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Show A n ' THE DESERET MARCH 11 NEWS .SATURDAY MAJESTIC ROLE ENACTED BY AOtlCULTORE DOT YOU OTH IN SAFEGUARDING NATT0NA1 PROSPERITY By Prarident FI mew G. hidAme rica, H?;SErdayi we desire to do eo or Ptmon, ifriodtanl American national character whether YOUR OWN HOME OoOece of CIjJj. dairies In ord to eampeta with the market. . -The co operative system- ,- Sled brings large sod small farmer toget Iter, thereby tncreaxrag- Jboleld of the Is take her I) lace. in. an. position of power sod leadership end DQllUcaJeejme aoiL peeweeils the o(fortiuiliy as wril We have Ion mm leader of the world. d In the social" respect. It has fha the sa-- 1 .. of . fivraing danger Isolated.and. cftBaered.-oureay- ea signification. greatest ooai on one of policy Indeed many It is therefore no wonder that apart from the world. And HneaThe the Danish farmer places his reliance present decade. until modern Invention had measurIt ay he the present two or three for the -future on the sysably solved the problem of transportem. will witness a year, national transtation of men and goods, of "It is use lea to taka up space com- Khali we seek policy. such fact a these. They menting on mission of the spoken and written tell their -- own etoryrWhy,. I would only political strength and lender, word and urrttl education had so ask. cannot the same or more be ship as the empire of old. bated done In England, where we have at spread that all parts of the world some upon temporary advantage least equal advantage? I know well read of the doings of all other parts of trade, armament, or nnmcrical that U, would be jione if only pur the eame and thought relatively Governments could be brought to . or ahaH we seek strength, were we isolated. But those thoughts,' understand the vast Importance of chan ex- - i . which finds democracy the Issues and to put their hands to day a are ended. The world haa proKslun. n the work and la the! ,the plough In earnest. English agrito the sise of a former slate. liven of culture la not played out. bat if It la And which makes people? The news, the goods and the Ideas te succeed under the new eondttioha them unoonquermble. that have arisen its system must be and Ideals of all the world are the This 1 the seventh article in a changed. Thar must be more small property of all the world. The free series by Dr." Peterson. . i farmers, more smsH owners of land, e public srhools, the free press, the everything, cheaper J ahd above and more all of steam engine and the gas engine, as who farm an average of nloety-thre- e which can In needs. my view, only exemplified in land, tea pnd air acre of land Further In be put In the- way of accomplishment traffic, the telephone and telegraph, Till an Act, I pthead and understand,, wa pass- by Btate example - without ed by which the state tsem powered To with loans labgrant enabling Home agricultural Hie Problem an transof have these wire Empire. great things orer to acquire allotments I think I Surely I have succeeded in show- .. . formed the world. We are ail near am rirhf In 10 any ?.ling neighbor whether We would or not. question is of enormous to the diseases that the population of .Denmark tance. After all Great Britain impor, So w became hah! Is the which, like those of other bub countries, and focaa of her world-wid- e of the world, the weakness of the was crowded into the now is cities, If and power, our and gigantii empire Ja -- worldand. the worlds strength In- - large- numbers returnlng to ths to be sustained and kept from falling sonndnesa TV shall taks on much land. to the pieces ' of Its own weight, thoroughly bad In the year ahead ' and to the a deputation of Suf- home energy, that la as steam ow much thoroughly gdod and much folk also.-Hmust be sustained Den-,'Iengine n tanners (England) visited mixed good and bad. A most interestthis be done if our population is thelr to the East ran ing story might be told of the -physlc-- l C ?L Council .. they any, allowed to deteriorate,. andJhow. can At7Ltr thing which, we will take.- in. the speaking such deterioration be prevented If farmer: The process of trade and Intermixing, from greatadvantaga-that-h- Danish e Is possesses more much a Interesting world; the the land and to crowd In- -, In ths sympathy of the government sen to cities? How, to ask a last quesstory may be told of the spiritual Loans withoutinterest, towards bring- tion. Ten minutes after using Danderine can values, ths false and true philosophers, ing waste lands migration be preventInto and ed In face this we will give and take. Bhnll we by generally small rates cultivation, of our Free Trade system, you can not find a single trace of of reInterest, with closer association England paid by Instalments, towards the im- a factor that In my view must con- dandruff or falling hair and your tinue to dominate the situation ex- scalp will not itch. -- but. what -- will strengthen our home ties, our domprovement of land agricultural cept estic relations ths sacred things as- buildings; and tow and by Interesting its children suf- pjease you most will bo after a few rates of sociated with the words, mother, wife and carriage of agricultural freight ficiently in the land of England to Week's use, when you see new hair, produce Induce them there to bide and mul- fine and downy at first yes but and child? Because England has for from Denmark to England. really new hair growing all over the , tiply? many generatlona exemplified the atShall Wo Build an Industrial Feudal system and feudal ideas scalp. Danderine 4 to the- hilr what tributes of a ho rim loving people. The Democracy? have had their reign and are outworn fresh showers of rfin and sunahlns English mans conception of home are to vegetation. Ij goes right to the In their general conclusions Is the Englishman's greatness. Or they Or rather the system Is worn out. but A deal lc.-y-h COftrsoTshat! wa ha lil Mws Id great the hair to grow,Aong, may be at- proof of this In such a document even them, helping ideal of home, the ideal, or should Danish farmers) success Strong and .luxuriant, that great man.-Ceconly to their system of as the will-o- f we say only . th idea of ths south tributed. not and of Danderine means of edu- Rhodes? In bequeathing his Dalham colorless hair lookmakes thin, lifeless, European nations and ths near-eas- t, ab- cation. but also togood youthfully bright, the fact that they Hall estate In Cambridgeshire he lustrous and we Shah the Balkans and south, own the land they occupy, to just twice as abundant. says: "My sxperience is that one of Adv. the . sorb now more of the austere demthey receive from govern- the things' making for the strength ocracy and - the physical and moral as ment, as well to of s counthe of the absence England of unownership cleanliness of the Scandinavian rabbits end vermin.' try estate which would maintain the their own property,, I presume by tries or shall we seek to Imitate the and comfort of the head of charity br by finding' them employNow u dignity let at the glance of and result Slav with his elements of art and again; Whereas I ment for which the family. property cannot this government and devoid sympathy of help, humbly believe that one of the se- pay that is, out of private filth, socially pot wealth and of the system of Shall We Seek Political Power, Only? which . The I .escort of History. it seems to have forwarded In crets of England's strength has been America has not yet matured m does not possible way. I go for my fact the existence of a clasq termed the The land of a the sense that our traditions have been every landlords, who devote their exist solely for thecountry to an address delivered by Herr M. oountry pleasure of the established. We may become an indus-- . P. to efforts the maintenance of those Blym, a rich and the advantage of their saltrial, mercantile nation predominant- parliament- - member of the Danish on their property. This Is the feudal aried dependents; therefore this is an' and ly, or we may become a rural nation of Idea, that members especially evil system which in my view must The following table give a com- of country families who have predominantly. Our national character parative gone tend to promote the ferocious menof the enormous abroad In thejr youth. But I mainis lust now in process of making. We increase statement public or private, covert or may ln our great respect forth since 187.In the exports of Denmark tain that it Is erroneous, that .it does dicancy. direct or Indirect, that is not show s just appreciation of the ostensible, of England fan to see statemanship ons of the features of the age. Rather the rural decay of England. We Way mission of landowners true is the it . continue to shape our legislation to to strive to enable tnoee upon their in' we half as have the favor,, past estates, to maintain themselvese out century, the manufacturing and the im-f- s of the fruits of their owp honorable business interests (not unwisely Indeed if the national exertions. In the past) and fall to took prosperity la to be kept up it would T out for the development of the farm-in- g seem most desirable that this system -should be followed on the largest posinterest. We can in the next three decades by legislation produce sible scale, lest at last our fate should either a great farming population or mo be that of Rome or of The Phoenian Ignorant and indigent one. cians As we form our new .world ideals Let our past and even but hteseiR Herr filym potntrout, further, ihat heeds and conditions of the time. This -- we rosy profit by the observations of abundance be admitted whether or indeed. In the present instance, is no Its full measure will endure is ana diseerntng Englishman who made between 176 and 1900 the export of bacon went trp 201 per proved by the fact that the testator other the following comments - on his own tion value question. Once e had almost cent, of butter 445 per cent, of eggs proceeds to make arrangements which a country and Denmark. of trade and manufacmonopoly 1.300 t, on. and so Also be muslr he called enLet us take the case of Denmark, highly artificial, to tures. Have we that monopoly today, says: sure Its In fulfilment the of his 'case which possesses. I believe, no advantwho are doomed continually to hamages over England In soil or climate. mer at the shut door of the world's ,ha "0t landed property. I maintain also that what Is neceshut which haa the enormous advant- t10 markets while our own stand open to nd h,r1 eIf sary now la not so much to support the world We must meet also H age of a government sympathetic to'bnttrnM g country the dignity and comfort of the heads. .America a rivalry ahich, alter- -; ..3. ,n .t.h , as a result of legls-jan- v agriculture. There, bul-tI ---i a ! , longer. Tew i... a h.. hi.. country families', which, in Ithat of youth with age, a contest pn. the vast majority of instancea, can j whereof the end may be foreseen is be done only by providing them with jit not admitted ha t onr absolute extraneous wealth, but rather the dig- - commercial superiority and comfort of the heads of! fore our And Jf it goes, if even pulUc. inV; 1 points higher than that made by hundreds of thousands of small coun- - half pf iteyes goes, what then? What tutlons to the tenants, more than the estates, according to the latest owners or occupiers. I to we have try fall bark upon except our tests made In ths royal laboratory. still further that the mission maintain of land- - home markets and our home land They ate now, like ths peasants, lords is not merely to devote their ef- - the land that made us in the begin-focompelled to Join the to the maintenance of those on , nlng and that, to a far greater extent than we now think possible, may still ' be called upon to support us in the pc THREE SECTION , 1922 mmq - ! 1 ! eon-trect- ! ! . car-rtag- -- -- 11 rPrt - Home Owners Make BetterCitizens r . . A BETTER CITIZEN. HE TAKES AN CIVIC-affair- s the and is ever ready to- - forward a movement-fobetterment of his city. He keeps bis home in better repair and thereby adds to the appearance and beauty of the place. He is interested in Aocal improvements, in the parks, schools and churches, and points with pride to the advantage his home city has --to offer. Heis .the..nian...whQ usually votes on" election day, He- is The citizen .who has. inYestedhisBavings m a home ipend8 his declining years free -from worry. He has invested in something which he cannot lose on a falling market. He is protected in his investment because he always has the roof over his. head. Unlike many purchases which deteriorate in value, as time flies by. real estate usually is actually worth a great deal more at the end of every dscade than the original cost, and. he has had the-usof the property all the time-- . THE MAN WIIQ QWNSHIS-HQM&-MAKE- S r -- J -- - -- - e . READ TODAYS HOME-OWNINOPPORTUNITIES NEWS CLASSIFIED REAL ESTATE COLUMNS. G THE -f il .. ly r -- per-cen- , e of 1 be-ni- ty countered in- the tobby one dan She - The matter was hushed up but the still had a quantity of jewel but she hotel management invited the princess confided to The News correspondent to leate. the hote.. that unless she quids a 'aucooas as a professional dancer, the only thing Women Finds Her Lost she seemed suited for, the Jewels woud have to provide her food as Hoard! Drowns Herself lasted. She dances lorg they every evening at the hotel library before a score' of the guest to test her Ppeial CorrejK.odeae.1 EXILED RUSSIAN a princess skill and progress She PARIS, March I. Lots of moner but is trying bravely to forget it. She j often leada to aulcidc. but rarely does has not yet an engagement in either who ha recovered f consid-- j i a theatre or a cabaret and her n TOCR erable turn of money seek self de- mondg aw beginning to disappear j An attractive young Russian prln-h- o struction. This has just happened at had lived alone at the Hotel Baue, near Orleans. A tragedy of In Paris for ' several E Continental months and who associated with Per- remorse haa been enacted. The body of Mile. Iaruise Doisneau, sons pf excellent social status, reWhile in aged thirt) eight. has been . taeiy cently fell on evil v day mcaUeoed rircumsts-iceand about rffrC)m the River Mauve, On the body (Continued fronr pags one.) the end of her resources she was was found a. waterproof bag containing accu-e- d of theft by Wolseley of Lady some but of the time had ridden 18,000 francs. ,35.000 francs being London, a friend who aso lived at fourth class on German trains. c it in note The princes, At th beginWith tears in her eyes the woman the Continental. Mil.- - Doisneau note seems; had an attack of heart trou- ning of November grajefiif!y .accepted a ble waa restaurant and taken (he jn "for the. childrens sake. .driven a thought that her ltUle hoard had by Lady Worse Icy tp the latter's been stolen from her and she Ingoodbye and good luck, the roan rooms. Leaving her on a bed. the formed the police, directing their atpulled off hta heavy cap with hi free hand, the little girl smiled she knew English woman went out for a physi- tention to a 'person whom sjie sustne meaning of money and the fam- cian. When ahe returned the- fair pected. She afterward found that she had ily headed straight for a aide street, Russian was escorted to hej- own Immediately thereafter merely mislaid her money and was so which Intuition tells anybody in Pari apartment. will lead Inevitably to a small cafe Lady. Wolseley discovered that a large affected by her hasty accusation that sum of money was missing from her che threw herself into the ner. placwhere food. may be had. handbag. She complained to the pol- ing her fortune in her clothes to that Quite a number of Russians of gentle birth are at a ice. Who found the missing money there should be no doubt that if had never been stolen Hu "de RIvoIl They hr the handbag of th princess. The prinoess protested her innomysterious y exist somehow. cence and declared Lady Wolseley had Germany la run ver Was Prince; Is Dancer. .. in the matter of saurieseconomically for Presithe money In her purse be- dent planted and Ministers black-eyethe d A of wom- cause the Eng'ish woman waa Jealous the former being the lowestsalary paid to an in her car y I h trite was en- - of her superior charms. any head of slate In the world. tion upon any other basis than that of equality of opportunity both pohive, and inlitically. which dustrially. xhlch w have onlv in part, Th grsatest strength of Industrial democracy is in th farrhs. Rural England by H. Alder we-no- dia-an,,- -- 1,009-fran- down-and-o- ut black-haire- d, rt 'Ybmjust know shes a clever hostess I end? Surelv these questions connected with agriculture, British land and its depopulation.-howeve- r persistently It mav suit politicians to ignore them, and however little the mass 4f or care may undrrsiand about thorn are. In fact, among the most important, if pot, as I myself believe, absolutely the most important which confront our generation. Still they are b ft almost put of the account, although the agricultural- - interest remains individually. I believe, the greatest in the nation, if the most voiceless and. on account of the unfortunate division of the classes concerned, politically the most helpless. ta For In this matter toot to the needs wishes and advantage of those from whom they derive, gheir chief .support, the dweiiera-d- n the ' cities, Tire Canee of a'tonal Decay.- Here I conclude mv comments up-- , on a ubjc Thai, to any nothing previous Mqdy and preparation, huh occupied at. my for two time and mind In doing I Tfrish to dat once more, as clearly a I nn, e that-onmy rincer? convfciion of th of tjie ruler of Great firt Britdin be to promo$ the trie welfare a.id prosperity of Bnmh land in ere ry just and reasonable way. aftd to multiply the JiomVK thereon. rs neveratakwa no matter how many drop in of an afternoon. For ahe knows that GhirardeilP a back there in the pan- try can measure up to ' , any occasion. She knows, too, that nothing makes people feel so homey gove-nmen- J ve-i- fuaaetT She a never a, a piping hot cup of this delicious chocolate. Soj - Gtor-ar-de- Uj D. GHIAAILDKLLI CO. Sate itjl SaaFnocaco ' oktn WARNING! Always say Bayer when you buy Aspirin. Unless you see the name Bayer on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by. physicians over. 22. years -- and proved safe by millkms-fo- r . 0 f j Colds Toothache to decline from Its present high position, the principal cause of Its faU will be our natlohal ntg'ee; to twaintsfn-t-he populati'm on the Hr.d. If a fiVr t from the villages, then-l- t l of a Irulh that broad yoad which leSd to the destruction, of Advanced I am sure that one of the worstpcopiea fatex which cat) befall England is that her land shtmtd become either a plaything or a waste, and A bat her greatest safe- try 8 H eadacheNeuralgla1 Neuriti Lumbago Accept only Bayef package which contains proper directions. Handy Beyer boxes of 12 tablets Also bottle of 24 mod 100 All druggists. Asptris Is tbs ties, merit f Bern MssaUctors sf SsMtoUadtatO Salley Octet guard liesjn the of a yeoman class, rooted In the soli and supported by the sol). These comments are so to the that the reader will see the, very point great opportunity which Is our in America; tvi will likewise see the very great danger which is oura There cannos be an enduring, political power without a sustaining rural intelligence, prosperity and contentment. The last right Tears of war and reconstruction has now made it Impossible. If it were ever possible, tq sustain a great aa 1. GHIKARDELL ' I . 0 . V |