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Show THE ENTERPRISE I&9S-0EMOC- - Ephraim, 1113PU1ILICAN $ TICKET. carre. no (rOVCANMEHT i$2i. ALL IRREVOCnOlX JfrZTTLtD. THE. 'S IRRMgtMLT' REPUBLICAN YEARS POUR WHICH INSURES US GCIRC JUDICIAL TICKET For Judge, 7th District, same: WM. D. LIVINGSTON, of Sanpeto county. For District Attorney, E. F. WOODS, of Emery county. SPEECH EPTRNCE STATE TICKET. OP 7 PARKER. C. Cutler of Salt Lake. Governor. .. ..John SINCE TN.tL RECLAMATION SERVICE, OHIN TRUST And THRIFT QUESTIONS ORE SENATE C. wee ronnns CUBAN $fFELY nt, I ft rHC Panama CANAL, PlflLLlPNE , MONEY, THE CHARLES W. FAIRBANKS. . fSRC, j'po'h- - Convalescent-pee- ls THEODORE ROOSEVELT. Vice-Preside- do. goo- - Utah CONG To'W-- L tm I 096- - OEM 0CA4CY UNiHFe Fcr President, For , 895- - (riT.usnr.n every 'Thursday ) - JIG PfNIC.COUMtKY PR 0. S. Tingey of Nephi. Justice of Supremo Court, D. N. Straup of Salt Lake. Treasurer.. James Christiansen of Richfield. Auditor.. ..J. A. Edwards of Brigham City. of Salt Lako Atty. General, M. A. Breeden Supt. of Schools.. ..A. ;0 Nelson ofof Manti. Logan. Congressman.. ..Joseph Ilowell II. P. Electors Alytonof Salt Presidential Y Secy, of State A. Miner of Salt Lako and L. Lake, J. Wade of Ogden. COUNTY M.0. STANDS MULE Democratic War Cry . A war cry of Democratic speakers in the campuign of 1892 was to tno effect that the proceeding Republican Congress had The cost the nation a billion dollars. to this charge wasYhat the country hud grown to bo a billion dollar TICKET. Abram Johnson of Mt. Pleasant and N. C. Christensen of Sterling. Moroni of D. Anderson Clerk 15. Treasurer J. M. Johnson of Spring City. Recorder Ilans Christensen, of Ephraim. Attomoy Lewis Larson of Manti. Sheriff John Knudsen of Mt Pleasant Assessor Herbert L. Smyth of Ftn. Green. Surveyor John L. Bench of Fairvihw. Supt. of Schools A. L. Larson of Ephraim. Commissioner, four year term Sidney S Sanderson of Fairview. Commissioner, two year term Henry D. For Representatives codU-ijUu- -- -- Rees of Wales. : Precinct Justice James L. Jensen. Precinct Constable 01 uf Thursby. wwBwwawnwwwwiBBi - n AAA AAA At iAi. LLt i You inut Register on Oct. 11, 12, 18 and'j; Nov. 1st mid 2nd or you can't vote at the November Election. g j 6 ANNOUNCEMENT ; The Republican County Committee has made arrangements with the Enterprise to vise this page from aow until election for all political matters. Beginning with this issue the committee is responsible for everything that appears on this page'and in the supplement. THE' PUBLISHER. Some Detoocrats pretend to see some en- couragemet in the Maine election. For Roosevelt ria doubt. The Rule or Ruin method will not work in Utah. The Kearns American party i)I discover : that fact on election day. country. Tho Democratic party when it came iuto power found that tne Republican was correct ancT that the business oi (he country could not bo handled along progressive litics for less money. 'Instead of profiting by that experience, however,, now comes Judge Parker, in a speech to Demo cratic editors, and challenges comparison in expenditure between the administrations of McKinley and Roosevelt and that of Grover Cleveland. The people will not befooled by any such cry where is tho comparison Will the Democrats ans were the question in tho Presidents letter of acceptance on this Let point? Totals are very misleading the Democratic oiators go into detail and tell us if they can where tho Republican expenditures have been wrong In telling of Republican expenditure will our friends please take into account National growth under Clevelands administration as well as under Roosevelts? One thing is certain the Republican party has not been compelledas was the Cleveland Democracy to issue upwards of four hundred millions of dollars worth of bonds in a time of profound peace to pay the running Again we expenses of the Government. is the where ask comparison? Comparison between a Democratic and a Republican adA ministration reminds us of a story. was crossijuestioning a Negro witness and was getting along fairly well until he asked the witness what his occupation was. Ise a carpenter, sab. What kind of a carpenter? They calls me a jack-lecarpenter. -- d g What is a jack-lecarpenter? He is a carpenter who is not a first class carpenter, sah. Well explain fully what you und.rstand a jack-le- g carpenter to be, insisted the g , lawyer. Boss, 1 declah I dunno how any mo cept to say hit am jes ter splain the same class an er diffunce twixt you first lawyer. Grover Clevelands reign was a jack leg administration while Roosevelts has 'been and is first class. . Two yeaxs ago Democratic orators , went. d FOR river. from ono end of this Stato to the other, telling people that Grover Cleveland was not a Democrat and refusing to have the of tho Stuffed Prophet saddled on to tho Democratic party. This these same are Grover praising year people and bis administration. It is pipe low on Bryan this year and high on Cleveland and Parker. Consistency, thou ait indeed a jewel in the Democratic ranks. Mal-Administ- ration Tho Tribune on Factions Tho Tribune seems to hae undergone quite a change of heart during tho past two years regarding factional tights and bolting. The following appeared in that remarkably consistent organ October 31, T902: ROOSEVELT ON REPUBLICAN HARMONY. President Roosevelt has done his party, and through it the country at large, a conspicuous service in his emphatic condemnation of factional fights in the Republican ranks. His first outspoken council for harmony was delivered, with a snap to it, to the Republicans of Texas, who were fighting among themselves for the Federal patronage He told them that tho ones who did the best work for the party as' a whole were the ones to be recognized, so far as purelv 'political appointments wero concerned, and that, the thing for all of them to do was to get together and all work to one'end of building up tbe party; that knifing should cease, and personal preferences bo sunk when necessary tor the general welfare. The president has now repeated that advice with emphasis, to the Republicans of the In discussing the State of Washington. factional difference among the Republicans there, ho said, I have no use for a man who cares more for the defeat of a member of his party, who belongs to another faction, than he does for tbe defeat of the common It is a golden text enemy, the Democrats. is idle to undertake It on party obligations. to carry out any given party policy if members of the party sacrifice the principles inIt is volved on tho altar of private hate. with in work men useless to try to harmony who are governed by some other motive than a common desire to see the triumph 'of the principles the party has adopted. Meet have no right to call themselves Republicans who refuse to support the principles of their party, and the candidates who represent those principles, but vote for the opposition. (Continued;on opposite-gage'.).- , |