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Show 4 DAILY OGDEN, UTAH. J. CANNON, STATE JOURNAL, SATURDAY, JUNE 1904. 4, THE RESPONSIBILITY AND THE VICTIM. UTAH STATE JOURNAL) FRANK UTAH EDITOR. Since the State Journal exposed the facDONT INTRUDE ON THE NEXT CON- tional Republican scheme to impose upon the shoulders of Senator Kearns more than VENTION. his share of the responsibity for Utahs pres-W- e if the Democratic ent conflict with the nation, many requests have been-askestate convention next week should adopt any have been made that this paper shall continue resolutions concerning; the disapproval of Utah ;ts exposition of this paramount subject, which now beiotr voiced generally in the 0oe corre8pondent asks if Kearns did not d "assume liability mCertainly8not. There is no necessity for or b,s ev' situation by agreeing in 1901 to any resolution on that subject at the ensuing; support Hon. Reed Smoot for the senatorship state convention. If the Democrats there to be assembled wo years later? Undoubtedly unless he afterward honor-Lou- is shall select staunch and able delegates to St. is discharged himself from that and shall place them under the unit rule, ab Let us see. time the .At convention will have discharged its duty. sponaibility. evd Hon. compact, by which There will be another Democratic state I Thomas Kearns made the was first choice convention some weeks later. of in the in order Utah Republicans t t0 faclitate the building of a big railroad and NYES WIDOW IN POVERTY. ... the sale of a smaller one and by which Hon. was to succeed Rawlins, there was There is a story that the widow of the not the minds of men who made the Present famous humorist, Bill Nye, is in poverty. We hope that it is not true. If anyone deserves bargain any idea of the chasm of public diswell of the world, it is the woman to whom aPProval into whi.ch the selection of Hon. Nye owed much of the encouragement and Reed Smoot would plunge the state of Utah, Doubtless Mr. Kearns was a principal inspiration that prompted him to amuse man- kind by his humor and to instruct mankind by PartJ to the agreement; but when he found his attacks upon fraud. It is a pity at Washington the serious antagonism which indeed if the presiding genuis of Bill Nyes Republican leaders felt against the selection an apostle, what was his duty: to remain life shall suffer any want while the world laughs at the jokes he cracked. As long as we silent and let Utah go on blindly to this dis-enjhis books his widow ought to receive aster? or to advise Hon. Reed Smoot and revenue from them to make her exist er gentlemen, parties to the bargain, of the cnce easy. danger which confronted the state and the d BANKS MILLINERY DEPT. A June Sale . IN S. J. BURT CU BROS.1 STORE. and New Styles. With New Methods An ordinary clearance sale means offering old goods at reduced prices. that Kind of a sale. New goods, new styles; about usual price will prevail. How can it be? Thus: one-quart- er This is not tepj the ih,! ;js If in the millinery business, write about six of the largest ladies hat houses in America, as we did the middle of Mav, soliciting offers of tlieir lowest price to close out their entire stock of spring and summer stales in hats at the close of the wholesale season. Space on their floors is worth more to them then, in preparing for fall stock, than the hats. Values, in their estimation, have gone to smithereens. You may x nn vo fin Vin i. m Arii limn n ...1 feg .ws re-th- I , ReedSt oy oth-cnou- ASSS callister and the governorship. Hon. Ld Callister is up against a hard Bame. Re appomted to a Rood fat office the through kindly efforts of Senator Kearns. Then he quit Kearns, from high conscientious reasons, to join himself to the Smoot forces. By these he is favored as candidate for Re- publican nomination to the governorship. But their influence is largely down at Provo and it does not seem to be brilliantly apparent at &1 Lake; for. despite the fact that neither Wells nor Hammond is anti-Smoyet these made a combination against the .gubernatorial, candidate-a- nd it looks as if Callister would be caught between the upper and nether millstones. Ed Callister is a fine man. Yet if you were out gunning for governors, you would no ordinarily take your first shot at hi- mbut as Republican governors go, he would be more than an average. It is a piteous thing 0 Mutemplate the mangling of such a good fellow by the machinery of the Wells-IIam- mond combination. nt ot, -- gh silent; he would have been justly charged, by everyone cognizant of the facts, with being a traitor to friendship and a traitor to his state, He returned home and gravely laid the matter before the authorities; later he announced the view 0f the president of the United States and the view of the chairman of the Republican in to the selection of Hon. Ly option jjee(j Smoot Did Senator Kearns thereby honorably aquit himael( f ,he responsibility? is the essence of our correspondent1, inquiry. abl he did all that he could do under the cumstances. The bargain was a bad one in the b inili and n0 8ubse ible action t could make it right. But sely Kearn- swbo arned his partners in the bargain that it wonId be dangerois to carrv it out-o-ught Prob-two.ha- cir-Sm- ve hedged with the entire responsibility Bor in fact with the major o it. burde0 must re8t the n.ho, atef the THE GREENBACKS warnin wbich bad come from ,dent aml the chairman of tbe R F t defiantly determined to send an apostle to be 8enae regardless of the consequences to Two influential newspapers are now en- gaged in a controversy as to whether United States greenbacks are redeemable or irre- deemable. One paper declares that they are irredeemable, and adds that they are "a con- and a mis- tinuing menace, mischief-makin- g financial to our take, And the pa- growth. per on the other side of the question says that they are and have been redeemable in gold, on demand, since the first day of January 1879. One statement is grotesque and the other is incorrect. The greenback says on its face. The United States will pay the bear- er $ If that is not a redeemable obli- nothing could be. It is the seems that the responsibility be Placed 0 course when a public calamity follows act, the people who are responsible ? P. lt always look for a scape-goa- t a victim In p.Pu!ar vengeance and disapproval. 18 ase sms a Republican faction to hang S1DS around tbe Yearns neck. In ancient who essen?er brought bad news was ?ayS in oil or to pieces by be.headed or ild horses or devoted to some other delectable an enraged king. fa , at tbe nstance apPears to U about the situation of He brought home adis-gatio- n Senatof Kearns fr0m RePublican lead- - blJ Utah. Pr0ni" Wi j US "r Pd eat beJiudd fulfilled at any time by the presentation note at the national treasury. Legally the greenback is not necessarily redeemable in gold at the demand of the holder. The government may pay at it, option, in either gold or silver an option which it would have been well to exercise under the Cleveland ad- ministration, to the saving of millions of dol- of interest bearing indebtedness, and to the sudden stoppage of the bankers endless ?S 1 theKL0mot;ve,e1wa0S condemnrf bad news; and tbe Smoot people pro-th- e pose to behead him and boil him in oil and htck bis legs to one wild horse and his arms t0 anober and pull him apart and the most rfeS, w The Englishmen thVpSfing of r iepS- - - e expect thia sale to acquaint the milli-ner- y Ogden trade with the most department in the city. A similar sale in Salt Lake last Januaryand February increased the volume of business there over NINE HUNDRED PER CENT during 0ntb8. as comPaied wfth the same months a year previous. We attrihute our during the present spring months to getting SuafnS?4 A111080 of.bu8mes8 way to get acquainted is to get something for the objective person could get ,t elsewhere. BANKS MILLINERY up-to-da- te ih-m- In The Sale Will Be On One Week Store. Starting Monday. pointers! J. E. Mathers of Wadsworth, Nev. is In the city. R. Douglas and wife of Pocatello are Ogden visitors. Moroni J. Thomas was up from Salt Lake last evening. Joseph C. Seabrook of London, Can ada, Is an Ogden visitor. M. Shepherd of Salt Lake City spent yesterday in the city on business. Secretary Joseph Parry, of the state board of horticulture spent last evening in the city. Lorln Farr and his daughter, Mrs. John Gay, have returned from a trip In the east. During their trip they visited Chicago. Atlanta, and the world's fair at St Louis. six-wee- ks Capital and 8urplua, Well The season when you do not like to cook very much. You only have to warm up our prepared soups and they are ready for dinner. Franco-Amarica- n Soup par can .'.15c and Van Camps Condensed can P I 25c I Soup joe Campbells Condensed Soup Pr can $225,000.00. First National Bank OGDEN, UTAH DAVID ECCLES, President. THOMAS D. DEE, JOHN PIXGREE, Cashier. JAS. F. BURTON, Assistant Cashier. Vice-Preside- nt DIRECTORS: David Eeclss Thomas D. Dss Geo. H. Tribe Barnard Whits W. W. Riter John Watson Adam Patterson Josoph Clark st- High Class Vaudeville FOR JELLIE8 TRY Bromangalon, 2 pkgs. for Jollyoon, par pkg Jelly O, per pkg (ALL FLAVORS.) 25c 124. 338 TWENTY-FIFT- YOUNG, 8tI H Proprietor and Manager THE WEEK OF MAY OUR BIG TOM . 301 VAUDEVILLE- - SHOW. HEFROU The Marvelous One I IDAIHIA 10J Theater Lyceum Family J. H. Naturally Sparkling i0o( EDGAR JONES CO. Phono And at the same time enjoy the exhilarating effects of drinking iQc (In Every Variety.) one-eigh- th -- & Bhos.1 PERSONAL who bought Stratton's Respectfully solicits the accounts of in mine Independence Colorado, paying there-lar-s banks, for the sum of ten milllion dollars, are suing viduals. mercantile firms and Indithe Stratton estate in the federal court at St. We pay Interest on time deposits. Louis for a recovery of six million dollars, on Ample resources, courteous treatChamLpan,C' The greenbacks, to the amount of 346,- - the ground that that the mine only proved to ment superior service. be worth four millions. 000,000 of dollars, constitute a Of course, courts have their own peculiar and a'Vers bearing debt of the government. They pass an4 te those .ica settling questions; but V(aJ as current money for their face. Thev are a man with horse sense would ordinary plain better than interest bearing bonds for two ask: Would.the Englishmen have restored reasons: First, they save the country from to the Strattons ten million dollars if the ne had proved to be worth paying more than eight million dollars per twenty mil- annum of interest; and, second, they serve as U0118? If not, there is no justice in the The Week of May 30 caV tbe courts already having de- money constituting nearly of the t' ..tire circulation and aiding the poop,, in- calculablv in all the channels of commerce. Was it worth while to spend four weeks iAMM0KDl friends are with of a time and take seventy-nin- e .. inquiring ballots in the Performances fearsome anxiety, as to Moyles Illinois Republican Afternoons and Evenings convention, merely for the caiia j sake of picking out a loser? Admission - - Ten Cents non-intere- J. Bcht S. wt not t0 . - of production. These snaps usually go to the big department stores in New Y ork, Chicago and St. Louis. This Season They Come to Ogden and Salt Lake City, One manufacturer and one jobber unloaded to us. The first lot lias forty dozen large dress shapes in white and champagne tljat were made ud during the montli of May. LATE STYLES I It also had dozen assorted shapes in other colors, and an equal amount of twenty children s blocks in Milan braids. These goods usually retail up to $4.50. We promise not to ask over $1 for any of them. Some will be so!d as low as 25 cents, and, by the way, it costs about $3 dozen to per block them. In one sense you would get that hat for nothing. Another lot has forty dozen Trotters, ready trimmed, in the new Tricornes, Turbans, Automobile and Worlds Fair Sailors. Regularly these goods sell up to $C and $7.50 each. We shall not ask vou over $2 for any one of them, perhaps only $1 for the one you want. They have those broad crowns and- wide brims; are trimmed with ribbons and velvets or belts and buckles, in new braids. If you buy these hats in a regular way by the dozen, in New York City, for less than $21 per dozen we will make you a present of ours. Our price will be $L each up. J11 untrimmed rough straws you are accustomed to paying $1 for will be 2o cents and 50 cents. They come in white, brown, navy, castor ?imPa8ne shades. Those Cuban braids, shaped in long front wide bell crowns, will go at 50 cents and 75 cents, usual price $1.25. lle?tra quality large shapes you have liked so well at $2 to $3.50 will be offered, untrimmed, for $1. Plain sailors, with silk bands, leather sweat lining, worth $1, will be 50 cents. Some of the same shapes that sold in New York for $39 per dozen, retailing at $5, will be offered for $1.25. Lag Dancer. MISS RICE Lithia Water A pure, delicious, appetizing Tabls Water. It enables you to oat and properly di- gest and assimilate your food. Makes wholesome soft drinks. Harpist LA CROIX . Comedy Juggler, THE GREAT LA RENO FAMILY Heavy Lifting, Etc. BABY LA RENO r.J.Kiesel&Co. 8ongs. UTTLE ELLEN Distributors . Lightning Buck Dance. THE JANETTS Royal Marionettes. T. MEYERS Cornet THE GREAT COMEDY FARCE Wanted A Wife, EDISON'S MOVING PICTURES. ILLUSTRATED SONGS. ADMISSION - . . 10 CENTS |