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Show P" ' i W w Ljuj - " war w aLs4 it W ' ",rri twtwrfcrrpwfci W W , 1 Jr qr . 4 Wv ?r4rtai"S fs ' n7'5Sr at PiVW 4k 4 Twwfeiwiwa-,- iF, i THE DESEBET NEWS MONDAY APRIL 17 1922 Hews peKret New Bldg. . Published Dally Except Sunday. Membef of Audit Bureau of Circulation. '. .15 One eeflf . 5 One month .... . 7 0 One ear ., .5 Cents . SlDfle copies The above rates apply to I tan. Idaho, oeraoa per month. and Wyoming; other Slates ,,...., 1,00. ' Send remittances to . . and business communications THE DEHERKT NEWS Salt Lake City. Utah. Address correspondence and other matter for publication to THE? EDITOR Cone pinion Woodman. Inc, irirvii - 7! W. Ailams St. Chicago. 510 Detroit. (.ightner Bid Kansas City. 592 Victor Bid. SUL Constitution Bldg. Atlanta San Francisco. Hoharl Bid. Bid ,o Angeles. Union Leaitu half the number killed in ,1907, and was Jess than the number killed in any year since 1889. Credit for, the improvement is ascribed chiefly to the education of the employees In safety first principles. Some of it is due, of course to improvement in' equipment of the railway plant, devices that permit the men jo do their work without subjecting themselves to the ext tame dangers of tlie oldtime methods and practices. But most of the progress made has been the result of more thoughtfulness and greater care on J.he partof the men themselves. NATURALIZATION TWENTY YEARS AGO. i lake City, as Entered at the postofflcs of second class matter according to Act of Congress, March 3. 179. SALT LAKH CITY. . APRIL THE GE.no CONFERENCE. 17, 1922. Hie nx-a who are disappointed Because conference did not gel right down to business as did the recent Washington conference on armament, should remember that at Genoa there is not the definiteness, unity or clear cleavage of the issue, the thing to be done, that thrrewas at Washington. Secretary ing, Hughes set a vigorous, almost breath-ta- li precedent when at the first available moment he placed before the delegates at Wash fngton A terse, pointed statement of what the Uaited States proposed and what it was wilting to do of limitation of arms. No such in action was possible at Genoa even were the character of Eurojvan diplomacy such as to have permitted id Inhere are more issues involved and they are more confused; it follows necessarily that tlfe difficulties are multiplied. To be pessimistic, therefore, over the outlook for the success of the Genoa convention; to be doubtful that any measure of good will -- come from ifils not justified by the mere fact tlial a week has passed and little has yet been accomplished. There was much work of a preliminary nature to be done. Inclusion of the Russian Soviet government was in itself a tre mendous, though necessary, responsibility. During the first week of its activity the has been largely engrossed with getting the Russian delegates into line so that the work may move forward. In this connection some progress has been made. OI great interest as well as significance is the announcement in todays dispatches that Germany and RusRia,1ndcpendent1yor the conference, have signed a treaty that puts these, two nations back upon virtually pre INJUSTICE AND RETRIBUTION. war basts of diplomatic relations. Negotiations for this treaty t have been under way for RESIDENT HEBER J. GRUNT hit the nail months. Just what effect its consummation jp squarely on the head at the industrial will. have upon the negotiations of the conferbanquet in this city a few nights ago, ence itself remains to be seen; but it is when he declared. No man can do an injury cerely to be hoped that the action taken will ,lft another without a greater injury coming contribute to tho general good and will back to him." His remarks followed a scathenhance rather than retard progres toward ing arraignment by a visiting speaker, of the goal of permanent peace, prosperity and unionism aa alleged to have been practiced in happines? throughout the nations of Europe San Francisco up until a few months ago, VThe speaker had pointed out that men not GOOD FRl'fTS OF SAFETY FIRST" members of lhe union were absolutely denied an opportunity to work; that materials could of the beneficial results of the safety not be secured except through the combine, SOME which American railroads have under1 oppressive restrictions and at" a cost been waging in recent years are indicated by that was prohibitive. He portrayed the great harm done to the city of the Golden Gate accident figures for 1921. According to statistics compiled by the interstate commerce comby the conditions that prevailed and he picmission, as reported m the' current issue of tured the way in which the intolerable situathe Railway Age, the railroads last year tion was overcome. In correcting these evils, made the best record of the thirty-foyears however, he maintained that the business men in which statistics have been kept Jbat means, and other citizens of ,San Francisco treated it is quite certain, the bet record they have (lie union men fairneSsj and if ever made, for it is doubt fnl that before any was to this "point that President Grant alluded when be made the comment above referred to. systematic and comprehensive safety first work had been undertaken, the accident recWithout attempting, to discuss the situaord rould iavp beena very good one. tion on the Pacific coast, it is well to be Statistics for last year are not complete reminded of the fact that no person or, organbut those assembled are sufficient to indicate ization can ever cxpecLto deal unjustly with clearly the progress made. The total number another, without sooner or later feeling the of employees on duty killed in train or tram heavy hand of retribution. Injustice may flourservice accidents was ish for a lime and the oppressed may not live a reduc-. 1,096, torn of t.oit, or in per cent, as comto see justice done them, but it comes event1920. u the- - . smallest pared wtib ually and in a way little expected by the number of employees on du.v ever killed in offending parly. Men. whether in or out of the any year for which figures are available. The unions, cannot hope to heap indignities upon ' number of passengers killed was 205, a reductheir fellows without themselves suffering the tion of 2i. or to cent, as compared consequences of their acts. ThO law of retriwith 1920. It 15 the smallest number of passbution is an irrevocable decree of heaven, and while courts may fail at time to mete out to engers ever killed in any year for which statistics ore available except 1895, l',s and 1915. ijun that which is. their just due, a higher ,.The total number of employees on duly and tribunal subsequently steps in- - and makes passengers killed m liam and Irani sen ire acadjustments where all human agencies have cidents was I Jin I as compared with 2,336 lft failed. 1920 a reduction of 4i per cent, and the smallest ever reported in history. Ttic total numA WISE DECISION. ber of is employees, 'T passengers and all other per-oWISE decision was made by lhe president having a right to be on gailway property killed was 3.106 of the California railroad commission as compared w itli 4,329 in 4920, a reduction of when he ruled that reasonable expenditures over 28 pec cent. , for newspaper advertising constitute a legitiThe foregoing.fipures do not include fatalmate 'operating charge for a public, utihty, ities resulting fioni Undii.-iriu. ulregardless of whether such expenditures are t.. s tra in" accidents that is, accidents occurring made in a lerrddry where the utility enjoys THOSE the-matt- junui, it, itn. - , -- fnp-feren- ce ur with--absolu- Ui v i- 7i iyi? !- -2 rr ns A Lunt-cdli- -- airiualm7mjapnty:-jrhe--ABmepniwfp- to the operation of trams.-Th- e number of poisons killed in such accidents iff 1920 was 463 and .The only imd9?tift9r7r'mhut!on"'tf-l-3iieF--eeiit- ,. rla-of persons the fatal accidents to which showed an increase was trespassers. The number of these persons killed m 1920 was 2,166. while in 1921 it was 2,481, an increase of 14 2 per cent. Automobile accidents have seriously interfered with efforts to reduce the number of people killed at highway crossings, but when the complete figures for 1921 are available they will show that the total number of persons of all classes killed was-onl- y about six thousand. It' was only abput one- s t ten training department lished in connection with the normal department of the school B. Okazaki Hokkaido, Japsmsss government engineer of Sapporo, was a Salt take visitor, the guest of Eldsr Hsbsr J. Grant, who was horns from a mission to tbs land of the Mikado. Word waa received of. the death ln M axilla, P. X., of Major F. A. M sachem, surgeon U. 8. A. A Washington, D, C, dispatch told of tho appointment of O. C. Beebe as national bssik examiner for Utah. Phot. Louis P. Moeaeh, principal of the Weber Stake Academy, resigned, to take effect at' the close of tho eurront school David O. McKay, an instructor year. Prof. in. tho ' institution, was named as his successor. 5 Secretary of War Elihu RqCsStled tor Cuba, to have personal supervision of tbe withdrawal of American troops oa the following May 29. The war department at Washington, D. C., received a dispatch from Manila, dated April 1, to the 'effect that Gen. Malver, Filipino insurgent leader, had. surrendered J. Franklin unconditionally to Brlg.-GeBell and that armed resistance to the" United States was terminated in the department of tho North Philippines, n. -- MIXED MARRIAGES. (For the Deseret News by Dr. Prank Crane.) I Considerable attention was attracted some time ago to the marltal difflcultle of an opera staa who bad married a chauffeur and proclaimed that she had found a 199 per cent. man. e The venture, however, did not pan chauffeur Went back to his machinery and the diva continued her operatic career. The parting was attended with hard words on both sides. The incident called attention to the infinite experiments that have been made, and are still being made, by young people out-Th- undertaking marriage thus coming from different worlds Some of these have had a measure of marsuccess. A few King Cophetuas ried beggar maids and lived happily ever after. Here and there we read of a mil- - Ilonaltces sged etxty who marries m shoe of a Spanish clerk aged twenty-twRoman Catholic- gentleman whose name might grace a cigar box marrying Former Hopkins's daughter, who 'lives oa Lick .Creek and was brought up a Methodist; of a preacher who marries a vaudeville star, and of a Prince of royal Greek' blood who selects his spouse from American mllllon-airedoand they seem to get along "pretty tol'able. But these are exceptions The fact is that marriage is not entirely a matter of young love, poetry, and passion. It also has its economical side and Jtg social bearings. Doubtless it is cruel and unfeeling for the stern parents to pick out av husband for their daughter with reference' only to his bank account, but after all that is not much worse than the daughter picking out a husband for herself with sole reference to the color of his eyes and his tasts in ilk shirts. Marriage is the one business where there has to be some sort of blending of romance and prudence. The problem is not wholly one of young people getting together; they also have to keep' together. And it takes other things than sentiment to ensure that. When a girl marries she not only marries an Individual, she marries also a background. ghe may find, after the first flush of romance Is passed, that her husband's way of looking at things, hi estimate of values and sven his moral convictions are utterly Irreconcilable to her own. Unfortunately she often does' not find this out , until it is too late. Love and trust and utter confidence are magnified and a girj often takes a martyr-like pride Ip refusing to consider more practical matters. We are not likely in America, saturated as wo are by novels, full of the ideals of romantic affection," to take up with the European notion that . parents should arrange marriages without reference to tho young peoples tastes, but it certainly might be well if the young people would consult with and give heed to their parents before they take an important step that may mean misery or happiness for (Copyright, 122,. by Frank Crane.) hn -- m. comit-on-sens- with the public. Every general policy it adopts is of )ital interest to c it serves, and at some time in its career every such corporation has a message to convey to its patrons. A situation arises which calls for explanation or defense, a change in schedules is made which will inconvenience the public unless it is given due. publicity, or .additional-- , financing "is required in which the people aye to be invited to participate. In any such case the interests of the utility Ihe-publi- luL eruption. Thai's the point! Almost the moment ftbarfWosntmectl touches tiie side . skm,ifdung stopf and healing begins d( your It takes 4 hours to baking, but' orilyN 4 minutes -- to buy a loaf of Royal A tested skin treatment For sale by all druggists Bread? See hov much time you save!. Buy TODAY A Mothers P. Old The broad S- - that made mother quit baking it wont take4 "slices to convince you of its unvarying goodness and economy! Horse Old Preacher. -- One in One Million. BT ARTHUR BRISBANE. yesterday MAUD FANCHER lay dying of poison in a Newark hospital. She is probably dead this morning. She poisoned her child to tako with her. In n long farewell letter to her husband, her use of English was imperfect. She wrote: hare saw, and "Don't never think. She told her husband to marry again and be happy, and thia is part of her postscript. Just bury me as cheap as possible, and lay Cecil oif my right arm In the And he will rest In his casket mothers arms leaving all the hardships here. When Goethe wrote in "Faust" Marguerites request that her baby be burled with her,, he wrote from his intellect no moro beautifully than this Ignorant mother,, writing from her heart. Dont say . say broad, Royal Bread! ROYAL BAKING CO. 'I are of .which dont fifty-si- x help much. But the . man or reached be can woman through the Help Wanted columns of The Deseret News. Theres, where the intelligent, efficient men and women look to find positions cf responsibility, for Salt Lake employers who have tested the high intelligence of the employees reached through The Deseret. News voice their Help Wanted needs in these' e, Thus far nobody baa seemed much excited about Rev. Mr. Meysra, too, old to preach and after a life in the tl fifty-seve-n help, Tou read perhaps in. this column about tbe oldest horse in tbe world, owned by a clergyman past fifty-Onretired on a pension of ft a day. Much interest is shown in Lhe HORSE. The jockey club ha arranged to pay alt of its expenses as long as it (Ives. Mr. Ehrich of the Horses Aid society, has told the Rev. Dr. Meyers who owns tbe horse that .she will pay 1! tba horse's living expenses including horse doctors bitla Many have sent money to care for tho HORSE. pulpit, retired on a trifle over There varieties .of Some one has said: a , day. A HOR8E more than .fifty years old IS'pnusual, therefor interesting. A clergyman more than seventy years old, retired with barely enough to live on, is not unusual, therefore NOT fifty-seven- th columns. interesting. commerce department anTh nounces a perfecting of accuracy es It possible to standards detect an- - error of one in a. million, even one In a hundred million. With such standards the absence- or A sin- on earth 7 attendj gle steel rivet from a gigantic steam- to Wise providence fortunately that. Jn any case, we need not worship displacing 25,909 tons would be ry for a while. This world could easily Instantly detected. Marvelous, wonderful and beautiful feed a thousand times aa many peopla. as are now on It. is science. If only some department of government had a similar machine for detecting things that are missing Pop Anson, famous grand old man election of baseball, la dead, net quite 79 years In public - officials before old. He played, aa professional, from day. 172 until 1897, when he retired at Mrs. Beasle Fuchs is dead in New the age ot 45. People wondered a York, aged 119. She died In her sleep, his ability Xo continue in tba game so and relatives say that aha was never long. 11L Youn gentlemen with minds cenShe leaves 2 children, grandchilIt tered on baseball, will observe that dren and every woman born did the same, how the powers of the mind outlast the A man that long would there be room for us all muscles, of th body. that-mak- - l depenfls xn hi- - irGril tii'reaf work at ai which baseball players, prize fighieis and other athletes are condeirn.iL to git around for the rest of rheir l.v-- . telling what they used to do. All countries including China, can teach this nation something While we ar working to clear off our forests. 'China is working hard to twsto.o her forest' Ir one ar one hundred million tfecM h tve I cen pul oiu. Tlei we ar riearln- - as iy forests and doing nothin; lo repjat? them. .That is one of many things that qugbt to Interest the government a huh alone hat power to handle the matter for th-country. thiitih t them. i mirri Collar- sfeel better , look better wear better when laundered by th JHE !mRMNGt $iBaycCwhchj?6u fey .ZAspir&IT aniryoI the community are Best served when the wwipacs-LnessaKe.,.i&. Broadcasted, in the cheapest manner possible. Newspaper publication is the only practicable medium for such for publication, and reasonable expenditure advertising are as necessary for public service corporation as for a department 'store or any other institution that deals with the public. Many utilities would undoubtedly find the way for their operation smoother Jf they made greater use of the newspapers to explain Ibeir policies to the people who are affected by :.? 4i--a- ' t X. o; btHftrtd local it y. healed that ,U...P..JL kindergarwould bo estab- -- TheivCry .nature of its business is such &eWsq andHeeKny jrhe.,.hoad ot Jrosteee ofth announced that a University ng ce qukky RESIOPL e. r cpn-feren- Haw ed me fealt ike to project. The aharee would bo pro-ratall stockholder who might desire to buy. Tbe stock at the time was quoted on the market at 17.25. With the disposal of sufficient shires to raise $109,590 the treasury would still contain 29,999 shares for futurs use. ' Charles E. Pickett, of Watsrloo, Iowa, prand exalted ruler of the B. P. O. Elks; Joseph T. Panning, of Indianapolis, Ind.. asid John D. O'Shea, of Lcran. Maaa. grand trustees were guests of local lodge No. It. They were hers to make arrangement for the Elks convention to bo held fn this city the following August. Tho visitor wer entertained at a reception la Chrlatensen's hall and at aa organ recital in the Taber-.nacl- which the country OVE ofatthe big problems the unassimilated is of that present conm-here-iro- mt a meeting of the board of director of the Utah dogar company, upon the ' recommendation of a special committee which had investigated the outook for a sugar factory in the Bear River valley. It was decided to sen 1B.IOO aharea of treasury stock at tli a share to finance the At SERVICE. alien the man who has foreign country and has not yet taken to himself the privileges and ideals of American citizenship. Probably a large part of the trouble--sounrest is due. to the fact that many laborers are ever ready to be swayed by plans, plots and machinations which, as they are led to believe, will help them to- get an advantage from the government; this spirit perhaps being an outgrowth of the spirit of underhand intrigue which ho n ey c ombed p ar Is of the European governments before the war, and the reaction against which has led to the extremes of. Bolshevism. Added to this is the spirit of apathy with which native Americans have considered the alien a spirit which makes Him feel that he is an outsider, instead of an integral part of oa the- - prinoiple the government atsol that the surest cure for Bolshevism is 100 per cent- - Americanism, a nation-wid- e movement has been launched aiming to help Lhe alien to become an American citizen in the fullest sense of the term. The International Association of Lions Clubs is sponsoring this movement, and endeavoring to enlist the of employers of alien labor throughout the country. The general plan aims at playto the alien, starting fits ing papers through proper channels, and educating him up to a rcaliation of the full meaning of citizenship in the United States of America. The fullest possible success is to be hoped for this movement It could be desired that Qiejrame spirit of loyally might be Inculcated into many who do - not need, naturalization papers. Throughout governmental ranks, from small cities right up to the houses of the national Congress, are found trouble-makiindividuals who place politics ahead of patriotism, consider self superior to service, and who are too much inclined to regard what should be held as a sacred trust, from the standpoint of What is there in it for ma?" There is a fipld for the teaching of 100 per cent Americanism among even some of thoe who as of the mighty, oacupy among the unassimilaled aliens. From the ROYAL Unless you see the name Bayer on tablets, you are - not- - getting genuine Aspirin prescribed byrphysictacs" over 22 years and proved safe by. millions for .Colds Headachy Rheumatism . Toothache. Neuritis -Neuralgia' .. Earache Lumbago , Pain; Pain LAUNDRY 625 SontU Stato Wasatch 2624 Downtown Offices: . Accept only Bayer " H AMB package which contains proper directions. taMato-A- lw, s tts - " H V tssOa walk at Bmt Mmstsuuw bottle, of T It and 22 East 2nd 600th 100-Dnu- grfrt MosssOdJcvr S,!lcrllcrt4 - V and Stats at 1st Sooth zrxmxi f -- 5. Jw. Si JuurS '' |