OCR Text |
Show TRUTH. 6 the Los Angeles Traction company and Miss Sallie Leonard will join the family there at the completion of her nursing course. able to maintain a wife and the tendant increase upon the salary he gets. All of which sounds, strange at- when we recall that a second lieu- tenant gets $1,400, and a first $1,500 dt 4 annum. There are lots of men Lieutenant and Mrs. Adna G. Clarke per of Fort Douglas ieft Tuesday for their who keep wives and several children nicely on that amount and much less. new post at Fort Flagler, Wash. The writer knows of several sturdy .4 4 Mrs. C. E. Angel entertained Monday for her sister, Miss Lyn. dt 4 Mrs. Edwin F. Holmes entertained the Bridge club at the Amelia Palace Thursday morning. dt dt Miss Bertha Eccles of Ogden is visiting friends in the city for a short time. American men and women who have grown into manhood and into womanhood, whose parents didnt see that much money in five years. t4 4 There is meat in what Corbin says, however. It is extremely doubtful if a lieutenant does not get enough salary, or that a captain does or that a major does, or a lieutenant-colone- l does, or, at the extreme limit, a colJt dt Mrs. A. B. Cochran, who has been onel does get enough salary to keep visiting her sister, Mrs. W. W. Arm- a wife. Because there is a social postrong, for a few days, has returned sition to be maintained. At the acadto Chicago. emy the cadet is taught to believe dt Mrs. J. O. Duke of Chicago has gone to her home, after spending the summer with her sister, Mrs. George Savage. dt dt Mr. and Mrs. Charles L. Rood have gone for a visit to the fair. dt .4 Mrs. Eugene Lewis and son, who have spent the past year abroad, are expected home about October 1. dt dt Mrs. McLaughlin sailed for America September 15th, and shortly after her arrival in this country she and Dr. McEnery will be married in Washing- - ton, D. C. Their present plan is to arrive in Salt Lake about October 15, and this will be their home, the doctor having decided to establish himself " ' aturJay After- B-f- in Monday October Jrd. ijt. of the Wonderful Merits of dt After October the hops at Fort Douglas will be more of a feature than ever, as the officers and ladies of the garrison will endeavor to make them larger but equally as informal as in the past. dt Adult Clajjej in RHONSTRATION dt leave within a. few days, taking with them Miss Holmes, who has been their guest for some time. : B-d- JOOOOOOOOOOOOOOf Col. and Mrs. Holmes will probably dt Clajjej noon. Octocer here. dt Academy School of Dancing Juxtende . ! the balance of the old boys have b GCneipp M alt Coffee ALL NEXT WEEK dt 4 4 In almost every avocation in lift man is free to do about as he likes with what he earns. He may save it. .deposit it in the bank, invest in stoc,, or bonds, put it on the high card, burn it up over a bar. Not so in the army. He must conform to he unwritten laws and live according to t prevailing fashion set by the wife the commanding officer andif he does not, look out for squalls. It is tough dtdt on he subaltern officer. comes out of the academy Because he susceptible to the influences of feminine humanity. He has been coop up long and held urider restraint, pair of saucy eyes has a wonderful fluence over him. He is quick to f in love; as quick perhaps1 as tile who is stuck on his uniform. He oug to be able to marry when he choos Really it does seem as if $1,400 r annum and house rent free and i1 rations he gets at every army pc ought to be enough for him and 1 wife to live on, but as Corbin in. mates, it is not. He must do as tl suggests; secure a If with a bundle. The system ought be changed. There ought to be mor democracy in the army. Not par ' democracy of course, but the gener feeling of democracy. This aris cratic feeling ought to be aboiishi Change the systesm and give the si .0 altern a chance to get a wife. Am ried man is better than-- single every day in the week. The rule ; plies to the army, as well as to its t J periors, the civilians. For after $ the civilian is the real boss and the officer. The latter is simply I "d liveried servant of the common n .1' major-gener- al a . Miss Jasmine Young informally en- tertained at luncheon yesterday for Mrs. John Marshall, Mrs. Winston and Mis Kirkpatrick. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. McKinney have gone for a trip to Idaho. dt dt Curtis L. Knight, who has been at St. Marks hospital for two weeks suffering from typhoid fever, is getting along nicely and will soon be able to return to his home. CHATTER. toeing the personal opinions of the writer and for which no one else is in any manner responsible. Corbin has broken Out again on the subject of young ofMajor-Gener- al ficers marrying. It will be remembered that a year or so ago he had something to say on this point. He is against the subaltern meaning a lieutenant marrying unless the officer has money of his own, or the girl he weds has a wad. Not having married untii he became a major-gen- eral, of course Corbin knows what he is talking about. The reasons for Corbins argument are found in the alleged fact that a subaltern does not get money enough to warrant his taking a wife.. He thinks the first lieutenant or the second lieutenant is not Demonstration will be in charge of Mrs. J. Frank Pickering of the Pickering Advertising Bureau, representatives of the Kneipp Malt Food Co., for Utah and Idaho, assisted by the Misses Genevieve Brown and Virginia Gravitt. TO THIS DEMONSTRATION WE INVITE ALL those who desire to quit the pernicious coffee drinking habit; those who have already quit using the poison and are striving to satisfy themselves with mixtures and mysteries in lieu of same, and all others who desire to acDRINK, which, while it has a quaint themselves with a pleasing coffee flavor, is absolutely free from caffeine, caffetannic acid, or other poiscncus constituents of coffee and tea and from any impure cr injurious substances of any nature. WILL BE WORTH YOUR TIME. The coffee will be made while you wait, as the important feature cf the demonstration is not to merely serve you a cup of the delicious drink, but to illustrate how easily and quickly it can be prepared, so that you can. without any experience, make in your homes this famous beverage just as good and with just as fine flaVor as can the chefs to the monarchs in the twenty-thre- e royal courts of Europe where it is used daily. But five or six minutes cf your time wiil be required and we know that you will consider it time profitably spent. There is nothing on the market like Kneipp Malt Coffee. It is made from the finest Montana Chevalier Barley, by the Kneipp Malt Food Co.. Manitowoc. Wis.. under rights purchased from the Katriner Malz Kaf-fe- e Fabriken. of Europe, who operate factories in nearly every country across the ocean. true-HEALT- Kneipp Malt Coffee Makes Rosy Cheeks! THE BIG RELIABLE STORE t t ; retired and Chaffee will soon be la on the shelf. The academy will si J be in absolute control.. It has p vided that the officer must have many suits of clothing, a suit for tl occasion and for that. That he mi live in about such a style, whether wants to or not. That his quarters must be fitted up in a certain fashiou. He must entertain about so often lose caste. . God help the subalte , who hopes for promotion if he ste outside the limit, because he wou never rise. There is no room for rig economy and frugality in the army ; . jOOOOOOOOOOOOCxXXXXXXXXXXXXTj X ' Christensen ..'tf i that he is one of the chosen people of the Lord; that he is a shade better than the man who makes the money that pays the taxes to support the institution that educates him free of cost; that he is better than the lad who goes to a college and pays his own way. When he becomes an officer he is full to the throat with ideas of how much better he is than the ordinary citizen, and as for comparing himself with his grizzled arid intelligent first sergeant; why that is not to be thought of. He believes he belongs to an exclusive set of people, whose rights are extensive and whose quality i far superior to that of the common clay ordinary civilians are made of. Time was when this wasn't so, but times have changed. The martinet system is now in the saddle. The are passing old veterans of 1861-5- . in posileft be few and there away and Brooks tions of command. Miles, pie. o MU8ING8 WITHOUT METHOD. True greatness ever mates with sim- plicity. Money makes the world go mostly. wrot. A temperate life is jslow, but pretty sure. Some mens of itself evil. highQgLJ&GA ' its of good is The man always in a hurry seldom gets anywhere. The wise man begins life by buying umbrella. a good The fellow who intends to succeed works without a time-table. When Opportunity knocks at you floor, Responsibility stands behind her.' Poets say that life is a flower. Why don t they add. that love is the hone in it? The inspired man is merely wholly swayed by his good th-o- ne |