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Show rAcu ten! - fe ) ." ' - r ' ' l ' the ruvo herald : " " l- - - - - ydak , Message- - ::-wm M'Kl 111 IUI IKil I '3: ' " Merely to buy and give are not enough. "The gift ..without the giver is bare." With what we give must go some part of ourselves, else, as St. Paul said "we have not charity." That is 1 j why the best gifts of all are those that are made by fingers that toil in love, into which go the the thoughts of the One who shall receive. To put' your hand in your pocket and extract a coin or a banknote, that k one thing. Some folks buy grand pianos and diamond broaches that may. ' But jtSUput your soul and heart into a gift that is an expression love, that is Christmas giving. " ' Bl k" ; ... " - " , X:-- r. ; , . i . jLifiY jij 'n'y - 7 i-- r it ii t- y great opportunities will be offered you. 7 : h-- ti your changes 5 -- o-- TO BE IN BUSINESS solely for the purpose of ma king money is selfish, and to use dishonest methods to accomplish deal this end is criminal. There is but one way to be successful in business, that success, in the true meaning of the world, is to honestly with the people giving them full value for their money. With the closing of the year we can look back with a great deal of pleasure upon our success and we are grateful for the future be fair, but as we take a glimpse into-th-e many new customers we have won. In dealing with the p ublic we have tried to of 1913 some radiwe see many changes to be made many opportunities to serve our patrons better. With the ushering in will be made to meet the requirements of our growing business. Watch for these changes for with their coming cal i x r r - pi v-- ?. 'tfrji1 iew-iin'- - -y- ' . imii yf y( : n LLru urnitureCO Provo, Utah s F" ' it -- U-' L -, jL i.i ,,i..n, ijiiii.i. nll mr .111,1 ,i n,t ,'.;:" i 4s. advantageous, why class organized society. It does he is dependent upon some .other as they desire, or cannot spare them ent to man the earn for chance his liveli economic of shouldn't a distribution be involve nbt organized change of schooling." through a longer period exter- hood. r. equally so?" They propose to substione or the most Important base, 'but merely a change of Jized-productio- n Perhaps We all in common depend upon tute an orderly method of distribuon the other hand, and most pernicious evils of our day nals. Revolution, a the same common resources of na- tion in place of the. haphazard one of within from a. is the attitude that legislation, and involves in thechange of ture and history. .None of us is right- private enterprise. Contlnued from Page Eight.) mechanism internal have change what should stand for justice, The final goal of Socialism Is to do without which, Socialists ly or nobly born until every child is taken upon themselves and have,' In society, born into as the immdiate entirely away with the wage system fected ' which labels 60 cans a minute. big cities no can be there claim the reproach suggesting this method to j!onRaiience7Tlncurred There is a Dla ten nress the Socfaiism, then, proposes a com- - inheritor of all "the resources of na- (Rusk in ) rent and. interest .We all as a means of adding and merited criticumof the public. ture rand history, of Industry and know, that in the Bible. Interest. ooo or more cards in ,wai prints iu JusUcirOT a to constitute as society, of .inspiration aifti culture; of jrwhieh is called usury, is regarded as so radical to a hair.N . A V.O a fwn nfton nmvpii a mockery We are surrounded by .abuandano change" ureaa to goodness and a great evil. It was forbidden the revolu- all that tempts term The revolution. to"Of machine has social been moulding in. Is seek to in ' every kind; fact,' we have an The possibility. justice and makes rented with which three persons can overflow for fullness, Israelites in their dealings with each a final to greatness, describe used goal is tion the of products,' so much so day' in general the privilege of tnOUld over 20.000 InavAa i flav t or fredom and gladness of life. ln that the poverty from which we to be attaineM, other, and in the case of poverty, It is in to complain suffer wealthy. The right the cotton Industry, one man and two is born of all Since in common deuend was forbidden f even - to- strangers. people its realization. in employed since .tactics s mostcases taken from the poor, plenty. Overflowing f WThile Socialism is revolutionary in upon the sources' and tools of produc "Take thou no usury of him, or Doys now do the work formerly re- on the one hand, starvation on the complaint and; process are too of tion, there can be no individual lib crease; but fear quiring 1,000 spinners. Amone wek the other; the people of this fair land God.that As we all know, the United its program, it follows the laws thy thy ers, tjne man now does the work of in need of the common decencies and States senate is dominated by special evolution in its method of attainment. erty save those soruces and tools brother may live with thee." Socialism does not come as'a rtm-ed- which belong to tbe people in common. iuiy. in making horseshoes, one" necessities of life because too much representatives of the trustsand corInterest, then, was originally looked ' man can do the work, which yrars a?o has been vils-o- f existing society, There can be no- social peace and Thomas Carlyle porations, and none of tis, I'm sure, produced. full no of the labor of the human upon as sin. The Socialist asks: O0Srien. In said,- - England was liberty but as a program of principles for a sanity, seeking new would" deny the fact that legislation new Why is it that interest has come to raaklng nails, one man;. can now (.o markets, while the million society; or, as they say, the first soul, so long as some people own that and a half haa' hAPn almost altoaether for the which all people depend. be T tnework: formerly-U0- Be upon has for social order that regarded as legitimate, even among men. men of. masses. proposition and women who made the classes and not for the The question now is, if this philo people who consider With the bosthope loom,t)y;ii) themselves ever been presented to the way Id. one man clothes, went with bare the of Chas. P. Kelly, speaker now does the- - work of 90 men with Isophy" be correct, how is this' trans christians? to their their viewpoint According bad they nothing wherewith to - the iaod loomr-I- n liouse-o- f delegates, at- St. Louis, the philos'ophy ls Msed on the constitu- formation to "1e" effected J the steel industry, the clothes tliey made. Have we buy Many people express a fear- 'of not co men tnree In the first place, let us understand Socialism, without with the latest machine had iudia, tion of the United States, and on the in the presence convicted boodler, In making his starving, realizing that one 11 turn out in ten Jiojjiajjso tons of walled-uand plentiful food sup- feesion. described in a few graphic fundeamental principles which gov- clearly, that Socialists do not pre- form of Socialism is already here ' "bf ern all religions: Since all men are, tend to have a ,oi ateet Dniiets, whereas in 1S32 it plies?. words the methods and motives which wand, magic the plutocratic. This plutocratic 115 .men to do th? same Said at least, potentially, the childrn of a About oneialf of the families in officeholders and politicians. will effect the social transformation Socialism without- demwort, in me, same length of time. In foe: "Our combine was, not along universal creator, they are bothers in in a it to Socialisijn - Since God has single day; expect they Re.'.."Doner making Chirty men now do the America own no property; (2)all relations. .and lines. Both DemocraU ocracyit seems to me is .the form-thatake place step by step. The of (he families hold but one- - party work that but a few years' ago reto it. My experi created men individuals, each with, a belonged we ought to fear. . The. .trusts' publicans disof the pu6lic power by eighth of the national wealthy while ence has ' been that boodlerr lineup special endowment, every man must quired 500 men. In acriml class utilize the methods of Socialianf cannot possessed bfrtheresult patentbinderlhrows-jwaiy-fwner- y useful work and develop his eni tamiliesholdmore according to their own Interests and do some of the. instantaneous overturning of men out of wort, each cotton har- - wealth than the remaining 99. The not their resources, centralizing all above me m faculties,; things, stanaaroe. under the system, but they expect their ;,. vester' displaces 38 men; each steam Biiddle class, consistine of 28 Der cent majority of party the wards of St Louis, he 'sbould have the opportunity to do it to present capital, cooperating Instead of be the result of persistent and plow 21 men, each rlvetin j Tnucbine of the population, hold 20 per cent of both the Demb5ratie . party and the so. . . . This at the eliminating conscious competition. effort, and Jhe jWprk ,o displaces 21 men, T each r nominate men to . The - Socialist' "Nature and usually Republican new and the better on is good as' It the way. proletarian 88 organization, men. : These Illustrations mieht h "The averaee Amer. go to thehouse of delegates for the economic have a value just to economic and political field, and of fas as It goes. It' is the limited things kan citizenappli "the money they can get out of it, .maefinitely multiplied, but why conthe extent taht they are the matrials th physical and moral rerfeneracy of cation of the economic principles of tinue? Industrialconditions have puuuc scnooi Bystem, but very few party man yotea for. his own fellows, the class. .... laboring socialism. . revolutionized, and yet, people take the trouble to find out to what and either one that gets In serves by which the human soul may freely I have never read one line in my o uunuiea ai me, tnoiiffht of eron extent the people are able to take those who rob the city of fran- express Itself, that the goalof history The, trust utilizes, the methods of vmic ; advantage or it. wnuiuons Deing cboISeration" is the liberty of each soul to at last study of Socialism where, any ad- Social chises." , ' In the City of Chicaeo. about nno. ; To review a minute: Why? We have deep become a law unto itself; the liberty vanced Socialist thinker expects any and coordination to get the best third go no further than the first rooted overtF and degradation on of each man to Individualize nature from' man and nature withSocialists claim that sudden transformation of the present results no further than the out Socialist aim and spirit The mental, physical and moral basis for grade, an those to live and for to and truth which himself, according every side, capitalistic state of society into a co- second grade. me neea or Socialism. r no fiirt. who bare-- ' made criminology a Care- original .life of his own. fa Sola ,sm r lhe tene- commonwealth rl the operative by ... That a Vast 01 'oe trust,, nowever, majority of, the human ther than the- third grader and three- - ful study are the chief factors in fill- 'They claim that no spiritual free means of a popular revolt or In eon . race Is in poverty, none: willJ no rurther than the fourth our jails and asylums. We have dom can achieve or maintain itself ex- sequence of a general economic col has come and seemingly come to stay". ing deny. louns go, The! in every 100 drotf an Immense army, of ' the laboring cept -- it be realfzed- in economic , Millions of people In this onn'S, i. grade. Ninety-sevesay that the only solulapse: they all claim that it must first tion Socialists berore reaching the tolgh schol. and trades class. wiling but. unable to freedom. ' of the problem is the socializa.: ; ways exist on the border of destitu. out start In . . . . and local . T"'. municipalities k legis m every .x.uuu iinisn me find work but a little more than won, ..J nis is evident when we realize rin1 vui (unco f It is a recognized principle even to lative and executive public Institu tion of the trust, that the ; benefits now monopolized by the few" may be- that only 4 per cent of the national nign school course. of one them We of have the the first duties of their time. day that tions. V The United States commissionpr of wealth beolngs-to- . come the Inheritance of all; the 52 per cent of lis dependent upon their state is to protect . the lives of Its absolutely Is The.fr Idea .to transform the Is betVeejj,,4jJutocratic Social-- '' choice Im population, constituting 7 millions of educationsays In ; his report of the employers r this cltizeiis. Logicalyl, ";' principle r' modern trusts Into cooperative enter s ism and democratic Socialism. . v. amines, mere are millions of peo-- cuHiuuuee oi imeen: ' find Industrial conditions such plies more than Bimple protection from prises on a large Bcale We operated, for . This qUery will Of,alk the DU P118 Of the Dublin Rrhnnln that a laborer has 4o be continually violence. Man's life' Is eudangered the' pie forking under conditions and to perhapr opine nf tho nnhlii. Thla Jienpflt iro. are fri the studieV-oine la homes that he .first three seeking work,, and In nine cases out fully as much, If not more, upon the tern .ihey, would extend-tyou': "If 'Socialism .la. based on Jusall Indus-- , tice and ears or in trie primary studies. of Millions of hone8CInd,ustrious side. to ten A j economic full righteousness sand has the of for from, fifty ten, every Job, application people tries as faai.es conditions are badly fed. clothed" unit 4,n.,s. of the population of the men have their eyes on the same piece this principle would protect men from of as Its basis, why do good 'humanity with. the mlt exception, of course, of not that class end. thousands die every year of pre- United States on arriving at ' the of workrNow," work Is honorable and hunger, cold and thirst, as well as those ofmen that represents' ' dependent upon purely personal Intellect and proper .for the age educawe have Sweatshould be considered supremely so, from poison, knife and .bullet. If skill such as the various arts and TBuiaoip. disease, humanity j Interests, secondary nock to Its standard?". . shop workers by the thousands, re- tion never receive It. Thirtv out nf but hunting and begging for work Is society is to protect Individuals on but crafts and small . , farming. fail to receive higher edu ceiving for cambric dresses, waists thirty-onEvery, student of psychology 'or The Socialist advocates the transhumiliating In the extreme to every one side.t it might better be the econiinea and trimmed, f 1.20 per dozen; cation, upon arriving at the proper man or woman, who lias ; the least omic than the physical ': Not a day fer of ownership In the social tools of sociology knows that every man born Into 'a class condition,: Inherits night gowns, with embroidery vand age of Independence in her or him. passes but that the number who perish production the land, factories, The question now arises. "What t spark or acquires a classhood In addition' tucked 'yokesx 1.00 'per dozen; silk Tbe question comes to tis,' Are we In the economic struggle far surpasses waists, 98 cents per dozen;; women's the main cause of this remarkahiv satisfied with the present condition those who fall as the result of per- stores, warehouses, mines, .mills,' shops, to his manhood. Class consciousness docks, wharves, means a consciousness wrappers, 40 cents per dojen; shirts, short duration of school attendance?" of affairs? Is It possible to reform sonal violence. The duty of society, Bteamshlps;" one's own ' 20 cents- a smelters, brick and stone interests as a member ofofa Hash" TTnttmf is W This hat the Rt.tH nlon knee In and 'social conditions under then, dozen; the life, of the yards, packing houses and all other 60 to guaranteeing society pants, 75 cents per dozen. : superintendent of public Intsructlon the present economic conditions? citizens, ts to secure to ach"and sources and 'means of hmdnrtinn Hia. a consciousness that his interests caa There are thousands upon thou- says: "The cause Is economic- condi the opportunity "to tribution and exchange from Indi best be subserved Socialists claim that it la absolutely by advancing the n . .V .1... .10 (ntfi.nBtn sands of wpmen, aye young" girls, tions. A majority of the natrons of imposslgle. '. s i ; earn a livelihood. . ' iiiu viaan . wniCu luicicoii ui 06 vidual to to the' capitalists people, ho are so reduced to the schools cannot public do without belongs. And claim , Let from understand is .the that the Socialists be operated for the benefit of all. It; clearly poverty and the f labor of ; tbelf" children, and blfged to 'work (for such a that the Socialist movement put forth Is . this that no spiritual ' Tne rahre of a commodity Ts". to he that they sell their bodies to pittance cannot therefore.: to them idve time Is rhone Elgbt O. Where tbe Flowers not a "reform, but a revolution. 4 A freedom can be achieved or maintain- - determined by the Mabor time, exeke out we existence; and we find many attend schobr longer. Too many reform merely proposes a readjust-- ed in poverty or degradation In olain Grow. Projifc Greenhouse, Huish & la its nroductlon. Th and many a modern storekeeper ia elth'er cannot support their children ment of the relations within the pres-- l language no man. is fee so loot as pended ' : !; Soclajststek thls.qu?stlon,,f'It organ-- . Thomaa,. florists. ; v , ; -t- he-world reaV-progre- ss. self-feedin- g lOnfoj-tunat- e , . . Ila-hArH.- i , but-no- the-meth- od : - store-louse- in-- . " for-th- backs-becau- -- - e se - . -- . - p - seven-eight- h' t eon-que- . torn-binln- tne God-give- g n - '- steam-rolle- - -- - 1 eL ' ., -- - - one-hal- f , ; two-third- : tT A7 -- - - n . J A -- , one-hal- . ; . 5 Three-fourth- , - J ( . will-pe- r: . - -- : e . - T . . . - : every-memb- er " A "", . . -- -, : the-fir- l, .. st . . . ; 1 '- - "f ' 1' . m |