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Show UTAH DEMOCKAT The Utah Democrat All Human Relations Will Improve With Progress in Social Sciences Bj Published Every Saturday By The Utah Democrat Pub. Co ADDRESS: 32 SO. MAIN STREET CARE Light Printing and Engraving Co. Salt Lake City, Utah Telephone Wasatch 9-S-- 4-9 Entered as Second class matter July 18th, 1922, at the Postoffice at Salt Lake City, Utah, under the act of March 3, 1879. FUN AND EDUCATION YALTER S. Hiatt points out in a series of articles published recently in Colliers that America spends $6,000,000,000. for pleasure, or something more than $50. per capita. This is a staggering sum naturally. The average mind has no way of measuring it, because there is nothing in the average experience with which to compare it. It comes a little closer to our understanding, perhaps, if we realize that it is half as much as all the war debts, including interests owned the United States by foreign countries. As Mr. Hiatt indicates, it is a little less than our national savings, and $2,000,000,000. more than the gold stock in the United States treasury. According to these figures we must be having a tremenduously good time, and probably we can afford it, but it is interesting to note in the light of the same national figures that we are spending very much less for education. In Utah alone the fun bug gets $25,000,000. per year, which is two and one half times the amount spent in the state for education, yet no one seems to be complaining about the high cost. WALTER DILL SCOTT, President Northwestern University. E8EARCH in the natural sciences has been effective in aiding the race to adjust itself to its physical environments. No such discovery of truth in the social sciences has been made in aiding the race to adjust itself to its human environments. Men are not now working together happily and effectively. There is said to be a lack of control in the home, restlessness in the school, apathy in the church, shirking in the shops, dishonesty in the counting houses, grafting in politic, crime in the city, and Bolshevism threatening aU our institutions. All our human relations will be improved as rapidly as we make progress in the social sciences, and I am convinced that our universities will make as great a contribution in the social sciences during the Twentieth century as they did by the discovery of truth in the natural sciences during the Nineteenth century. We may expect the most helpful contributions to the betterment of human relations from universities possessing favorable characteristics : First, the university must be untrammeled by. traditions or superstitions, by politics or cults; but must be animated by a love for truth, and the members of the teaching and research staff must be zealous in their pursuits of truth in their respective fields, and should be sympathetic with research and investigation in fields even quite remote from their own. Second, the university must sustain a graduate school and a group of professional schools, all in intimate contact with city life. Third, the university must be inspired with the ideals of religion. The religious interpretation of the universe offers the only possible hope for improvement. Faith in the brotherhood of man and the fatherhood of God provides the only basis for stable human relations. You Can Easily Have a Your Own BAKERS RESPONSIBILITY T is quite some task and responsiblity that Mr. Baker has had placed upon his shoulders to present unsympathitically to the world the cold facts in the life of one of the worlds noblest characters and the relationship of that character to one of the greatest epochs in human progress. The charge to Mr. Baker to give the cold facts does not mean that he is to present only the intellectual achievement, the political philosophy of the man but that he is to reveal the soul of Woodrow Wilson. The world wants to look into the heart of Woodrow Wilson and see that it pulsated with human emotions. We know something of his philosophy and the transcendency of his intellect but now we want to know something of his joys and sorrows, his hopes and ambitions! his heart throbs. Through these papers, letters, and memoirs, Mr. Baker must permit the world to see the heman Woodrow Wilson. We said the world, yes, Woodrow Wilson does not belong to America alone, he belongs to humanity. And the great masses of his admirers all over the world do not want to be awed by his cold transcendent intellect, they want to feel the warmth and tenderness of his soul, Tis a noble task. May it be fittingly done. Trained-Pi- g and Heres How Act All or County Respective Signers NOTICE TO CREDITORS Estate of Walter Henry Atwood Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the under- signed at Utah Savings and Trust Co. Salt Lake City, Utah, on or before the 27th day of March A.D. 1925. Utah Savings & Trust Co., 235 So. Main St. Administrator of the estate of Walter Henry Atwood. Date 1st publication Deceased. Creditors will present claims with vouchers to the undersigned at 311 South Ninth East, Salt Lake City, Utah, on ar before the 3d day of March A. D. 1925. RUTH B. STANDING, Administratrix ' of the Estate of Erwin H. Standing, Deceased. Date of first publication Jan. 3d A. D. 1925; last Jan. 24th, 1925. Herbert B. Maw, Attorney, Deseret Bank Bldg. 504 Punishment of Criminal Always Wrong, but Society Must Protect Itself it SUMMONS ELVERNA BAILEY WILLIAMS, Defendant The State of Utah to the said Defendant: You are hereby summoned to appear within twenty days after the service of this summons upon you, if served within the county in which this action is brought; otherwise, within thirty days after service, and defend the above entitled action, and in case of your failure so to do, judgment, will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of the said Court. This action is brought for the purpose of dissolving the bonds of matrimony hertofore and now existing between plaintiff and defendant. King & Schulder Attorneys for Plaintiff S. L. Williams P. O.- Address 630 Judge Bldg., Salt Lake City, Utah. - worth of switchboards and other central office equipment have been added to the telephone plant in this state every month for the past five years.' Thatlijiist the INSIDE installa- tion. .It .doesnt include pole lines, cables and all the buildings that are being erected and added to from month to month. J ust the exchange equipment. On a railway journey from Salt Lake City to Price, you see the locomotive, the tracks and yards, the cars and stations and bridges. But to talk from Salt Lake City to Price you see only the telephone instrument before you. Great exchange buildings house of dollars worth of switchboards, intermediate and terminal frames, batteries and power plants the intricate and highly sensitive mechanisms which make Long Distance communication a valuable service for every citizen. ra3-yo- ns Bell System One Policy Os System U Sir trial Service end ell Directed toward Better Service The Mountain States Telephone & Telegraph Co. we All the present available Preferred stock of Utah Power & Light Company has been sold VS. V Many Thousands of Dollars to-w-it: Deseased. CHAS. H. HART HAROLD H. HART netting. Thats impossible. So at last they turn to the runway, go up the steps, hesitate a long while, then finally slide down the chute and get IN THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT what theyre after. Then heres the strange part of it: after a week or Of Salt Lake County, State of Utah so, remove the food. The pigs will keep on shooting the chutes just the same. By some strange form of animal reasoning, the pleasure of food S. Z. WILLIAMS, has become associated with that exercise of sliding down that incline. Plaintiff brutalizes those who inflict it and those who receive it. There is only one motive for it and that is revenge, in which there can be no justice for it is based on hatred, which is degrading. That punishment is not much of a deterrent is clear from the fact that our prisons are full of repeaters and that spectacular crimes are followed by imitations. And the idea of reformation is equally absurd. Man works according to his structure. He never reforms because he cannot. His intrinsic character is fixed. All of which doesnt change the fact that society must defend itself be worthy against the criminal sometimes against the saint whether it of defense or not. But all we need to do is to isolate the offender. In fact thats all we can do. If scientists were no wiser than legislators, we would still be punishabandoned such magical ing the insane, the idiots, even, the sick. We have treatments.' And some day we shall treat the criminal with as much . ton, Defendants, to be sold at Sheriff's Sale at the west front door of the County Court House in the City and County of Salt Lake, State of Utah, on the 11th day of February A. D. 1925, at twelve oclock noon of said day, all the right, title, claim and interest of said Defendants of, in and to the following described Real All of Lot two (2) in Estate Block one (1), in Lockwood, Plat "A, according to the official plat thereof now on file and of record in Book H, of Plats, at page 44, records of said County. Together with all and singular the tenements hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging or in any wise appertaining. Situated in Salt Lake County, State of Utah. Purchese price payable in lawful money of the United States. Dated at Salt Lake City, Utah, this SHERIFFS SALE 14th day of January, 1925. BENJAMIN R. HARRIES, Sheriff In the District Court in and for the of Salt Lake County, State of Utah. County of Salt Lake, State of Utah, By F. M. Mathews, Deputy Sheriff. Granite Realty Company, a corpora- J. P. Neeley, Attorney for Plaintiff. tion, Plaintiff, against Lorenzo F. Date of first publication, January Elg, Lenora J. Elg and Mary E. Bur 17th, 1925. De- fendant: You are hereby summoned to appear within twenty days ofter the service of this summons upon you, if served within the county in which this action is brought; otherwise, within thirty days after service, and defend the above entitled action; and in case of your failure so to do, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of said Court. This action is brought for the purpose of dissolving the bonds of matLEGAL NOTICES rimony existing between plaintiff and defendant. POWERS, RITER & COWAN, PROBATE AND GUARDIANAttorneys for Plaintiff. SHIP NOTICES P. O. Address, 314 Kearns Building, For Further Information ConSalt Lake City, Utah. sult the Clerk Estate of ERWIN II. STANDING, Likewise the pig which youve seen squealing in the wake of the clown In the circus. The secret ? Simply that his. hoglets has been taken from his mother at birth and raised on a bottle. His feeding has been timed so that it comes during circus hours. The pig follows the clown because he knows hes going to get a square meal. A pig isnt supposed to have much intelligence. Perhaps he hasnt act all your own very easily. but you can have a trained-pi- g build a pen leading to a set of stairs which lead in turn to Simply a chute, the chute traveling down into another closely netted enclosure. In this enclosure put a bucket of favorite pig food. Then turn the pigs loose and let them make their own deductions. First of all, the pigs will try to reach the food by going through the Punishment is always wrong, u The State of Utah to the said NOTICE TO CREDITORS By C. R. COOPER, in " Lions n Tigers n' Everything. By CLARENCE DARROW. in New York World. ay Tim From a Cat's Eyes. Chinese peannt, who has neither watch, dock nor sun disk tells the time from the eyes of a cat. The degree of dilation of a rat's eye varies through the day, contracting and expanding as the light grows strong or dim. The Chinese peasant has merely to note the size of the pupil In order to know at once the hour of the day. This method, which haa not a little originality, must, however, he somewhat' Incdhvenlent if the feline timepiece should happen to be off somewhere on business of Its own. Paris Le Petit Parislenne. Tlie In All Future Reclamation Projects the States Should Contribute Jan. 3 - Jan. 31. IN THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT Of Salt Lake County, State of Utah By SECRETARY WORK, U. S. Department of Interior. The obligations of settlers on existing reclamation projects should be ETHEL SCHURTZ, will require a rePlaintiff adjusted and a basis provided for future payments. This VS. to crops their profitable determine to areas of produce ability appraisal under irrigation. On all projects undertaken hereafter the state in which tbs develop- ment ig located should psrticipate in the selection of settlers and the deto contribute to velopment of farms. The states should not be required construction costs, but should be required to contribute to the fund provided for advances to settlers for farm development as they now contribute to the construction of roads and to agricultural education. advanced to A fund should be provided from which money can be and equip their farms. Such advances help worthy, needy settlers improve should bear interest, and, for permanent improvements, should extend over long periods. Four per cent is suggested as the interest rate. SUMMONS GEORGE A. SCHURTZ, Defendant The State of Utah to the said De- fendant: You are hereby summoned to ap- pear within twenty days after the served within the county in which service of this summons upon you, if this action is brought; otherwise, within thirty days after service, and defend the above entitled action, and in case of your failure so to do, judgment, will be rendered against you according to the demand of the comWho plaint, which has been filed with the College Clerk of the said Court. This action is brought by the plainto recover a judgment dissolving tiff By DEAN H. E. HAWKES, Columbia University. the marriage contract existing bedesirable most to the whether as even tween plaintiff and defendant. There is a difference of opinion that students of a to kind the E. F. Allen college and successful athletic policy brings attract successful athletes, athletics Of Attorney for Plaintiff desires. course, the college most 306 Atlas Block O. Address P. inbut a college of athletes who are not primarily students is a damage Salt Lake City, Utah stead of a blessing. Jan. 3 - Jan. 31. In fact, I am inclined to think that, among the elements that go to make the solid reputation of a college, athletic supremacy comes far down IN THIRD JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT on the list in the minds of those, both young and. old, whose judgment Lake Of Salt County, State of Utah. counts. This means that the cultivation of athletics in the college should be in the interest of the part that it plays in the education of both players MARGARET CAMERON SINGLEand spectators. Plaintiff TARY, vs. Unless athletics can take its place in the picture, in its proper perSUMMONS relations with the rest of the college, trouble spective, and in M. HOWARD SINGLETARY, is certain to arise. Defendant t A Are Not Primarily of Athletes Students Is a Damage Nearly seven thousand local people have invested their savings in our stock. This is most gratifying, as it indicates the confidence which our customers and other local people have in this Company, its employes, and its management. We shall do all in our power to merit a continuation of this confidence. We regret that we can accept no more subscriptions for stock at this time but we will be pleased to enter your name for advance reservation to be filled at such future time as we may again have more stock to offer. Utah Power & Light Company ive . Mf Ml Mf M.f Ml M MS Mf Ml Mf Mf Mf Mf Mf Mf M! M Mf Mf Mf MfMf Mf M' & |