OCR Text |
Show Murray Eagle, Murray, Utah PLAN SPRING PLOWING , . Sally Sez Hy with use of ''Caterpillar" Tractor oldest and leading track-typ- e Jinttn tractor. Prominent farmers owe success to these machines. Write for descriptive catalogs, it ml ; V' Vrn-- " 'W ("PROSPERITY lHP ISSvsUT'" RETURNING DON'T THROW- - 'Th-Kv- M- " ' " '' ME Landeg Tractor & Equipment Co. Salt Lake Cilj and Tremonton, Utah t lis The West h,8 fc many years. I hav"! education here. married and farmed C raising my children W made 2 w Intermountain Caterpillar i' THIS WEEK'S PRTij1 ' Proper Ventilation The best way to entilate a room is to open a window top and bottom or one window at the top and an other on the opposite room at the bottom. my suDnorf rr , ut proves to my advanw superior ' ; goods at MRS- - fi . side of the Send for ci.. FRER Contain. Many Feed on Acorns The acorn crop is appreciated not only by small animals but by bears and deer as well. Scriptural Pm.nJ "Nearer, y My God, xuuiiueu upon a story i of Gent The exnrestdnn 270 SO. WEST TEMPLE Everything in Canvas 100 paireTNT? Addrea. Salt Lake Cfo eighth chapter SPERETENT&AWNINGCo. Life often seems a "bit" unfair, To one who's crippled, or "in a chair", But there's an ease for every care, And helping hands our fate will share. PATRONIZE HOME INDUSTRY V' A. P. Hij dance" is a line Goods old, Cheese Long Popular Cheese is the form in which milk can be preserved for years. It is of ancient lineage, There are 350 varieties of it known to be made in the world. ty "J from Lord Byron. Aak Tour Dnttm APEX J ASPS AN INTERMOUNTAIN Problem Is J to Co'J Feeling that the a living is not a pleasar S ' worl-- .'r J. Still in Force The law of compensation never fails. The less important you are the more important a kind nature enable you to feel.- - San Francisco "Bargain and Corruption.!" CNy L LIMB CO. ARTIFICIAL Artificial Limb when Trussti Brace Arch Support Crulchca Elastic Houory Extension Shoot Established in Salt Lak In 1908 Ph. Wan. 264 Satisfaction Guarantied 135 W. Third So. I Bait Lake City, Ut. Chronicle. j it comes ? ' to maii .J5 No woman ever man. She merely does work for the comnletf,. s Angeles Times. t-- On Music Music is the most aristocratic of all the arts, inasmuch as it is the Walter J. Damrosch, conductor, greatest refiner of human emotions. CLAUDE NEON i A if F.i.ectrical Products Cc 1048 So. Main Too Expensive Must Finish in a Hurry With modern methocMHi Many an enthusiast has moments 'Tardon me," said the golfer, as cremation took place when he wishes he had budgeted his blah. Lafayette Journal and he caught up to the members play- matory at Working, ue Z2 Courier. ing ahead of him. "Would you mind in 1885. if I played through? I've just heard Cl that my house is on fire." Kansas weeivt-VW- iUU A Pr ft City Star. for,-50-w- ord w YOUR WOOL splitter" and Lincoln himself set current a nuro bcr of dignified political maxima that were adopted as slogans by the orators, such as "A 'KeepCoot withCoolidge By ELMO SCOTT WATSON V Unit tlit- Presidential coiiiimlstt is beginning to warm up, the sloganeers f will Sufi! be busy Inventing apt and catch words with which to clianu the ear of the voter. Already senatorial groups In both parties have chosen from those submitted In n recent contest mottoes which they hope will advance the cause of their standard bearers the Iemocrats with their "Hee-hawWe're coming back!" nml the ItepuU- licans with their "Prosperity Is IteturniiiK Ieti't Throw It In Keverse!" And nlready there are dissenting opinions to tho value of both slogans, both of which have been characterized ns uninspired and uninspiring." So It would seem that there's still a chance to coin e pliraso which will play Its part In electing our next President and, If we may Judge by past history, that flogan may be brought Into being fit the must unexpected time nnd under the most unexpected circumstances any time between tow and November S. How potent a fclogan may bo In winning for a Presidential candidate (and also for losing one!) Is easily seen by tin examination of Amer ican political history. The first effective use of the campaign slogan was nway back lu when the ItepubUcnn party (which later became the I'emocratlc) raised the cry of "Kpial rights for nil; special privileges fur none!" In protest ecaltt the aristocratic tendencies of the led-rrallparty nnd swept Thomas Jefferson Into ollice over John Admns, who was a candidate for re election. Then followed 21 year of rule by the "Virginia dynasty" Jefferson, Madison and Monroe and the Federalist parly disappeared from the icene, leaving only the P.opnblienns, who now called themselves Ietnocrals, with various factions within the party. In 121 there were four outstanding candidates John Qulncy Adams, Monroe's secretary ef state; William Crawford, Ms secntnry of the treasury; Henry ("lay, n member of the Imuc of representatives, and Andrew Jackson, n member of the senate.. In the election Jackson led In b'th the popular and the electoral vote but did not have n maSo the election was thrown Into the jority. bouse ef representatives and there Clay threw Ms support to Adams, resulting In his election. Whi n the new President Adams offered Clay the post of secretary of state, Jncfesoti adherents raided the cry of "ltargaln and Corruption P They kept that slogan warm for four yearn and In the election of ISHS It helped Jackson defeat Adntns and sent hint to the White House, there to stfiy for o'uht sears. In the meantime the Whig party bad Iwen formed but Its strength In the 1VJ2 can palirn was divided and Jackson gnln wns on ay winner. When "Old Hickory" was through with being Prrsiii'i)t he passed Ids mantle along to his secretary of state, Martin Van Buren, who Itieted In 1ku over four Whig candidates, one of them, William Henry Harrison, Then came the famous campaign of 3Jirt when n slogan very definitely won fin election, This time one of the defeated Whig cnndhlMes of the previous eloc tlon was swept Into ollice on platform of slogan nnd so fit1'. Affairs had gone badly for Van llurcn during Lis four J ears. They had been four years of "continued executive autocracy, of undiminished Official partisanship, of Increasingly violent interference with the fiscal system of the tint Inn, of unrelenting Administrative Abuse of power." There had been ft punk-- and Van Huron Was measures which micht upset the financial stability of the nation. Then, too, this Presi-Cewin was supposed to be n upholder of - N ! sf s tf ht House Divided Against Itself Cannot Stand" and "Slavery Is a Moral, Social nnd Political Wrong." .Grant's famous "Let Us Have Peace" was used to good advantage ns a slogan in electing the "Man from Appomattox" but the corruption " He Kept Us Out of Yarl" which marked his two administrations provided thepemocratic opponents of his successor, Hayes, democratic ideals had become considerable of an with the best possible type of slogan. So "Til-dearistocrat. and Reform" echoed throughout the camSo when the Whigs nominated the type of mau paign In ISTd as a powerful rallying cry for the that Andrew Jackson had once been a frontiers- Pemoerats. By all the rules of slogan logic, the man, an Indian tighter and a military hero, the brevity and the force of that slogan should nation wns ready to turn (to state it paradox- have won for Tiblen hut election boards and an ically) from n Pemocrat who was nn aristocrat electoral commission decided otherwise. to a Whig who was a democrat. Unwittingly a In the campaign of IS! there was a case of I'emocratlc newspaper gave the Whig candidate history repeating Itself In that, Just as In the the greatest boost It could possibly have given case of Harrison and the Whigs in 3 S 10, Clevehim. Sneering nt his intellectual caliber (which land and the Pemoerats profited by a blunder admittedly was small) it said, "Give him a barrel made by the opposition. In Hint year Blaine of cider in a log cabin the remainder of his was the Republican candidate nnd his Presilife." dential aspirations were favored by Ids nickAnd what a godsend that was to the Whigs! names of the "Plumed Knight" and the "Rupert Immediately the log cabin and the hard cider of pthate" as well ns by the tuneful quality of barrel became their symbols and Harrison's In- the rallying cry of "Blaine, p.laine, Blaine of dian fighting record furnished them the rinsing Maine." These were offset, however, somewhat war cry of "Tippecanoe and Tyler, Too!" Just by "Nosey P.laine," "The Tattooed Man" and for good measure they threw In a few pointed "Jim, the Penman," the latter referring to the faremarks at Van Daren, such as "Van, Van is n mous Mulligan Letters. Used-UMan" and "With Tip nnd Tyler Weil But the fatal blow to his chances was struck Bust Van's Bller." They also anticipated the when an enthusiastic Blaine supporter, Rev. It. "full dinner nail" appeal to the voter with "Van's It. Rurehard declared In a speech that all conPolicy: Fifty Cents a Pay and French Soup; scientious Americans should vote the RepubOur Policy: Two Pullars a Pay and Boast lican ticket because the Pemoerats stood f.,r Beef." Blaine was "Rum, Romanism nnd Rebellion. Four years later the campaign witnessed not present nt the time but did not hear him disonly the appearance of the first "dark horse" In tinctly onongh to realize the gross error nnd a Presidential campaign but also another telling to repudiate this slur upon the religious belief slogan. The "dark horse" was James K. Polk of of millions of Americans. So the slogan which renties-e- e nnd the slogan was "Fifty-FouForty tho Republicans had attempted to tack on the or light!" At that time the United States was Pemoerats proved to be a boomerang and aided Involved In two disputes, one with Mexico over In defeating their candidate. Cleveland's first campaign contributed "The Texas and the other with Great Britain over the of Pesttny" nnd "Tell the Truth" to the Man stood for The pemoerats country. Oregon of the Oregon country and re annexa- slogan stock, both of which had a strong appeal tion of Texas." The Fifty-FouForty or Fight" to the voter. The tariff campaigns were prolific with slogans represented the northern boundary line which the United States dinaanded degrees, 40 minamong the niot telling ones were "Prelection utes, north, latitude. What vve actually got and Prosperity," "Free Trade anil Pauperized (and not by fighting either, but by arbitration) Labor" and 'Tree Trade ajid the Pestrtictlon of was 49 degrees. So the slogan didn't mean so American Industries," which the Mark much after the election, but it did play a vital Hanna boiled down Into the slogan part in deciding the election In Folk's favor, as of "The Full Pinner Pall." did the slogan "Polk and Texas; Clay and No William Jennings Bryan, who Is associated In most Americans' memory with Clay, Tllden and Texas'' in regard to the Texas question. In the war with Mexico which followed so soon Blaine as men "who Just missed the Presidency," after Polk's election one of our victorious gen- bad a strong slogan strong in Its brevity and erals was Zachnry Taylor and from nn Incident Its capability of being easily remembered In his In the battle of Buenu Vista came a slogan "Sixteen to One." Rut it wan't strong enough which helped elect Taylor President In IMS, It to win the election for him the first time he was the famous "A little more grape, Captain tried and he never was able to get another Bragg" which struck the popular fancy as being which brought him nny nearer to the White Just what a great military commander would say House. Sometimes a slogan will have a "kick back" under tho circumstances. What he actually did sny on that occasion was the laconic "Give 'cm after it has Accomplished Its purpose. There Is belli" But that didn't matter so much ns the no doubt but that "He Kept Us Out of War" j fact that the combination of the "grape" slogan iieipeu re eicci v mxirow Wilson In lPM, Atll and his popular nickname of "Old Bough and then fate decreed that with six months n'fter Beady" (so reminiscent of "Old Hickory" and Ids election we should be "In" and not "out" of "Old Tippecanoe") had mailt the same appeal as war. "Too Proud to Fight" was nti'iiher phrase the Jackson combination and the Harrison com- that haunted hint. bination of slogan and nickname. As for the slogan of recent years, they ore too In the same year was born a slogan that cry, familiar to most of us h, need much cmmieM talllred In popular phraseology the most fateful America turned "Rack to Nr.t't,;,)cV" In American was It Movement "Free with Warren G. Harding In BOX In 1021 history. when Soil, Free Speech, Free Labor nnd Free Men," the Pemoerats impel that It was restless taken from ft plank In the platform of the Free Republican misrule and hot for a chntiL'e under ih..v Soil party of si the forerunner of the Bepnh-llcn- learned that It had decided to "Keep with ' nnd nominated that elected Abraham t'ooli.le-- Insuad of vole for party "RHtor pnv The Stirling campaign of isi;, With I .avis." U loim the Lincoln in Pemoerats, wcrie was fruitful In slogans, ns It was one of the bit- brown derby nnd singing "The terest In our history, Among them were, "Mil- Vork" asked America to p Sidewalks of New 'icht member p lions for Freedom, Not One Cenr for Slavery." Years of Wall Street" and to MltIn "Gh, "Intervention Is Plsunioti." "Popular Sovereignty a Chance" But Instead f h?edini t,U and National Union," "Free Homes f,,r Free America voted for "Hoover nnd Pros,,Pri!3. Men," "The Constitution nnd the Union. Now What slogan America will be repeating thj and Forever," "Bet Liberty Bo National and year will depend upon who h nominated at tl(, Slavery Sectional," and scores of others, on both two conventions jn Chien m xt June and which sides of the slavery controversy, In similar ap- Will be the of the two slogans Will be de better pealing strains. Numerous catch ptirneg were elded at the poll In November. woven about tin title "Old Abe" and "The Hall- n r r 5-- vote-gettin- rilcal paid CAN BE EXCHANGED FOR FINE WOOLEN MERCHANDISE MEW WRITE Original Utah Woolen Mills BUT article should use mane Goods above. Send l.AKK CITY Door Hinges Metal door hinges should be washed frequently in warm soap suds and there will be far less of drastic polishing. They should be wiped dry after each washyiff and then rubbed with oil to prevent rusting. YiCO to Inv u)iubi iI5ox 1313, Salt LW your story appears column you will Ci'" ;' receive check for V j". Free From Carbon Briefly Told Hasty impulse manages things badly. &; your si tain i roaucis MOTOR OIL , 1Z oa Inters? a1 1 W. N. IL Wl S. L. ADVERTIS in! MM9! "the yioAem Vaul Revere TPS a far cry to the hcrald-Mn- g methods of Revolutionary days but the dauntless spirit of getting the news to all the homes of the people is the same! tidings of n e w desirable products at the same time. The result is immediate and wide diffusion of knowledge about the thincs that make lite modern, happy and ful!.rp And what is more, adver- - hm tising has set up standards of truthfulness that establish mt confidence and secure quick JEf,! acceptance of worthy service! and products. Manufactcr- - C7' ers, merchants and buyers, all j reap the rewards of our flex nit Time was when a new style woman's gown or improved farm implement spread from town to town by the slow medium of rumor. The lady "out west" heard the decree of fashion months after the lady on Broadway had made her debut in the ible system of distributing latest creation. and selling. i f1 But today, how all that is Yes, advertising spreads f"1 Main Street of the the news, quickens desire. y0W1 changed! " country's remotest village guides in the choice, and moves abreast of New York's influences to the buyer'if smart Fifth Avenue. Thanks advantage the price that"-"- . to the speed and efficiency of is paid. Let advertising advertising, all the people . . the guide to all your everywhere get the glad . cnases. N p'' ... UTAH STATE PRESS ASSOCIATION in cooperation with SALT LAKE ADVERTISING CLUB War-wear- j ln JJ (') n.i.-t.'..- Advertising Builds Business and Protects the ConsuA L |