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Show is-' - .T. - - . THE HERALD,-TUESDAY- JULY , 1 Minn HERALD qEHE:piOLY nn Why Carbon County V1IIICI It... It .. l. ETVERfe A k Unmi Tk AFTtRNOOS EXCKHT SATURDAY. f EEK-iJA- uetond clans mail mutter June t, 1811. aLthe Utalvpifcle the Act of March 3, 'i'jC. Rodsers, Editor and Publisher. lte4 A iif' warms of 8ubscripttoor by carrier SO cents a month; by PM in Utah county, 3 a year; outnlde the county, 13.50 a year. 277 J VOTE SWAPPING r . t..;,:-.- - ,..... r , ,., 4 , X g - f tp I rvv I V - I , DISC Ml i , ! v h; CANYON ROAD -- rat - e " . - e r ... - -" tit. Overland is one J andfcands more firmly intrenched .-' Vthan ever in popular favor. f " iKe OmtUhmI rs greater ntswienHs K meuey value Jf tkaa ." Aspringbase of y etker car. 130ch. "-"- "ht, - sepspsByajpjBsjgpsjsggwevaww,. SSSSBBliif'"W'Jw Richard O'NeU. New York state's greatest war hero, was too busy Helping his buddies nght for better conditions to go on a honeymoon when wedded last year. So he postponed h untU the Disabled War Veterans met in San Francisco. Here he is with his bride. Of 27 killed five, wounded four and captured 14 Germans O'NeU. - ' ' . f " , ' gjft , ' eribr Motor Go. ruse IVaiit Ad 0n WB I WlU uH:t , AS '2SMWfer-.- Jectric V poles or wires, is extremely danger- J ous first, because of the likelihood of loss of life or serious injury from single-hande- we are glad to bear of com Twelve or fifteen years ago, this road, from the city limits to Olm- - plaints coming in from the out stead, was turnplked and surfaced side about our road, and hope they with shale, a very large percentage will continue to come in until of this work being donated by the something substantial is done. This is the most traveled piece residents of this district. Each year since that time, until tbe Of state road in the county and present, for the comfort and con- likewise the roughest, hence it venience of all who traveled it, as should be given first consideration, well as the upkeep of the road it- but instead it Is given last consider self, it has been sprinkled at the ation. What we want is pavement. with water will expense dfTEeTsxpayers of the4PrinWig-thfljs- d no longer satisfy us, and sprinkling Pleasant View precinct. Each year, the question ot levy- with oil would be very objection-- ; ing a tax for sprinkling this road, able, for various reasons. We are has been decided at a special elec- ready to do our part, and we hope tion. Of course ire have always as the road, gets rougher and the bad some dry votes. There are In dust deeper that public sentiment this community, as ln.v all others. will get stronger in favor of a some, very selfish people. They paved road. Yours truly. would not wiUintiv soend a dollar C. ELMO CLUFF. If they .for a public . benefit, thought somebody else would receive more benefit from it than they, no matter now many times their money's worth they thetri-- 1 selves receive. "Why should I spend my hard personal contact; and second, because of the possibility of fire and other property damage due to contact of -- wires. For the protection of life and property, therefore, such apparatus when foundittachediourpoles or ejuip-men- t, will be removed. Utah Power & Light Co EfiklailPubUc Senia" .1 earned money .to settle the dust In somebody else's cooryard? they say. because they themselves don't happen to live on the main road. Well, this year, the dry voters were In the majority, but they don't ail belong to the selfish class. There are other reasons for losing the election this year. The "wets' as well as some ot the "drys" feel that the general public has not ap lpj WANTED-- along perhaps the property owners the road would be willing - to oo their Dart. Yea. the property own ers along this road have carried the burden alone all these years. It's the suta. county, and general Dubllc who have enjoyed traveling our sprinkled highway iok oave failed to do their part. . A year ago. In order to avert some of the dangers to1 life you sneak of. we petitioned the county i commissioners to place a few lights along the road at the most dangerous corners. They turned us' down cold. This year the . state road commission was about to cut us oft the sute road map, but Mr. Wright and others succeeded In preventing - -:-- 'l 1 I I 1 1 I . - ti hum ' Mali 1 1 1 1 aT J Mi 1 M . f - uie wOaiTieias ri - . i Si . genius would come along and make two or three tons of coal where one is now, you wouldn't need to il worry about fuel for .next winter. If a I iiiiii 1 .JLi , , ' super-hum- an But in -absence of such a eenius. anil in the the nresence of . a serious slump in coal production tjie wise householder will take no chances, but will store a winters. supply NOW. ' Skim milk, thickened with cocoa-nu- t replace the butterfat of wblchTt has been robbed, is widely sold In condensed form, according to reports. .This oil lacks the vlUr, mines that the original cream possessed and resulU obtained, from feeding tt to growing children and baoies are described as disastrous. the ; Not long ago in discussing Question with our county- commissioners as to why the' road up in the canyon was being sprinkled, and the road from the city limiu to the mouth' of the canyon left dry. our state road commissioner, Mr. Stewart, said to me that it was very much more important that tie road in the canyon be sprinkled. ; I suppose it U mbre .Important to keep the dust off the ok brush in the canyon, then to "keep it out ot the homes ot boulevard, residents, and oft tbe thousands., ot 'dollars worth of choice trult and other crops from the mouth of the canyon down. Yott fellows wno oxive sacs and forth from the canyoa aU the time never think ot this, do you? You never tntnn oi tne hum you give the people living along the road; you 4ust tmni. oi the dust you are getting from the other Castle Gat and Clear Creek coals arejdeal forstoripfc v and you know their- unequalled heaj ijualities. ' ': ASK YOUR ,N DEALER , flU. JtQ. r H , it' I i The attaching of such apparatus, or , roads. You suggest thai Jf the state and county and publio in general would take ud the Question ot sprinkling. popular cari in America today At $550, manner. preciated the enterprising and peopla of . this district in their efforts to maintain good of the most' Denver, to." H. As a SAFETY FIRST measure, this Company will not permit the use of its poles or equipment for the attachment of radio apparatus, in any 4 in two states, Mississippi, seven, and Texas, twelve. . Of those lynched two were whites and twenty-eignegroes. Eleven of those put to death embraces the coal me crime oi rape ana nineteen wer -- Tulmes of eetern Pennsylvania, Illinois. Froai fenses. five Of those puL ..araA with Ohio, Indl; andminers and oper-the to year year nu weaver xi TZ CimTged With Other Of- atorf from those states nave met burned. .vPfme- ffc&th. were burned at the stake and agreed , njon certain wages. That agreement was then made the Editor, The Herald: ifput to oeatn ana men inetr uuuiee basis tor wage settlements in otner Dear Sir A very recent issue of r,t those lynched in the year 1921, were districts In the united states. oaoer DUDlished an lnterestvour and to death were first put strike was In 191S agnation-widthe stake and three Mine work ine and spirited article on the road United called by the burned. were bodies their tn America, from that strike conditions in the Pleasant view - , The states in which lynchings occurred ana tne numrjer eraof the aunous tno, to our way precinct, special attention being grew two; Arkansas, follows! one; are as Alabama, in each states of thinking. b must notorious dev drawn to the dangers and un i vlnriA fine! Ceoriria. four: Louisiana, one: Mississippi, cision ever handed down by a fed- pleasantness of the excessive ' eral Judge when "Judge Anderson amount of dust, due to the fact apveni South Carohna, one: Oklahoma, one, and Texas, of Indiana ordered the miners to that the road Is not being sprln " return to workvery much against kled this rear. six months iileirallvjirithin death to wit vhtrv vuirsnrm our own - wlshta, However, we In Justice to the taxpayers and -is indeed a terrible record in this land, one of the f undamentaT complied and returned to work, as rexldentsoOaId precinct; tdesire premised by the pres to make public a few facts con' declarations of which is tnat a person accusea oi an oenoe we hadof been the) Unite. States that we cernlng the maintenance and ident shaU have a fair trial Of course, the results of a trkl of this Piece of sUte road would get fair treatment. pnrHinff to law are not always satisfactory. Often there Is a ' "After we returned to work the during- the past few years, and Just . u ontonA (riven for a heinous crime, and the offender, President appointed I commission why the road is not being sprinkled ""after a jfew fnonths pr year is liberated, gam iobecornei to settle the differences between this1 summer. do thlft, however, not to ciltl-dsthe miners and operators. The tn fh rent of community, uui even so, uus is commission was eompottd of three what was said in your previous tor each no excuse for wilful murder, whichis perpetrated members: a miner, one operator, lxsue. 'but to direct public opinion criminaL and one person supposed to be dis m the right channel, and place pdb and everv one connected with the : lynching of there are interested,. From time to time the Ilo erttldsm, ahouid there oe any, vnnh hnt mm man i thus done to death.'membersv4nim"-UBli'n'K!where It properly belongs. 5 as many murdera created as there: are thereby WW ' V mnK that riATTWtmtM II. JUG IIBVU1X ... VVUUUIbVCU to com-m- lt murder, the mob member is the more easily prepared the . another, whenever he tonceivea it his duty to take effect place of the lawfully appointed' courts. Thui the evil ef sri hmchin is incakulably far reaching, f And the South li not the only offender In this disdain of the lives nd rights r of others, - i x lit i of Raymond and ber twin daogntars C Daniel, the chOdren'f grandmother, she's Ma duo J MOBS IN THE U. S. A. x, J. lightJs Mrs. J. es It f """"rl No Mrs. A, cellent opi6rtfiftyroneartfcl '"Consequently, when April l ar- there is to know about a strike. He has teen In some very dan rived there was nothing left for us mine workers to do but lay geroua places as a strike leader. down our, tools rand implements A few year ago while supervising until such a time as the operator strike In West Virginia be was are willing to meet with our reprethrown In jail by the authorities sentatives and fix the wage scale without a provocation, according to as requested by the commission bis story, and was kept there for by the president of the some time without permission to appointed United States. get in communication with bis 'Wore than 500,000 coal miners friends. He was later released walked out on April 1 and are still .... without a charge being placed out as a of the refusal of; result him. against the operators to meet with thAm His very appearance Inspires and settle tbe wage scale. There trust and confidence, and his quiet and unobtrusive ways gain many can be no settlement of the strike in the United States friend for him. He is not of the anywhere until such a time as the operators kind, and claims that and miners in the competitive field he has never in his life carried come to an agreementany kind of a weapon. "When the settlement is finally Curing one of my 'many conversations with Mr. Dobbins while in made, tbe coal miners of Utah will insist that the mining laws of the Scofield, I asked him to explain to me tbe miners' side of the strike state of Utah be complied with bv ' The following information concerning lynchings for the controversy and why the coal permuting tne miners to out check on the tipples to see to first six months of this year is compiled by Tuskegee Insti- mines In Utah are idle at this time. welghmen The coal mines of Utah are idle it that the coal they load is prop- tute in the department of records and research by Monroe because the miners hare no con eny ana correctly weighed, Just ,N. Work; In the first six months of 1922 there were thirty tract or agreement under which the same as in other states where for they can work." said Mr. Dobbins. coal is being mined." lynchings. This is six less than' the number, thirty-si-the first six months of 1921, and eighteen more than the "For over 20 years the mining- well as as of prices 1920. months Of of thesges day the six number, twelve, for the first laborers have ha" Id by joint thirty persons put to death, nineteen, or 63 per cent, were agreement, in t "'.1 ine tory, and nobody cares anyhow." The custom, of course, is the outgrowth of the Washington pork barrel scramble where favored noses are so brazenly thrust into the national money trough. There it is bad enough, but when the practice is brought more nearly home the effect is demoralizing. Unprincipled legislators are enabled to entrench them-selvin office so firmly that it soon, becomes next to impossible to uproot them. Theyilways "make good" for the home folks, and that is as far as the vision goes. The rest, to quote the melancholy Dane, is silence. The practice lowers the moral fibre of the people and legislatures become simply distributing centers of graft and special favors, state budgets are swollen beyond all necessity, genuine expenditures do not count, nothing counts, in deed, but moves that will keep the tawdry politician in his legislative job. i "' Hero on Delayed Honeymooo Exclusive of sample copies and free distribution copies. I ' iigJT - its decinion, the lafist section of. By N. OONNAR RASMUiOJi. operaterej The Herald's Staff Correspondent. which provided tiiat-t- h When the strike in the coal and miners of the four competitive! states should meet before AprirT,1 ampH broke out in April, the in- 1922, to negotiate for a new agree ternational board of the United ment and thus prevent Hie nuneri Mine Workers of America sent Ed of the country from being idle on Dobbins of Belleville, 111 , to super- that date. vise the strike in tbe Utah coal "The officers of the United iHine Mr. Dobbins was al$Qrst Workers camps. of America Called upon! at his Helper, the operators ot tnose states in) headquarters making over Seo te field moved but later Tli a nnnaniaA Tmntno nf swanninar vntpa in at a fa tacn'a of this year, and again in where he is now directing the January February and March, and urged tures has reached a pass where it is akin to national scan- - strike. them to meet and comply with the Mr. Dobbins is not only an old aai. pu Due interest is sacniicea on me aitar 01 county hand at the coal mining business, award of the commission, and. if possible, avert a strike. Te all of cupidity, though as a fact the home folks in the long run pay having worked In the Illinois coal our entreaties the operators turned mlnen since be was a boy, but be a deaf ear. Tbe of the dearly for their supposed favored legislation. also understands per- United 8tates and president the secretary of "You vote for my bill and I'll vote for yours," is the taining to a strikeeverything situation. Durilaoer used their good offices and battle cry. ng; bis career as an International Influence to persuade the operators I "The provisions of my bill will not affect your tern board member, be has had an ex SWORN CIRCULATION -- 'Jim stofflce, 'faltered ProvO, Out VidlKCU t - j - Wnllffirl v A It 1922. fei)o" 4 fQOU - . - Uttal : ' ; ' ' ' :: : r . .. ... . - fid Co. Jlmers and Shippers of Castle Gate and Gear Creek Coals. " : V. w. a |