OCR Text |
Show WHY NOI HERE INMSOUIH? W. G. Piatt Draws Comparisons Between Conditions in Alabama Ala-bama and Here. SEES NO REASON WHY IRON CANNOT BE MADE Talk of Insufficient Water Held to be Foundationless and Merely Excuse for Delaying Establishment Establish-ment of Important Industry. Some one has said that a nation is measured by its homes. It may also !e truthfully said that the type and character of a people can be measured and near accuately estimated by the climate and condition of the country in which they live. This is verified when one considers the status of the United States and Canada as compared com-pared with the old world countries. We find people coming from conglom orated laws and religions to a land of blue sky, where the clear atmosphere seems to penetrate and shatter the dogmas and classicisms of the Orient or Occident. Here they rind freedom and equality; but be it said to the shame of the Bolshevism, Reds and other such organizations, they know not the extent nor how to appreciate such privileges as are inherent here Aside from the subject let me state that their modes of procedure and conditions into which they have thrown our government at present, is decidedly not American. They are like a caged bird let loose and need to be subdued and trained to the original orig-inal privilege of all life Freedom. This foreign element which so hinders hind-ers our American progression, reflects the training of their home land. Let every Utahn and American firmly oppose op-pose the spread of such dogmas. We have no use for them. To one who has traveled beyond the boundaries of the Rockies, it is easy to see the advantages of a land situated situ-ated as Utah is. We have occasion to rejoice in the four seasons of the year. They have a far greater and better effect than cultivation or tillage for the farmer. In winter time the snow and frosts kill millions of insect pests which harbor thru the winter in several sev-eral other regions and do harm untold the following spring and summer. Jack Frost is a cultivator and pulverizer pulver-izer worthy to pattern after. He op-cm op-cm the soil so that the rootlets can burrow deep in the spring and easily withstand the summer's heat and drouth. This is another advantage. (Continued on last page.) |