OCR Text |
Show A Live Democratic Newspaper The Democrat will save you money on your legal notices. .For Live Democrats Call Was. 1587. WORLD PEACE. NATIONAL TICKET For President JOHN W. DAVIS When state officials conspire to convert the state fair into a laws of the state of Utah gambling den; when they seek to violate when which they are sworn to enforce; and, they permit a concessioner of a state institution to attempt to prostitute the court in an effort to prevent peace officers from performing their sworn duties, it is high time, we think, for a grand jury investigation of such contempt for the constitution and disregard for established law and order. . For Vice President CHARLES W. BRYAN - For Governor GEORGE H. DERN For Supreme Court A. J. WEBER Spanish Swamp Home of Wild Camel Herd For Secretary of State J. W. FUNK Wild camels exist In western Europe, within two days journey from Piccadilly circus, writes a correspondent of the London Mall. There are a considerable number of them In this mysterious colony,'' but no one knows exactly how many. To survive they have actually become For State Auditor DANIEL O. LARSON For State Superintendent of Public Instruction M. WOODWARD For Congress First District FRANK FRANCI8 ' Second District - James h.' waters COUNTY TICKET For State Senate HARDEN BENNION MRS. SARAH E. STEWART JOHN HANSEN For Members State House of W. R. WALLACE, Reads Like Gulliver In Paul Bunyans camp there was a great cookhouse with a kitchen like Mammoth cave, and a dining another hall ' wherein, under huge and lofty beams, the tables were ranged like the ranks of an army corps drawn up for parade on a plain. Here were served breakfasts of ham and eggs and hot cakes, and huge and Incomparable Sunday dinners and. the simpler weekday meals of which the coffee was most highly praised, writes James Stephens In the American Mercury. Paul Bunyan Invented a machine for e the mixing of the batter, so devised that perfectly paving contractors now employ small models of It for mixing cement The range on which a battalion of cooks fried the not cakes was greased by a ski champion from Norway, who skied to and from with sides of bacon strapped to his Jr. ( CREIGHTON G. KING MRS. J. J. GALLIGAN FISHER HARRIS C. B. FELT DARRELL T. LANE W. E. EVANS F. W. JAMES MRS. ANNA BRADY hot-cak- feet And that the men In the far end of the cookhouse might be served before the hot cakes cooled, the flunkies speeded on roller skates. It required a crew of 11 teamsters with teams and scrapers to keep the yard back of the cookhouse cleared of coffee grounds and egg shells. Kerbau' s Sensitive Nose Malay bull fights are not like those we are accustomed to read about a writer In the Youth's Companion tells us. The contestants are generally water, buffaloes animals that says Mr. Carveth Wells In Asia, the Malays call kerbau. A kerbau, or carabao, as It Is often written in English, makes, continues Mr. Wells, a white mans life miser- able because he does not like the white man's smell, though he doesn't mind the smell of a Chinese or a Malay. If you think you have no smelt Just go near a kerbau I He not only sees you a long way off, but he Instantly begins to sniff the air. Then he lays his ears back and rushes at you. I remember once being chased out of a rice field by a kerbau. The rice was growing in deep mud, and I was rushing along up to my knees, with the great animal floundering behind me. While I was shrieking for help a little Malay boy about four years old and quite naked ran up, caught the bull by the nose and led him away I Never in my life had I felt such a fooll MRS. LUELLA C. HAYMOND DESPAIN AUSTIN P. MILLER JOSEPH HIBBARD W. D. JONES W. C. CRUMP, Jr. For County Commissioners Four-yea- term r FRANKLYN CHRISTIANSON Two-ye- term ar H. B. AVEN For County Attorney CALVIN W. RAWLINGS JUDICIARY TICKET FOR THIRD DISTRICT For Judges J. LOUIS BROWN GRANT H. BAGLEY DELBERT M. DRAPER RAY T. ELSMORE DAVID W. MOFFAT HENRY V. VAN PELT For District Attorney RAY VAN COTT low-pri- Salt Lake City .(Political Advertisement) Ill-fate- d eleren-thou-sand-to- co-operat- ion U-bo- WAR VETERANS Davis believes in generous appropriations, honest management and sympahtetic care and assistance in the hospitalization, rehabilitation and compensation of the veterans of all wars and their dependents. He favors humanizing the veterans bureau. LAW ENFORCEMENT Davis believes in strict enforcement of the eighteenth amendment. He favors abolition of protective methods for those caught., in ...the . act of violating it. He favors respect of all laws and enforcement of the constitution. FREEDOM OF RELIGION at Davis believes in vigorous enforcement of existing laws Old Weather Saws against private monopolies and Based on Good Sense illegal combinations and enactAdmiral Fitzroy, who Invented the ment of further legislation to barometer and commanded the brig make this possible. on Its Beagle expedition to the American coast In 1831, declares that most MUSCLE SHOALS of the old saws regarding weather Davis believes that the pro- are reliable and based on common-sens- e duction of cheaper and higher-grad- e Investigation. As a weather exfertilizers is essential to pert he commended an old saying to agricultural prosperity. He favors the effect that the glow of dawn high the sky denotes wind, and a low prompt action by congress for In the operation of Muscle Shoals dawn fair weather. He bade us believe delicate clouds mean in the production, distribution that wind-fai- r weather, and safe of commercial fertilizers, ones 'wind.' Mist-o- n anda hard, ragged hilltop means to the farmers 61' soft-lookin- g, -- gs ce Davis believes in in immediate reclamation of arid and semi-ari- d lands in the West. He favors recovery of the navys oil reserves and all other parts of the public domain which have been fraudulently or illegally leased to private interests. He favors vigorous prosceution of all public officials, private citizens and In the population. Our Country We inhabit a country which has been signalized In the great history of freedom. We live under forms of government more favorable to its diffusion than any other the world has known. A succession of Incidents of rare curiosity and almost mysterious connection has marked out America as a corporations which participated great theater of political reform. Many in these transactions. He favors stand recorded In our circumstances revision of the water powers annals connected with the assertion act, the general leasing act and of human rights which, were we not all other legislation relating to familiar with them, would fill even our the public domain. He believes minds with amazement. Edward Ev- the nation should retain title to erett. its water power and favors creation and development of our inspires Confidence water power. He favors conserPicture postcards of a Kansas City vation of migratory birds. He hotel carry this message: This hotel fully equipped with wants a national policy of resprinklers. Statistics show loss forestation. of life has never occurred In a WATER TRANSPORTATION sprinkled building. In case of fire you Davis believes in the building may get wet, but not burned. To one traveler that brought a wonof inland waterways, flood conderful thought and he wrote theretrol and the lowering of flood under the Now 1 following prayer: levels on the Mississippi and me down to Statistics auto--mati- c Colorado rivers. MERCHANT MARINE Davis believes that the should own. operate and man its ships. He thinks Ameri- gov-erme- nt can ships should be favored by manufacturers and railroads. CIVIL SERVICE Davis believes that ex-servi- ce JUDGE H. E. WALLACE k FOR JUDGES OF CITY COURT In explanation of collisions at sea It is said to be a scientific fact that a very large Hur moving through shallow water will attract small craft toward her. This theory was first put forward when the White Star liner Olympic collided with the Brit'sh destroyer Hawke, whose captain stated on oath that his vessel was sucked toward the big liner and refused to answer her helm at all. He AVIATION LABOR was laughed at then, but not so long Davis belives that the gov- afterward the Titanic started Davis believes in collective ernment should develop and sus- on her maiden voyage. As bargaining and laws regulating tain both federal and commercial down Southampton docksshethesteamed Amerthe hours of labor. He believes aviation. n ican liner New York, an in with state govship, began to get uneasy ernments for the welfare, educaSTOCK SALES at her berth alongside the quay. Pretion and protection of children. Davis believes in immediate sently her stout mooring ropes He favors all necessary safe- passage of legislation to enable snapped, one after another, and ahe guards against exhaustive, de- the states to enforce their laws started to move out toward the White Titanic was Immedibilitating employment conditions relating to the gradual financial Star ship. Thewhile tugs got hold of ately stopped, for women. strangling of innocent investors the New York and towed her back caused by indiscriminate promo- into safety. During the war there was WOMEN another proof of the theory, this time Davis believes that women tion, refinancing and reorganizainof on an tion the Olympic again. German subby corporations in men beside the have a place marine to sidled was getsuch basis. flated He thinks her and up affairs of the nation. He favors to when the a methods serious constitute ting her, torpedo ready use of their political power to suction drew the close up unof to menace the our stability enact beneficent laws and the der the liners stern, and the blades of economic system. in the of exaction public fidelity her great propeller ripped open the service. ; submarine from stem to stern. MONOPOLIES men should be given preference cnce to the orderly process of in appointments. He believes the the law and deplores any effort internal revenue and other gov- to arouse religious or racial disernment positions not in civil turbances. service should be included. He IMMIGRATION is in favor of adequate salaries Davis believes in the total exto provide a decent living for clusion of Asiatic immigration. postal employes. the country. rain and wind If It long or comes He opposes any legislation that down fine weatherstays If It rises and dislimits the production of fertilizers perses. Italn Is due when distant obat Muscle Shoals by limiting the jects look near as on what Is called a good hearing day. And rain Is foreof power used there. amount Davis believes in defense of told by pigs carrying straws to sties. nuisance taxes, sales freedom of and freedom HIGHWAYS The religion pig as a prophet appears In an taxof forms taxes and other thinks the He old Davis of the believes riddle: Question: Why Is a roads press. improved ation. He believes in a general church and the state should for- are of vital storme to follows presently when a comto importance tax reduction. ever remain separate. He does merce and industry, agriculture company of hogges - runne crying not favor religious tests for those and rural life. He favors a con- home? Answer: A hog Is most dull RAILROADS of a melancholy nature; and so by who occupy public office. He tinuation of federal aid under ex- and Davis believes that the reason foretell the ralne that act insists at all times upon obedi- - isting federal and state agencies. cometh. doth transportation In time of ralne, most cattell should be rewritten in order that doe prlcke up their ears; as for exIberian an asse will, when he perceivetb the high purposes which public ample " V Don Juan so Another named The Iberian peninsula was acbe a storme of ralne or hall doth follow. welfare demands may from the ancient Inhabitants, who I was not engaged to one of them, that believes He were as on known the Iberes. According but I was complished. the verge of It with the railroad freight rates should be to some authorities the word merely whole five. They had letters of mine, Story of Elgin means The name but Id followed the advice of my dying Inhabitants. We might use the glamorous words adjusted so as to give to bulky, seems to have been applied by the father, and never used the word mar- of childhood's raw commodities basic, tales, Long ago Greek navigators to the riage In any of them. Id never given and far away, fairy earlier to tell the tale of Elgin the lowest rates, placing the peoples on the eastern coast of Spain, any of them presents when you're cathedral, whose seven hundredth highest rates upon the more val- probably originally those who dwelt starting business from what's little birthday was celebrated last August 5 uable and less bulky manufactur- by the River Iberus, the modern Ebro. more than a nucleus you dont throw and 8. So long ago as the ed products. Iberian thus means sometimes the pop- your money about I Tea or an Ice at time of the early Middle ages,twilight so far ulation of the peninsula In general the confectioner's was as far as ever I away as Rome, must we go for the beRECLALMATION AND and sometimes the peoples of some went and not that unless my hand ginnings of the story of this hoary old CONSERVATION definite race who formed one element was forced. But there had been disEsch-Cummin- JOHN D. LOFTIS L. E. AGRICULTURE Davis believes in stimulating marketing movements and the; establishment of an export marketing corporation. He believes that suitable credits should be secured for farmers. He thinks these things will reduce the margin between what the producer 4 receives for his products and what the consumer .has to pay for piis supplies. TARIFF ANDD TAXES Davis believes in a tax on commodities entering the custom houses, which will promote effective - compt4tion and. protect against monopoly. He believes that the fairest tax by which to raise revenues is the income tax. He favors a graduated tax upon incomes. He opposes the New Explanation for Disasters on Ocean so-call- ed Representatives Vision of Cookhouse f co-operat- ive For State Treasurer JOSEPH RIRIE DR. HUGH . safety. For Attorney General J. W. ROBINSON semi-aquati- c. -- NATIONA'L DEFENSE strict and believes Davis of land and sweeping reductions sea armaments- to prevent competitive military and naval building should b$ instituted after conferences with foreign nations. Until such time he demands adequate military and naval STATE TICKET wholly lacking under Republican rule. Up the Guadalquivir in Andalusia Is the dreariest malarial swamp in Spain, and perhaps In the world, an endless vista of waterlogged wilderness, broken only by occasional low islands covered with willow scrub. Here, among enormous flocks of gulls and greylag goose, teal, widgeon, pochard and mallard, dwell the outlaw camels. In another five years the colony will have completed a century of life in western Europe. Their ancestors were brought over from Africa In 1829 by the Marquis de Vlllafranca for farm work. Villafrancas horses panicked, however, as horses will unless carefully acclimatized to camel, and there were some nasty accidents. Rather than have the work of his estates upset by labor trouble, the marquis turned his camels loose. Some were killed. The descendants of those who took to the marlsma" survived. Davis believes world peace can be attained only through the League of Nations. And since the league has been turned down once by congress, he thinks that a referendum election should be held to give the people plenty of time to decide definitely for themselves whether they still desire to remain separate in world affairs or whether they desire to participate in everything through the j medium of the league. o Attempt Made To Use Courts To Prevent Peace Officers Performing Their Sworn Duty All For The Sake of Financial Gain. rottenness In governmental administration as was evidenced this week in the attempt to encompass the the operation of gambling games at antiUtah sate fair in definance of the gambling laws of the state of Utahun-is the political cancer, that, left checked; will destroy the entire fabric of civil government. It is such disregard for law and its enforcement on the part of those whose sacred duty it is to set a perfect example in the observance of law that is responsible for existence inof the Ku Klux Klan and other visible empires and causes them to take the administration of law into their own hands. It is such attempts to prostitute the courts and other agencies of government, for special privilege, that breeds anarchy, jand jglves. birth to revolution. The state fair is presumed to be an educational Institution a place for the visual instruction, especially of our younger generation. Mr. Citizen ,do you want your children educated in an environment of Do gambling devices and gamblers? for you want to pay double price admittance to a place to be mulucted of the little coin you possess by trade wheels and other devices designated, made and operated for the special purpose of getting your money? This conspiracy to convert the state fair into a gambling den, to raise money for a busted" fair board, started long before the gates of the fair opened. Representatives of the board went to the chief of police of Salt Lake City and told him the financial condition of the fair, then asked if he would look the other way ' while these trade machines and gambling devices were operated during fair week. The chief of police told them to see the sheriff. When they put their diabolical plan before Sheriff an Benjamin R. Harris they got answer straight from the shoulder. "No, gentlemen. The state owes it to itself and its citizens to be the first obin setting a worthy example in servance of the law," the sehriff informed them. My duty is to enforce the law and the law will be enforced. Then, in furtherance of the scheme to defy the law, the fair board sat back and permitted a concessioner to of slip into court and take advantage order an to get this sacred institution chief of and sheriff the prohibiting police from performing their duty. no The papers were secreted and record made of them until after all the proceedings had been carried through. The order was obtained in chambers. of Then, somebody forged the name a district Judge to a copy of the order, took it, without attestation by the clerk of the courts, to a city constable and had him serve it upon the sheriff and chief of police. The bogusness of the signature was and recognized In the sheriff office had it until service of it was refused been taken back and properily signed and attested. The petitioner had the writ made returnable into court October 10, after hearthe fair would be closed, so that until the ing would be postponed courses. games had run their and the But, the district, the county at this city attorney Joined in protest immediate procedure and demanded the court hearing with result that left Thursday dissolved the order and free the sheriff and chief of police to perform their duty. virtue Honesty in government is a What Davis Stands For VOTE FOR HONEST GOVERNMENT Effort to Convert Utahs State Fair Into Gambling Den Such $1.50 A YEAR SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1924 VOL. 3, NO. 26 OLIVER C. DALBY cussions of the subject of love, and there also had been as opportunity offered what may be called preliminaries. From Tam pi ins Tales of Ills Family, by Barry Pain. Women and Courtship Man views It as a great testimony to his prowess at amour to yield up his liberty, his property and his soul to the first woman who. In despair of finding better game, turns her appraising eye upon him. But If you want to bear a mirthless laugh. Just present this masculine theory to a bridesmaid at a wedding, particularly after alcohol and crocodile tears have done their disarming work upon her. That Is to say, just hint to her that the bride harbored no notion of marriage until stormed Into acquiescence by the moonstruck and Impetuous bridegroom. H. L Mencken, In In Defense of Women. Ouf of Date Quickly The Oxford dictionary Is far from complete, writes Ernest Weekly In the Atlantic Monthly. You will search It In vain for aspidistra and appendicinesleep. guard citis, boche and bolshevlst, lay decontrol and my slumber deep. If I should die Im ma camouflage, not concerned, I may get wet but I and Dora, and broadcasting wont get burned. Tavern Talk. bootlegging, and dope Qend, for a dictionary published totomorrow. day Is almost out-of-da- te Labeled pile, whose Influence has been casting Its spell upon the lives of the dwellers In the old province of Moray from that far-otime to the present There is an old tradition that the Culdees founded the church to begin with, Just as they did that of Birnle. In any case the site was already hallowed by when sacred associations, many scion of Andrew the Bishop Moray, powerful house of De Moravia, moved the Cathedral of Spynle to the Church of Holy Trinity In Elgin. ff Up-to-Da- te Mark Twains home at Redding, Conn., was at one time visited by burglars. After their visit Mark Twain tacked the following sign on his front door: Notice to the Next Burglar: There is nothing but plated ware In this house now and henceforth. You will find It In the brass thing In the dining room over In the corner by the basket with the kittens. If yon want the basket, put the kittens In the brass thing. Do not make a noise; it disturbs the family. You will find rubbers In the front hall by that thing which has umbrellas In It; chiffonier, I think they call It, or pergola, or something like that. Please close the door when you go I Held Many High Offices James Buchanan, President of the United States from 1857 to 1861, held all that are persuaded If at last you many prominent posts before he was Defined Well Envy elected Chief Executive. He had been things In the world are rotten save Is a littleness of soul which InEnvy a are young you self, congressman, senator, secretary of your precious and a certain see cannot point, beyond tellectuals Duluth Ilerald. state, and minister to Great Britain. if It does not occupy the whole space French Cotton industry R. B. THURMAN France has 9,380,000 spinning spindles, 1,213,000 twisting spindles and A. W. DUVALL Industry. 173,800 mechanical looms In Its cotton feels Itself excluded. HazlitL Mankind's Great. Error And Not Much Else Some people have funny bones tween their ears. It be- Is falling In love with our own mistaken Ideas that makes fools and beggars of half mankind. E. Young. |