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Show TRUTH. to believe they would not resort to such & trick. If the Herald wants information on this subject, it could easily get it from Democrats, who know all about the 5 higher than here. Better still Mormon liing about them was their trivial and Gentile mingle in social and busi- character, considering his anxiety to ness, affairs, meet in primaries and have them made. He wanted "divi- -l For President Theodore Roosevelt I political conventions and subscribe to sion to For Vice President Charles W. divisions and changed party papers. Yet in the face of these fpunders into framers. I For tlie Fairbanks. facts, when classes have been coming Dingley act itself he wished to sub deal. The attack of Cannon on Roosevelt together through the ties of friendship stitute the fourth section of tho STATE TICKET. at the American party convention, the and business, until an understanding Dingley act, and for of he wanted. CUtlr approval and endorsement of the same of respect and toleration has been "this section of. He wanted the re-- 1 8alt'Lk!'ern0,"'j0hn artwo Herald in and Tribune gradually arrived at, just as prosperity ciprocity clauses stricken out and by the For Secretary of State Charles 8. ticles, which' were so similar as to is coming to us as never before, like a this section inserted. He wanted. 1 the effects of Juab. of out like a clear of twins, thunder spectacular Yingey look clap sky eight instead of nine and forty1 all of marked this comes of of. I stages the yell this instead of seventy and so on. He which have For Justice of Supreme Court disapproval sensational of animals a fierce flop lot like justifies N. Straup of Salt Lake, any and Daniel crowd, craved over twenty of these correc-- J political reasonable man inv believing the they turn loose to destroy all the good tions, and, no doubt, would have! For Treasurer James Christiansen c "American-Democratideal to be a, that after so many weary years has craved as many more if there had I of Sevier. fact. The methods pursued by Kearns been accomplished. . been time. For Auditor J. A. Edwards of Box Do any of you, when camping outf and the Tribune justify any suspicion Tim only explanation possible of Elder, or conclusion that may be reached. just as your good open air evening these endless . . . corrections is that! , 8c100,a comfortend. reaches its eaten Sup and meal had the niende been game political Every J Judge Parker was frightened or a. j r Ne,80n of 8anpete Some day in the future the heteroge- ing pipe had been lighted, remembef least bit nervous over his paper. This. s For A. the consternation, alarm and terror is no great wonder, for he was con- nous mass of disappointed Attorney . General M. of Weber. and Democratic schemers will dis- that came over you as out of the peace- fronted with many difficulties. TheBreeden integrate. Then the curtain will drop ful night there came the sudden wolf Republican party is in possession of! I Por Prealdential. Electors E. W. ade H. P. Myton of Salt and to the people of Utah will be re- ish howl of a coyote? How it rever most of the public policies that are James A- - Miner of Salt Lake, vealed in all its hideousness the whole berated until it seemed as though a worth anything, and there was noth-- l Congress Joseph Howell of history of the dark political job now pack of demons had broken loose? If ing left to Judge Parker except sud: being worked. Then there will not be so, then you can understand this pick flaws in them and restate them J r Judges of Third Judicial Dia-an- d so many virtuous denials, and several den political howl from a band of dis-- He did not venture to condemn them. I It is the would be Democratic and American gruntled it would not do to assent to them. 1 trict C. W. Morse, M. L. Ritchie, Geo. FairKearns revengeful yelp because to His task was one of straddling and. ! heroes will, to quote Senator JLri71?r?"9, T District Attorney Frederick C. banks, fade into the boundless ocean him the gate of political preferment evasion, and the situation was so fa- -. Looourow a cf of lot had closed, and the yelps of oblivion. vorable for that sort of writing thatj Mormon haters who have never been he was like a mediaeval martyr COUNTY TICKET. politically fair, except when offices walking over heated ploughshares.'! SHALL WE GO BACKWARDS. to came them. This was all the more hazardous beto to men be Commissioners Long Term, John Are these cause he was not at all familiar with, permitted Has it ever occurred to the people of C. conditions restore more once the thd subject matter of his paper. Mackey; Short Term, D. Miller. of this state that the efforts of the Sheriff C. Frank Emery. In such circumstances it was no leaders of the American party to re- hate and distrust which marred the calm the think hiss-We not, By wonder that the composition of Attorney Parley P. Christensen. store the conditions that existed here past? of Clerk J. U. Eldredge, Jr. the of the fireside, people letter was to Judge Parker a treadfifteen or twenty years ago is a politi- light Recorder P. O. Perkins. cal crime, that if those conditions Utah, Gentile and Mormon, will think mill by day and a nightmare by night to hearts Auditor I. M. Fisher. their and this imover, -; and that he corrected it, without question were restored it would undo all the convicW. O. Carbis. come Treasurer the deep proving it, or tried to do so, until theprogress which has been made, all and minds will Assessor C. M. Brown. that has been done to, bring about a tion that in Utah political peace shallr ory of the newsboy under his window; Mormon-eateof the the that day warned him that his production was;, Surveyor J. B. Swenson. perfect understanding between all prevail; is over. classes in Utah already in the hands of the public. j Superintendent of Schools John W. o; Smith. Let us look back fifteen years, at Chicago Chronicle. that time the Gentiles were on one JUDGE PARKERS ERRATA. side, the Mormons on the other. BeREPUBLICAN CITY NOMINEES. POLITICAL OLIGARCHY. tween the two classes there was no However, Judge Parkers letter of B. Diehl intercourse, social or business. The acceptance may have been received Something like a hundred years ago j City Judger-Christoph- er Mormon party had a large majority, J. Whitaker, it Thomas Jefferson protested against J ad Joseph there was not a Gentile in office from by his party and by the country, Justice of the Peace Dana T. Idaho to New Mexico and Arizona, ex- is certan that he himself was not satSmith. cept those who were holding under isfied with it, as after taking two cause it gave more power to 19.000;l constable W. F. Hills, Federal appointment. The state, months to compose it he was frantical- voters in the plantation region of the-easthan to 30,000 in the county and city governments, and all ly correcting it up to the time it went over to all the country. press the school districts were under Morholding western part of the state; FOR THE LEGISLATURE, SALT LAKE .COUNTY, As the general. public may not un- hence, he claimed, the state would be mon control. The Mormon people had For State Senators Stephen H. been accustomed to meet in conven- derstand, a long document like this really ruled by an oligarchy. Let us i to d tlie-japnow desires is true see its In which this whether Love, Samuel C. Park, George N. promulgator tion, a committee would of In slave-the press : rence. district, qne of the old list of pear simultaneously report a prepared-beforehan- d is and distributed nrinted are included the' William Pan-te- r, the For Representative country holding districts, American nominees, just as the C. E. Marks, A. V. Anderson, 8. J. Richmond and Manchester.; party did the other day. It was swal- ihrough the Associated Press' several cities-o- f lowed just R3 the American party days in advance, under an Injunction and one in 28 of the population votes.1 Stookey, H. B. Cromar, C. S. Kinney, ticket wag. Two or three men made all not to print it until a certain day. In the Fourth district, another of Thomas Hull, William T. Edward, H. the motions, just the same as in the Judge Parkers letter was distributed those with a large population S. Joseph, William M. McCrea. American convention. There w4as no in this way, and the printed copies a total vote of 6,341 was cast in a. Me, everything mechanical the same were in mo3t of the newspaper offices population of 16G,321 one in 26, the. than 30,000. And Judge Parker does os the American for a day or two before the letter was winning candidate receiving 5,717 not delire that convention. justice shall wait on s of the votes, or about Throughout the state the great ques- printed last Monday. Documents that are distributed in whole, In the Ninth district, includ- political oligarchy! o tions which divided the parties of the nation had not been seriously consid- this way are supposed to be as per- ing some of the western counties, SENAered cr discussed, and politics was fect as the authors of them can. make about whose rights Jefferson was soli-- J HILES, THE TRIBUNE AND be- citous, a total vote of 27.170 was cast; TOR CANNON. something to which the people were them, and probably there never one-of a about in 227,381 population strangers. How different things are fore was a political paper which had seven. vote to The in was it after to corrected be Republican candiJudge Hiles does not seem to think given today. The offices are divided. Every and his opreceived date .13,694 Parker votes, in this class is represented in our govern- the press way. Judge much of the Democratic party of Utah. ment, while one or other of the great was the first public man who after ponent, 13,476 more than twice as He says it is a church party and that political parties control. Upon school spending sixty anxious days and sleep- many votes as were required to elect its members in the legislature are litboards Gentiles are fully represented, less nights over a pronunciamento a Democrat in the Fourth district an than aggregation of and questions of politics are debated could not get it into a shape to suit while the total vote is four times as tle better marionettes. Suppose the judge from one end of the state to the other. him, and was compelled to follow it great as that in the Fourth district, church Is to congress, what party will elected Young men, yes, and old men, who fif- with despairing errata until the roar and the population only about 60,000 he act with in Washington? Certainly teen years ago never thought cf tariff, of the printing press warned him that greater. Sixty thousand more people, not with the party, and as Republican and four times as many votes required.: are now discussing it at every corner it had gone beyond recall. no is American there there, he These changes were more remark- to elect a representative! And Jef- would doubtless uniteparty store, farmers discuss it over their with the nafences, the women in their homes; in able for their number than for their ferson called it political oligarchy tional Democracy. How 'would Utah no state does political excitement run importance. Indeed, the significant when 19,000. voters had more power Republicans like that? And yet the Tribune, while pretending, to support the national Republican administration is straining every nerve to elect a Democratic congressman. What sort of a newspaper is the Tribune any way? It can change from one party to another about as fast as Frank J. Cannon, and for the same reason, either money or spite. . office-seeker- to-jr- r ' 1 ; office-seeker- -- s. ) . t non-slave- -; ! Law-Thir- self-appoint- ed , ex-sla- ve five-sixth- i i ! ! o BURLINGTON ROUTE. Best line to Chicago, Omaha and Kansas City. St Loils, |