OCR Text |
Show straits for material to urge against Smoot when it Is forced to gore TRUTH THE LABYRINTH OF THE LAW. 9 Utah will have delegations to each . Gilmoros and Marine bands, all play- convention and that both delegations j15 e sam0 inuslc; the music that morning stars sang together on will be heard from is manifest from a creations dawn. Its harmony begins resume of the men who make them up. on the rocky coast of Maine and ech- If anything comes up in either that oes around tho world. Tho notes of bugles stir tho morning light in the gentlemen composing these delega- Pcrto Itico and thrill tho listeners tions believe is inimical to tho Inter- far away Philippines. Its jn ests of Utah, they will no doubt vig- - an anthem that will ring on and on orously oppose It If overruled they when every last one of us living to-aro C0ver0n cart will know that the sentiments of a not join tho chorus? Why not get Why majority of the people of the country on tho band wagon? were against them and they should Havent wo had trouble enough? I we been led astray by dcsign- Havent get on tho band wagon. mon cnS enough? Havent we Too long has this state been out of suffered enough; all of us? Of course harmony with her sisters. In the W0 iiave Then let us, one and all, Mormon grand chorus which is sung by the nation there has been a note of dis-- and Gentile, Republican and Demo-corIt Is time the meter and the crats say to ourselves this business rhythm were perfected and this fair has gone far enough; that from this commonwealth placed In full and com- - time on we are going to do as the balance of the country does, and wo plete accord with the others. Get on the band wagon. are determined we will get on tho The representatives of all the states band wagon, and territories of this Union are not men who want to trample on the riehts of others, and no declaration of policy will be made at either conven tion that has for Its ultimate end the enactment into statute of anything cal-- 1 Mr. n, jiagh jjaa neycr filed an culated to overturn any system of pol- application nor made any effort to so Ities or religion. cure the position of assistant postmas- Get on the band wagon. Let us rise up when all is done and ter, tho Ileraid to tho contray not- as Democrats or Republicans believing withstanding. In its anxiety to creato n the principles of our own parties. a 8mal IolltIcal nation tho Herald declare that In the coming battle at fhe polls we are going to grapple with as drawn upon the immense stock of each other in strife, imagination it always has on hand, sach believing he is doing the best Mr. Nash declares ho is not an appli-thin- g for the common good of all con- - Lsnt of v;or(1. lll!lt 'emed: that from this time on we never applied for it, cither perwill eliminate corruption from our r10 fections; that religious differences, sonally or by letter, and that so far or the lack of them, shall cut no fleure as he is concerned the Heralds story in our actions at the polls and that we. jg a jak0 constructcd out of nothing, every mothers son and mother's wlth n foundation in fact "If It Hap-in- g daughter of us. Intend rotlng accord-- -1 to the dictates of our own con- pens its in the Herald, that is to sciences, like the balance of the re-- say, sometimes, nubile. In other words, let us get on p, jfesgier will ho appointed as- 1 Postmaster In Salt Lalce This we? The musicians rny there have been playing the song of information comes from a reiiablo human liberty since the day when source. The appointment will bo rnado John Hancock spilled ink over three a)0ut July 1. Inches of space on the immortal de- claration. It was a small band at first and didn't amount to much more than The Bachelors Song, the aggregation of old chaps down at I one of the slates of the Argentine bachelors have to pay a line West Jordan, with their over shoulder Republic 1 a month up to the age of SO, of vn.1vn It cornets hut tuba ana rotary 6 a 2 ft month rom 30 t0 35, and has been increasing ever since until month after they reach the age of to.) now it Is a whole battalion of Sousa's, Since my twentieth birthday I had tried With no success to win a bride; My heart had been returned with thanks In October, 1901, while making imstrain its imagination as it has done provements on the Goldberg building. in this Instance. Truths article had South Main street, the tailor shop of no more connection with the Smoot John T. Buckle was damaged to concase than it had with the transit of siderable extent by the caving In of a Venus. wall, and the occupants of the clotho ing factory escaped serious injury only ROOSEVELT'S CANDIDACY. by a narrow margin. Buckle brought suit for damages. The action was inCommenting upon the campaign, stituted the agent of the owner the Boston News Bureau has this to of the against Goldberg building. The lower gay among many other things, the court has just decided for the defendappended being of interest because of ant, and the opinion is that Buckle its historical facts: sued the wrong man. It appears that Since the administration of the second Adams there have been twenty Goldbergs agent let the work to a contractor; that the contractor sublet presidential elections the one this also sublet In that it; that the year being the twenty-firs- t time there have been twenty presi- it. Buckle, of course, will appeal. If the appeal is sustained he will get dents, five of whom became such, not damages; if the appeal is not susby election, but by the death of the tained Buckle will sue some one else. elected presidents. But who to sue. That is the question. "Of the fifteen elected presidents If the letting of a contract releases the will undoubtthe during that period, eight were nomi- owner, contractor. release the If the subFour of the edly nated for letting releases the contractor, will Lincoln, the second subletting release the subnamely, Jackson, eight tractor? If the rule applies will not Grant, and McKinley were the fact that the second The other four, John Quincy Adams, a man with a pick and shovel to Van Buren, Cleveland and Harrison hired do the work release all save the unforwere defeated. tunate who was working by the day. This is of interest In view of the and if the identity of this individual fact that again this year the presi- canont be obtained will Buckle ever get anything for the damage done his dent will be a candidate for the windings and writh-ing- s as there is now no doubt that shop?of Verily, the law are as sinuous as the Mr. Roosevelt will be unanimously course of the serpent and a man who nominated at the convention to be bucks the statutes and the authorities held at Chicago this month. Tet in on tcrts has to be a hummer if he gets anything save a bill of costs. one sense this will not be a o for Mr. Roosevelt was never GET ON THE BAND WAGON. elected president, though he has served as such since the death of McTwo great national conventions will Kinley in 1901. He is one of the five be held shortly, one next week, the presidents of the United States who, other during the first week of July. being elected as vice presidents, The two will ehoSt represent the sentiments reached the higher office in the constitutional method through the death of the American people in relation to of presidents. He is the only one of matters political. Forty-fou- r states outthe five to be nominated for a fall side of Utah, four territories and the term, although Fillmore received a few votes in 1856, and Arthur made Hawaiian islands will be represented an unsuccessful campaign for the there in force. Every delegate to nomination in 1884. these conventions will be actuated by Judged by results, therefore, a desire to better the conditions of the Roosevelt is one of the ablest men who have appeared in the political country and its people. Get on the band wagon. life of this country. Although only 46 years old, he has been a candidate for mayor, governor, and vice president, and will soon be nominated m for president. He has been elected as ft governor and vice president. He has ft also served as chairman of the civil m service commissiaon and assistant m secretary of the navy, to say nothing ft All Refrigerators and lew Cream Freezers, Monday of his brief career in the army. He ft nnd week. Only 20 Refrigerators to sell. Come is the youngest man who ever served m m - : as president, and if elected in Noearlyvember, he will be the youngest man in to be elected to that position, and the only man, since Van Buren to be it in elected president after having been if . elected vice president. He has thus if TELEPHONE 1637 k broken many records. If he serves if if 9 Salt Lake City, Utah West Third South Street out a second term, he will leave office if in 1909 only 50 years old, and still if Adama, younger than Washington, Jefferson. Madison. Monroe, John Q. Adams, Jackson, Van Buren, Harrl sub-contrac- or sub-lettin- g n. re-electe- d. sub-contract- or re-electio- n, r8 to d. I good-nature- d re-electio- n, . 20 PER CENT OFF -- - . . Brubaker Campbell Hardware Co. 27-2- son, Taylor, Buchanan, Lincoln, Hayes. Garfield, Benjamin Harrison, and McKinley were when first elected president "A president Is always weaker when running for a second term than when standing for the first. This was signally. Illustrated in the case of President Cleveland who when in office in 1888 was defeated by Harrison and yet when out of office in 1892 easily defeated Harrison who was in office. If. therefore, Roosevelt succeeds next November, have he will achieved the most notable triumph of Heber M. Wells, President. Tyree, W. H. Cunningham, Pres. & Gen. Mgr. Secretary H. V. W. S. HcComlck, Treasurer. SPEND YOUR MONEY AT HOME. , his already notable career. I MMllI 1 IB1IB H mill Coin Organised and Conducted Under the State Laws of Utah. to - Its Patrons Affording Greater Advantages and -Facilities - than foreign Ineoropratlons. Office, SSSffflSJ5! Salt Lake City, Utah. ' I 1 8lnt By cruel ladies In endless ranks. instead of the balm that the jilted ft But, tacks ft The state came down on me with a tax, ft And I saw ray savings disappear ft At the rate of twelve pounds every year. It came a bit expensive, for 1 wasnt a wealthy bachelor. ft my purse wouldnt stand the ft! Fearing drain. ft At the age of thirty I tried again; in Bought new clothes of the latest style. sinlle; in Practiced a fascinating in But why, I cannot understand Nobody wanted my heart and hand; And the state. In its brutal, callous way, tax it made me pay. in Doubled the Pounds to the number of twenty-fou- r in I paid for being a bachelor. ill My fiftieth birthday found me still A single Jack In search of a Jill; Hairless, hopeless, dull and stout, of gout; Troubled, too, with a twinge And for all my exertions 1 could not Find any one willing to share my lot. But did the state feel sorry for me? $ No; it multiplied my afine by three. pounds and couple more :: Seventy I paid for being a bachelor. I write these lines with a borrowed quill On the back of an unpaid tailors bill. As clever readers will doubtless guess. The local workhouse Is my address. It seems the only refuge for A cruelly harried bachelor. London Chronicle. Alcohol Vs. Oil Lamp. An alcohol lamp gives off but half the heat and vitiates the atmosphere but half as much as a kerosene lamp of the same illuminating power. f |