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Show f SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. Better Homes in America Movement an Out-- ; standing Fom: of Public Service By HERBERT HOOVJR, f ! Thats Differtrt. The difference between i,,ar in il.e world the i'nlted States bread n ing upon the water : p.iveriiMi. ut maintains 10373 aids to money to friends Is tl...: Mead Ration und usea 117 vessels. In- cast upon the waters ce-:- o cluding lightships. many days. Cincinnati L.tijintir. B.o Ligl'.thcucc In it..- - l.iro-- Organization. Hylitlioi'se oryanlza-!i":- : ta-.-- j!IEI?F invn-ioni- I Building. coii.e. 1. I.. Visiting Parr. 1 M r.iih. rx arc lc Kiuiulry, Mulctary. NOVEL MAKES f.r-.t- r MAIN we!-- HAG Kl CIS WOVEN 1 Gland; V. N. CVi llyland 2702-- R. STKEKT IDEAL PICTURE of homes wlr.Lli was is danger that the and the drift to the cities, may deprive war, the great uf our population of the inestimable an increasingly large portion home. in lie the which true values Through local organizatof available housing. increase to amount the is it possible ions, however, to maintain and desirable also develop high standards, t jj possible and also of privacy and and but convenience of comfort, safety, only sat be expressed in the house itself, its equipment and which may beauty, Ml 1921 'MAIN STREET i lj Secretary of Commerce. S: Alll'll 21, -J l--t Gopher lrairie Slow Has Vidor and Blue .is Lends M.i-S'.rvct," which open-- i Snn-- , d.iy ut the Princess Theatre ali i w hich will co:ii::i,.ie on Monday a'.-is a picture of pictures. The word yroat li.is been bandied about so often uiul freely thui is has lost sonic of its connoia-- l turns. Yet, it is the word, ami the only word, tit to describe this wonderful picture which has lost not a single quality in its transposition io the screen from Sinclair Lewi..' novel SWELL EAST I ri alA . - ,i 4 ... J Ju H JS "5 .a !' ., i. J, h ii.'ib ? 1. surroundings. The amenities of our civilization should be accessible to all persons, High standards are vhstever their income is or their occupation. with economy and can be put within the reach of alL Our families are they have a strong creative' instinct; for something better, and ever to make the best nse of ever strive they what they have. Beyond having their homes decent and beautiful and healthful they want to make them attractive and beautiful, and they are in contriving to reduce household drudgery. dger Besides the will, they have the education and practical ingenuity peeded to make the best use of the devices which modern civilization has On the other hand, with the passing of individual placed at their disposal. handicraft in making articles for the home, men and women find difficulty selection from the vast number and variety of articles jo making the beat tnd mctliuds that are offered to them. A great need is apparent for well directed concerted efforts to work nt s solution from the point of view of the family with a small income, that has to make both ends meet. of the citizens of each community in better homes The been has found successful and agreed upon by leading demonstrations organizations representing millions of men and women as a practical way of meeting this need, and of presenting the results of study to the public in a way that can readily be grasped. I therefore have no hesitation in as an outstanding form of public service. From nrging such this movement there should develop steadiness of character, high ideals af family life, civic pride, and responsibility throughout our land. i its con-grte- nt FT ,a :! f the same name. ig It is long since such a picture was S seen, and the highest praise is due all that participated in it, to Harry Heaumont, the dinctor; to Florence Vidor, Monte Blue and the excellent supporting cast, consisting of Harry Myers, Noah lleery, Is.uise Fazenda, Robert Cordon, Josephine Crowell, 1 s Cordon Griffith, Otis llarlan and ' fv Alan Hale. Main Street" is the story of Carol Kennicott and her brave but pathetic t-efforts to make Gopher l'rairie 'a better place to live in. She is tilled with ideas she wishes to put into practice. The inhabitants do not with her; even lu-- husband, L)r. Kennicott, is too cmrrosxcd in his medical practice to further Ms wife's plan. In despair, she finds her only ally in Erik Yalbnrg, a young idealist. Two things happen: tongues begin H wagging maliciously, and Erik finds himself too hopelessly in love with Carol thut he wants her to elope. These situations bring on the dramatic climaxes to the picture. self-relia- N $050 u T i sym-tuthi- COAL ze r 8Mark Jensen, E. 21st So. St. Great Compassion. No compassion Is greater tlmn that of a mmi toward a laiy who ought to have belter doilies. kiml-liearle- Is Here No Longer. Is It Believable? Is It Imaginable? Lenin HAMPTON COAL CO. LODGE MEETING Sugar House Friendship Lodge No. 27, 1. 0. 0. F., meets every Thursday evening at 8 clock at the Lodge Hall in the Smoot By LEON TROTSKY, in Pravda. Lenin is here no longer. These words hurl upon our consciousness like a gigantic cliff falling into the tea. Is it believable? Ia it imaginable? Is it comprehensible? The working people of the world will not be able to grasp For the is still is to go. we road have the still that enemy very powerful. Long Unfinished is the great work, the greatest to be mastered in the history of the world ; for Lenin was more needed by the working class of the world thin perhaps anyone else in the wide world, than perhaps anyone was ever needed in human history. Lenin is here no longer. But Leninism is here. The immortal part of lanin, hia teaching, his work, his method, his example all these live in ns, in that party that he created, in the first working class state, at rhose head he stood. How are we to go ahead? With the lantern of Leninism in our hands! Shall we find the right road ? Through our collective thought we shill find it. And the collective will of the party will help us in doing so. Your responsibility has increased. Be worthy of your teacher, of leader! While we overcome are by sorrow, let us dose our hearts jour ind our ranks more tightly. Let ns dose them all for new battles I Comrades, brothers, Lenin ia no longer among us. Farewell, Ilyitch 1 Farewell, leader 1 Telephone Ily. 1213 Lenin is here no longer. themselves LETS GO BOYS it There Are No Higher Ideals Than Those of the Legal Profession By Guard four HEALTH' With an Baseball Season is Her Have you seen the new 1924 line of baseball goods? season. Its the opening hit of the CHARLES E. HUGHES, Address to American Law Institute. There are no higher ideals in the community than those of the legal profession. We can never in the complexity of relations afford to lose the ideal of the independent lawyer, learned in the law, secure in his reputation for honorable conduct of his trust, loyal to hia government no lees than to his client Ilia loyalties never dash with the standards of honor, There always have been and always will be defections from these (tandarda, but the standards themselves are not impaired, and those who arc disloyal to them lose the highest reward that any lawyer can obtain, ud that is the esteem of hie professional brethren. But we are thinking tonight not of these and essential virtues, but of the leu emphasized duty that the lawyer owes to the law itself to contribute to its improvement, to ite adequacy, to its certainty, to its appropriate exposition. In the great task this institute has assumed are pledging our service to the highest of causes, as in perfecting the Understanding and in facilitating the administVtion of the law we are buttressing the foundation! of juatice, which cannot be established by any arbitrary devices or by confiding the interests of liberty to an uncontrolled official discretion, but only through laws reasonable, understandable, and ed impartially and effectively administered. College Should Fit Itself to Field in Which It Can Become Strongest By DAVID KINLEY, President University of Illinois The field of education demanded by the public in a country like ours, depends, in pnrt, on the strength of the particular economic and orial classes that want an education. In the days when only the leisure class i.ii Id afford a higher education, they demanded that it be of a to which they regarded aa suited to their purposes. Other classes hove bcwine strong enough in modern democraeics to insist on a higher education fur Iheniselvea. Hence we have liad pressure for vocational education Ul all for a growing numbor of pro- -, education lines, fur professional tcMion, and here and there a demand for a general education., although lo term ling been variously defined. It is clear that no institution, and particularly no college with a limit., , endowment, can offer courses of study to meet all these demands Hint college is wise, therefore, which fits itself to the field in which it ) become strongest It is wise, too, if it selects the field whose cultiva-tio- n is, on the whole, most conducive to the general interests. In my opinion, it ia wise in both these respects if it provides a of carefully selected and adjusted studies that will give that general training of body, mind, and heart which will make its graduate! human products can ve made ip far as product n u ill-rou- Tears. all-rou- nd We are proud to have such a fine lot needs Every woman knows the drudgery of washday when the family washing is done in the old fahior'xl way. And it is not so much the drudgery itself that women hi i oil Id dread but the result of tliih needless drain on the strength is broken health. That is w hat counts most. of real baseball goods everything the player UNIFORMS SHOES MATS GLOVES BATS BALLS SHIN GUARDS SLIDING PADS MASKS EXTRA CAPS HASERALL HOSE SCORE BOOKS This complete line is now on display at our store. First class baseball shoes Your health conies first guard it and protect it by owning an AutoMalic electric washer $1.50 and up $3.75 to $8.00 Baseball bats $1.00 to $2.50 Beballs Special Terms 23c to $2.00 Baseball masks For MARCH Only Do not let this opportunity pass to get this marvelous servant to bring joy and health to your home. $1.25 to $7.50 i IS SPECIALS $1 Down and $5 a Month More than 15.000 women in the territory served by this company use and praise the AutoMatic. $5 and $6.50 Catchers gloves Fielders glovse $15.00 Big league catchers gloves A special fielders' glove Extra baseball caps, all colors Come in and see out the country. the famous Bill Doak gloves $9.00 $1.83 50c and 75c used in till big league games through- Wc supply uniforms made specially to o;der for all amateur and professional teams. Granite Lumber and Hardware Co. gSOTAH POWER. & LIGHT COL Efficient- - cPublle Service 1081 East 21st So. WMFs&mi Hy. 210 trPyttnjsxtss&i' THE WINCHESTER STORE 1 M fj |