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Show HE MIDVALE OURNAL Volume Three Number Thirty-Nine BEET PRODUCERS Subscription': $1.00 the year, and worth it! Midvale City, Utah, Friday, March 2, 1928 Where Will She Drop the Handkerchief?'==By Albert r. Reid~- 1ft';-H~ove; Against the Field ' . LABOR SAVING MACHINES. EMPLOYMENT FOR ALL. THOMAS EDISON A YQUNG MAN. 17,000 YEARS FROM STONE AGE MUST COOPERATE It Is an old saying that "Distant ) fields often look greener" and people ilave a habit of falling for the smooth talking individual who !_eeks to sent money out of the (!'ommunity and tear down the ver:r foundation upon which the community is built. We have right in our own community many persons who are daily doing things in a business way will eventually wreck even the strongest organization. The main idea is to Induce industry to locate in this communitY: By so doing we find a market for our products and a demand for our labor. For instance-*t is reported that beet growers In and around South Salt Lake Co. have, In Isolated instances, contracted their beet crops to operatIng concerns "in distant lands." Can the West Jordan Sugar Factory continue to operate when the beet crop is shipped away? How can it keep going when the product is taken away? We note the following editorial in the Evening Herald of Provo, recently: "Is Utah county to lose its sugar - Are the sugar plants to be dismantled and tne rnacninery sent to OLher counties or states wuere better cooperation may be ootainea from the growers'! to these ...- auest-toi~~~~~~~e~~~E~~~~~---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ \" ' .,.. Written Specially for the Journal Herbert c. Hoover, Secretary of :ornmerce, who ente-red the Ohio ?residential primary in opposition t3 Senator Frank B. Willis, Ohio's 'favorite son," now virtually faces he field in the fight for the conven ion delegates there. The Ohio Primary Election Law ·equires each candidate for district lelegate, or for delegate at large, o state his first and second choices l 'provided, however, that the name 1 1f no candidate for President shall 1 Je used without his written author· ty." While the Willis forces claim to 1ave made no erort to guide the :econd choices, their delegate canlidates are sure to name former }overnor Frank 0. Lowden of 11-' inois, Senator Charles Curtis of ~ansas, Senator James E. Watson f Indiana, and in a few local cases :olonel Charles R. Fisher of Willington, Ohio. Although many Villis backers wanted Vice Presilent Dawes as second choice, he -·efused his consent, saying he fatared Governor Lowden. The majority of the Willis dele- Five ;ates, particularly in the rural dis- Presidential 1 .ricts, are expected to name Gov.::;:::. __;'lrnor Lowden, for there is can- Possibilities M.!!UI'~;:!' ~ ~iderable sentiment in Ohio for Lowden or Dawes on the farm re-[ The ftve possible successors of Calvin Coolidge Ohians that Vice President lief issue. It is the feeling among as Republican r!:'"~~~~=l::~;;;;i;::~!~~:~~~e<i~~s~ultimately the man to be candidates for the 'Pr idc!\('y1 this f The Community Club will hold a on March the 7th, with the section In charge. Officers be elected at this meeting. llrs. Nellie Gorham, Mrs. C. B. Mrs. A. W. Bowen and Mrs. 'Beckstead attended the card given by the Ladies Club of In Fraternal Hall Febt'U· %9th. LOST! LOST!! LOST!!! A Black Key Book containing 8 somewhere between State St. West Jordan l\leeting House. • J v~ . "If a drop of salt water could talk it would tell the whole story of the Pacific." One Santa Fe freight train going through the Kansas City yards to Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas ' grain fields told the story of prog' ress and prosperity in tPis coun· try and promised a solution of its labor problem, agt'ravatcd by immigration restrictionf. That train of thirty-one cars carried $2j0,000 worth of "Com\; 'IC Harvesters" and will soon he ft :lowed by a thousand carloads ef those labor-saving machines. 1'hey cut grain, thresh it, pile up lhc straw, delivering the grain in sacks or by spout to miniature grain elevators. In Kansas last year they saved the work of 40,· 000 men. Employment conditions are not sati.,factory in New York State and Governor Smith inst•ucts pub'ic officials to help "take up the sl~ck" by putting men to work on hlic enterprises. Ti at should be, automatically, ,,art 0£ National and State pro-srammesa A farmer finds somethin~ for his farm hands and his own hands to do in \Vinter, when crops are in. A good farmer keeps hi2 horses at work, earning their keep in Winter, hauling wood or otherwise. National and State governments, all needing roads, canals, clrainage1 all sorts of impreov::mrn•.s, sh·:mlo find work for everybody w lling to work, and at d~r .. P: tY\Y I Secretary of Com· mcrce Herber! Hoover, Former Governor of Illinois, Frank 0. Lowden, Senator Charles Curtis ot Kansas, Frank B. Willis of Ohio, James E. Watso11. of Indiana. Thomas A. Eriiwn san he Is really 162 years (\ld. hec1Lt'-e he has done two J,._y<' wor!: ~v~r)' day of his eighty-:·nc -,. -•rs. He did ten thou'"••rl ''C'I•-!' c'!(•rk when he changd n a!;'s !;r;hl ng system from k•rosene tn < r.rtnrity His habit 0f wNkin!( two days in one ar··r m•t~ for the. fact that mentally • .-,~ is forty, not eighty-one. n · e mind stays young in m:ln or 'Ster!inn" Well em Romance :J ~ilh DOROTHY DWAN Jt"'l bl{ HARRY SINrtAIR OPJoGO Scwano 'br HAROLD LIPSITZ BEN STO LO FF ProduclimL ~::::; BALL |