Show I I JUDGE VISIT TO EUROPE 1 Judge H I i H I in liln trip awa from home was Impressed wIth Uw lie bu activity of London rondon Of he prefers to Lo 1 liVe c In he grades them themas as follows london Now York and Rome wIth Paris be YOnI ond consideration The Judge says sas N New w York appears urs tame lame one has hag been iu in London The English mell is the mart of the lie worM world where goods from Stock Stockholm holm and Constantinople can cun be pur purchased purchased chased for less than In time the place o otheir their theIl manufacture London does docs tar Car I more amore than New York and thoro I iS eldo on nil all sides of great greater er Industrial and commercial import alice ance We Ve Americans at times are aro di dis to overrate ourselves New Yell as our emporium has been look looked looked ed upon ns as the tho busIest city in the tho world bitt here Is an whose prejudIces are American taking some of oC the Ule conceIt out of Us hy by proving lint London contInues to lo bJ be the corn com comI center of Of the tue world Een Beil in com compares pares fa favorably 0 rab Ij Uh Ne New York in business and excels that city in architecture and general attractiveness Rome Romo is a ell city of antiquity vet et beautiful and In man many sections mod modern ern ermi But the most c city In iii all Europe Is Versailles In opinion I Yet the JUdge Is glad to get back to America lie He seems to think that thal large larse cities and old ruins and an at al of the do not male make for that near approach to con which we all desire He saw women in the beet beel fields of German who were over at theIr tasks from earl mornIng until late at night The They were paId 50 cents a day Time The Themen men laborers In the fields worked equally as hard for fOl a compensation not much larger He was In Ital Italy where the scenery is 15 grand but the live lIe In squalor In France the tho eke out omit a bare exIst exIstence existence ence And so fill over oer Europe Mr says the laborers in countrIes are moro more me like slaves than free freo men He turned from that scene of oC PO pov crt erly that Americans know lenow little of the real degradation which Is upon other oilier of the world and happy hapIJ lii III thought that when back In utah he would be away from the sorrows of poverty whIch force at attention attention upon an American who vIsits th lip old world II |