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Show w iwrwi I Issued Weekly by Truth Publishing Company. Western Newspaper Union Building, South West Temple Street, 241 Salt Lake City. John W. Hughes, Editor and Manager. 19, 1901, at Balt Lake City, second-clas- s as matter, under Act Utah, of Congress of March 1, 1879. Sintered June Terms of Subscription. - Address all communications PUBLISHING COMPANY, City, Utah. i i i f . 1 I : ? r J '1 I i ; 1 : i i t i ' I i H h ii if. i t j i to TRUTH Salt Lake Contrary to the expectations of people who had derived their ideas from the comic supplements, and other pictorial atrocities of the yellow utterances press, Mr. Roosevelts were characterized by a steadfast adherence to the main question at issue in the campaign, and whatever he said bore the stamp of original thought, broad experience and study, and the most conscientious sense of responsibility. There was no ranting, no personal abuse, no wild statements or strange imaginings, in any of Mr. Roosevelts speeches, and there was no posing. He stood before this great audience dignified, collected and amply able to take care of himself an American gentleman. In language, in bearing, in all that he said and did, there was what made friends for him of all who came within the sound of tVi- f - AZJflCClf&5frZkir d, throughout his journey from and back to the capital, the people rose to him with unmatched enthusiasm. He met and talked with hundreds of his fellow citizens, in every occupation, in every stage and state of society, from the cowboy to college president. He saw and spoke to and was cheered by thousands upon thousands of men, women and children. President Roosevelt is no stranger to the people of the United States. He knows them. They know him. And they understand each other. The people have seen enough of Roosevelt now as youth and cowboy and sportsman and naval sec. retary and soldier commissioner police and and governor his democratic ways, more democratic far in action than the aristocratic and exclusive Parker, with his colorless democratic platitudes. Talk does not settle popular estimates of public men. Thousands nay, hundreds of thousands of Democrats see more real democracy in the vigorous, wideawake Theodore Roosevelt than In the colorless, secretive Alton B. Parker. The platforms arc mighty near together. The men are going to be a more decisive feature of this campaign than usual. And with my knowledge of the American people and the things which please their taste and fancy and fill their ideals of what real American manhood is I would, if I were a betting man, stake all I had that Roosevelt will be an easy winner. John S. Wise of HEATERS AT BrubakerCampbell Hardware Co. , 3 Elias Morris Sons Co MANTELS MANTELS MANTELS - one-fourt- co or fight a Spaniard. And they like and to think themselves president fair judges of his ingrain democratic and republican personality. They believe he would spring at and grapple with a usurper or a monarchist as Truth warns readers of the Tribune bronwould as a wild he lasso fiercely not to believe anything which appears in the politcal colmns of that paper. liaaaMaamAAMARAiamiumiAiAiAiaiihiimiuuauaammuAiiAuuaAAuummiAAiBi Its entire politcal department is shamelessly prostituted to accomplishA ACORN COST ing the plan of revenge adopted by Senator Kearns and a few of his friends. Everything is manufactured or distorted in a way which those in SI3.00 In $10.00. A $12.00 In $0.00. charge think will best tend to the acYon Still Have Chance to Buy an complishment of that end. There is Acorn Range at Ceet. no honor, no attempt at fairness, no ef-- . fort to give facts. Friends and foes alike are to be stricken down before the. great Juggernaut. All this is so 37 and SO WEST THIRD SOUTH STREET . SALT LAKE CITY, apparent, so barefaced that the atUTAH tempt to mislead and deceive fails of innnnVWnfTfTVIVTTTVTYTTfTTVVVTVTVWmVVTVfTTTTfVVTVTVTTTVTVffflHVTTTTVvVvtYTTTVTTTfTTTVTVTVTYT J its purpose. The people are not so credulous as the Tribune management thinks. Methods like those of the Tribune cant succeed, cant even deceive for very long. FEW President Roosevelt is not an unknown quantity to the American people. He is personally well known to a vast number of voters in every part of the country. In New York he is familiar to the sight of a great majority of the people of that great city. Throughout his own state the same is true. In Boston he is as much at home as in New York, for Harvard is his alma mater. Throughout New England he is recognized as the representative and exponent of the ideals which have ruled the cradle of Amer ican liberty from the landing of the Pilgrim fathers. And this native of the Empire state, this graduate from the famous New England university is even more fervently admired and .beloved in the west the far west and middle west, than he is in the east And this intensity of feeling for Roosevelt in the west unswayed by sectional bias, as it is, is but the national feeling of a young, virile people. A people who recognize a man when they see him! During the McKinley campaign of 1900 Roosevelt, as candidate for vice president, visited almost every west era state and territory. He spoke to immense crowds, and won friends by thousands by his straightforward, dignified utterances, and his manly, generous personality. Toward the end of the campaign the national committee was overwhelmed by requests for speeches by Roosevelt in all- parts of the country. It was a physical impossibility for of the enhim: to accept gagements to speak that were, urged upon him. In Chicago, where, on his return from the west,. he addressed a great crowd at the Coliseum, .he was received with the utmort exhibiton of enthusiasm. His speech was calm, forceful, logical and convincing, a contrast to the frantic efforts of ordi self-controlle- I JJ J.WA-.- TRUTH. 12.00 OKI TEAR Qn advance) 1.00 SIX MONTHS (In advance) 75 THREE MONTHS (In advance) Postmasters sending subscriptions to TRUTH may retain 25 per cent of sub sorlptlon price as commission. H the paper is not desired beyond the date subscribed for, the publication should be notified by letter two weeks or more before the term expires. Dfaconti nuances. Remember that the publisher must be notified by letter when a subscriber wishes his paper stopped; all arrears must be his voice. paid in. full. President Roosevelt has visited the to have their Requests of subscribers paper mailed to a new adress, to secure Pacific coast since his assumption of attention, must mention former as well the presidency, and there, as well as as present address. . t Vi TRUTH r ums.Tft.? jyjgmJJ&5''g?.ar.?g.H5KMtWi..5r-.aSB..- B h New 8Lid BeeLxtiful Consignment Just Received. : The Tribune who has constantly on hand a prominent Republican and a prominent Democrat, has added to its stock of myths "prominent Mormon. The latter is doing most of the tall talking now. The Tribunes "prominent Mormon favors the K. K. party. Of course he does. If he didnt he would lose his job. In yesterdays issue he was made to say that he "was mortified because of the feeling which exists in the east against Utah. He omitted to say, that is the Tribune writer who is the mouthpiece of the papers fictitious Mormon, omitted to say that the Tribune, Senator Kearns and a lot of other .dishonest time servers, are directly responsible for the false conceptions the people in the east have of Utah and her people. The Tribune of Sunday devotes almost an entire page to abuse of the Mormons and the Mormon church. The allegation, freed from the chaff, is that the church rules everything politically now and always did so. It is interesting to compare these utterances with those of the paper three or four years ago, when day. after 'day it said the church was out of politics and that polygamy was dead. Then it loaded down the Mormons and the heads of the church with fulsome praise to the . point of naucea.; The paper either lied then it is lieing now. Why the change? Senator . -- nary speakers. . ! , -- l |