr Aator. Bho la Mk Thomas WlntrtnslMun, widow and a Monitor far Louth. - Mosodahashortooa oloetod a Llbosal and baa bond, who dlod.fa tho Hanot of Oumnona Library. , v OUua woman hnvo In racent years taken tholr place In National found! l Wo have had woraea In tho, National Lealalatare of tho Hatted Staiaa. A wbrnaB delegate haa ant In tha meeting of tea Lcacue of Nagano at Ooaova. ' , - FEDERAL REPRESENTATIVE DYER of Missouri seems see his name attached important piece of legislation designed for the correction of a widespread cviL He was the' author of the bill under which the federal government has taken a band in checking the theft of automobiles; and now the House judiciary committee has returned a favorable report on Mr. Dyers bilL Imprisonment for from five years to life is provided by the bill as the punishment to be meted out to any member of a mob that lakes human life. The penalty is salutary enough, but the chief significance of the bill lies in ttie fact that its enactment would give the federal government juriadiclion over such cases. As it stands now, lynching is a crime punishable by the aisle courts; and no matter how eager Judges of those courts may be to repress such scls, they are hampered by tha fact that only state and county officers can he depended npotf to'brihg'"brfendertberor' the bar of justice and testify against them. Such officers are themselves subject to terrorization or persecution by the very mobs they may seek to punish, or they may be even in partial sympathy with tbetnTAa a result genuine prosecutions for lynchQig are exceedingly rare. With the Dyer bill in effect, however, federal officers, backed by the full authority of the United States government and unhampered bjr local prejudices, passion or . intimidation, would ire free to proceed against mob members. A few convictions under such a law would unquestionably bring a notable decrease in of instances of mob Violence, and it would go far in bleaching one or the black pages in Lka current history of the Ohited Stales. - . khao' two woman ore new Members of tho Houae of Commons In 'England.' Other , in. - - zations In other words, - P s ; A CAROLINA That wasnt i - - 16 Veers and Buy at less than coat of materials making, tfe could not replace them -. on todays market at double the P- dal price quoted.' -- Choose from a big bargain table fulL Yariety galore. All the pmartest models imaginable in serviceable LINENES, CHAMBRAYS, quality, . GINGHAMS, ZEPHYRS, ETC.. AH generously proportioned, full cut and fast color. Every color and combination. Many clevdresses included. Buy Saturday at 98c. . er two-piec- e Mamma, yeu will find me in . wlU , occupied. The period of writing in the your owq blood has passed , phonograph and the typewriter are here, and tbe Turk using the old ink seems as would a herd of bison. aa-ay- X Repeat orders tell the story of its merit. During ita firs month oa the market, have been received from re-ord- - . Te Tke Art Levers t - Well Kbhwr , tat 'FvaaHMi Am HM Will ArIM - The Newhome Hotel (Oak Hmm, er, . Exhibition of His Oil ' ? . Paintings AT ' SHOWER mt Balt Lefce CMy GEO.S.TILDEN , f4 ' ' - J , I ' IDEAL COAL at $7.50 a ton la cheap only in prices d aoBI wD repeat too. . j ' . ' ;. f Telephone Wasatch 7288. ' - ,1 'f. ; i . ; ' Ideal Coal Company BRUCE TAGGART, Manager. OTf Lakhy.l Oct. 17th to Oct. 29th, ' -- Fourteen per cent of the buyers of lump coal.1 Sixteen per cent of the buyer of nut coal. Twenty-thre- e per cent of the buyers of pea ' ' ' coal. V ; t ' - ' 358 W. SO. TEMPLE.. 1921 All are medially lavtted te view, "tales eemerlee assay laadaeapsa af Central Callfarata . Clear Babys Skin With Cutzcura; and Talcum Soap .OhjiatTal In iwtnrnmn U. IliKu,! n - ; to be or ANNOUNCEMENT gully-wash- "u,. HSfcca 0 to 'bo-fo- re Thus things gradually change. You read with horror that some brute has tortured a helpless fellow creature, forgetting that .once kings, lords and judges, had their tortures regularly a rain. . That wasJ a a and a trash-mov- er as they ay in North Carolina. Charlofton News ana Courier. , log-lift- .v ttaluco to 55.50 nigclc? ; The most Interesting lady In the day's news , she's dead now. Is M tea Caroline Ewen. She leaves her entire fortune of $0.C to supply milk for the cats of the world. 8he couldnt bear to think of any kitten drowned, or any eat hungry kind hearted lady. BUT If every kitten lived, and without interference raisedlts little family, this world would eoon be a solid mass of cats and kittens, no room on it for kind Miss Ewen they would eat her. e e Once when rulers mads a treaty, each would sign his name in blood tu show he meant 1L Sentimental youngs people wrote using blood for ink. Now use a fountain pen or typewriter. thy Minarsi Kartak was! Teeterday found by the police in a Detroit rail- - I road station writing Uttle notes In his own blood, with a share piece of rosewood for a pen. Hla chest was punctured In many placea, which had supplied him with ""red ink" and he carried many documents written In his own Turkish blood. The police were 'puzzled. Lieut. Smith, seeking some reasonable explanation asked him Are you prophet V . More than nine million automobiles were registered in the United Slate during the first six months of ISSQenough, in a pinch, to have carried every person in the United States at the same time. If this is not the age of gasoline, what age is it? Springfield Republican. i the Cats. 1- Lloyd George, who knows how to get at things, is asking for gtgantle credits to help lack of employment, and says positively no Briton shall starve." The war I to blame says Lloyd George, friendship between tlons, revival of power to buy from each other will alone solve the problem. He realizes that the plan to to kill off the defeated wUl not work ' profitably. In five years this stupid earth spent on war, killing and destroying, more than three hundred thousand mil Ilona of dollars. . If a man spent ten times his yearly revenue In one he drunken murderous debauch. would have to eave and suffer for some time. That is what the world must do. May it be warned against similar debauches In future. , MILE-AG- if I the, river near the bridge nieet you In the other world. The Mormon' is a very good- - citizen, and it is the testimony of prominent Gentiles who were questioned by the writer that the would be pleased if they rould say so much in praise of the home life of the Gentiles in generaLas thev can with truth of the Mormon. Richard Bpillane in Philadelphia Ledger. , siduously. ) ExyfBaiTepcbBBek. world. ' TELL IT TO LULA SHEPARD,' GKsSf' Ing could be simpler than five-ye- . Deaths Slaylt StyfcC t not to be, that la the question. Except Carl's farewell to his mother: Well, mamma, I guess I cant stand It any longer: for when I caine home Margaret had left. Where she went I dont know, but I am done with this OCTOBER SI, 101. was announced that tha Deseret Agricultural and Manufacturing Society had secured a lease on Carder's Park with the option of purr ha slag tho property at tbe end of that time' for $15,000. The deal was made with A. W. HeCune, representing tbs Consolidated Railway and Power company, Oho owner. Governor Heber M. Wells, President X. A. Empey of tbo D. A. and M., John C. Cutler, John White and J. G. McDonald inspected the property to determine changes necessary to convert the' resort into exposition grounds It was said that S60.00S would to expends-- for buildings and equipment and that the place would bo operated as an amusement resort thronghout tha summer season, to close each year with the annual state fair. During the life of the lease the society would endeavor to dispose advantageously of the Agricultural Park property on the west side, which was desired by railroads for terminal facilities.' Elder Joseph E. Taylor, of Balt Lake stake presidency, had received letter from his son. Elder Alma O. Taylor, on a mission In Japan with. Elder Heber J. Grant of tha Council of the Twelve, giving a detailed account of tbe dedication by Eldar' Grant of the land of Japan to the preaching of tbo gospel and the fulfillment of the . purposes of the Lord. Judge A. B. Sawyer declined tho Independent nomination of the Salt Lake Bar association as a candidate for city judge. ' Tho Vtsh agency, which included Nevada. of the Mutual Life Insurance Coen- paoy of New York, held a convention In tbo Kenyon hotel, with Manager Rulon 8. . . A Welle presiding. . ; , The Salt Lake Ministerial society at a meeting In the assembly hall of tho T. M. C. A. outlined a campaign of civic and moral reform. Major Charles E. Stanton returned from the Philippines, where for three years he . . ' had been army paymaster. te This is as it should be. If by persuasion and argument, backed up by facts that will substantiate their contention, they can get a majority of tha British people to agree with and support them, then they can take the reins of government and put. their theories of national guidance to the test. Meanwhile, they themselves will Jiave learned something, and ha hot impetuosity of their most radical adherents will have cooled. That being aecom plished, their rule would not necessarily prove a menace to their country and its institutiona. ' It , WkZa. A generally that la true. For one young man that kills him self on account of a girl, twenty-fiv- e girls kill themselves on account of some your.g man not worth it. Each feels that life is not worth while if some particular little fish ' gets off the book. Have you noticed how plainly, simT ply, men writs In facing death Noth From tbe Files of Tbe Deseret News. - Si: ::zd . TWENTY YEARS AGO. nECACSE of the- failure of, the great coal strike in England a few months ago, the mind of British labor has been turned from direct action to political aotion. So reports a prominent American labor leader, who has recently returned from the British Isles, where he went to make a study of the labor movement. The coal strike failed, he says, because of the collapse of the triple alliance, which was counted upon to defeat the government in the controversy and give the Labor party the upper band. Incidentally this collapse .and attendant failure proved, the American investigator admits, the fact that organized labor, in Great Britain at least, is wholly unprepared for a general strike. - Now the labor interests are seeking to gain by quieter and more orderly methods that which they failed to get through utilization of Uie walkout. Their leaders have decided, it is understood, that their followers can not be counted upon to carry direct action to a point of efficacy. Particularly in a period of depression such as has engulfed Britain during the past year, any widespread strike is almost sure of failure. The Labor people, therefore, in carrying their plans forward must choose between outright revolution and slower and more orderly process of a Ibor parliament The great masses of the British people, it is certain, do not want revolution; in fact, waul'd rise almost as one body to quell iL So Laborites must lake tha alternative and proceed by the slower process of getting control of the gov eminent, if they can. by political action. To Uiis task they are devoting their efforts as- S.zrC-S3z::'- a-man I!l, - Wait - .U , , , BRITISH LABOR CHANGES TACTICS. I - y. government ought to govern and not to rule. Governments should follow and not lead. Government is preserve tive and not constructive. . In proportion as we get hold of this idea wa shall see that government Is peculiarly . woman's place. , Let as hope that tha time is not far otf when all mayors, governors, presidents, , councillors, and legislators, or at toast tha ' . majority of them, are feminine This will release a lot of husky men who - had toetter be out maHJmn Ihlngand doings something constructive. , by Frank Crane.) (Copyright, r r One thing is certain, there should be reasonable time for discussion and government mediation before strikes are started that may end no one knows where. la 114 If the wars beginning had bean postponed for three months. It I never would have happened. . Wbat nation, beaten or conqueror, doesn't wish now tbo postponement bad occurred. e e a The other day a policeman threw his wife into the liver, he I In jail for life. Now another young man ot police training, throws himself In the river because some young woman didn't like him. We are queer beings, killing others and ourselves on impulse, nob even one per cent developed. The interesting thing about Carl Bates, former policeman, who writes habitual notes to his mother, is that he kaa man, Men have died and worms have eaten them, but not for love," says Shakespeare, and - . - v, - -- i anti-lynchi- ng v BY ARTHUR BRISBANE, yard matt ra will not TEN thousand and . tbay advis faltew workers to oall ha strike off pubtlo opinion overwhelms yon. No doubt publte opinion will play an Important part la this strike. After w big war, heavy tanas, bond driven; with five millions Idle and everybody worried, the public la not patient about another war. Industrial, Inside our borders a war that would threaten what is left of prosperity and endanger the jobs of more Ikon half the men atilt at work. e sThe stock market does not Believe that a serious strike Is coming. Railroad shares were up yesterday and others including oil. Why, , nobody stock exchange seems knows, but the ' usually wipe a boat coming events, perhape because It looks St situations - . a Afl For woman . have boon- choaen for elective and appointive positions In other Btateo. These are but drops before tho comiqg shower. Thera la Uttfo doubt that more and more woman will taka their place In puhtte life, for the reaeon that that Is where they naturally belcmg. And that la tha position for which their peculiar temperament and qualities fit them. Govermpent la a. woman's bmiaeee not a mans. It la. in tho nature of houaekoop- -, The mans business is to produce, to , work, and to adventure The natural sphere of a woman la to conserve what he (sins. And that In all government ought to- be , merely a taking care of the results which man has attained. Some pepple look upon the entrance of women Into politics - aa threatening the , . homo, and they are and.- Others look upon the same thing and are . because gleeful, they dp- not believe In the home. v K , r ' Both of these are wrong. , Woman wSl never lose her place In the i homo. That la where she naturally belongs, and so long as there are homes women will . rule them, and so long as there are children women will bring them 'up. But,' the point la that womap la an individual. Sha Is engaged In tha .home busi- -. neee, wplch: - In the conserving- - business. Just as maw la - engaged with, tha outside world, which is tha producing business. And there Is no reason why tho horns-makand conservator should not have her place in the affairs of State as wall as the ., outside adventurer. Indeed, a mind trained to the care of children and the affairs of a home is better,. ' qualld0f to run affairs of State than a mind that has been trained 4n a lawyer's office or a Ary goods More. ; ' Little by llftle we are coming to see tho ' folly of the idea of government It te. not tha business of a government to lead.' Leadership la tbe province of the Individual life and voluntary organizations Th sola business of government la to preserve the peace and maintain tha mutual rights of Individuals and voluntary organi- LAW AGAINST LYNCHING. TODAY t i' . . , ' &rS? mmi er -- - ed jt rr The Deseret Hews, hr Freak Craa.K straphanger, -. . t, real "leisure elaaa." The street ears move leisurely entough, when in motion, but they are as rochets or airplanes in comparison with the people they serve. To the latter, lime seems as 'nothing when the business in band is gviting on or off a ear, snd Uie entrances or exits of the ears are beginning to attract the attention of society editors a places where informal functions are regularly held. Street car riding is a pleasant business if you belong to the . . , , "leisure class." . t'n fortunately, however, some citizens get on street cars who wish to get somewhere within a reasonable Unite limit. Of course their hope are vain if the route of the car lies through the business district, yet some consideration might be given them. Perhape if their wishes were served, the "leisure class" be reduced in numbers. ,, ' might It is the public, rather than the traction company, which is at fault for the ' great waste of time in street car transit, ' but it is the company which can do most to correct conditions. Three words form the key. Step lively, please," is the constant adjuration of street csr conductors who are themselves wide awaJfe and are paid for speeding passengers over lines in ciUes where traffic moves faster. The repealed, call, ppoken crisply by & conductor who acts as though be were going somewhere, seems almost magical in its effect. It wakes the moon-gazipassenger from an unconscious lethargy, and before he knows it he is "stepping lively in spite of himself. If the operators of the 8alt Lake cat will try the use of the slogan for a few day the tune lost by the cere in the business district will be reduced. And if time is money, the saving effected will be by no means incoaid erabto FOR VOTING PURPOSES. CUFFRAGE women throughout the country are more or less disturbed ofer an anomaly, under the Massachusetts law which disfranchises married women who do 'not have the seme legal residence as their husbands. It is to be assumed that not many of tba fair ex would be deprived of the ballot by this provision; still, there are enough of them, with good and sufficient reason for separate legal residence, to make amendment of the law necessary. For example, there are wives who, for personal or basinets reasons, maintain a separate residence from their husbands, though not estranged; there ere women who have legal separations from their hatbands not divorced; there are unfortunate . though wives who do not know the whereabouts of their husbands; and there are wives whose husbands have legal residence at city ciubs which do not admit women to membership, and where they cannot obtain actual residence. Yet in all such cases these women cannot be registered for voting purposes because they can pot prove the same "legal residence" as their husbands. Probably there was no deliberate intention to impose this exclusion; more likely the situation has grown out of. a technicat failure to adjust the existing laws to the condition creaied by admitting women to the franchise. In any case it should be promptly corrected. Surely a slate which requires, as does Massachusetts, that husbands and wives file separate ' Income lax returns, is not going to be so inconsistent as to deny to women the status of individuals for voting purposes when it givea them specifically that status for taxation pur-- " ranaY ccroisn.si tzx d rcuTic& ng this winter, arouse 4he usual lamentation against the injerovidence, if not the crime, of ' such a misuse of a great gift of nature designed for the sustenance and nourishment of hnman and animal life. As an economic problem, however, under such circumstances as now exist, the proposition finds many defend- -' era. There is In many localities an abundance ' and a great surplus of corn, and a scarcity of coaj at least at ' prices within the reach of the ordinary farmer. It la said that two tons of the former will give as much heat as one ton of the latter even more where carefully used; end the relative prices In the localities named are about KAO per ton for corn and J12per ton for coaL Fran this the farmer argues that he is not only economizing when be bums his com, but he is in a way actually ' setting it, whereas be might pot be able to get rid of it Ju the market at all. Nor is there lacking the support of economists end scientists of higher degree then the humble farmer. . These authorities hold that it is no worse to burn corn in our stoves if the price justifies itthsn to burn wood or coal or oil in feet that it is philosophically preferable to do so. The yield of corn is an annual event from the kernel of aeed to the matured ear or cob is a natural, unfailing proceaa that can be ed year after year indefinitely, as long as Vater runs and grass grows." On the other hand, the production of wood for fuel purposes, even if intelligently undertaken, re--m quires a long period of years; we are eontin? ually warned that we are already in sight of our limber exhaustion unless a halt is called and sharp restorative measures applied; while ea to coal and oil, the reserve quantities of . which are by no means illimitable and are pretty accurately estimated, there is no hope of reoewing them el ell. Plausible though this may sound, one cannot but feel that there is an aspect of wickedness in burning this royal product of the American soil, especially' at a time when in ' other parts of the world there, are millions ol human beings whose lives Oould he saved by it if it were available to them as food. The siU , uation emphasises tha fact that the greatest now or at any time, to the welfare t ' drawback, of the world's peoples is the imperfect distribution of essential commodities. "RESIDENCE" xn:T73 , corroapondanea aad ether wetter for paWwaUos to THE EDITOR. . I. P, MoKlaasy. Advsrtl.lng Raprsaaiitatlva. Taw Tark Offio. tit Fifth Ar.au.-- I Auatl Offlca, 111 South Michigan Avsnue. La Francisco Offlca. tM Crockar Bide. Patera at tba postoffire of Balt Laka City. Coniress, elaaa mattar according to Act of lasask B. 1111. ' to u tntrlattd foT r.pu bile. Uo n ofexclttalvalyeetlila all news dispatch.. tto.Ce this BraAltaa to It. or not othanrlu arodltad Is tha local aawa publlahad arsayap.r. snd tatalao kaaslh. All rip a of rapublleatloa of apodal dla- -, ara reserved. hors alao pstsku ist ' S Ital skua ratss apelyte Vysaitsg; etber statu ,c: Tt for he will have discovered the Bunas af OrmUtlM. Vteta. leb-- . hr moll. V ! u wniaJM tlou for members. of the "letoure clam," the investigating passenger, eoneludiag, hie touf, 1 will reverently remove hie bat whenever ha Ttk realizes he is in the presence of a T-len- But T ! ftt Bu.Pt annany.. 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