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Show NEW DOLLARS IN SIGHT FOR UTAH Excellent Crops Throughout the State and An Unlimited Amount of Money With Which to Move Them. iHvldenda from new dotlnr money I taken from the ground will thl jeer be the grenteKt In the hlMory of the Ktatc of t'lah. ray Bund) Herald Itepubllenn. The new wealth that will be added to the Mate thl year hn been placed by arlous atntlatl' elans at between J6. 000.000 nnd $30,-000,000. $30,-000,000. The people of Utnh, ll I figured, nrc today earning more per capita thnn thoe of any other Male In the union. Peraon who dig Into figure have found that the mining Induatry thl etr will pay In excea of $10,000,000 In dMdcndm The aheepmen will receive re-ceive grenter return than ever Ikj-fore. Ikj-fore. Rugar I now bringing moro for tho Ktatc thnn In nny year that augar beet, hae been treated In the Mate. The farm product nre nto bringing good return. In nddlllon there I the fruit crop, the wool crop, live Mock and many other Induatrle that bring new money to the Mate. Horre nrc bringing higher price than In many, year, live atock I high and chance nre that the crop for Utah thl year will be the greateat In hlatory. Per Capita IVirnlng Large. There I little doubt but what the new dollar Induatrle concern that gel their money from production from the ground will thl year pay more than ha ever been witnecd In Utah. If thl nmount I placed nt $25,000,-000, $25,000,-000, which I declared to be conacrva-live, conacrva-live, nnd counting that Utah ha over tno.000 population, ll mean that the lleehlve atale I enrnlng In excea of nil expenre and overhead charge two hundred nnd fifty dollar ench for every man, woman nnd child In the Mote. It I probable that no other Mate In the union can honM of ueh earning. Hhould the earning of thl Main remain here for the upbuilding of the commonwealth It I figured It would be only ii decade before Utnh would rnnk n the greateat atale n regard i per capita earning In the United Bute. A It I, more than half the money earned hero goe to other atutea. It It aald, to pay dividend nn ! propel ty owned here. lloftnn Man' View (llieu. Jame P. Sheldon, flnnnrlal editor of the lloaton Journal and general manager of the lloaton lnanclal New, who ha been In Bait lAkc City for Hivernl day looking over the financial fin-ancial altuntlon and making a atudy of economic conditions any that tho Wert doe not underaUnd the Knat, and that on the other hand Kaaterner look on the Weaterner a a faraway brother. The farm of the Kaat have been uaed up, ho raid, and Inatend of !!aMerner rehabilitating them nnd conaenlng them n thn Weatrrner boa learned to do, they throw them aaliU'. n It were. UTAH'S hl'GAH HKirr CHOP in r.xci:i.i.r..vr condition lletween 1k and reven hundred thourand ton of ugar beet will he the aeaaon' production for the Utah-Idaho Utah-Idaho Sugar company, according to a atntement made by Oeorgo A. Smith, pm charing agent, nt Hall I.ake City. Bmlth recently looked over tho ugar beet Induatry In tho two Male and any the irop aro In good condition, but that thn total loniiago would be greater If the country had moro rain. The crop In UUh will be about normal," raid Bmlth, "but In Idaho, where there tin been more molrlure, tho tonnage will be more than laat year by one-thlid. However, It la not loo Into to awell tho tonnage In UUh. for It I poaalhle that good rain may come before It I tlmo to movo the trop to the factorlea." Tho total tonnage for the aeuaon uxually average moro In UUh than In Idaho, Bmlth raid, but on account of the extremely dry eaon It will not reach that point thl year, although, generally apeaklng. the Utah yield will i. i.riuili'iillv normal. Sugar foctorlc In loth Mate, ha believe, will commence operation two week earlier than laat year. Thl I accounted for by the fact that ow-Ing ow-Ing to tho dry weather the beet will ripen that much more quickly. Unlea rain ahould het In, faclorle ore expected to. Mart about September 30th. thi: Choi's op kouthkhn UTAH Alii: QUITK HEAVY C, J. Ullrich, oaalatunt atale engineer, en-gineer, recently vlilted Waahlngton, Iron and Heaver countle In company with W, ! Ileer, atale engineer, lleen la atlll In the aouthern part of tho Mate. Their Iravela were for the nuipoao of checking up on contorted water filing and Inapcctlon of roada. Ciop are generally good In the aou-thern aou-thern countle. a Ullrich. Irrigated trop have auffered lerf from the drouth than dry farm cropa. but there expectancy of a heavy harvert In both. Ullrich I high In prahve of the work done by the agricultural college throughout the aouth. The experl-ment experl-ment farm acatter.d over the Muth country are. In hi opinion, proving of Ineatlmablo value to tho farmer Jn landing aral-unce In the olullon of problem that face them. Utah Prult Crop Short. Utah fruit thl-yr wIM drmn gooJ price, according to Y..U. Oar-vln Oar-vln general manager of the Utah Krultcrowera' aaaoclatlon. who aaya that evidence of thl already I In . Kht The re.on. he .aid. I. largely Jl, the crop In UUh would be below normal and the demand wem to be unuaually heavy. , Take tho aUte over." aJ J. W- wnrd Taylor, Mate horticultural com-inbaloner, com-inbaloner, "and you will find that tho crop of apple promise to be Juit about 33 per cent of w hat It vva laat yenr. 1-aM year the crop wn unuaually un-uaually henvy and, of courae, Halt I-nko City la n dumping ground for the frultr left In other part of the atale. 'The hhorlaga In Utah county thl year wilt make n big hole In the supply sup-ply on which Halt Lake Clti dealers depend," UTAH WllllVr CHOP THIS YKAH IS HKCOHD DHCXKEH There will bo more wheat produced In. Utah thl ear than ever before In thn hlntory of the state. In 1313, 6,-430,000 6,-430,000 buahel of wheat wa grown on 265,000 ncre nnd It wa sold (or 14.616.600. Itenort for laat year how that 7,376,000 buahel of wheat v.u produced from 331,000 ncre at n value of I,35,t00. The winter wheat I rupldly being hnrveated, nnd while It I too early for official rtntlatlc, n crop of 1,730,-000 1,730,-000 buahel I the prediction of nil-thorlllr. nil-thorlllr. Thl Increnao I attributed to the fact that there I 30 per cent more land devoted to tho cultivation of wheat now than there wa last year. The price to bo naked In the world market for wheat I n matter of muth speculation, hut It I eatlmated eatl-mated that 17,100,000 will bo tho approximate ap-proximate value of Utah', wheat yield. Wheat (Utlatlc compiled by the aUte and federal government In 1314 show that Utah ha a yield averaging twenty-aeven huahela to the acre, while the general average for tho United 8tatca I fifteen buahel to the acre. Water !ou' In Sevier Itlvrr. J, C. Dort, water commlaaloner of the Sevier, called laat Friday on K. C. I-n Hue, engineer of thn water resource re-source department of thn United Htate geological lurvey at Halt take City, Dort aald the water of thn Sevier Se-vier are lower than they have been for ten year, only 65 per cent of the normal flow of two hundred and ninety-five second-feet being available for Irrigation purpoae. Hut for method of conaervatlon of molature and timely rain, according to Dort, thn crop loaar In Bevier thl year would have been enormous. Home damage to crop I reported, due to tho shortage of water, but na a wholo the conso-quencea conso-quencea will not be scrloua. Ilorrvolr Save licet. Abundant wutrr from the Htravvhcr-ry Htravvhcr-ry Itlver reaervolr ha aaved the beet crop In UUh county thl year, according accord-ing to John T. Ijint, agricultural su perintendent for the Utah-Idaho Sugar Su-gar company for the Payvon district. !.ant was In Bait I-ako City the first of thn week, 'The normal flow vvaa so light thl year," he raid, "that many farmer In the flpanlah Pork district would have entirely loat their cropa but for the Btrawberry water," Ileet In Utah county are In excellent condition, condi-tion, according to Lant, and a good beet year I looked for there. |