OCR Text |
Show DAILY UTAH STATE JOURNAL OGDEN, UTAH, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1904. Hearst Writes Eloquent Plea for the National Democracy Randolph Hearst prealdent Rational Association of Demo-ltl- c clubs, haa written the following inter-t- o that la of general public people: American the of your association I A prealdent lna you of the great opportunity Itaelf to all Demo-I- n ekieh presenta election and urge coming the and untiring activity special you until the now cloning of from grgy ta tki P011- -The people of the United States are once more to express Jyauyb the national vote the natlon-j- j conscience and the national opln-jg- ei on government of the people. I hope that every official and every of every club in our jgdftdual member do all' that he can will cHodation more than ever before to promote belad expound the Interests and the democJeffersonian iefs of genuine -- net- 1 call upon all members of the cluba u begin earnest campaign work to reorganise where is necessary and especially u respond promptly and energetically come t, (very suggestion that may tom the national management of the Democratic party. 1 have offered my services and those g my newspapers to the managers of Ac Democracy, and insofar as I have fdt Justified I have offered the much pester influence of the National of Democratic dubs, pledgiof all the ng the honest ambers to further effort on the lines in which A that genuine Democracy s majority of the American people hereor-pnlssti- on nn lm reasons why the of the United States should inert themselves and work energetically In this campaign. nt First and foremost, there is the duty before us all we must restore the government of this countfor ry to the hands of the people shorn and by whom the government vu created. Ai Democrats we are interested especially this year in repudiating and disproving by earnest, sincere work the charges made against us., . . The president of the United States, Is his formal letter of aceptance, calls a. iH Democrats hypocrites and He says that they are compelled to improvise their convictions, ml that it is no wonder they forget their convictions over night. He declared in his speech to the committee that notified him of Ms nomination, that the Democratic party believed In nothing In particular, and that luch beliefs as it had were simply based on a desire for office and could be changed to suit the shifting There are special Democrats per-une- tlme-erver- "It Is the duty of the National Association WWWWWW the ordei of corporations. The Democratic party has a great respect for vested rights It has also a great hatred of vested wrongs, no matter how long or respectable their antecedents. Democrats believe In the statemente of the platform that 'the rights of labor are certainly no less 'vested, no less speech Issued by Republican Judges on sacred" and no less inalienable than the rights of capital.' Democrats denounce the exportation without process of law of men and women from the etateworking of Colorado or from any other part of American soil. The Democracy detests all kinds of anarchy, and especially that which puts the executive of a state, backed by the militia, above the laws and above the courts. Democrats believe In handling the people's money as carefully as an Indivdual would handle his own, spending any amount usefully In the real Interests of the people to whom the money belongs, not one dollar extravagantly for the subsidising of railroads for Instance, or the payment of extortionate prices to brasen agents of organised plunder, such as the representatives of the Armor Plate trust. The Democracy believes in putting the thieves out of the postofllce and all other branches of public service, from the U. S. senate all the way down. The Democrats believe tbat public property Is public property, and that not even the occupant of the White House should turn into private yachts or make of the officers and sailors of the navy the domestic servants of the president's household. The Democratic party believes in expansion it Is a party of expansion, as Jefferson was Americas greatest expansionist But It Is opposed to imperialism. It believes that those that come under the American flag should be treated as American, they should be made to share all the privileges of Americans, and not treated as conquered subjects, to be ruled by the personal favorites of a personal president The Democratic platform says: 'We denounce protection as a robbery of the many to enrich the few, and Democrats mean exactly what the platform says. They know that through protection the trusts rob the public, workingmen and businessmen alike. And Democrats, if elected, will find a way to pull away from the trusts their protecting cloak the tariff. The Democratic party believes In spending the national money to Increase the wealth of the nation and of the indivdual. In the building of the Isthmian canal, which will bring closer together the east and the west, put a check on the extortion of railways and multiply by two the defensive power of our navy. "The Democracy believes in national Improvement by the reclamation of arid lands; supplying homes for millions of dtlxens in the future and an Increased area to the essential wealth producing sections of the country. Becauses It opposes corruption and the substitution of cash zor the will of the people, the Democratc party fa men-of-w- ar members of the of Democratic and of all Democrats to unite h proving that the Democrats have principles, and permanent principles. "We should unite to preach our Democratic beliefs rom now until diction day and to vote for those Principles on that day. "The Republican party, which now calls Democralta men without prin-dpl- ei or honor, praised in its first national platform two men our our history, coupling them together Wash-otfo- n and Jefferson and declared In fcwr of restoring the action of the federal government to the principles The Washington and Jefferson. Democracy must prove that, unlike Republican party, it still adheres Wy. as in the past to the principles f (Mbs Jefferson; that it means to one hundred years ago, to the doctrine of equal rights for all and special privileges for none; while Mr. Roosevelt' party and Mr. Roosevelt, with every appointment in his gift bestowed on sonii- trust puppet, hold to the doctrine of snci'liil favors for those who can and will pay. WILLIAM RANDOLPH HEARST. New York. - SHE REALLY KNEW. Anna Shlegelmllch of Douglas, Wit., solved a great problem for herself the other day, and Incidentally set at an example which many of her alstera may follow with profit, should occasion require. Anna Schlegelmilch't young man was so bashful that he could not bring himself to the point of standing up long enough before witnesses to be married. He was a young man of the best ixtsslble Intentions, and meant to do right, but time and again he had She dlsapimlnted her at the altar. knew his falling, but she also recognised his virtues, and because she felt that he would be a good husband could she ever get him, she was determined to be patient, even at the cost of embarrassment and no small amount of humiliation. Mrs. Schlegelmllch had made at least a dosen wedding cakes that were never used as they were Intended to be used. The best room had been decorated for the happy event at least a dozen times. Friends were invited to be present at the ceremony so often that they came to regard the Invitations as the order of the day. All the arrangements for the wedding were made over and over again, and every detail was attended to, but at the laet moment the expected bridegroom wai absent. He Just could not screw Ms courage up to the ordeal, and It was his practice to start for parts unknown on hi" wedding days. A few days ago he turned up at the young woman's home again and once more asked her to name the wedding day. Thla time she simply put on her hat, took him by the arm, marched him to the marriage license office, then to the minister, and before he realised what she was doing the thing was done, and, of course, he was the happiest young man In Douglas. There were no cards; no flowers, no witnesses beyond those required by law. There was no cake, no music; no dance. The young woman conducted everything on purely business lines. She had reached the point where sentiment had to be dispensed with for the sake of all concerned, end everybody In Douglas is ot the opinion that If she had not taken thla course some other girl would, sooner or later, have taken him away from her by doing with him precisely ae she has done. Young men, as a rule, keep their wedding engagements but young men MjUgule fear th wedding ordeal. It Is no secret In the sex that many y&ung men who are now single would be only too glad to be married if the young women In whom they are interested would only be willing to wed on the Anna Schlegelmllch plan. Chicago Inter Ocean. i The Wages of Sin Follow Even the Flying Automobile i Of the five persons Injured in the uutomubile accldeit on Jerome avenue early yesterday one, Mrs Kate Wadsworth, may die. None of the oth- ers la seriously hurt. It was one of the three deud, Albert Noyes the driver, who took the party out He sneaked away with his emmachine on last Thursday ployer night for a little private auto ride with a picked-u- p party of convivial friends The trip ended under the wheels of a locomotive, with three of the party dead and five hurt. Never waa death more sudden. One moment they were laughing and singing with a mirth that was not entirely due to youthful spirits. A second later they were being ground to pieces The machine, going at top speed, was driven over a thirty foot bank on to a railroad track. At the moment when It struck, a New York Central passenger train smashed Into the wreckage. This Is the list of casualties: The dead: Noyes, Albert, East Eighty-fir- Cockran, st Mary, years old, of street. 28 25 Eighth avenue. years old, SSI 110 on the roud and unbottled more enonto When they turned thusiasm. Macomb's Dam Bridge the tender tried to hall them, but they were gone like a shot. Somewhere, away out toward West Chester, they turned back and, still scorching, made for Manhattan again. Before they left there wae another drink ail around. Noyes headed down Sedgwick avenue to cross Macomb's Dam Bridge. Jerome avenue meets Sedgwick avenue at a sharp angle and the latter turns In to bridge. A tag end of Jerome avenue continues on straight for perhaps half a block, when the thoroughfare eude abruptly in a thirty-fo- ot stone embankment above the tracks of the railroad. Just across the track is a signal tower. That half block Is used only as a switching placa for trolley cars, and to prevent careless drivers from running down to grief there is a stout rail fence above the embankment with an arc light to ahow it by nlghL Policeman Tracey and a car crew on the siding heard the auto chugging down Sedgwick avenue. The passengers were singing and the machine was going like mad. It reached the turn and before they could yell a warning It had passed and shot down the blind alley toward the fence and Strobel, Mrs Isabelle, 25 years old, wife of George Strobel, a policeman. The injured: Llevlerll, Jeannette, 18, 2262 Fifth embankment. The car men and the policeman saw avenue; badly bruised. Feres, Emma, 18, 209 East Eighty-fift- h that vision of sudden death;' the watchman In the railroad signal tower street; broken wrist, bruises. Spies Moses 80, 111 West Eighty-fift- h looked up and saw It; only the victims street, face smashed and Jaw bro- raced on unronscolus. They were ken. singing Just a fraction of a second beWadsworth, Moses Mrs Kate, 45 fore three of them were crushed to death. East Fifty-fir- st street; Internally .As tha signalman looked up and saw may die. Lately chauffeurs off for a lark In the autos headlights flash In his face, aaw the big machine tear through the machines borrowed from the employers have made the Riverside Casino fence and dive out toward the tracks, the southbound express, going forty-fiv- e In 110th street a kind of a hang-ou- t. miles an hour, flashed past Ms Noyes wo there often, drinking and He show- elbow. The machine, spilling the peo- dancing with the gang. ed up late Thursday evening with two pie ae It fell, landed on the very cowwomen. They went In, had a few catcher of the locomotive. Engineer Livingston saw a red drinks, and then Noyes got generous and offered to take every one In sight danger light flash from the tower, and In the same Instant felt a Jar which for a ride. Three girls accepted the Invitation made his engine shake, but he was unand the seata were packed when one der the bridge 800 feet beyond before Murphy, once a waiter at the place, his engine stopped. Th machine, a load of splintera and Joined them. but later a hanger-oscrap metal, hung from the cowcatchRoom for more gents?" he asked. said Noyes bring them er. A womans head, the face unSure, So Murphy, Mosea Spies and touched, a head dressed In a gay plumalong! Chnrlea Doran Joined the party. They ed hat, hung from the wreckage. He packed In any way, until they spilled dragged away a piece of steel, and the over the rails of the big touring car. head fell with It. It had been Miss They hRd a final atlrrup cup, and then Cockrans five seconds before. On the other side .of the track lay Noyes "sent her along" up toward the Mrs. Strobel, broken 'al'topleces and Bronx. In tha Somewhere Besides the four men there 'were Just breathing. Mrs Isabelle Strobel and her sister. wreckage waa the little that was left Emma Feres, the women whom Noyes of Noyes. The passengers streamed out of the had with him when he started; Mary Cockran, a pretty little restaurant car to help. They found a woman runcashier; Jeanette Llevlerll and Mrs. ning up and down hysterically. It was Kate Wadsworth. Noyes wss out .for Miss Peres, least Injured of all the BOOK BINDING. Spies, Mrs. Wadsworth and a time and began by taking the regular womefi. number plate off his machine and sub- Doran were strung along beside the For 800 feet the The new plant of Wilcox A Woody stituting a fake number, lettered on track unconscious. roadway waa strewn with splinters. ' mw open for business All kinds of cardboard. Hank books and loose leaf work. 2376 They shot ont toward the Bronx at The locomotive wheels bumping over a terrific speed. Twice they stopped the Ruto wreckage, had ground Noyes Washington avenue. all to pieces and cut Miss Cockran In two. Half way down the line they found her corset, torn away from the body. Mrs. Strobel was In such a condition that It was a wonder that she lived at all. She died half an hour after she was removed with the other injured to the Fordham hospital. Murphy, the ninth member of the party, could not be found. The police searched for houra. thinking that hla body might have been toaaed away from the track. No one of the party knew who was Noyes employer. The broken machine, an electric touring car of French make, constructed by Leffebre ft Son, Seine. France, wae chewed into thousands of bits. The batteries survived It all, however. A general alarm from police headquarter brought no claimant Even Noyes wife, who appeared ld with her child late yesterday to take the body away, did not know hla employer's name. He worked somewhere In Jersey, he said. It wae a new Job. He was not drunk, I know. Albert never drank. He was just driving too fast. The identification number on the machine was of no help. Instead of the customary metal figures, the masubscribers past month chine bore a pasteboard sign with the number 10.972 printed on It In ink. That P mber belongs to Boa-maft Co., of 209 East Eighty-fift- h sireet Theyve missed no machine and dont know Noyes. The other bodies were claimed later THE FOLLOWING LI8T WILL CONVINCE THE In the day. Mrs. 'Strobel was the wife MERCHANT8 OF OGDEN AND THE 8TATE of Parolman George Strobel of tbe Fourth precinct They have been sepTHAT THE JOURNAL WILL GIVE TO THEM arated for two years. Miss Peres, who : BETTER ' 8ERVICE THAN ANY PAPER IN THE was Injured In the smash up, waa her WE HAVE THE PAPER DELIVERED 8TATE. sister. BY CARRIER AT THE H0ME8 IN THE FOLStrobel appeared at Coroner O'Gor-tnan- 's SETTLEMENTS: office In the afternoon and askLOWING ed to see his wifes body. The depuFARR WEST, NORTH OGDEN, ties warned him that It was In shockPLAIN CITY, PLEASANT VIEW, ing condition, but he persisted. When the fare waa uncovered he knelt beside -- WILSON. HARRISVILLE, the coffin and said; Oh. Bella! The wages of sin are IN ALL THE OTHER WARDS OF THE COUNdeath! New York Sun. MAIL A HEAVY CIRCULATION. TY WE HAVE Saved Hie Life. IN DAVIS COUNTY WE HAVE A LARGE AND J. W. Davenport Wlngo, Ky wr INCREASING SUBSCRIPTION LIST DELIVERED June 14, 1902: I want to tell BY CARRIERS. I believe Ballard's Snow Llnln saved my life. I was under the tr IN MORGAN, BOXELDER, CACHE AND 8ALT ment of two doctors, and they told LAKE COUNTIES WE AL80 HAVE A HEAVY one of my lungs was entirely g and tha other badly affected. I CIRCULATION. had a lump In my side. I don't tl that I could have lived over months longer. I was Induced t friend to try Ballards Snow Llnln The first application gave me relief; two fifty cent bottles c ms sound and welL It is a won ful medicine and I recommend It 2S&, B0&, j suffering humanity. For sale by George F. Cave. . n. OF OGDEN, UTAH perpetu-th- e kind of government which Wellington's courage and statesman-l- p created, which Jeffersons genius tinted and carried on. "Jbe Republicans who, since the is-- ff of their first platform above JJjrted, have changed from praise of wson to service of the trusts, must J made to realise in this campaign on the coming election day that I Democratic party still has its principles, that It has the to fight for them and to win. The people of the United States are ocrats at heart, a vast majority of They do not put money above they do not believe that a which was established by all should be taken out of their lWople and turned over to a selfish few tie exploited for their own profit, "very member of our national as' 7tion of Democratic clubs will ren- t service to his party and. icrviJ1 ar mor Important, a great t the jj. advocating nation, by expounding earnestly from now tlon day principles and whlch constitute the force w r of Democratic party. .Unlike the Republican by the owners and represented Dem-t- f apologists, the r"n believe in the teachings fferson. They really believe what ben they advocate fun da -Democratic beliefs. b1Iev in those specific "irongly enunciated In the "jtiocfotlc platform at St Louis this "titiWent Roosevelt will read Hat P ntform he will see that he Is ,n nirt, !"PPoe linking that the partyhim la apologetic, feeVk I, kliWMCO?v,cton' willing to sacrifice to place. 'Jcri'ocratle hdom party elands for "e nr". of conscience end g nposes always stood, on freedom of the fed, T disgraced Colorado. St I, Qprri the Injitnctlon against free vor the election of United States sett1 by the direct vote of the people. The Democracy favors the admission of the territories of Oklahoma and Iiuli.m Territory, of Arisons and New Mexico, to the full powers of statehood. It believes that these communities; equal in character and intelligence to any others In the United States, should have the same rights and privileges a any other American community. The Democratc party demands the extermination of polygamy, the enforcement of the laws that protect the American home today and the American race In the future. The Democrats believe In a great navy, to be used solely for protection against aggressors. They oppose a great standing army which can be used against the people themselves. These, with a hearty pledged support of the Monroe doctrine, a demand that the service of the old soldiers be fairly and generously recognised, and s vigorous protest against the attempt of President Roosevelt to stir up race hatred as an engine of political advancement, constitute the main features of the latest Democratic platform, worded to meet the especial conditions and emergencies of the day. Back of this platform and above it stand the eternal principles of equal righta and of Just government that are the foundation of Democracy. These principles move and inspire the true Democracy of thla country. They are principles that cannot be Improvised or destroyed, for they are a part of justice itself and a part of the certain future. Democrats believe in a just distribution of the cost of government. For that reason ther demand an Income tax that shall put the burden upon those best able to bear it. Democrats believe that the people should control the national and municipal monolles. They believe that the people alone should own and control the public necessities in order to remain free Therefore they advocate national ownership of the railroads, the telegraph, and municipal ownership of the city streets, street railroads and of city necessities gas and electric light, as well as of water. Democrats believe with Jefferson in American Independence, equality and opportunity for all, special privileges for none. They realize that there cannot be national Independence while a few men control the national and municipal monopolies national necessities. The power which controls lifes necessities control people and the Democrats are determined that there shall not grow up within the government a power greater than that of the people. The members of the National Association of Democratic clubs should emphasize in their dlscuslsons these fundamental Democratic prlncples prlncipes that are permanent because they are based on truth and that are destined eventually to rule in the administration of this country. And while expounding the principles of the Democracy the Democrats should not fall to call attention to the difference between Thomas Jefferson's preaching of equal rights and the Republican partys practicing of special privileges. It Is a far cry from Jeffersons equal rights Ideas which the Republicans Indorsed In their first national conventions to the Hanna Idea of special privileges which the Republicans have ended by accepting. We Democrats hold now, as we did atom & four-year-o- I Kj&BS&saKBil Increase Our Jef-""ml- an vl-Jj- JF Subscription Books gov-vvnm- are Always Open ' to Advertisers and We Invite Investigation 1000 bona fide Increase in Ogden 500 Delivered in the Gty by Carrier for 60 cents a Month By Mail postpaid for $6 a Year or 50 cents a Month n |