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Show EACH MAN'S RESPONSIBILITY. -If the editor of the Salt Lake Tribune will follow up Lis own suggestions, as to the part each member of society should play in the making of a better world, and will persistently school his readers read-ers in that broader view of each individual's obligations, then the movement which the Standard has so long advocated will be given an added impetus. The Tribune says : In this free Western country, where everyone is able to live above dire want for the necessities of life, where a spirit of liberality prevails, and where the abject poverty of. large cities is quite unknown, un-known, we are apt to become too confident of our immunities from responsibilities appertaining to the duties we owe to society. The Western country is comparatively new, yet-i3 fast becoming like the rest of the world; its cities are losing their pioneer aspects as they develop into commercial centers, having all the qualities of the metropolis. me-tropolis. Broad prairies and fertile valleys have lost their primeval aspects, to a great extent, and now show the handiwork of man, with towns and villages dotted over the plain and in the canyon, each being connected with innumerable wires of commerce and intercourse in-tercourse that bind them to their community life. During the last half century this advancement has gone on so fast that we have almost lost sight of the salient features of social life that pertain to individual responsibilities, however free and broad-minded we may suppose ourselves to be in a general way. We have not the poverty of the Eastern centers, but we have the same varieties of injustice, of crime, of the strong hand crushing the weak and remaining the champion of right,, The widow and the orphan are not so neglected only because there are fewer of them; the official of-ficial robber is punished perhaps less, according to the number, only because we admire skill and energy and in our admiration for the fighting man we lose sight of the lack of manhood in the polished criminal. When will people learn to remember that every crime that is committed is to some extent the crime of all? When will the public recognize the fact that every criminal who lives is a product of their own making, being crushed into his hideous form by the forces that society upholds? When in the course of human events men lie and rob and steal it is demonstrated that the ideals, or the lack of them, made them criminals; these ideals are products of social growth or of social lethargy, the law-breaker merely carrying the fundamental ideas further towards the dead line. The absolute interdependence of all people is forgotten in everyday every-day life. Heaven on earth cannot be expected to come in a century, yet the moral growth of our States should demand first consideration, considera-tion, and this consideration should be in the home and in the school. Every father should recognize his direct obligations and endeavor to discharge them as becoming, a man. Sympathy won't cure all wrongs, although it will save many souls where nothing else will do so. It requires brotherly love put into daily practice to make men good, to build up the naturally weak and to make the strong still more able to do right. We all so freely condemn the man or woman who falls, yet few stop to inquire to what extent responsibility for the missteps rests with us. The boy who uses cocaine, the man who is a victim of bad habits, and the girl who has grown wayward might have been saved as useful, honorable members of society had their environment beon good. Not half the sorrow chargeable to environment comes from pre-, pre-, natal influences. Nature struggles to avert imperfections, and, as a result, a child may be of low parentage and still come into existence fairly well equipped to be better than those who gave it birth, yet, allowed to grow up in an atmosphere of degradation, the child is lated to be as low as its parents. That which applies to a child and its immediate influence holds 5 u1T cimumty relations. In every community there are good l.. . ?nuence8 wnich pre-determine the morals of the average chi d in that community. Children are highly impressionable and child impressions are enduring. The children of today are the men and women of tomorrow. f .iTw3 W?7 e,Very crime coranaittcd is to some extent the crime ?C I 1 of us' are sowing the seeds from which must come 6 w C7e ? Vv deed9 &d or bad the harvest will woinen 78 ' a,nd then good or bad men and i I i |