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Show THE EMPLOYMENT OF LABOR. It Is always well when a community is able to supply from within Itself the labor It needs to carry on Its enterprises, be these small or great. Such a condition condi-tion makes for a homogeneous soelety, which has like alms and needs, and which In any crisis or at any pivotal time can be unitedly thrown Into the scale for the advantage of all. In that case, the wholo community is one, and It goes forward upon lines that all can heartily approve. But where there are alien elements ln; troduced, which have no common interests inter-ests with the community at large, which seek only employment for a time so that the person who hires his labor for the time, may go to some foreign land to enjoy the fruit of his labor In this, there are heterogeneous elements which do not fit Into the scheme of American society or community life. It makes it worse when those laborers, alien In sentiment and purpose, do not even look to their employers or to the citizens of the region (from which thoy may be separated by language) for their adjustments and for the consideration of questions tlyit affect them, but who are under the abaolute control and direction di-rection of persons hundreds of miles away, who have no knowledge of local conditions and less care for local sentiment senti-ment or advantages. Colorado has been a desperate sufferer from the Introduction of this sort of labor. la-bor. Utah thus far has not been very materially affected by It; but the coal mine troubles in Carbon county a year ago gave us an unpleasant tasto of them. Certain occurrences south of the city recently re-cently have called attention to a possibly possi-bly dangerous phase of this alien employment, em-ployment, aside from the economic In-advl8ablllty In-advl8ablllty of ever getting in too much of It. It seems to us that in an old settled community such aB Utah 1b, there should be ample labor at living rates all around, to obviate the necessity of the Importation of the sort of labor indicated, indi-cated, which is practically the .same as the coolie labor which the laws of the country forbid, and which also has an element of peril In It which the coollo labor lacks. We are emphatically In favor fa-vor of continuing and enlarging all the Industrial and 'economic plants fnat we havo, and of adding to them as fast as they can be developed; but we think that this word of caution in regard to the selection of labor Is decidedly In order. |