OCR Text |
Show THE CITIZEN the pedical convention. Following people, instead of the people doing things for themselves and developing their own initiative and Communism is defined as a common store of wealth to be drawn upon, not in accordance with services rendered, but in response to a human right to sustenance. Socialism is defined as the collective appropriation of the soil and all the instruments of production, transportation and distribution. Under Communistic Socialism the agriculturist would produce only to meet his own needs, and he and other classes would all suffer for want of each others products. Modem commerce would collapse and civilization would return to the condition of primitive American Indians. Folowing paragraphs of sound economic conclusions are from a remarkable book on Relation of Government to Industry, by M. L. Requa of San Francisco. The more a government interferes in production, transportation or distribution, the more nonproducers does it require to carry on this interfer con- Dr. and Mra. Aland will visit jfis. Alands parents and relatives in St. Cloud and St. Paul, Minn. vention self-relianc- wedding of Miss Mary Virginia Matson and John. Arthur Hailey of South Bend, Ind., took place at 11 oclock at St Josephs church yesterday. The Rev. William Ruel performed the ceremony.' The CHILDRENS JUBILEE Thousands of Children to Parade day. Greatest Childrens Fes- To- tival in History. ptgeant at University of Utah Sta-Stadiu- m in Evening. Commemorating the fiftieth anni- of the birth of the Primary Association of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-da- y Saints thousands of children and dozens of beautiful floats will parade down Main street Marthis afternoon at 3:30 oclock! garet Boyle, small daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ashby Boyle of 1001 East South Temple street, will act as queen. Fifty attendants will accomplittle queen. Heralds any the mounted on ponies also will wait upon her. All the participants are primary children between the ages of 7 and 10 versary e. 9 Understand About Men sets forth her case against men with equal AWFUL MEN; FUNNY WOMEN frankness, bearing down hard Upon a mans inconsistent attitude before and after marriage and the other qualities that make him a general nuisance about the house. The great Full and Frank freedom to discuss the shortcomings of the opposite sex has been given to both men and women in the May issue of The American Magazine. They haye been saying things behind each others backs for years, in their clubs and at their tea parties. Now they are brought out into the open with their characteristic remarks: Those awful men" and those funny women. Printed side by side are those two widely opposed views, written by an anonymous man and an anonymous woman, of course, and therein lies material for a thousand domestic con- troversies. For example the man who writes Things I Cant Understand About Women, begins with the statement that women are unable to take any general remark except as a personal one. He continues down the line, declaring that women never act by reason, that they are always impractical, are inveterate showmen, and adds that while a man hates to take the difference between women and men, she says, is that women regard the things they cant" understand .about men with a tolerant smile. So the old argument between men and woman is on again. Not that it has ever quieted down. But ho doubt every decade brings new .. grievance for both sexes and it is, a wise man who takes no side. Sooner or later one of the two arguers will make an exception of one person in the opposite camp, and the best decision a contestant can get is a draw. . . Golf is .the exercise par excellence of the middle aged; it is the consolation of the senile; it is the despair of the ambitious. Senator J. T. Robinson of Arkansas. THE NATIONAL -- , CASH REGISTER years. Besides the thousands of children in various costumes ' representing the Trail Builders, Seagulls, Bluebirds, various flowers, etc., there will be dozens of decorated cars and dozens of floats depicting scenes typical of various parts of the west. At 6 p. m. these children will give 1 series of beautiful dances, choruses, etc., at the University of Utah stadium. If you can imagine hundreds of children forming a big Bluebird or Seagull you will realize in part at least how beautiful this pageant is going to be. The first general session of the jubilee conference was held at 2 p. o., Friday, in the Assembly hall. At 6 p. m. a banquet was held at the Hotel Utah followed by a reception. A special organ recital will be given in the tabernacle by Professor Edward P. Kimball for primary workers and the general public at 10 a. m. : dressed CO. .... . . . i A. V. Kuhn Sales Agt. 2nd So. & Stale .Sts. Phone Was. 1144 . , r NEW and REBUILT NATIONALS . Saturday. At 3:30 p. m. : Winchester and Ross in Wise and Otherwise now playing Pantages ence, precisely as the more heavily a people is taxed, the more taxgather-er-s are required to collect the re-- 4 A the parade will be- at the Brigham Young monument, till go south on Main street to Third Sputh street, east on Third South to Second East street. gin Two in 2 meetings will be held Sunday the tabernacle at 10:30 a. m. and p. m. WHAT IS PATERNALISM? It is only another name for higher developments of Socialism and Communism. We he regret to confess that United States of America is lean-ln- S toward paternalism. It is defined in Standard Diction-Jf- y n as excessive governmental of private affairs and business methods after the maner of a dealing with his children; the government doing things for the regu-mtio- fa-to- er 1 telephone receiver off the hook, a woman cannot put it back. The writer of Things I Cant , venue. Government restriction acts an outlet and a retreat for demagogues who find it easier to pass superficial legislation, than to recognize conditions as they exist and meet them by well directed laws. Government regulation is inflexible and does not respond to the needs of the time. Private enterprise on the other hand is flexible, can be easily shifted and directed, and responds to the demands that arise. It is difficult to define the limits of a policy of extreme interference once it is adoped, for the effect is cumulative and tends to become every thing that is connoted by the word paternalism. SEND IT TO THE LAUNDRY but the country smells good! Jump in your car-t-ake a Keeleys Box Lunch and hie off to the canyons! My, LAUNDRY Distinctive Work I I Hyland 190 BOX LUNCHES TACKED TO ORDER 60c at aht or I rttiu iIsOj . |