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Show PROVO POST, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1921. THE PROVOPOST Provos .i.tx Popular Newspaper , Published Each Tuesday and Friday By ' THE POST PUBLISHING COMPANY 125 West Center St. Phone 15 NEPH HICKS ! AT T Editor and Manager Entered at the postoffice at Provo City, Utah, as second class matter "" Subscription Terms One --Year $3.00 Six Months Three Months 1 Z 1.50 .75 : ' SUPPORT A HOME INDUSTRY BY SUBSCRIBING TONIGHT . BRYANT WASHBURN In NOW" BOY SCOUT WEEK. Today Is the eleventh anniversary of the birth of the Boy Scout movement in America, and while there are enough boy scouts now ..engaged in the work, who, if stood hand to hand, 'would make a solid line fromthe Atlantic. JtQ. the Pacific, there are yet eight" millions in. this "country " awaiting the opportunity; of becoming members "of this splendid organization which is designed to make real men out of boys, t Many people have many ways of directing the energies lad of scout age, and there are few par of the wide-awaentii who would not have their boys become righteous mer; but hoW 6adly they fail in their teachings through want of such helpfulness as scoutcraft offers is seen on every hand. Many of the more tragic examples are found in our state industrial schools and ouy penal institutions. - In Proyo we have ascout council, the members of which are anxious to develop the scout work in this district, ab though their progress during the past year has been somewhat delayed. This council, however jjndLthQSfi scout masters who are interested in the movement, are somewhat handicapped through a lack of' interest on the par of parents whose boys should participate im the activities of the various troops of the city ;4. This being scout wek may we not suggest that in connection with the jamboree Panned for next Saturday that N. we have a big scout parade and ask the boy scouts Tof the - V? the jamboree, too, be one of genuine city to join.-Lto the hoys. More activity is what is needed, and pleasure more attractive features for the boys. We regard the movement as one of the greatest in America, and every father and mother of a boy of scout age should assist those men yrho nre trying to make the movement successful. We regard it great because its object is to make the kind of men out of the boys that Edgar A. Guest, Americas poet of cheer, so aptly describes in these beautiful lines, entitled Answering Him: ' When shall I be a man? he said, As I was putting him tombed. How many years will have to be Before Time makes a man of me? .. ..... And .will I be a man when I heaved a sigh, Am grown up big? I Because it called for careful thought To' give the answer that he sought. " Mail Orders- ARE POURING IN TO THE COLUMBIA THEATRE 's, !An Amateur i)evfl THURSDAY AND FRIDAY Matinee 4 p.m. - -- -- WISE-FOOLS ; FEBURARY ABLE TO SECURE SEATS ke . 1 i I , DESIRE A'romance of "mother-lov- littlestar in "which the e COMING DIRECT FROM TWO CAPACITY is a motherless Waif who escapes in trousers from aConi-vein Italy and comes to America to care . for all the poor, neglectedbabies. WEEKS AT MASON OPERA HOUSE, LOS ANGELES. When all hope of having a No. 1 company in a play that can be human, plausable and exciting at once has vanished, along nt - Altogether charming, quaint and different frofrtMiSs StewartVpre vious photoplays From the Story by. Violet Irwia - comesa real productioit and everybody has a . Los Angeles chance to register joy, again. Directed bjr Wilfred North Times. - And so I sat him on my knee, And said to him: aA man youll be -- When you have learned that honor brings More joy than all the crowns of kings; That it is better to be time To all who know and trust in you Than all the gold of earth to gain If winning it shall leave a staid. for-victo- ry -- 1 U Examiner. WEDNESDAY and THURSDAY ' TOM MOORE -In-T- - When you have learned that you must hold Your honor dearer far than gold ; wealth or fame That no for Can pay you your tarnished name ; And when in all you say or, do Of others youre considerate, too, Content to do the bet you can Suuh a creed; youll be a man.'" Rockies. .will be ' In the creation and the Accumulation of the wealth of the world, and thus were entitled to a voice in the matter , of wages, conditions under which they were to work, houi;s of labor, and, many other factors affecting their welfare. Singly and apart, and occasionally in small units, their peti Hons for improvement were made. That the answer. to these petitions was unsatisfactory to at least the one party is ' evidenced by the fact that unrest "was in evi-- " dence everywhere. Get together was suggested and organization became the watchword for millions of toilers in every Vocation of life. The organization of labor is one of the great movements in society. Any man who fails to recognize it fails to recognize one of the greatest social forcei of modern times. Labor has a right to orgainze under the law. Capital has labor if it chooses. Whether . the right to employ non-uniit is wisdom in either case to do so is quite another question and depends, upon the circumstances, surrounding the situa- tion. One thing is certain; two mighty social forces have their lines of battle drawn and they are facing each other. The other elements in society not arrayed on either side certainly have the right to say to the contending forces, it is high time to declare an armistice and come together in open council and settle all the problems upon which there is a difference. At this moment We know Qf no hettar ormore irfodern method than by arbitration. adults. It may be well of Ocil starve. " - it . cant have his;owrnbiisines3,lawyer3would ' . if they were childrenfkut childish. . , v Claude Gillingwater Helen MenkeaN. Harry Davenport Wallace Fortune Howard Gould" , ""Millard Vincent Donald Foster Harry Leighton Harry Forsman . Joseph Garry Herbert Saunders -Minnie Remaley 33 PERFORMANCES IN NEW YORK 7 MONTHS ' . - . IN CHICAGO PHILADEL- - PHIA BOSTON LOVED IN LONDON A IHT IN AUSTRALIA - N, IT BROKE ALL RECORDS ON THE PACIFIC COAST-PROVO GETS THE SAME ORIGIONAL COMPANY Owing to the importance of this attraction, all - patrons are advised to send mail ordes, so as to secure best seats now. 7 , Prices Lower Floor, $2.00, $2.50; Balcony, $1.00, $1.50; Boxes, $2.50. - Address letters, make checks, 'postoffice and express money orderspayable to Columbia' Theatre; add 10 per cent war tax to price of tickets; include stamped en-' velope to insure safe return. self-address- ed - A REAL N0.--1 If you happy, you ATTRACTION haven t learned to do without things and t ' havent learned to live. . t No woman that is one ever observed a baby without saying, Isnt he the cutest thing ! nor a youth in his ' teens without exclaiming, How that boy does grow! llGNTNlNOFFERS Super- - - ' r Women like to be petted as is not wise to call one .of them Los Angeles WEimsmusmuiAumMii, With New York CastvOf Excellence that a barking dog never bites, but one who his shin.. allows others to experiment with JLcprd)odyminded in a long time. .Austin Strono g everything in this world,-a- s yoaveoften heard, but there are not over a half dozen things that .are worth having; You of the most appealing amusements, Qj y . thinks barking dogs. ORGANIZED LABOR. cf Ufah which held The Carpenters and Jivners its session in Provo tm Friday and Saturday- - of last- week thi3 city the brings forcibly to the attention of the people of "did fact that labor today is not attacking its problems as it in the past. There was a lime when if seemed that the only work of the world at a problem labor had was to do the price very largely fixed by the other party, namely, capital. As society developed the conviction was forced upon the mind of laboring classes that they were an important factor of-t- he J a tmw:mi mwmimm Wednesday only, Chapter 10 of Ruth Roland in :LRuth ' shown. : of 'TURN TO TMRIGHT' DEAR MEfand PRODUCE ' Many children are disappointing, and so are nearly all ill-gott- en -- -- Los Angeles JOHN GOLDEN hirty a Week - 1 See It Before, Salt Lake City under a barn after a rat. And you dont. alter a boys longing to play .in the mud by dressing him in a white Fauntle-ro- y ' . suit. "By r COMMON SENSE X One to reach-u- s Herald. , e, . . ' TONIGHT - on Some of us learn this .truth too late ; ' That years alone cant make us great ; three-scorten . That many who are of4being men, Have fallen short 4 Because they fought And toiled without refining thought; And whether wrong or whether right They lived but for their own delight. keeps audience in hysteri- Los AngelesRecord. Clean, clever drama. ever-increasin- sweet, When you can fight -- Yet bravely swallow down defeat, And cling to hope and keep the right, Nor use deceit instead of might; When you are kind and brave and clean. And fair to all and never mean ; When there is good in all you plan, That day my boy, youll be a man. 3 Wise Fools cs. et 4 14 DONT DELAY OR YOU MAY NOT BE InHer Latest Released ( Niht Next Monday LOUIS B. MAYER presents ANITA STEWART T THE TREMEND-OU- S COMEDY HIT WHICH PLAYS HERE FOR- -3 t ' A man likes to think that he is master of his own horn and a wise wife allows him to think it, but she and tb neighbors know who is, . , |