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Show • ... • ., ~-S - . .. ·· · Utah1s Most " .... OF WEHK: .\IN :· . . . ,.., , • ..... _• 10 • "' • • - •}IC• J o .. I 1: .. • _. ,. What Woald You Do With a Mizzion- · · · \ ;Quit Work? H ei'e's ·Your *nswert· • 9 • ,,:f ·~ ' I •. . • . I 1 • \ \ \ •, .., _. ~ _JOU dldD"t !lave to work, \dla' ctOr . I .. . · J.... L~ 1QJ1tamt,~. JM'IJBi*pel'• .. 'WOUld yc;u ·. • ' ~' . ·· ~ A~ ~ PuUtaer pr1at plaJ- wrtter, bellevee he knoWII nary man•a ~nae to that qUesuo\i 1t put to '&he test.. . . . P.rozn falrJ·~ youth to ptpeclreamlng age, the qu~on of what )'OU woUld do ·u you had a mtll1on dollars :Has resulted ln the~ farthest ::atgbti of the Imagination. Williams · pre~M~n~ th~ problem In m~em pattern, and 1n le&IJ than two pages of Hearst's current CoamOJ)outan gtves a puzzling pb110110pby of ute and labor. • . The Heaven of ~he O)d Tp¢ament would be a Bell, W111Jams thinks, and explains \hal pothing of the sort 1s mentioned ln the 1ie"' TeStament. He Plc.tures tlte • misfortune of a world Without work. "Nearly every man thinks h1a Job the hardest and moat disagreeable 1n the world," writes W1111ams. "It 1a a sin to be contented. It 18 neither human nor 'cllvtne: n•s ~trary tQ nature and Whole sclutme of our active \lnlverse. A divine discontent 111 part M the urge that makes trs work. But It 1a not, I repeat, tn order to give ua the means of avoiding .1·ork." Work 1':!r Wllliama must have pereonal lu tel:CHt·, a chance to use the · mtn.d, a ch::illenge to the pride, skill or Ingenuity of the operator, a chance . to grow. There 1a no dlf[erence be- lly. we nterely think we do. · I tween such work and play, W1111ams "We happen to be born in 4 WOI1CI proves. lie further says: made by anci for work. And •when ··u your mlnd ~"t supplied ,...on1 we do not uae our ~-given mental a~ything else to work,on, it will wor and physical lacultlea tn the ''·ay theJ' , on 1tscl(,. It's got to work. Other- wen Intended to be used . .,..,.,, we are wrtae you'd probably Cultivate some sJJAply going co'ltra.ry to t 'w 'wJ!rue .,.rbbig diseases to lntel'est you. scheme ot 11!e and ot the "·1iverse-Wobod.y realiJ wania to take life eaa- a univene ot motion. not of 1U~R.• I "Pickles and fruit Juices wtn ua& here before clubwomen. keep the human engl,Q.• runniJ;lJ. "American women have come to a I Neither 1s tt necessary to eat to repass tn tbetr cra.me to be fA.shtonably ph!tlon. Food bulk 1s not easenual tl'&U where thousand& of them are to well-be1Q8 ·ot the b04J. On the ~~[&m debating the question. 'shall I keep contrary, too much bulk lnevttablJ my figure or keep JDY husband.' ·• gives d1seomtort. Concentrated food declared Dr. Booher. "The records such aa candy, which 1a one o! the 1D the country's domestic relation moat valuable energy fooda man eata. anst divorce courts tndlcate thls 'Should..-have a larger place 1n the ellwttb startltng platnneas. etary of the ordinary woman. Con..Lazineas. loss of health and pep feotlonery. tn tact, used aa deaaen. and W temper are the common re- tends to balance dietary fault& tha' aults of women's urge to atWn may occ;ur 1n the main part or the At~MG A e:w ,.srlph-Uke figures that nature never meal, atn~ candy tolltatn. not only _Jfl~· intended theJ ~ou)d. own. Glrlland sugar, but. milk. butter. nuts, fr\11-&e. CliiiCAOG-~J ot perfect. thlrty-~ women who would add years to tbetr and other esaentl&la to health. liDII llldUSU10ualy reductng to tm- Uvee and Ute to tbetr years muat .. 'Bat yo\lr wa1 to b~th' ta a be'perf• a12Je ldxteena 11!1 ,O.oodtns the malntatA proper health babltf. They ter ru11t tO't womeb to • go by thaD · uuoa.. eli .y.o~ ;• ~~ .*"~lr heal~ · ~ . 'stvve ~une¥ m11o trouble.' .. Dr. James Booher. tn an address! , th._ • Jesse Lynch WilliQms .. .l..·a••••••w•+'n••••••••••••• •tt•••••••·••••••••••••*•••••••••·••++•••• t•••••• , 1 Hero_Ship From Pacific Makes Her Curtsy to Atl~nt~ =i . "'- ~ W:tZShington First to Sponsor Use t,_ I Of Candy u.s W4f EJJOd, Necessity, ~·•••••••_.••.,...•••••••••••••••••..•:t•••••••n•••••U•..••••••••,._.-. 1 CMP2ESS QF AUST2At.IA ~---- [lCJl0<)-4CJeoqe Waahtng\on WM war, am 1n peace, and 1lrat colonies aa a candy eater, acto Walter c. Bughea, eecrethe National Contectionera' ln an addreea here. .world war put candy on the an energy food, but •over DOt the first place that folUld ltaelf among the ID mllltary knapsacks," Bughee. ..Washington American to sponsor the fec::tto,neJry lD the army. of an Indian cam• he found tlme 'to se~d IJ1X weeks away overseas. BU:P•PlJ of candy, of which tre11Delly fond. In the coltime, due to the repres~olcmli!ll industries and the of the people on England. candy manufa-ctured. before, 1n 1747, the sweet.J tor the armJ Of Grea• hacl been ot peFrederick was en•n~~ra.1t:e war and hls IGpstates, especially been cut oft. em1er1tetJlcv came Ana Pruastan sc1entist, • • • 0 l . tG \trge the use of the beet no~· known as the sugar beet as a possibl supply of sweets for the m1\1tary. ·~ut the use of ~dy ~~ 110ld1ers ~ irruch fa:tther b,aok, re<:arCtS allow. The lioora ln their conquest 'lf Spatn In the seventh century used It aud lt was a common artl.cle among the Crusaders whose expeditions aptnat the infidels really resulted in the cultivation of Europe's sweet tooth." ~~ Tl-tE SMALLE:ST 8ELL-~OP · I WA~'-Ki TOM . ~ I UE-CR:>I! L . .. . I .. ,. |