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Show THE CITIZEN to make a hit with the people he must dig up lively the 3ampaign material instead of discussing dry rules governing ponduct of a meeting. come forward who stands for the per , Now wont someone sonal rights of the people as provided for in the Constitution of She United States of 17761 i he wants 1 . I What in li are the people going to do I Cant we send men to the next legislature election coining this fall who will work for the interests of the people and who protect their rights! The Salt Lake Telegram is doing a great public good in exposing business interests that are prying people loose from will d money. ;If you shoot a fire cracker or take a drink you are a criini-ia- h their The only amendment we can see to the present law is to kill but if you are hungry these moral reformers cannot see you. tell you how you must live, but do not provide the means, the law entirely, and if any one wants to start a bank, let them S?hey e comply with the banking laws. tad we are wondering what its all about. hard-earne- 1811 ft , . - ha , , EXTREMES NEW YORK AWAKENS i Doctors say that hospitals are in great need of liquor, and New York has adopted more stringent criminal laws. It is deplore the destruction of good brandies when they could Pa!, step from insanity to sanity. A pistol law was passed a few they ears ago to stop crime in that state. It took away pistols from be so useful in the hospitals. The people in the hospitals are no better tlian the people on ehe law abiding people which made it easier for the crooks to et them. As the crook does not obey any law, the pistol law the outside. Some of our preachers have said that all the drunks ras looked upon with great favor by the criminal element and should die. If liquor would save a mans life in a hospital, why s a result, New York state became one of the criminal centers not let him die and that will be one less that will crave for liquor. In our efforts to abolish the saloon we went to the other exf America. :mt. However, under the new laws that have been enacted, crim-i- t treme, and when near death we bewail the law that allows us to i:iais will not only be barred from getting bail, but will be pu- die if a drink of liquor would save our lives. nched according to the severity of the crime, and there will be no CIIURCII RULE mstardohs and full time must be served. Habitual criminals will is ia severely penalized with extra time added to sentences, e r If churches devoted their time to religion and the saving of All states should follow this example. It is the beginning Cof the end of common crime and with strict enforcement of the souls, more people would attend them. The Presbyterian church he w by just judges, the criminal element will have a tough time has withdrawn its support from the sesquicentennial exposition at Philadelphia, the 150th anniversary of the Fourth of July, bean; tills country keeping out of jail. id e Watch the., big decrease in crime in New York within the cause the directors of the exposition saw fit to keep the place aliear. When criminals know that the courts mean business, they open on Sundays. it olake themselves scarce. It is to be deplored that a leading church of the nation )le i Utah needs a complete revision of its criminal code in or-- i should display such narrow judgment ,and it only goes to show alir that criminals will be punished and the law abiding citizen that the dictation of any church invariably works against the best interests of a community. of 'otected. No doubt thousands of visitors would find Sunday the only : fre Some of the juries sitting on murder cases in this state, in this city, have been a disgrace, and some of the most day of the week to visit the exposition, or stay at home. The nsthrdened criminals have been allowed to escape just punisli-itv3n- t. church takes the stand that if anyone cannot attend on week days, they should remain home. Does the church believe that if the people were not permitted to attend the exposition on Sunat ? Does a murderer show mercy to his victim! days that the people would instead flock to the churches! digt Then why should a jury show mercy to a murderer! citizen is worth more than all the ledg One good POISON SPRAYING i a Iminals in the whole world. c ' 1 : es-maricia- lly law-abidi- ng iniel It has taken many millions TELEGRAM EXPOSE une The Salt Lake Telegrams expose in building and loan that have been doing a banking business in which Ld h&ne depositors have been taught a dear lesson in sleigh coin tricks, meets with general public approval. this If some of the stories are true, as published by the Tele-1- ( flun, these high pressure business men and their salesmen talk Poor widows and others into depositing their money their concerns, ought to be given the greatest publicity. The owners should be given 0 tis and the individual officials and ry publicity, until such time that they revised their business tutio: as-Hoftdati- ons - ) B to-- t thods. In fact the state should not allow any firm to take deposits ouress such firm put up a bond to cover the deposits and as a fie tection to the public. when our laws ur -j It is sure getting to a nice state of affairs and apparently legitimately, the sandbagging of during the day time and at night the criminal sand- rr ds sPeoPle them when going home. Surely when the is caught between two such fires, and his hard earned so ruthlessly confiscated and taken away from him, we Voider at times if there is any use living to fight such a one- j;d battle. yu invest your money, you lose itof; ifa you keep your liion- fc rff home, you are robbed at the point gun. j j. j- ..mit, law-abidi- ng hay cit-T- fi of dollars to find out that we are getting nowhere in trying to exterminate pestiferous insect life by spraying. In fact, insects are yearly increasing and there are few people living in this generation that have tasted a nice juicy apple free from poison. Yet we continue to blunder along in the same old way. Now comes forward Dr. L. 0. Howard, chief of the bureau of entomology, United States Department of Agriculture, and tells us that we are in danger of being wiped off the face of the earth bv insects. Evidently the doctor has only studied the extermination of insect life via the poison route. lie has never paid any attention to the adults but depends upon scientific spraying to kill the eggs and young worms that are hatched. If the adult moth or insect were killed, there would be no eggs, and it is an easy matter to catch the breeding insects in traps. It has been conclusively proven by thorough experiment that the insect trap will do more good in an orchard than all the poison arsenic that can be sprayed upon the fruit, and thereby prolong the health and life of the people. The doctors statement regarding the mastery of insects is surely surprising when the entomology department continues to advocate poison spraying instead of trying some other method. But these departments as a rule get into a rut and it either takes too much work to get out or they figure that a change would bo too expensive. |