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Show V v THE 14 from Los Angeles. They expect to make Salt Lake their home. Dr. Brown Is a nephew of Mrs. E. J. Kearns and Mrs. John Hampton. Mrs. W. P. Bresslngham have returned to the city, after a three weeks visit to San Francisco and Portland. Mr. and CITIZEN Mrs. R. Lindegren ' left for California Tuesday last, where she will spend a month with friends and rela- Mr. and Mrs. George Critchlow and children are spending the summer at Brighton. They are occupying the E. B. Critchlow cottage. Dr. and Mrs. A. A. Kerr have returned to their home in the city, after a visit to New York. and children have gone to Idaho, where they will visit for several weeks. Mrs. Tom Boyer has gone to Can- a prominent engineer of Chicago, is visiting with his the remaining summer months visiting wtih relatives and friends. Mrs. S. C. Slaughter is the guest of .'the A. H. Walsh family at their sum- mer home in East canyon. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Fenton parents, ard. California .visiting friends at Los Angeles, Long Beach and San Francisco. Mrs. Thomas Kearns and Miss Kath- ryn Driscoll are at the Kearns ranch at Ely, Nev. Miss Esther Daughtery and Miss K. Moorehead have gone to spend a L. Howard, Dr. and Mrs. Orson How- to her home in the city after a visit in California. MERRY MEASLES. A Milwaukee boy told his teacher that his sister had. the measles. You go right home, Johnny, she said, "and dont come back until your sister is well. Johnny left in a hurry. Atfer he was gone another little boy held up his hand and said: "Teacher, Johnny Dolans sister what has the measles lives in Philadelphia. month visiting at the ONeill ranch in Nevada. BURLESONED. Mary had a little mail, A letter white as snow, And everywhere she posted it The blamed thing wouldnt go. Mrs. E. A. Frewin leaves in a few days for Bear Lake and Candies the IT Xi r Pastries The most refreshing and most satisfying! AT LAGOON AT SALTAIR AT LIBERTY PARK Sis: Fisher Mrs. Lynn H. Clayton has returned Mrs. Martin Good has returned to the city after spending six weeks in WANTED tives. , ada and will spend MILLIONS OF WORKERS Order from your local dealer or JESS C. OLSON DIST. CO., Salt Lake Distributors 533 So. 4th West Wasatch 5664 Manufactured by Becker Products Co., Ogden 1 Light Lunches United THE position States is n6w in such of financial I and economic dominance that we can do about what we please with respect to the rest of the world. That is to say, we can do what we please,1 if we go about it thoughtfully, with business and statesmanship working hand in hand. On the one hand we can lend money and sell raw materials freely to Europe, and let the laborers j stay over there and make goods, and we can keep our tariffs low so that the goods they make can come in here for sale. On the other hand, we can keep our money at home and make our tariff high, so that European labor will be led to come over here and work for us here at home. Which of the two policies is to prevail will be developed by time. In any event, whether we are to have immigration on a large scale is an important factor in our economic future. For a generation we have relied upon the immigrant to build our roads, to mine our coal, to dig our ore, to man our factories, to provide our domestic servants. If we dont get them, then most assuredly we shall have to get along without a good deal of the work they did for us, without a good deal of the comfort and convenience we have been accustomed to. The result of our present deficit of what we call common labor is one of the most apparent aspects of our daily life. It is apparent in the scarcity of what we call domestic servants. It is apparent in the defective upkeep of our railroads, and even more so in the condition of our public roads. There is no physical need in this country just now so great as good roads. Hundreds of thousands of miles of road which are now merely trails through the mud ought to be made into permanent highways adapted to automobile traffic in any kind of weather conditions. And what I have said of roads applies in the same degree to that large group of operations which we call public works. There is a great deal of activity throughout America just now. But what we are busy about, for the most part, is perishable goods, goods for immediate consumption. We are not, and for five years have not been, paying enough attention, or indeed any measurable attention, to making additions to the permanent material basis on which our civilization rests. We have not been building any new railroads, nor have we even been giving adequate upkeep to the railroads we have. The erection of buildings has been interdicted by the government; we have not beer building hospitals, schools, and the like. We cannot resume this kind of building, in the accustomed degree, without a large access of human hands. America in the near future could make profitable use of millions of workers, to build roads and bridges, to repair the railroads, to drain swamps, to build levees on the Mississippi, to reclaim land by Irrigation. The degree in which we can take up that kind of permanent improvement will be limited by. the available quantity of human beings to do the work. Colliers. WHERE KINGS ARE WED are probably THERE who think few, even of they know their London, who have discovered the Chapel Royal. It is possible, indeed, to wander again and again through the maze of St. James Palace without even suspecting its nearness, although it looks out on you through a large window at the very portal. And yet this cunningly concealed chapel is one of the most historic and interest-,- ing buildings in England, well worth' a long pilgrimage to visit. For centuries it has been the matrimonial Mecca of Royalty. Queen Anne wore her bridal veil at its altar for George of Denmark; Frederick, Prince of Wales, put a wedding ring on the finger of the Duke of Coburgs daughter; and George IV, too intoxicated to stand without support, hiccoughed his vows to Caroline within its walls. It was the setting for Queen Victorias nuptials eighty years ago; her daughter, the Princess Royal, stood at its altar with her German bridegroom; and our late King Edward was married there in 1863. And not only has it been the scene of these and many other weddings of royalty and nobility, but at its font scores of princes and princesses have received their christening. And yet this ultra-RoyChapel has no architectural pretensions to rival its splendid history. It is small but twenty yards long, with accommodation for two hundred persons only. It is no larger, in fact, than many a parish room. Nor is it beautiful, apart from its painted and' panelled Holbein ceiling, on which you may see ' the name of Henry VIII, and the date, 1540. And yet it boasts three galleries, one for royalty, another for peers and peeresses and other distinguished personages, and the third for its organ, one of the finest in England. Here generations of kings have worreverently. shipped more or less I his attended last service in Charles this chapel before taking his walk to the headsmans block in Whitehall; and George III listened patiently to sermons two and three hours long, amusing himself by beating time to the anthem and boxing his pages ears when they ventured to talk or giggle. And Queen Anne was so shocked by the ogling and sighing of the younger members of the congregation during the sermon, that she gave orders for the pews to be raised higher and made into closets. The Chapel Royal claims to have the best choir in London. It is composed of boy choristers, arrayed in gold and scarlet uniforms while, ruffs and bands, and ! stockings. San Francisco News al i i i knee-breech- Lettfer. 1 es ' |