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Show THE SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, SUNDAY MORNING, JULY N Utilities, roads -- Factories, Railand Mill Still Kenning1 Near-Norm- al Coal Shortage . Acute, but Business Said to Feel Only First Effects of Strikes. By HARDEN COLFAX, v, (Copyright, 1923, by Salt Lake Tri Suave.) WASHINGTON. July 29. Industrial America's ability To iaar along Through Its work when by all the rules of inventory and mathemattca it Bhould be prostrated by the cool strike Is the marvel of the day In official Washington. Government officials, statisticians and .Albers who figured a month ago that industry would be paralysed early In July are waiting. In mute astonishment, with August only two days away, for the paralysis to set in. The truth is that, notwithstanding the belief of the experts that there are only a few spoonfuls of coal left for mills, factories, railroads and utilities to run utilities on, America's" mills, factories, and railroads are still running very much as they were during the revival of last AprH and May. It is undeniable that there has been a slowdown to some exhas not aptent. but the Blowdown proached, In the slightest degree, the measure of the disaster that was fore- Find liras at Gardner & A dams Co. . i 4 Felt and Straw Hats Hats ...Now $1.50 $2.00 $100 Hats ...Now $3.00 $3.75 Hats ..'.Now Hats ...Now $150 $o.00 $6.00 Boys Knickerbocker Hats ..Now $5.C5 $1000 IIats ..ow $7.50 $12.00 Hats ..Now $9.00 $7.50 Suits ..Priced - $7.50 ..Priced $9.00 ..Priced $11.25 $18.00 ..Priced $13.50 $20.00 ..Priced $15.00 $25.00 ..Priced $18.75 $10.00 $12.00 $15.00 All Silk Pajamas .Off - Mens and Boys , Reports of activity during the week dosing today are to the effect that the rail situation Is improving and that the coal shortage is acute but that indusinitial eftry asof yet has felt only the fects the twin strikes. Iron and steel promotion oontlnue far above the average of the past six months, carloadings, according to ths latest figures of i te American Railway assciatlon, are bolding up in surprising shape and exceed 4w many thousands the carloadings of any week during the winter, with the exception of the period immediately preceding April 1. Manufacturing and building eonsftic-tio- n continue at high levels, the latter at the peak of Us trend, which in itself r. Is a Money continues easy and in such great abundance that low rates show unInterest prevailing mistakable sterns of going lower. Business is moving along in general, these reports state, with some little diminution, caused solely by the strikes, hut with the diminution little, and not great. CAPS SPECIAL! $1.00 $1.50 $2.00 $2.50 $3.00 Mercerized Shirts and Drawers, 75c KEEP-KOO- that production shows signs of dropping because of lessened demand. Overproduction of automobiles appears as a specter to mar the prospect ofis unalloyed The Ford camp reported prosperity. to be 100,900 care behind on orders, hut other companies, geared to high speed, are catching up; some have caught up. and others already sense a coming surplus Another period of price xutting appears among the possibilities. In The rubber tire indusuy price cutresult of ting already has set hi asTThe Some of the mammoth overproduction. n manufacturers have recently placed cord tires on the market at popular ,rates, or from d below the prices of their to. and Other greatly advertised lines. fancy companies, it is thought, will follow. 45c $3.00 Suits $4.00 Suita $5.00 Suits SHIRTS Railroad earnings for June are being reported daily to the interstate commerce commission. As a whole, they show a remarkable growth in net income over the corresponding period of 1921. Here and there individual roads have suffered, notably the cool carrier, but The big lines with two or three outstanding exceptions The New Hawn, for have prospered. instance, reports net Income of 1X50,000, as compared with a deficit of 153,000 in June, 1921. Other roads for June, 1922, and June, 1921. respectively, show the following comparisons: Rock Island, 11,753.000 and 1,00,000; Wabash, 901.000 snd 4000; Chicago & 2,389 00 0 earnings last Northwestern, month and deficit of 594.000 In June a and 1,827,000 Four, year ago; Big Among the coal carrying roads the figures vary. The Norfolk & Western, for Instance, earned 1. 257,000 In June. 1921, snd nearly three times as much, or 3,404,000, last June, due to the Increased volume of nonunion cool moved over its line, while the Delaware & Hudson, an anthracite carrier, reported a deficit of teat month, aa compared with 301,000 net income of 1,063.000 In June, 1921. statement for the The federal reserve e from the sound week shows economic position of the banks during the week preceding. v to Be Progressives Active in Bannock Several big lots which are the pic! of our great stock. Every good make represented. $1.50 Shirts ...Now $1.15 $2.00 Shirts ...Now $1.50 $2.50 Shirts ...Now $1.90 $3.00 Shirts ...Now $2.25 $3.50 Shirts ...Now $2.75 . . .Now $3.00 $4.00 Shirts $5.00 Shirts ...Now $3.75 . . .Now $4.50 $6.00 Shirts RESPONSE to this sale has been grcat-whiproves that real values and genuine price cuts is what the men of Salt Lake want. POCATELLO. Idaho. July 29. The Progreeslve party, a new political .party created by the filing of a petition' with the secretary of state, will he represented In Bannock countv during the coming election. It Is the Intention of the leaders In Idaho, namely. Frank Johnesse-I Dunning and H. Famuels, that each precinct in every county In the state shall be organized before the election In November. Many names w!)l be written In at the primaries, according to local leaders of the party, hut at present there are candidates for the offices of state senator and sheriff, only. In this county. W. A. Hunt of Inltom aspires to the ibs!tlon of senator from Bannock county, and C C. Blake and J. J. Scott,, both of Pocatello, are candilates for sheiiff. Benjamin F. the candidate for Justice of the laws peace for the Pocatello district, and D. A. Perkins is a candidate for delegate to the county convention from Pocatello precinct Nothe7, as well as for committeeman from precinct. C, C. Blake la an aspirant as a delefrom gate to the county convention Pocatello precinct No, !.- 1 Money-Savin- g v Reductions on ch Values 75o Now 95c Values Values Now $1.15 Values .....Now $1.50 Now $1.90 Values Values $2.25 SILK UNION SUITS, .$6.00 Values Now $4.50. $2.50 $3.50 $5.00 $6.00 $8.00 $10.00 and We offer .you the finest apparel we have had for years ask you to match these values if you can. Come in tomorrow the better things are still here. Look at the great reductions and savings youll make. NOTE THE SALE PRICES ON OUR SUMMER Oxfords Oxfords Oxfords Oxfords Oxfords Oxfords ;....Now Now Now Now Now ....Now $1.83 $2.65 $3.75 $4.50 $8.00 $7.50 SPECIAL! MEN'S SHOES Values O from $6 to 112 now... Mw SUI Underwear ...'..Now Exceptional Values at $15, Now Reduced to $1.00 $1.15 $1,50 ' $2.00 $2.50 $3.00 $1125 I $16.50 .... ....Sale price $12.35 Sale price $13.00 Sale price $15.00 $18.00 $20.00 $22.50 $25.00 $35.00 : Neckwear ...J...' . .V. . . ... Sale Prices on Patterned suits 3-Pie- ce 75c at '50o $1.00 qt - 65c $2.50 at Sale price $16.85 Sale price $1 8.75 I. Sale price $26.25 One I $1.50 $2.00 at $1.00 at $1.35 ..,...$1.63 Lot of BOW, TIES, 35c . Regularly Priced $20.00, Now Reduced to HOSIERY $1.00 Silk Hose . . . .Now 75c $1.50 Silk Hose ....Now $1.00 $25.00 $30.00 $35.00 $15 Suits Suits Suits Priced $18.75 Priced $22.50 ..Priced $26.25 sacs Special! BOYS. UNION SUITS $1.00 $1.50 $10.00 $45.00 Suits Suits $5.00 Suits sss-tv- . Priced $30.00 ............ .Priced .....Priced . PAJAMAS $33.75 $37.50 l'.,itt,l'.a'Au,i.r.x:!:rgag. rrjs. swazra- Whitt, blut and plaln and striped - .75c ..,.$1.15 Company - 5I.G5 BOYS JUNIOR SUITS ardner KEARNS BUILDING tan,- 33SP9 Utah's Greatest Clothing Store , Cpeelsl to Tbs Tribune. .....Sale price $3.00 .....Sale price '$3.75 Footwear. 751.-oo- o. little-chang- $1.85 Sale price $2.25 Great one-quart-er Rail Earnings Grow. .....Sale price SPECIAL! A few odd sizes Boys' Shirts, $6.00 Values, $1.50 best-know- one-thir- 75c $1.15 $1.50 $1.90 $2.25 Boy. Wash SUITS $2.50 Suits Odd Sizes Curtailment Reported; On the other hand, two of the chief railroads of the country. The Erie and the Wabash, are reported to be extremely short of coal and have curtailed operations on that account; half a dozen or so blast furnaces In the middle west have banked their fires for lack of fuel; the section in and around Detroit is oh scanty coal rations and the three chief carriers of nonunion coal ..from West Virginia fields have embargoed virtually all other swell the volume of freight in order to the mines they serve to clamoring industries. Intense Interest attaches to the meetand ing next week of the Illinois miners, the reports are eurrerft here that ranks will miners break in the then become an actual happening. Such reports appear on the surface amk seem fathered by rope rather .than probability. With road building and construction at top speed, word comes from America s third chief industry the camp rf the automobile makers that the high tide of the boom is receding somewhat and Now Now Now Now Now Caps Caps Caps Caps Caps L Shirts and Drawers record-breake- VX 1922. Our Sales Always Combine Quality With Low Prices and Genuine Price-Cut- s , Assuring You of Greater Values and Absolute Satisfaction. cast. Railroads Active." SO, $5.00 $6.00 $7.50 SALT LAKE CITY ...Priced ...Priced $3.75 $4.50 . . .Priced , $5.65 $10.00,... Priced $7.50 $12.00 . ..Triced $9.03 ,) P |