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Show , , . . . t . i ., . k, . . . . ' - . I . , . - .....m. a dommk I MONDAi' e 9W61:;: NOM , ist-e- !L I , i. ., ' : is not at hand as to A what, extent the public I brary in this city is used by our business men . but a check elsewhere reveals that the average business man of today seldom Nisi Is the public library. lie reads the papers for the gamut news of the day and an occasional magazine article buL he does not read worth-whi- le There are wealthy Sok& men' in this country who do not, read a book a year'. They are too thoroughly absorbed in business and wheetnot to occup:ed they are riding in their automobiles or playing T ( ' - .; , , , . , : 1926. BUSINESS MEN DO NOT HEAD. I ' '"- AUGUST 16. EALT LAKE CITY.- r i ; ' ... HE inforrnation ' 4 golf.- - ' good.-1Muc- : 1 h : 1 - , t , . i ' i , 1 - ii I , i 1 , , r, , 4 "; A ' ; - ,' , ArGusT .. , ., - 14 : AL - - . - i - 11 I TODAY' -- - tend - him-futi- - . , i - i . - "na . - . 0 4 twow.1 ATonic 'Of Rarelidue In Childhood - , , SCOTT'S Aboundsln '' and Live Stock company SLOGS head of Utah lambs but the price Vtas not stated. - The purchasi came dome to breaking the record. S SS- 11, Retail dealers of Salt .Lakti City. Ogden. Provo and other points held a big outing at lAgoon where litindreds of prizes - were ,distributed. It was estimated that more than 11,000 persons were present. 11 Announcement was made that A. Fred prominent hotel man of this city, had purchased for 111,000 from the Claseby heirs the premises at 111 east Second South street which included a tbros-sto- ll brick building. ' W. r STRUM - ; enmIlImboinutee . ----.1. wehhaltne ' .ydeltalonlwIlnddgiamownds. 111 Rti. A i -- 7til - ' ' (15 f . , li. ,. ' - : . Dn. ' : - , - : -- 'J . . . , , , , ' ; I. It stirs in rippling, wind-swe- pt 1 - , . waves. Like a restless . rosy' sea. While over it like a pirate bold. ' Roves the plundering bumble-be- e, And honey-bee- i. like Argonauts. , Go forth to seek their prize. , And lifting w!rurs like bright hued sails Speeds a fleet of butterflies. Frink Converse, . ' - , Weer ' , - c',, , I - - . . . - ; '' ........ - - ! The Dr.Astr,Chale Jag. Y New York Ow ,, Monody Mole, N .Y.) ' . - . .' Z.- - vproof l. ' 11 ,'.6....A c A, Ir , -- - I ' rik-,, i : - ,, ..,t . ; .',' 4 ..., , , , ', '''''''''', , ''... s- - A r ----. , '- 4 , r .C1144. SWYAbolt N. Y. d ' - , , & I - - e$ ,,,,,,k-- , ' 20 - ,1t. - ' Hulas atm L Schwhit bead was dizzy a frequent intiwvals. My stomach ws .1 was sad upset horribly coast' paled. I took Carters Little !Ave Pills and I soon Noticed a decide( It is 'moths ecol improvement since I have bad a headache or ski stomach. Your pills bare edC, CArier's Little Liver Pills ; t peroiy vegetable writes:"My problem in human engineering. It recast the practices et his day and generation. compelling limitation on the part of his competitors. It is mete to say that his working out of the wage problem affected favorably the lives of more Amer. cons than any other single act of I the COSSUPateti lasetle.'ItIrt; .. a living American. 'Tor a 'univer- cleanse she intestioes el their poi sity to ro!ognisc his achievement Ss meows alto;- 1:1341 are saga its...nsolms: putting honorary degrees to coated. ,smail. sad east to saki ammo Ma , Away. Herald Post. ..1 ipreggio.s. SS & The tsd podium; good , , t'PT,EIRINS', - , SAUCC ' - -- -- - of demonstration. lie was frahk In sayingthat iit was riot humanitarian motives that prompt. ed liberal payment of empleiell It was hia, solution to a difficult s THE CLOVER FIELD.- ''' 4 , . Of .i. S. Is made only . awarding absurd honorary degrees, . but no one will be dispooe4 to find fault with the doctor of engineering diploma presented to Henry Ford. He excels as an engineer. not merely in dealing with machinery, but with human beings. His fetish for oficiency .has developed not only but , time and , prompted him to a number of rad- . ical departures to get the beet out of his workers. The one big principle which be taught the remainder of the industrial world was that high wages are cheapest. When 1college professors :arr milkene tnehissof flirt suLaviclitaedhteo.Pkrraettnictizefti'll764611-1- Le , oen' gutter il I a front fresh roots and herbs. FORD 15 HONORED. ars- 1 111 - L Remember S. - - . grf eon-- . Adencsmillions teatify to merits. An unbroken record of servica for over 100 years is a greet testimonial to a great out of the mist, cailtne and passing away; But . I cannot speak, for my voice Is weak. ; And . this is the end of my . lay. ' KIPLE4G. ' - ' - You can take S. S. 11..,with . , - rheumatism. , Voices from ItaL Pills - Reed.-4--Wa- Rich,.red blood clears. the skin, increases the appetite, builds strength and steps Mist on the face of tho sea. Mist on the sodden land. Filling the vales as daylight falls, , And blotting the detoiate send. , Voices from out of the mist, one to another: Calling "Rath love an end, thou more than friend, Ilion dearer than ever brother?" .et' they would be cheaper than the yelrro---llow, and if diamonds were as plenránk ' tiful as glass. women would not :. 1..4 itai , .. want them. Moralize on that. , ipe The United States government 700 r41. ,..3.' &- 1, now rune a budges system, or tries to.' and yesterday President. Cool. ,(N: idge cut ninety.uthe million dollars , 1 Ifyis.CV from the preliminary estimate. According to the present plans. the government this year., will spend three billion two hundred and i Tag Vrataplosimer Mammies wino' raisove ."'".............."4"1111 That is ' seventy million dollars. ' much leas than' we were spending a while ago.- but it is six times the : ' ; annual expeditor that filled the , country- with horror in. liOT ,of Tom le exprithmme. .. ,...especially when you. pay the bills 'i Stkatliattadtat." 11aggiab,., live: for other countries. .. . . ' by ' , 'I Inas' A few days ago Young Whitt,: 1 ' AM.CIIASIC more. the Baltimore bandit. was banged for murder. i , . PILLSf , does a 'What American,,asks: man, , One dose enll convince youthifilt of in his last day."' ,' - - ' . ' ; When he sits in a- - condemned , .. ,.of that., merit. , ..., murderer's cell. man doesn't think i Gentle hi mums. end ;.; much, if at ail. He is ousally not , ., sate tO mut. of the thinking kind. for thinktlig would have kept him from that I Iced this'orong endorsement I . ot Dr. A.W. Chase's KL P&L ' ' ' - :1 MZLJ.N. Stone, apace No.3, But nature is kind to weld an. .; Dmig.G numbetyregles: imals, and event to murderers. Der. 11 oi rags, 'For a win mays nearly all wnimals die ',., base been troubled with cry 1 without great suffering. becalm killed by some other animal, in the 'A ' kidneys, ham and idso my beast. I find Dr KL, extitement of flight they feel little pain. The murderer. manage, Pills swooderfulreinetlyAbey : to excuse hinuself, in his own mind, :. certainly are the finest I rags used. 1 would not be without them in my home sad take . great pleasure in recommend., ins them tomtientle. 7 Asi the for : Write lis espy of ear hoeika ' J and the nation. According to the American Educational Digest, there Is more illiteracy among iI than among the children the nativi-bor- n and illiteracy in the of the foreign-bor- n, rural districts, as recorded in census reports, is .almost twice that in the cities. It is a matter, of state responsibility,' and a vital concern of the nation, to insure complete literacy in this country within the next generation. order- - to accomplish --this.I it will be necessary for the rural districts to take active measures , in this campaign against illiteracy and for the larger cities to concentrate upon reaching this class through the evening classes and through the class.. es for women in the homes. , It is easier to eliminate child Illiteracy than that of adults. It, Is also of the tereitest, imporiance to lead those who are already able to read and write to make use of this power in taking' an active and Intenigent part in the affairs of government. At- ter literacy should come Its practice. dividual rIn - Health7italciins PARAGRAPHS F. Saunders.'of this City purchased during the day from .the Heber Land B. -- , ,Mtaintns: . , , EMULSION s ISO& 141. . ; 'I . I The Thirty-thir- d annual session of the Utah antesion of the Methodist Episcopal church convened in the Din church in this city with Bishop David It Moor. of Fortiand. Ore.. presiding. , , , , , - d . Announcement was made. that W. Z. Tollerton master mechanic at Pocatello. Idaho. for the Oregon Short Line had been appointed to the position of superintendent of motive power for the Rock Island road at Topeka. Man. taking--their--seat- s S full-loa- From the Files of the Deseret News. a - iirZ , ,.-- -'''- TWENTY YEARS AGO one-thi- rd 4 .. i Pro , T : I Ni ng , , - And as the meek and lowly one of Nazareth are the merci- ful, for they shall obtain mercy." ed i -- , , i Who will not mercy unto others show How can be mercy ever hope to have? wage-earne- 4 Quaker Oats "stands by you through the morning More suspicious than Doubting Thomas is the man who questions the purity of the Golden Rule. Compunction is more likely to bother the consciences after sunset , than in broad daylight. a with ends The honeymoon bang when the party of the first slams the door when he leaves the love nest,. . Many persons deemed the Allies too lenient in their treatment of the defeat- od German and Austrian leaders, who. they said. should have been dealt with most severely. But the spirit of mat- nanimity toward a defeated foe which prevella In this civilized age was manifooted here. even while the bitterness engendered an the worlds greatest war still lurked la the hearts of men. After many vengeful and cruel years theredawned- upon- - the- - world the 'thought that to be merciful to a fallen foe and not subject him to the depths of humiliation or. torture or death was not only to ennoble oneself, but to in- cresao one!. right to the enjoyment of clemency. compassion and good, will. For. as Spencer truly says, 19-2- - I what - . y. - wage-earne- t ., A onion upon whom fortune had smiled was planning a trip to of ancient Europe and the Far East. the. chits and In the midst or her plannins. hor mind went bock to a friend of her girlhood days Whom fortune bud passed by. friend had bein clerking In For twenty-flyears this girlhood ' a small store in a small town.-The highest point touched by the curve or her income was thir- This year's mosquitoes are 'big, That's why 11111i0D3 start dollars a month. ger and bitter. , had inCOMS four and ' their she thia mother of Out supported a days in this way brothers and sistert in their younger The woman of good fortune and the woman of ill fortune bad , feel right through the "cue"' . well-ha- 1 kept in touch over the years; from the counter of the small store in il. you must have ill woman for woman of ing. Ilisof small the good the town : tune sent to iy. , . anced, complete food at breakfast fortune news of her girlhood home. e i, 1 do not mean to "greet lilli-thAt most other mealsthat is, at clerk at the counter. suffered 4:71:1!1 lb 'luncheon and at dinnerTon usually the pinch of poverty; I mean only to suggest that she lived - a restrict-'- at responsibility: kind bi food. ed lila and 'carried a God made the country:. picnic get that Just ils the woman of good fortune, was completing her plans for breakfast the great dietary at But maned that it way.. up panics her tour ef 'Europa and the Iar East a letter came from the woman miatake is most often madoa bur. . of ill fortune. Silence has much to recommend tied meal, often badly chosen. an ambition."- - the letter read. have ."I have at 'zit realized accoun- t- ' Thanks to o generous gift at Ebristmas It and still is not very popular. Thus Quaker Oats, containing opened time: I got a hundred dollarg together an at, once., And , I have16 protein, foods great tissue but Most can be bank a managed dogs account:7 58 carbohydrate,its great opened it is not always easy to get along builder, element. plus The pathos Of this enthusiasm toucbed the woman of good for- energy . with humin nature. tuns. , i vitammes and the 'WA" that makes In the course of her reply. sin told this friend of her girlhood of die--, eternal in the haatives seldom needcbd, is the her plans for her trip to Europe and the Far Emit. and asktdher what Mope springs human breast and dope is a clime tetic urge of the world today. she might; do for her before she left and what she might bring to her 0 . . ,i second. It if food that "stands by you upon her, return. . .les Th reply was as suggestive ss it was simple. .4 the morning. Food that through If you are old enough to remem- should start every breakfast in your Clothes or cash would-hav- e been seettible suggestions. 1111111.6 ber the But her spirit was rich enough to make a "foolish"' suggestion. shirt trier buttoned If 1 could just have a 'bottle of perfume from Parisi" wrote the up the back. you cannot doubt that home. Don't deny yourself the natural clerk from the small store in the small town.; the world is getting better. this rich food offers. stimulation Cut of her bard life a sensitivoneu to the beautlfql had survived. . . , . And doubtlene it watt her ability to prefer- perfume to provisions . Get Quaker Oats today. Grocers that' bad made it possible for her to carry heavy burdens with a have two kinds: Quick Quaker. ... , Years. ' light heart for twenty-fiv- e which cooks in 3 to 5 minutes, and 4..) , ..s Maybe rose leaves.. have something . to do with reality as well as , Quaker Oats. with romance.' Syndicate-McChire ) Newspaper toopyright.1626. by the 1 1111 "''''N and usually feels far 'himself the 0 THE PIREECr FOOD . Not on manners: At open-ai- r sympathy that he ought to have necis in meetings Thal; Hospitals wil, no longer be lap mosquitoes gently zdeltp.f741-h,, order .not to disturb tho 'peaky. essary when ecience has evolvel and sear convicted Fort IP ' that thotte food hates says Henry the perfect , le. ttiou Itb In "Today and Tomorrow ?ut consoling. . quite often it is the man t k Company). arms the catches Page the that hleday. longest ' thinks he "The best doctors," ewVithnitsedpottatesto largest fish. tbaRtemIteolyas;utryesootthy Educating Rats. "seem to agree that the cure fc , not a blow at North America. isn't most inaispoeittons is to be fault is There side to a everybright intended to take South Artle1101111 In diet and not in medicine. Wh thing. In the case of the waterMaking Blue Diamonds. not prevent that illness in the firt melon the radiance is on the inside. onadwanyoi firootemodetdhe.loUnbioleyde : States. place? It ell leads up to this--4 America?' into South Sometimes they charge an ad- bed food causes illness. then th cruel Insect Wives. No explanation or apology I o mission and still call It free speech. perfect food will causewehealth. Am If we are foolish enough ought that being the case , needed. immiof this country search for that perfect foodan to keep out A $99,000,000 Slash. Preachers are supposed to know find it When we have found it nts like the Italians. who we certainly everythingThe other day a memthe world will have taken it helped to build ber of his flock asked the pastor greatest single step fcrwart.. not to play a ought Mal- to how children Deseret News does not to and keep keep "It is going to take some tint quiet. try manger part to get this food. It may not sail necessarily endorse or commend lane. Spaniards. Frenchmen and .4 Of out all of Mr. Brisbanged condo- desirable imm!grants The evil of bad eetispany is seen In the world today in any form. llill editorials are pub' South America, la the case of goldenrod: It comes may be produced from some yl Itshed as expressioos of nein- our foolish loss will be South along with the blooming- ragweed !sting food or from some col ens of the worltra highest of existing foods. It nit America's gain. and is .unjustly accused of causing hination w ts salaried editor.be that a new plant will have I , tity.ferer.., be evolved. The one thing certs, ftohaodt w000arnoilnagob 4 '14. Is that this food will be fowl lisheSdithr000uDni:eanideral will BRISBA''NE. ' Publishers(Protected Some by scientists BY ARTHURday. someone will brit by many .tbout a condition which will mai needlessly. The amount everywhere The 1916. Star Co.) by (Copyright . the hospitals unnecessary." of fruit and vegeta hi es wasted in Professor McDougall.- - of Mar- - the United States is equal to the - cf"Nte;;c I i eaten. amount that. ths intelligence yard. proves Oceans. takee and rivers couldof white rats can be, increased in bseatSix times every provide fish and meat. eight generations. , etc,. day the rats were dropped in wat- - CO, porpoises. popthe five times present 'ete4f212'S or and had to climb out on one of support 60 time. two wire landing stages, one ulation of the globe. and fishing were -p "ILIVVs1C1 rjoiellAA:vir charged with electricity that gave that rientificallynewer with done a severe shock.' the other not so boats. good fish protected. and "A SOLDIER'S GRAVE." atructive fish like sharks. ecientif- - BY JOHN.ALBEE. After eight generations the rats eliminated. learned to choose the safe land- - tastily Elegiac verse like this has a Mg. which was darker than the - . Earth's IA00.000,000 human be- -- wide appeal. Alb. wits born in - . other. . z . alMassachusetts in 1833, and early in You may call that slow. But in ings weigh about 1,200.0011 tons. 150 pounds average which life studied divinity at Harvard. but 4 eight thousand generations the lowing billi o no finally decided to devote his life to endless too The much. is human race has not learned to philosophy and to literary pursuits. con- - or tons 'of fertile soil on this earth. keep away from war. which-icultivated. to sa y nothing His poetry is not great. but it has :to more the than siderably unpleasant oceans. would feed a little charm and a value for the of tlril; electrically charged landing stage thousand times that population. student of the period in' which be of the rat. , lived. . a away Professor Julian Huxley. who hie'A Scotch farmer puttingfound in Break not his sweet repose sheep shearing tools, Inherits his love at science. shows a bole wall a first edition Thou whom chance bringabto this the in that courtship and deep affection of the poems of Robert Burns. pub- sequestered ground. exist even among lower animals. lished at Kilmarnock in 17$0. If The sacred yard his ashes close. The male crab holds hisbrightly It la a reed edition. the owner will But go thy way In silence; here no , sound , colored claw in the air to attract get 51.000 .for , it. Burns got 6100 & Ihmon. libeetakag 4 1 I , the lady crab's favorable attention. for the book. Moralize on that. Ti ever heard- but from the mur- Itlam The male spider will catch a fly Burns doesn't care. now. muring Pines. and offer ft to the female spider. Answering the seas neer murmur: Nor ever here come rumor as you have seen a rooster find a Of anxious world or war's worm and let'a hen eat it. Some, aline. times, at the Lust moment be eats The faded the bleaching flag. it himself. 1 Markwreath. The poor male spider is most the dead soldier's dust beto be pitied of all husbands. for 0-"Cneath. his wife usually devour him at And show the death be chose: the end of the honeymoon. The By ROBERT QEILLIVI. save who weeps Forgotten by her praying manta has the same ' alone. disagreeable habit. wrote his tameless name on Righteousness doesn't swallow And this SKIN TROUBLES stone: Scientists tell you that with the its Adam's apple when the collec- Break notlowhis sweet terms,- down the aisle. aid of radium you can transform tion plate starts e (Copyright. 1926.) a yellow diamond worth Sloe into A snob is a prosperous human RHEUMATISM a blue white diamond worth $700. who doesn't know the fellow COMMONPLACES. If the diamond is bigger your in- being him loaned who lean 1$ during his creased value will be proportion. Atter Heine. years atoly greater. MSS olAPPETITE Rain on the face of the sea. Diamonds thusftreated have reRain on the sodden land. If sour friends think you look And mained blue for four years. Whethla blurred the window-pan- s er they would remain blue forever, with rain LOSS of science doesn't know. in nand. watch As I it. pen ,... . er Young men and women who are engaged in high school or university work read a number of books each year, but they are INFLUENZA RESPONSIBLE. fond of fiction and read largely for diversion rather than for information. Such reading IN a survey recently made by a leading in.. I rarely or never does them or anybody else 1 surance company IL is disclosed that rs reading merely to pau the health conditions- among in any time away is worse than useless; it, dis- the United States and Canada were less tfates and fritters away one's intellectual ca- favorable during the first half of than pacity. It unfits for any real brain work. for the same period of any year since 1920. Such readers are like grown people fed on Prevalence of influenza and pneumonia, it pap, and never allowed to use their is declared, were largely responsible for muscles e intellectually flabby and incomthis condition,, deaths from these diseases petent. being above the average for the half year But to return to the business mati. He period. There was also an increased numought to read because he needs a wider cul- ber of deaths from measies, organic heart ture and companionship than is to be found disease, chronic nephritis and cerebral In his business alone. Good books to the hemorrhage. The outlook is, from the recmind are like fresh pure air and ef ercisé ord already established, that this year will to the body. "I never feel altogether hap- be the worst in the matter of deaths from py," says Norman Hapgood, "unless I am measles, that the children of American and rs have expec!enced in the process of reading at least one ,book Canadian in which there bre. tithes a spirit stronger since tell. Tbe rate, 17.6 per i00,000 while , than my own." persons exposed, is exactly four times what Business men ought to read and study it was a year ago. Such ' The influenza outbreak is held respon--i. lathe line of their special'worls reading' tends to idealize ones labor,' lift' it sible for the increased mortality. This disout of mere routine and drudgery, and set ease is of such a peculiar character that it it where it properly belongs in wider and hastens the death of many persons suffer-more human relations.. But, a man who ing from chronic diseases, which is reflectstudies only his business, narrows his life, ed in the h'ghee mortality from what is for an exceedingly Important part of any called degenerative. conditions. These inbusiness worth while is the relation in creases, says the report, have more than which it stands to the larger life of the , counter-balancthe improvement in the world. .record of diphtheria, tuberculosis and kinMoreover, beyond any special business dred ailments, In which a man is engaged is the fact that "It will be recalled: says the statement be Is a mem The old Greek said,"This con- - issued, "that in 1920 the country experienc;erns humanity and nothing that concerns ed a very severe recrudescence of the 1918 humanity is foreign to me." He was a citi- influenza pandemic resulting in a very unzen of the world. Every man, be he busideath rate during the early part ness.. man or botanist, possesses at, least in But in the latter part of 1920, germ, whatever is human. All the tragedy Ifavorable situation took a surprising turn that. has ever made men weep; all the and when the year had run it was found that the mortality comedy that, has ever made them.laugh; all the hopes and fears longings and ambitions of the industrial population had actually ' that have ever stirred the hearts of men, registered the minimum rate up to that the whole tremendous drama that has earth time.. General 'population .mortality, statisfor its stage and life beyond for its denouetics likewise showed that with a single exment, has found' its way within the covers ception, 1920 had registered a lower death of books. Man is so cunningly keyed an in- rate than any previoui Year. strument that be is capable of responding "What occurred in the second half of to whatever, in all this, has touched and 1920 suggests strongly that the 1926 influthrilled and lifted the race. enza flurry constitutes in itself no real This has been a world of evolution, of ground for pessimism as to the final record, struggle between the for this year. It is Etill entirely possible growth, an age-lolower and the higher, the worse and the that sufficient improvement will .. develop in better. The business snanevery man the latter half of 1926 to counterbalance tho who is mentally capableshould in the in- high rate of the first half of the year.". terests of general, culture and because he 11111 LKAL1. is a man, know a good deal of all the struggle, defeat, and victory of humanity. CCORDING to sla tistics given out by Such knowledge is necessary for a true the StatesBureaua-I4un., philosophy- of - life and of understanding tion about sI per cent- of the men, its ineaning and purpose. women and eh ildreri,in this country, len THE PRIMARY Ft STEM,. yearsof age or older, are unable to read or wr:te. So far 'as education is concern HERt is widespread sentim ent over th e ed tho$e figures do not mean much, for country that the use of vast sums of wti le it is difficult to draw the line bemoney in primary elections is to be conNc(ri littrityr.rd illitcraey, there is demned, &though there are few who would no doubt but that about of our go so far as to suggest that the direct priare near illiterates. population The mary law, which makes such eipenditures average adult who has not. gone beyond the third or fourth grade of school ,is likepossible, should be repealed. Recent disclosures in Pennsylvania and ly to be aterate rather than literate.where candidate t for United 'States To teach- people to read and v.Tit0 is senator had almost unlimited means at only the mere beginning of education. their dispose!, and went it by the hundreds Milions can read and write who are to of thousands, have- - caused leading men, of all intents and purposes illiterate, be: the nation to express themselves In no un- cause they make no use of their literad certain terms, some go!ng so fir as to say to add to their knowledge or learning or that those who secured nomination M this to take an intelVgent part in the life of ,waye if finally elected, should be barred their day and generation. Of course, one from because of having must, he able to read and write as the beCorrupted the elecCon system. ginning step in education; but the great It will perhaps not be denied that the problem is, to continue adult education convention plan also affords opportunity for until it becomes of some yalue to the in--, . iI fight It 'doesn't. Matter the mirror says. LEAVES AND REALITY tl-fi- . gollEle - e ! . ? DT GLENS MANE. . irfooldent of Colvereity of Wisoondo sod formai editor of tbo Coo. In the nein light thrown upon Abraham LincOln by the recently published letters andltaiks of hie son Robert. who paased away from earth in July, no fact shines forth more luminously as a guide for ambitious people than that to be leo to be Tnartianin10111. great is What has b.en set forth by history as um to the g spirit of Abraham Lincoln. particularly ea displayed in his pleas tor . moderation in the treatment of the defeated South by the Federal close of the Civil government after-thWar. is not only given full subetantia- lion. but also amplification' bY the report of the Great Emancipator's senti- merits privately expressed' to his son. Hebert' Todd Lincoln. who was on Gen. Grants staff, at the time of Lees surrender. was the first eyewitness to relate to his father the story of the pur- butt and capture of Lees army. Robert tells of this.lw a letter to a friend. He saw Lee. dressed in spotless new uniform enter the McLean house to to ' Grant and 'saw the sisal soldier emerge, still wearing , southern his setord,thiough the magnanimity of 's Grant. It was proof of Abraham own irsagnanisnify that he delighted in that.of Gritzt ' In all- his term of office Lincoln -' showed 'the'''same sperti.- To his most powerful rivaloSalmon B. Chasei he gave the greatest place a President has to bestow. that of Chief Justice of the vnitetr States Sopreme Court. 'To be magnanimous." says Buskin. io be great in life; to be! come this increasingly is to advance in life. We are prone 'to think of Alexander and Caesar as grettt men. but here was an ' essential element of. greatness the?' and other ancient rulers did not possess. They were cruel and vengeful to defeatet foemen. In the Middle ' and later the leaders of rebellions.ages as ' well as other foemen. when captured were nearly always put to death. which was sometimes preceded by terrible tor- tura- , I i nosE 1 Front Los Angeles Times. of Nevada said he could see no good reason require why the &rect. primary should more money than the indirect primary, but thought the law governing direct primaries should be maler.ally 'changed. Senator! Bruce of Maryland said that in his opinion there is no widespread demand for the re- - i peal of the Seventeenth Amendment to the Constitution and be did not th!nk such action desirable. These are the views of some of the them-men the of who men leading nation, selves might be affected should the primary system be repealed or modified. Doubtless the views of the public generally on the questien'would be equally divided although there is no question but general opinion is greatly opposed to the corrupting influence of money in our election system. . - . Ium A,V313 tirs. 15 ! -- - - .. OA MAGNANIMOUS 1 Phono C.Y. Utah Atittrnoons Except tiunday. of Circulatim Ileintper of Audit Bureau I RATES. c,r:ascitirrios I .1$ One Week .45 I One Month 7.40 one sear 1.00 advancer in Year paid tit One Cents bawls Comes rates apply to Utah. Idaho. The above instL y states other ?;evade- - end WYonilt,a; Per month. $1.00. fur publication to Address correspondence The Editor. communica bend remittanees And business qt. Salt Lake City. Utah, COM 10 The Liereret NATIONAL APVERTIgtMI KEPP.ESENTATIVEt Inc. Cone, Eotbent;urg and ti Note, East alst Street ed New Turk City Blvd. BO. Michigan 'fiq Senator Frank L. Greene of yermont ChteaSO Mil Donovan Biding Detroit Cola Bldg. Coca of the opinsm that "only the man with I was Kansas City Huliding , .....fel constitution Atlanta Victoria Building Money has a chance to run for nomination aC Louis Conger and Moody. while Senator DuPont of Delaware ! Angeles. Califorsic now," Higgins Building,MnLosFrancisco. California believed the convention system much pref- - I ' Holbrook Building. City. erable to the present primaries. Senator Entered at the pottoffice at Salt Lak aCcording to Act of as second classS. matter Howell of Nebraska expressed the view that HOS. Mares Congress. matter svWcti system was erriployed no entitled i exclusivelynews dmTits Associated Press of elf with money, or who had means at those to the use for republication credited Snitches credited toil. or not otherwise 11111V11 'pubwould use it freely to acLa this newspaper. and also the WC1111 ther command, lished herein. All rights for republication of their purpose. Senator Pittman complish Special dispatches here are also reserved. -----Salt : ISO. Wxst. illilom. 01.., the use of money, but not, perhaps . to the same extent as does the primary system, which by many is regarded as favorable to the man of means. Discusson of the question caused the New York Times recently to interview some of the leading men of the nation. While some could find no partictilar fault with the primary system, bel:eving that one was just as east), corrupted as the other, the major-- 1 ity of those expressing an opinion were in! favor of so mod fying the law as to elimin- ate the many abuses that have crept in.! Some contended that the direct primary was I fundamentally .sound, while others saw. in' upon it a departure from the principle wlieli the American government is found- . , .. j , , , , TIIE iiESERE'r:NE,WS an. -- , , . .s . . . , . , . . . . . 4, - - r Imam, ., - , .. : ,... :: , , 1 ,: , , , 1 '. - - |