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Show 2 HERE: Mr. With the MlIy $50.00 taste And the $25.00 purse See these hand tailored Rogers Peet suits Theyre just your kind $20 $35 ONE PRICE. 'and heartburnings. Just prior to the time the sin and disgrace of electing Mr. Kearns to the senate was committed, the Republican party of the state was harmonious. Now it is torn up by Internal dissentions and leading members of the party are looking with grave apprehension to the future, and assert that the senior senator is to blame for the condition which now exists. Instead of displaying broadmindedness and sound judgment, he has shown narrowness, bigotry and vindictiveness beyond anything known in the history of the state. Whether this is due to poor advice from trusted friends, or to ignorance, egotism and disregard of good advice, is a question, but the fact remains he has made more mistakes than all the other purported politicians of the state combined. He has not even shown the semblance of common sense, ignorance and egotism exuding from every pore of his ample corpus. Notwithstanding his great wealth, the prestige of the high position he holds and the power of the newspapers he controls, he has been losing ground daily from the day he was elected. He has shown himself to be utterly devoid of the chief idea of a successful politician that is, gratitude to the party and the people who on him the exalted office he is supposed to fill. It is well known how much he owes to the Mormon church for his advancement, yet eighteen months after his election 136,138 MAIN ST. he was discovered conspiring at the national capital and at home to defeat the election of a leading Mormon to the United States senate, and that, auwas too, at an election in which his own contested by the ceedings, ditor, anu finally dismissed at the re- seat was not in dispute. He did as much as any living man to disrupt quest of the policeman who paid all the Republican party of the state in the costs. These proceedings were in- 1896 by supporting Bryan and Bryan-lsm- . tended merely to obscure and compliYet the party forgave him and cate the main question, the validity of Sneets appointment, and had they conferred ). P, GARDNER, been prompted by motives of sincerity, they would have been instituted when the auditor held up the payroll nearly four weeks before. As these cases would have involved Sheets title to the chiefs office, it is quite apparent why they were not instituted earlier. Hemple was induced to lend himself to the scheme on the promise that Daveler, an employee of Perry Heath, and chairman of the fire committee of the city council, would secure his brother a position in the fire department, and he afterwards apologized to the auditor for his action while Siegfus was merely a stool pigeon for the Kearns contingent. The auditors defense throughout was that as a officer, he had a right to know who was the legally qualified chief of the police department before he could be compelled to honor a payroll purporting to be certified to by the head of that department, and on this defense he would have won in any court in the state. Thus was the famous Sheets case terminated and a deep laid scheme of Heath and Kearns shattered into fragments. As a result Mr. Sheets feels very sore and threatens to turn the Fifth precinct to the Democrats at the next election. Perry Heath merely smiles the same old smile, while Mr. Kearns is bitterness to the core and in revenge, through the Tribune, is working up a case of unlawful cohabitation against President Joseph F. Smith, to be sprung With glaring headlines about the time that President Roosevelt reaches Lit ah. Shades of Eula Wray! What next? quasi-judici- consideraelected him senator, for a was f he tion, of course, but still at the time known well given. It was was sinof his election that the party beet the cerely in favor of fosteringfirst opporsugar industry, yet at the with the tunity, instead of complying his secured who demands of those constituents his election, he betrayed inand voted against the beet sugar Cuban dustry in the matter of the of the reciprocity treaty. He boastsheld is by high regard in which he national other Senator Hanna and magnates of the party. Their regard is solely based on the fact that he is k pliant tool in their lands. He( hasnt sense enough to figure out al-a can policy for himself, and they ways rely on his voting as they tell him. In return, they give him a sop once in a while in the shape of an appointment tor some friend. & Jt Two weeks since. Truth published extracts from the Brooklyn Eagle's editorial expressions advocating the nomination of Cleveland for the presidency. Mr. Bryan, editor of the Com' moner, saw the same editorial, but he doesnt handle it in the same fashion. This paper printed it as a matter of news, but the twice defeated candidate for the highest office in the gift of the people simply uses it as an excuse for jumping on Mr. Clevelands political anatomy. But there is nothing new in what he has said. He simply reiterates the same old story about Grover bolting in 1896 and again in 1900. Bryan has, perhaps, a right to kick on Cleveland. Bryan only bolted Cleveland once, in 1892, while Cleveland has bolted Bryan twice. J & Mr. If Bryan had said anything new, Truth would have printed It, for Salt Lake City Brewing Cos. LAGER. BEER The Gem of the Intermountain Region." 3B3E2BO al o POLITICAL MELANGE. The results of the election of Thomas Kearns to the United States senate have caused the Republican party a long series of bitter troubles It Is apparent that Utah has become the dumping ground for a vast amount of cheap and Inferior quality of eastern beer which is selling below cost for the sole purpose of getting rid of it. It is spoiling on the hands of the manufacturers and rather than run it down the sewer, where it belongs. It is sent to Utah and palmed off on instead of quality. While reputation singling out no particular brand, we can truthfully state that the greater portion of imported beers comes within that category. Now, we are in position to offer the beer consuming public the finest quality of lager beer ever produced in the west- -a pure, wholesome tonic, at B.? brands. We do this to convince the J? prlce over the public that Utah can manufacture as fine a quality of beer as can be pro- nWere iQ be United States. Every day strangers traveling through our city, drink the beer of the Salt Lake City Brewing Co. and pronounce it superior to any they can find, either east or west of us. Wo deliver to any address in the city at 12.50 per case of two dozen quarts, case and bottles to be called for when empty, and we pride ourselves on prompt delivery, so do not fail to telephone your orders to No. 17. I10tlCe, l tCn cara ShCrui?aVdTtSd0beer day of irior Ldikc City Brewing Company JACOB MORITZ, General Manager duiiimuimimiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiui KRUG'S OMAHA BEER. Krugs Cabinet As nutritious as any English Porters or Malt Tonics, and a Connoisseur's delight. Krugs Extra Pale Light, and mild, and palatable, and appropriate on all occasions. Either of the shove brands delivered any part of the city. in The Old Resort, i 276 South Main Street. ADAM SNYDER. Proprietor. telephone toot r. QTTTTT7TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT7TTTT& Mr. Bryans statements are matters of news, probably more so of late than ever, for the Associated Press is not giving him as much space as it used to, and his paper does not have the circulation here it once had. But beyond going after Cleveland on the bolting proposition, there isnt any- thing worth printing. But Dr. McKel-vethe editor of the Brooklyn Eagle, has something new in his latest and strongest utterance. Really, if Cleveland should he nominated and elected the editor of the Eagle deserves any position he may ask for. He begins by saying: The Cleveland movement has now gone far enough to make y, plain that the Democratic party has something to substitute for the wholesale insanity of Bryanism and the fell reproach of Hillism. The man whose candidacy cost the loss of every northern state to his party can no more delude it or dictate to it The continued sway of the intolerable has been made impossible. Of course, the devils that are done for and done with, but do not know it, tear and hiss in their outcoming. Theirs is an instructive, even if a repulsive exhibition. They void their venom at those with whom they could do nothing and without whom nothing could he done. The American people have voted them down for ten years. They stood for the paramountcy of the lawless. The people voted for law. They advocated repudiation behind the word Silver. The people sustained solvency and honesty. They struck unclean palms with tariff panhandlers. The people preferred sincere protectionists to masked ones. Of course, they blame the effect of their own infidelities on those who held to the straight paths and to the true faith. It is always the same. The thief is always the railer at the judge. The arrested offender is always the contemner of the constable. & After stating once again that the way to Democratic supremacy is by the pathway laid out by Cleveland, the editor dips his pen into some real, bitter gall and proceeds to say: But all of It has not yet been stated. Bryanism and Hillism have been driven to Republicanism for d fen 8 a It is Republicanism which now Joins .with a bastard Democracy 1 trying to keep Bryanism and HilUs aliva It Is Republicanism, in its of ?ans and interviews, which is w that Bryanism is underrated and |