GOODWIN'S WEEKLY H
PANTAGES
1 Unequalled Vaudeville
. i On Broadwap
-(
vi ' It's a winning bill get your
seats early.
Menlo Moore's
FOLLIES OF TODAY
A whirl of song and dance1, with
Billy and Edith Adams and
the Bunnin Sisters
$f Billy Dorn Hazel
BACHELOR, ADAMS & VERT
Presenting their comedy sketch
"Two Nuts in a Kernel."
AL PRINCE & RITA BELL
v t "Two Nifties"
'v Classy singing and piano act
Art Madeline King
HENRY & MOORE
"At the News Stand"
BEEMAN & ANDERSON
"A Roller Skating Novelty"
EDDIE FITZPATRICK
And His Concert Orchestra
"A FIGHT FOR MILLIONS"
the latest and greatest Vitagraph
chapter-play featuring
WILLIAM DUNCAN
With Edith Johnson and
Joe Ryan
IV
Three shows dally 2:45, 730 and
9:15 p. m. Mat. prices, 10, 15 and
25 cents. Night prices, 15, 25, 35
cents.
U
Woolley Brothers
BROKERS
Mtmbers Salt Lake Stock and
Mining Exchange.
Mining and Industrial Stocks
We solicit your busincM
617.18.19 NewhouM Bldg.
Telephone Weattch 1134
National
City Bank
The Only Bank on State 8treet.
The growth of thin institution
haa been remarkable and its
Savings Accounts are rapidly in
creasing. a Member Federal Reserve Bank.
JAME8 PINQREE President
HYRUM PINQREE Cashier
ing a bayonet at the back of every unwilling planter, and the scheme
was a great success. It is safe to say that were a similar plan re
sorted to in this country in the- utilization of the labor already avail
able, the government might accomplish wonders in solving the labor
shortage.
But no matter how necessary it may be, we are not yet ready to
adopt such a drastic policy with respect to ourselves, and certainly we
cannot consistently contemplate the use of alien labor in this fashion,
even though the aliens be enemies. Moreover, Germany would retali
ate with a vengeance. We might as well make up our minds to do the
work ourselves.
WORKING PROHIBITION OVER-TIME.
SECRETARY of the Navy Daniels and William Jennings Bryan,
prohibitionist plenipotentiary, insisting that greater efficiency is
evidenced where shipyard workers have been denied alcoholic liquor,
recognize only the pathological element in the general prohibition
argument. Bainbridge Colby and Edward N. Hurley, of the ship
t building board, and Postmaster General Burleson, maintain that
greater efficiency will continue with a liberal flow of alcoholic drink ;
but in doing so, thev 1 not necessarily deprecate Mr. Daniels' and
Mr. Bryan's argumu
It should be boi.i :n mind that efficiency results not from a
single, common cause, but from various fundamental elements, not
the least important of which is the worker's mental attitude. It does
not necessarily follow that because Messrs. Colby, Hurley and Burle
son hold for greater efficiency where alcohloic liquor is permitted that
they maintain that alcohol makes for greater physical speed, endur
ance and stamina. It is their contention that if the ship-yard workers
are discontented or dissatisfied for whatever cause or reason, they
necessarily cannot or will not put the same spirit of willingness and
co-operation into their labors. Consequently this psychological ele
ment is apt to reduce output, and a possible psychological reduction in
J efficiency is just as vital an argument in the production of ships as is
1 the argument that prohibition promotes efficiency and output. "It was
not efficiency, or inefficiency, but growing dissatisfaction, that com
pelled Britain to increase her production of beer for the workers last
year.
Both the wets and the drys are deducting from the sliipyards
prohibition controversy a lot of substantiating propaganda that does
not substantiate. Detroit Saturday Night.
Jk jfe
TELLING THE TRUTH.
IT is worth while noting that our war news is coming straight from
the front these days, that the casualty lists are being announced
1 daily, and that no less a personage than General March, the Chief of
Staff, is meeting with the newspaper men at frequent intervals and
spreading before them the real significance of the shifting scenes at
the front. Meanwhile, we hear little from Baker and nothing from
Creel. The Administration, it would seem, has finally sensed the ad
vantage of taking the people into its confidence and of telling the
truth. This marked change of attitude has already had a tremendous
effect for good; the people are beginning to believe what they read
again, and thus they are coming to manifest a spirit of confidence and
good will towards the authorities that could nowhere be found a
short time ago. In this we see one of the most cheering signs of the
times.
f f I f
There are enemy aliens and there are native aliens. The Ameri
can who does not do his part toward winning the war, who neither
fights nor works, nor lends for victory is as much an alien to America's
purposes and America's cause as the rankest Prussian interned in this
country. This is a war of peoples as well as of nations, and each in
dividual has a place and a duty. Pendleton Tribune.
Tn achieve victory we must have two armies : One that fights ;
one that saves. Every patriot will be a member of one of these
J armies.
Pinecrest I
Inn I
Emigration Canyon I
Thirteen miles from M
the monument. H
Driving over a fine M
road through a beautl- H
fui canyon. M
Strictly modern hotel. H
Room and boated, $3 Hj
to $4 per day, with H
bath extra. H
Dining tabic service H
also a la carte. M
H
Stage to Hotel H
CALL M
A. FRED WEY I
Wasatch 2401. M
Salt Lake I
Oil Stock Exchange I
318 Newhouse Building jH
Fiscal Agents for H
Wyoming Crown Oil Co. H
Montana-Wyoming Oil Co. H
Salt Lake-Intermountain H
Oil Club.
Wasatch 2385. H
ilfKpillH I
A TOWER OF M
STRENGTH FOR M
OVER 59 YEARS. IH
I Walker Brothers JL m
BANKERS M IB
Founded 1859. In cor- M M
I porated 1903. Absorbed Mgffi M
Salt Lake City branch f,t ti- M
Wells-Fargo & Com- m jj
I pany Bank 1905. Ad. J jl
mltted to Federal Re- jj JJ H
serve system March, ;j ji VM
i 1918- IHii
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