Show mir THE EUREKA REPORTER issued every friday at eureka the metropolis of the great tintic gintic kw mining district C E HUISH editor and manager subscription price 2 50 per year in advance D R G r A SSI UN U N ON 0 N TR DE LABEL there is an editorial in the logan jo birnal of january which sho lid ild be read by those grafters grat who have tor for a number of beirs ears been using the utah press association as a means of gamin special favors and privileges leges Wit with hsuch such a bunch of cheap skates in the profession the newspaper business of utah will always be below the I 1 agh standard attained in almost every other western state many timea times efforts have been becu made to bring about leg station beneficial to the newspapers it it in every fase case a failure has b en recorded because those who w v ere back of the movement were not bona fi ie it publishers ib lishers or journalists the following pa digraph is taken from the e lit ligonal orial in the jo arnal the papers referred to are called syn liate luata papers and spring up like mushroe ns wherever it is thought t that either temporarily or dermat antly th re can undo unde the bald pretense and in the guise of a local newspaper be secured sufficient public and private advertising to affard a rake off ahey are found in mining districts where the publication of patent and assess ment not ces is compulsory in farming localities where many are provi 9 up I 1 and in a ly place where temporarily spoils are to b found established in a day without adding any community alue they thel can be discontini dis contin led in 4 a night without an loss r 9 some time ago the leaders of the odd fellows lodge in utah started a movement for the establishment of a home at which some of the old timers of the order men and women who while passing into the shado vs of life and finding it difficult to support themselves might find a place in wl ich to spend their dec ining inin bears gears and it now seems quite certain that this apropo will be carried through to successful completion ahe I 1 he lea ling old fellows of the state are said to favor the cottage plan I 1 which mans the erection and maintenance of a group of cottages where the ni worthy orthy members could be cared for or perhaps we should says could cara care toi for themselves and in this way eliminate the disagree di disagreeable able features of most public institutions of this kind the best way to build up a city is for each and every man in it not to strive to rend and tear down whenever a man inobe in the town is doing well do not try to tear him down all the residents of a to town n are partners not op portents in all likelihood the more business done by your rival the more you will do every gentlemen who treats his customers honestly courteous ly and fairly will get his share and the more business that can be secured i by united effort the better it will be for all when a town ceases to grow it commences to die and the more the people try to kill off eich each other in their business and good name the more rapidly will utter ruin come to all stand together for the advancement of every citizen it a inin shows ability to prosper do not pull him back with jealousy or weigh him down with cold indifference the provo herald states that the people of that city are well pleased with the prohibition plan and while there were 51 54 arrests for drunkenness in prove provo in the tile year 1911 thesis this is q atean over the sho ving of 19 when the town was wet that paper also objects to the kep rep arter corn com paring conditions in cureka with those in provo because the population of provo is nearly three timea times as faige large as Ps eur ka but the last census does not bear out such a statement provo however has twice the number of peo pie that eureka has and perhaps our compares com paris in d d the metropolis ot of utah county an injustice it if so we stand corrected but if the prohibition la vs are being enforced it should not be necessary to arrest 64 54 people for drunken ness in provo in the course of a year not one out of one hundred of those who drink whiskey imbibe to such an extent that it is necessary to lock them up on a charge of drunkenness and it is but natural to suppose that prohibition is falling away short of prohibiting the sale of liquor at provo |