Show HOME INTERESTS during the present peri berid ad of free trade hallucinations when many of the good people of utah feel f it chome industries it is good to lay before our readers what the ladies 0 of f denver are doing for their city an and d state they recently sent to the manufacturers exchange the follow ins inn document signed by two thousand loyal ladies of colorado to the manufacturers exchange denver colo cob we the undersigned undersigner under signed ladies of denver appreciating the pour courtesy tesy of the ma f in in asking us ua to lend our assistance to ta encourage hurne bame industries do hereby most willingly alree agree in ordering goods to saive the pre preference prele terence rence te colorado man goods believing taht what is ie an advantage to colorado mandac jurers will not nm only benefit us in our household economy but will very much benefit the entire city and fhate by beeping keeping colorado money in Col colorado colored orad 0 circulation that kind of a resolution has the right kind of a ring and such instances tell us why colorado is today forcing ahead ro go rapidly in home industries dus tries we need the same spirit to t manifest itself in utah our homo industries are lar languishing tb throughout I 1 tho length ana breadth of the territory THE can name four woolen mills in utah that have been erected at a great expense h have bare not been running for over a year and two have been adlo for more than two years the cause is thit that people persist in bu buying fida im imported good sEven our provo woolen mills which have succeeded in running nin the alio greater part of the year can find but a small market at home if we are correctly informed tho greater part of its ita goods is sent out of the territory and wherever provo goods aro are used outside of utah there is a constant dem demand and for them it shows that they are of the best quality on the marl marlet et and yet our people do not patronize this horn institute I 1 anthero on TherO j is ie a craze anion among the people for imported articles and that craze has hai been kept up until the territory is is pretty well drained of its ita mono money y each year a dollar is harder to get hold bold of as tin is s are duller and they will continue to grow duller so eo long ns as wo me ignore our hone home industries r for or many years utah people were aught by precept and aby prat c the necessity of home industries and man many y home product productions ioni were aged for example nearly all the larger of our territory r supported a tannery and a shoe shop aud and nearly all our boots and shoes were wade made at home now low the v are imported from the east and our tanners and shoemakers are without work other artisans are also without outwork work the writer not ion long ago mst a sl el pep herder in ia Sout southern bern utah who hl had d been a foreman in wool mills at L cd england gland he was well acquainted quain ted with all kinds kinda of m machinery machi h nory used it in woolen D mills having been raised among L its haw ham aud and worked it dar n the better belter part of I 1 ais life yo co doubt this is but one case out of hundreds hun dreda that exist it ii our T tetory because dua dna sup bur p 14 is IR 11 given home production li lini amz a 0 of our ur young youn men are also growing to manhood without learning eny buy useful trade thore is no I 1 encouragement for them to learn a trade under the present condition conditi cn cf affairs lot lei utah get gel up societies 0 of reform as they have in colorado and let us ns make timos times better by patronizing tome home industries let tho the reform begin gi a with our county and pal government if the conaty has a contract to lot let for building 1 a bridge let it be given to home parties it if our our home government will att the right 1 rind kind of an example the same spirit will soon take hold of the people and utah will prosper this eternal cry of hard bard times will thou then cease because more money will be kept in circulation at home |