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Show 4 ,x f N IT ' to 4 m Temperature. Roof of Weather Forecast J Maximum Minimum I Northern Utah Generally fair tonight and Sunday. I Boston Bldg. 8t Tostrrday . 88 Mrdjr. . . Miijruim Todaj Today 9 a tr To J&y Noon Today 6am if 40 PAGES CITY UTAH SALT. LAKE SATURDAY AUGUST 1022 12 SEVENTY-THIR- .. Kioak, . 72 10 .... If 14 44 41 If II I YEAR. D SHOPMEN REJECT HARINGS FINAL PROPOSAL Locomotive Firemen Return to Work at Ogden Railroad Yards Mexicans Learning Salt Lake Route Men How to Bathe in Army of Obregon Rail Denindiha. Seniority Workers Reared 4 Seibold Outline Various Element Reflected in Political Situation Throughout Country. Decisioii Made Striking Unions in Written Response to White House Ask That Men Retain Rights. ) Aftociated Pri-i- n LOS ANGELES. Vug 12 the Mexican artny rc teaming to take regular hatin', to General Franple00 Serrano, secretary marine In the cabinet of President brlex Obregon. who U paying a visit to Loa Angelea. CtiOOlS Wt harn eftUblifihM In nearly all of the garrtaona, he and while many who continued. fnllimed Gtncrtl Obrgou to were Illiterate, I am certain 90 per cent of throe same men can qos read and write in the morale Thlf improvement and condition of the private soldier is making for a Better arm M In the national t Bv vic-to- rr En-gmce- Aided by Bandits LAS VEG AS, Ner-- . Anglo-Iris- h Peace. Treaty,, ,, and-- . Outstanding Figure in Political Feud is Victim of Heart Fail-ur- e Was Elected President of Irish Body" And Served as F oreign Secretary. 12 Ang Transcontinental traffic oxer tile Salt Lake line of the Talon Pacific i)8ton wu completely tied up here today when members of the big four brother hood a refused U handle trains on the lat egaa dhllon, which extend 296 ndlea from mnot (till, to Calleate, (International News Service.) LONDON, Aug. 12. Arthur Griffith, founder of the Sinn and one of the signers of the Anglo-Iris- h peace treaty, died from heart failure today, said an Exchange Telegraph dispatch from Dublin. Griffith was one of the outstanding figures in the political feud which developed after the peace signing of the Anglo-Iris- h Nn treatv. He and Michael Collins led the fight for the treaty, the an perla' to The Nws ) sae- chief leader on the side OGDEN, Aug 12 Locomotive fre-- Ck'5 utU10n was contending for a republic was Eamonn de Valera. en of the Southern Pacifc talrol returned to work at noon today be rg Gnff th wa oicted prsldwnt of th t it for 38 hours and tlelrg up the Lul Ereinn and when the Ir sh pro-v- ii wese- - ternUal of the roid ona! government was appointed ha This dec s on wan reuchej after a wan named foreign eecretarv reGpiion from dev-are-the enmrers con-ndGrifLonJudora was fith had been eiected to the British WABHINGTOX mseljernrn the r att'tud and oppetng House cf Commons on the Sinn Fein the str ke Soon .sfter ths resolutbn flexlbla' and acirr ' b jt rever tok hji seat na presented word came from fhe the aenaie $ approved, Grffith- was chn rman of the Irish Wawrh c ub where the f remen were of rerv to condcraton whch c.nie d'g-iLondon to ir evior that the rreo would turn o work without anv concession negotuea the treav ment to the und-- a Whn voung man Griffith went to rata n a righs as g except tnt the a program more South Africa v d in en p Leaders or r Returning to Dublin, debate njee he founded and edited the United which thev t f aI T'1 oncesons negotiations for arv ngrr -re-- 1 Irishman t The the was whch weie omrnv u a final p mirieit f date for by the authorities only to besuppressed moval In the week after nv guards from the ,ocal railsucceeded by The Smn Fe'p newspaper road v irdt the taking down of search Laer he started another pnl Ma. Dtrhs and the reinstatement of a paper CLEVELAND Kfor9 H caPed Nat onaliy L Mirph discharged hojer committee of foa Gr ff th e writing atf parted wide atAug 2 g and miners to reach an agreement He was for arg iment rather Or H two tralrs have !et over the tention than fighting and did not Take part in foeumpcion of en mlrtrg Southern Ptcifi since the opening (By Ammdatri Pr... I H 12 Aug YAKIMA. Charle Smith reported to die polios today that two armed men. holding him op on a afreet and finding his pockets mpi handed him S3 cents. Take k. ho pio(cd one of the bandlle as sayuiz buy a yourself mp of roffiv and a ou re ciwli instack of hot oak re ly worse off than we are Fn Pacific hero, was averted ehu afternoon, when the rrprnannta tires of the road agreed to remote armed guards. without faor wrtie fearlessly (By The Assoc ated press.) he ftsds them m ceadltioM as 12 WASHINGTON Aug Heads or expres-sio- s of faet Aar stateasest the seven railroad organizations now of oplsioa la the srfleles will asd on strike were declared by one of ha wholly oa the responsibility Des of Mr. kelbold. The aathortty their chief officials today after a firtal hews may or may not share net conference to have decided to reject i ditor. la the opinions set fort completed the last strike settlement proposal put forward by President Seibold. Louis By Harding The striking unions in a written re(Special to The New. . D sponse een to the White House were WASHINGTON'. Xjk 11 are Professional poetical leaders said by th8 official to have told the wide apart to trying to Incite a funpreside? t the cond not call off the damental cause for the ronfu-e- d restriae urleas a guarantee was given those sults of recent pritnarifs or come that ail of their men would be reinthat figure in ennesr. et to stated in service with eniorty rights The majority of these leaders agree The president had prounimpaired that the manifest popultar dissatisposed that the seniority status of the faction la due in failuirs of Congres Experts Submit In- ication returning striker be left to adjudrather than to anv actual fa i'ts aith Allied by the railroad labor board the executive branrh of the Hnrd'ng Soon after the response of the Lloyd strlk Report demnity administration Thev also concur In the ng shopmem reached the White opolnlon that the s'eri e Congressionheads unHouse, al soil has sprouted an unexpected George Makes Conces- ions, who haveof the been in conference amount of liberalism in both parties wftinhe shop craft leaders for the were resumed today Those who had of the strike vestvr'lay the second Lack of efficient leadership and sions to Poincare. meet- sect. on of No 15 which left for San past two days, arrived at the White been Informed of ye erda cohesion In the naUonal leg.slature House and went into conference with ing said today they wre convinced Franc4co this morning 18 hours and leaders Is attributed by some of these President Harding, Secretaries Hoov- that there were no insurmountable 19 Ute and No I which left to the faet that tha skilled er and' Davis, chairman Hooper of dtfftciy lefOa the wrv ef a speedy and at rnnutes 12 18 am, eight hours and 49 Keans mechanics, of government ' got By DAVID M. CHURCH. the rtfUboad Tabor borL and .Chair-- , Juat aetUemcnt r,k minutes late ytog-th- a elghtJfWffl. man Camming &t the senate InterUff Correspondent, More than 609 passengers had been of th Wilson administration British state commerce committee, Also parWbAtvr th actual causes. It la LONDON Aug. 12.Tb4 Mrs OUiida D. Davis marooned here durirg the period of CHICAGO the conference. ticipated in Into summoned the cabinet was urgently strike quite certain there existsa amour Southern beauu and one of the gal- theThe more pro- session st noon today to consider s train bulletin shows that the voters of the country lery leaders of he Kooseve t stampede movements from here west over the Officer is in nounced degree of exasperation over Injured ronverUion aJlied experts who In the rational the from Repjbljcar report the failure of Congress rather than from Southern Pacific this afternoon will Coast Rail Explosion of 1912, has filed - for d.vurce because of any faults with the ex- had been working upon the terms for be ae fohow William Iav Chicago lumberthe proposed Indemnity moratorium Vo ecutive wing of the goxernment. Overv'd Limbed potd for Dav gl Mr Fhe y man that posai-bhtover chared for Germany. Optimism 20 pm Tbo Democratic appraisement of the (By International New, Service ) scheduled for has dies pated srwral hundred thous- '3No30 10pm of a temporary settlement is situation Is that Mr Harding is equalleavme at 12 15 p n was Special Deputy United Ptate, Mar and dohars in the Ust few vears The is little hope that a .Hall 7 m a No ne H af g ly to blame for the alleged fatuous growing There out to hive J was wounded couple were marr cd in 15$ ness of Congressional leaders because permanent solution of the indemnity windows of Sillhan 21 of hoh Fr div and todav leaving the Southern Pacific iU be found he has refused to assert his leader-h'p.7 problem roundhouse here were shattered and V ld hav e jef at 45 at 125 pm The experts werejn ses;onneArly bother this change is jusnf ed on of rtre ernckade surroundre u a m on Lothdi BUPERTOR, Is a matter of partisan opinion and half the night chscuMinfe the propo- ingport the was Hallw'iv Northertorn down when yards special agent wis the subject for such acrimonious con- sals that had been made Friday after- f.ve bomba wounded anonr Las exploded simultaneously shot ard serious Vegas Strike Leaves troversy Of one thing there can be no noon by Premier Liod George of here early today. others bruised four exBritain Premier Thunls of Belgium judgment as question Popular BuPlvan waa even miie from Two Trains on Desert In the mouth 'at Saunders wounded of France to Poincare has in date and resu.ts Premier pr mary pressed todav v en a mob f rr ke gunshot helrg fired upon with here ea It was expected that the three pre- ahyahofgun not refleced an tendency on the part when he rushed out to In- - s mpat U4rers attu .ed a carload of 2 A VGELt 5 Tha Aug of the oters to say it w.h Lowers". miers woald corfer aga n this af- vest n emplov'.s en roje from Tn n an- t e r gate the explosions According non-u- r Most of the comment on the Con- ternoon to s United States wo un h marshal in Mlnneapo toBu,rnr ouhF pase"-gr- It is understood that Premier Lloyd cl depufy gressional situation ar drompamed two of ! e the bombs nrge were sre Lftk or re hurled to with erbal miiles less flafer rg George bas made some cdnces'-lorI '1 e of up t t s en.e o1av the French especially In retard to from automobiles and two others b fji A man arre.ed Tex Demoorau OpclmiMlo LARFPO. o e t b vf band e standnlg outside the stockof German coal fields a"d state ade this meting as be emerged f r m the them Ciijen'r trair'ren n th p is this condition of affairs that control ks N.Ui and owned forests stricter Mexlsupervision from the Grande of of German finances comirg er ad tbt c m adds two to toe a lnsplres the aggrensive Although an Immediate search was Rio , r! Democratic leaders regarding the outno t Instituted trsc of tralrs hld up at f the homberstcan ireidv - Prg If the moratorium is arranged it iaaw Eawin come of the November battle for confound and they are believed to (bvv admitted deM- poins probably will run on! a few months was In Denver on a chare trol of the two Houses of Congress Instead I have all escaped in automobiles was tbe Tnon Par sad (Morse wanted wih of two yeara as Germany reo A00 from These leaders assert that the record The bombs were of the black abcondirg oVce here that tbe rnfce rr f of failure which they credit to the Re quested Sn- - Iik- - line was cau 1 b x. fa.- dep tvpe and exploded with heavy Internaional Trust company Jast Fe rrm ra.ns use rbe SaetonatlonsA deputy United States gust o Ban Rirnard o ad p.a marshal expressed the belief that -- The t WASHINGTON reduce the wide margin of 24 by which f wo t.eup of frtur Jc.me of the bombs contained shrap-- 1 it sviiicu ne! branse of thfc manner in which ,Santa Fe ranroad bv necessitated be tj, thaf g rion of he re Mr Hard rg party controls tbe Sen- uiuic ' 1 mail ate to rot njnre than six It is ony of Unite Fates the roundhouse window were shat-- j rf pt,uhern Pac,f c general Associated Pres ) fair to say that the Republican lead- ae- t the F uhern Pacif c jt was leaded fre hefe n wps train tered ers expect and in fact hope that at office the was the to 12 jofficia Sullivan taken Coo DENVER, dopartmen post Doris hospital Aug thej in 8 unweldy majority present the waa killed her parent He will recover. (Continued on page two) today Houe will he cut down more than Eplinger, Mr and Mr E Eplinger of Ft J 80 cont The leaders who do not Francis Kansas and gnufither Rin hold seat in Congress believe that M Kagua were seriously reduction would make for an automobile accident nearInjured liroom- : field. Colorado, last cening The in- (Cotrtlnued on page two) 'jured hate been brought to a Denver of t rlf of rildf ia wHttei by I.oU Sbold, aatleaii writer. on wllkawa the Mifltfoai tlreogkutmsk-UpalttkalSlates. g Mr. Seibold is lalte4 m tsar of the raantry sad will 4 Tfcfc tm Signer rs and Conductors Condemn Attitude of Firemen and Oppose Strike. Man Without Coin (By Associated Press) EAOT ST IX) CIS, Aug. 13. The threatened walkout of 300 members of the Big Four brotherhoods, employed by the Missouri Aftr DEAD IN DUBUN IS work-eleme- re n Arthur Griffith d t o- - 1 h- -i -- lj g -- the Dublin when sfg at throw off Brit sf a and authority republic was actually proclaimed Griffith twice arrested for hit pout cai ar tatlons t? Reductions on Freight Of Crude Chemicals 1 sjp-pos- 2 Firemen Hurt 1 Paf njred i In Freight Pier el -- Wrclc te fhild v fer. I i , j pr THE TRUTH ABOUT UTAH j Cole Tells of Efficient Law in California in 48 A lia (By Associated Press.) SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 12. Cages from the early legal history ot CaUlonua passed betore a noted assemblage of delegates to the convention of tne American Bar at a association, banquet which lasted until early thi3 morning when former Senator Cornelius Cole, within a few months of his 100th birthday, addressed the gathering. There Was no such thing as statutory law in San Francisco In 1848, said Senator Cole on reminiscent mood. There was no civil code, no political code, no criminal code, no judges decisions to guide the lawyers. And let me assure you that this oommuijity-waunder no worse conditions civily and politically than it has Senator Cole was admitted to the California bar in been since. 1848, dug gold in 1849, and practiced law in San Francisco from' s 1850 , to 1852. . Lord Shaw of England, another speaker at the banquet, felicitated the members of the association upon the selection of John W. Davis, former ambassador to the court of St. James, for the ' j presidency. v If I were to choose for duty in international relations a man In whose person was united all the qualities of a great and succes- ful diplomatist, I would choose a man of the qualities possessed in , superlative degree by Mr. Davis. Chief Justice Taft, sparkling with geniality, endorsed the! 1924 convention of the association in London,! , plan to hold the adding that no better spot could be selected than the place that If you had seen the development of the Briish conBnohlaw. go to London. I'll go with you. he concluded. . M. Henri Aubepin. representing the French bar, aroused the t cheers of the gathering bv the fervor with which he spoke of I Americas help in the finale of the war. . ! il GREAT INDUSTRY THREATENED. a troth facing Utah that we would fain peas unrecorded but In the Interest of truth, sod the future of the state the real facta concerning potash must be art forth that the people may are how the very existence of one of our greatest potential industries hung. In Ute b ala nee. Tills is not a political argument because these articles must be kept free from poUtics If they arc to preserve any possible value they may now poearss. It la simply a Uttle fact story of what la happening In Washington where the futures of whole states are sometime bartered for a golden song. Know then, that since potash became of any Importance as an Amerl.-aproduct. Utah ha produced one eighth of the total ot the United States. It is estimated to he one of our greatest single mourirg Mnce Nature stored it In plenty In many places In the state, especially In the Valley of the Great Salt Lake where the supply Is almost limitless The alunlte deposits of MarysvalO rich tn potash are extensive enough to last for scores of years under forced production. Although men had dreamed before the war of producing potash In western merica In competition with Germany under right government protection, that great conflict gave them their chance. The govern-- , ment geological survey had previously located It for them In Utah, Nevada and Southern California and s a fourth of Ihl great sum wav they liopped onto the matter to the 'tune of over 30,0(10,000. extended in this state. At Saldura on the Great Salt Lake desert one of the biggest plants In the world was erected at a cost of more than S3 000,000 with promise of production for centuries. Coo Id they Is insured a break with the cheaper labor of Europe. Near the Great Death alley in Southern CaHlomla oilier big plant were erected, while at Mary vale in Utah, Eastern capital put large sums into the aiunlic de, T. posits. This Is all now threatened to be wiped away through the Insidious practice of cheap German competition and an apparent lack of foresight on the part of oar rongresamen t a a whole They have been fought sturdily by the representatives from our own state who rralUe the lnetlmable value of the potaeh Induss try to Utah. v Months ago. Senator Reed Smoot brought to the attention of Congress a deep-lai- d plot to kill the American potaeh Industry at one fell swoop.. He produced In tbe senate an agreement between practically all American- distrnbntors of the fertiliser and tbe German syndicate, by which tbe American agreed tn handle IS per cent of American potash requirements f"m the Gorman prodnuTK If there could he any possibility of competition from American producer, the Germans were to be given a chance to tmtlcrn-i- l this competition. No more pernicious contract was err entered from an American standpoint and yet H operated until its expiration and is subject to renewal. Senator Smoot called attention to this bnt there was no law by which to attack H. . Looking backward. It Is quite evident now that the powerful Interests behind, mnrdcrpn as far aa Utah potash is concerned, were looking forward to the act km that has Jast taken place In the senate. with the They propose to put potash on the free list. Taken In conjunction with the agreement distributors, it means that Germany can hold back profitable prod net Ion of Western Amirican potash for years to come, and It means the ruination of the Industry In this state until such time as local consumption or Oriental dlaributlon can hope to compete with the drastic terms of the German combine Hr Clip theae each day. Tha ooUectioa win be valuable Information oa your own state. la Pci-Imp- ' - this-dea- ' l, I Fire in New York lJau?r pow-lo- upr wtts made to S. P. Announces Rate 1 s iyf, t to-- a f remen (B j Asso td Press) ORK A'"s 15 -- Thousands of were de.trosed two ' (Bv Associate Pre ) FRANCISCO Reductiorg trancontirentaI freight rates on crud cvaride potash ard arsenical fluo dust have been announced here by ths PacU r- romp a h c The present rale of 33 08H per hundr.d pounds on crul. cyanide from Niagara Kalis to Pacific coast points will be reduced September IS to II OS. A new rate of 74 cents per hundred pnLnds on carload lots of from Cahforna points lo Chicagopotash and points wi b put into effect August et 22 the present ra'es ranging from SO cents tn Chicago to SI 4 cen's to Denser The ri on arsenical Tue duyf he. tween California points and Colorado points will be red icd fr im 12 50 pef hundred pounds to 50 cents per hun dred pounds in carload los effect!'. September 2a were serious' r irei and Lnlta Republic Suggest others were "urmme in! Peking for Conference fighing a Maze that was stiI eating 'By Ao-latPres.) up plr D of the Nw Yn-Central' railroad nn the North rivr water' TOKIO Aug 12 Th. eastert at Chita answenrg Japan. republic n hou-- s front hi after ! note regarding negotiation, o'er con thirtv J d fr aftc-noo- d sci) t a,ded ,he of the f!re dejarimrnt and expedition from augges'ed Pe streams were sho' ir'a the king as the placeSiberia ext, for i conference flame Damage bv md afternoon pan replied stating a preference Ja fo mas ermated at II som censor in Manchuria appara u, I Mrs. McCormick to Wed Young Swiss Architect Copynght, 1922 by the Chicago American Publishing Co CHICAGO, Aug. 12. (By International News Service.) Mrs. Edith Rockefeller McCormick will marry Edward Krenn. Swiss architect and landscape gardener, in Chicago n February, according to an authoritative source today close to the councils involving both sides of the divided home of the McCormicks. Mr Krenn came to the United States on the same boat a3 Mr. McCormick and ha3 been living at the Drake ever Mnce. Mr. Krenn has been associated with Mrs. McCormick's irter. ests for several years. They met during Mrs. McCormick's early cssociations with Dr. Jungs colony in Zurich. Switzerland, and their chance acquaintanceship ripened into the closer bond during the intervening years. , When she came to this country MrJ McCormick brought the voung architect over and se thim to work on plans for tle extensive zoological gardens she has donated to Cook county and whrh are to be located in the forest preserve ner this citv. Unlike her former husband Darn'd F. McComirk who married Ganna Walka famous Polish alto opera s;r gcr in Pans yesterday. Mrs. McCormick plans to continu a residence in this ctiy and set her wedding date to conform to t!io law of this state for not remarrying within a year after the signing of the eoara-t:on decree. It also became knowm toav that the mamage of Miss Mathilda McCormick, daughter of Harold McCormick and Mrs. Edith Rockefeller McCormick, and M"v Over. riding master. wo"ld take place within th "evt few- - drs and that it was of the Imminence of MathiUaa imoeriing nuptials that her and his bride h's remarriage in order that-h- e , father. hastened I might witness his daughter wedding. -- Sw-i- s t I V V ,3 t t 7 t' 1 5 i I I e |