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Show T UTAH STATESMAN Editorial Comment Liberty lltr lliah tatsman A Democratic state newspaper, published every Friday at Salt Lake City, Utah, devoted to progressive ideas and to promotion of the progress and prosperity of the state and party. Office Room 111 Atlas Block, Salt Lake City, Utah. BERNARD L. FLANAGAN, Editor. C. S. GODDARD, Business Manager. Second CIbh Metier. July II. lilt, at the Poetofflee at Enter Lake Oily. Utah, under tba act of March a 111. ADVERTISING RATES Per Column Inch $1.00 LEGAL NOTICES ...... Notice of Assessment, 5 times Delinquent Notices, per column inch Probate Notices, 2 times Notice to Creditors, 4 times , .... s. . . .50 nons activities. In Mrs. Inez Knight Allen of Provo the Democrats of Utah have found another jewel who will carry on t;he work of democracy and womans part in democracy to a successful conclusion. Mrs. Allen will have the combined support of the Democrats of the state and will work to the utmost of her ability for the welfare of the party. James Moyle, national committeeman, was and will be' reinstalled at Houston. Mr-- ' Moyles ability is well known, not only in Utah but in the entire country. Mr. Moyle became a national figure during the Wilson administration a8 first assistant secretary of the treasury, under , The Statesman takes this occasion to thank Mrs. Weston Vernon for the services she has rendered and will continue to render to the Democratic party. The Statesman also expresses utmost confidence in Mrs. Inez Knight Allen and in Jim Moyle, and bids them success in their handling of party affairsTHE JEWEL INCONSISTENCY. Those who realize that politicians, like the Dons Julia, consent while swearing they never .will, may find fresh warrant for their cynicism in two dispatches from widely separated points printed in yesterdays Times. Our Dallas corDemocratic respondent, analyzing the reasons why the Texas Smith Governor declare to refused against State Convention resolu-- i with its been consistent have fiery would (which their haste to climb on the lions), expressed fear that in bunch may even forget to the Texas Smith Jones. Far away Jesse ballot for cast their complimentary from Dallas, in Seattle, our correspondent at about the same time of writing was describing: (1) A Republican State the platform unanimously commending Congress for bill and praising Messrs. Coolidge, Hoover and all their works; (2) a set of Democratic delegates who in 1924 had raised the roof for McAdoo setting out m 1928 unanimously for Smith. These two accounts happened to reach The Times for the same issue. But such are the plastic natures of politicians they could be paralleled in almost every campaipi-Thwide American air haa from time to time been filled with denunciatory roars, statesmen vowing that their right arms might wither and their tongues cleave to the roof s of with other their mouths if ever they made common cause sometime only of years statesmen. Yet the passage foes erstwhile two disclosed has been required weeks have of words swallowing toiling on the same stump and daily exAn to utter. toil and time taken had which invective cellent example of this was presented in Kentucky last fall when former Senators Stanley and Beckham formed an alliance after a decade of bitter hostility. All such illustrations of the fact that a politician is a weather-van- e lead the public to expect anything of primaries will conventions and elections. This explains why people dispatch, and will comcredit the implication in the Dallas about-fac- e recorded in the prehend without amazement the Times. York New Seattle. from report - on e . ! any county In the nro Republicans tho where state It dark politics and playing dMp before the is Weber county and that prosperous campaign la over Ogilen as the county which clainu outs lotof county aeat wilt eend for good campaignAt ammunition the present time the Democrats.Weber to la county It look like bo tho dark and 1h,d5r. . ro.un? flint for tho big Aos hloodleet part of tho corn. And will the coma tbo fight which willbefore bo held convention -- th?he alluatlon In Wrber who can probably count cial life in Utah by tho calendar which right now abound on the walla of the many home of Utah. But Mr. Farr will be left out la tho cold If Weber send a native son as governor nomine to face the firing squad of voter. Thua we hav Weber county torn by many desire. There' the crowd: tlm hla offi- crowd: tho crowd: and ancra1 crowd. And when them crowd get crowding there' going to ho eom toes stepped on and the toe are county not going to ho of tho Democratic and ae It looks to an Interested la about highly amused Democrat county Tho lTttle atunt of tho Samuel committee In endorsing w. O. Dy for governor aa agalnat H. Watt!, mors or Junction nlal candidate from the ot bad feelcity, has createdMr.a lot or any Wattle ing Not that any feeling of hla friends hav about what the committee did aa how thoy did It. Wattle publicly announced himself on that score. Now, turning from that angle, other purta let ve look at the many Weber Republican are pliiying In this campaign. First of all Weber county want to have the honor of having the Republican nomine for governor. Just why la a myatenr wa will not attempt to solve. Walker, prone nl Second, John atuta treasurer, brant to be secro-tar- y of ataie. If Weber county wins In Ita effort to hnve a home boy carry the party banner aa governor nominee Mr. Walker U out of a Job. Hal Farr, aol.tant attorney general and another Weber county man anplree to be attorney general, replacing Harvey Cluff who Is victim of gubernntormanln Pn Woman's Journals Which Features Democratic and Republican Pages During Campaign Kings ' - Out Interesting Facts. " Our Slogan: Every Reader a Contributor.'4 - w Womens Voices Can be Heard Best in District Conventions bo coming into her own. acapa to load directlyH to tho elevaWo do not Ignore tho flelda covPower Comes Within, Not Without, the tion of tho building, ahe said. "I ered by axtansion aervlca and night have been antlnly controlled by Those Who Would Lead Should Choose Small that achool, nor tho fhia work dono In fact and tha fact that tha poreach, but wa submit that the Civic tion of the eld building which esm and Then Use Ability to Center occuplca a field covered by Group caped tha fin win stand ae the neither. Here w have women from museum." Power. all walk of Ufa whom nelthor "Ae one connected with the thea-t- n, agency haa touched. W believe aald G. Barnard Shaw. "I am that the humble taakn of homo have tha fact that, alsince tha passage of tho politics? What could or would Gov- Impressedtha by a cultural value quite aa fundamenla a woman, I architect though tal aa that of hooka. Wo era doing Nineteenth Amendment in life ernor Smith do differently? was tha only one that fed hen What era tho facta about tho which showed any theatre sense," a bit of r (March work with the and tha entrance of women into Canter aa laboratory and the staff tho nation's electorate, political present condition? Tha cost of tho building will bo Tho moat conspicuous fact la that opproxlmately have and aa research workers. Wo are pioskeptics prophets 750,000, including not dehaa drinkIn women. prohibition stopped In ban busily angaged making tha teaching of neering subscriptions nlsed in the United Wo racogniM that tba technique ductions About women In polltlsa, ing, but has manly changed tho States. natur of tho liquor traffic. Thu governing tho 'teaching of adults trying to estimate their Influence has boon abollshad. Recogdiffers materially from that gov- and to establish their characteristics saloon nised breweries and distilleries an British Girls Keep Fit aa In the and always tho political child. field, growing erning Both tha manufactun and Records play an Important part In dlacuMlons involving women, dosed. Walkink Clubs tha distribution of llquon of alt In the discovery of tho Intercity ana thoy have all bean lumped together, aorta now clandMtine criman and British women an outdoing tho typoi of teaching to which women being absolutely Identical and tha inal. Tha bootlerer haa succeedfor walkrespond. Our new system of record most sweeping generalization have ed the saloonkeeper and the wine men In their enthuriaahm , instance boon made from (pacific ing. keeping should show improved merchant. With tho arrival of sunny weath-- r mothoda for this teaching. Aa wa Woman nr failures In politics or It is a question whether the volhappy parties an seen grow w must maintain our old thoy era successes. Women hav ume of liquor consumed haa bean "d tnkklng through the flexibility without neglecting appli- no political Judgment or they are ndueed. Tha quality has certainly cation of nowor mothoda. At the lntanMly discriminating. Woman been Impaired. The character of .?? Jil?! la main roads, Marching out tho many beat wa are but groping our way arc concerned about this and that the man angaged In the burin and our measure of success depanda or thoy art not concerned. ohyiously won. Before prohibi- wonderful bits of sylvan acanary In aplto of thoM conflicting gen- tion tho liquor dealer was social ly within easy reach of London. In upon tho publla good will won eralisations about women, tbo ostracised. Now ha la ar criminal. all of thM parties tha girls outthrough years of pioneering as well number tha men by at least two to Dnutkenueos a Virtue, aa upon a continuation of the sin- facts art that In tho eight years Before the war It waa a disgrace one. woman haws had the suffrage they gularly united spirit of our staff Rambling, dubs are springing up ba druuken- - Now, too often, n and the loyalty of our Intrepid lit- hav acted vary much aa human to England and nearly every beings might ha expected to act, la funny. Woman as Wall aa man all ever tle band of workers. have divided an almost every ques- are heavy drinkers. Young men big buelneea firm In London has Wa believe; own lta club, tbo members of women drink more than thoy 1. That the 3046 women who, tion, aa have men. have followeJ and mala and female, rtoutly did before tho prohibition law. which, aa own crowds tha leader tha and thoir of tho spur pricked by This la the eondltion with which hod and hatlees, every Sunday take need, came to reglaterad Claeses have tha man, and In that abort any president must deal. Insofar aa train to some country village, from unhave not time the furnish any displayed the Mason, past during hi power extends to deal with the whence they set out on thalr wanbeat argument tn support of our usual qualities of leadership, nor situation. derings. Each carries a light claim that Civic Center decuples have thoy etood together for any How much difference la there In knapsack containing macintosh and particular movement or measure. the attitude of tho two poaalblo can- Sincheon. a unique field and renders a and they walk many Men Politicians 8aj which la real and appreciated. didate Secretary Hpover and Gov- mllea before they reach their Anno In the Review womPictorial 2. That the 3000 additional ernor Smith? Wbta could cither from which they take the en tn organised community activi- Hard gives a Marching if not com- do about it? train home of Cenwomen, plimentary Clvlo picture used Hoover la counted a ties who this year baaed on Interview with promi- dry.Secretary His statement to Senator Borter In pursuance of their varied nent men of tho country, was ho politicians considered tha pro- Women Will be There furnah that social activities, and welfare with the Im- hibition amendment and tha Volish the beat possible argument for leaving tha reader Mrs. Woodrow Wilson respects really stead act a "noble experiment" A1 Smith for hla tho need for a downtown headquar- pression that women have Accordloyalty to hor huswhich time Alone would condemn band accomplished very little. ters for women.i during tha war. She will b of tho human ing to tha et teamen ts of various or Justify. . ConMrvatlon Houston convention at the and. If Smiths Stand. resources of tho etato to b a eoeial men. women may bo claMlfled powe ara not mistaken, will he acmasin Governor hie fem8mlth Into Mid, throe tha neceslitically groups, a greet reception. Tho par. obligation and an economic inist pompfl best exemplified by sage to tho New York legislature: corded ty never appears tn so good a light sity. to Tho Alice opposed Paul Woman's prohibition har and party, a Clvlo Center plan city 4. Tha the re peel and tha unasMlIAble right to peti- aa when ItItsaccords or sta:e to 1)0 an economic adminis- tha women lobbyists, directed prin- have members feel for tha tion a change in tho Voiatoad act or affection tho of cipally by League Wtqnen conMrvatton. man nobla woman whom of human this tration groat In the Constitution. voters, trying to work In a no devotedly attended during hi Clvlo Flan. to "But tho tho authority change way for meaauras and lllnea 1. A local volunteer group movements .and tho women within enforcement of tho law now belongs How many delegates theM womto Congrca to ropreMntallvo citizen Congress and any the parties en may influence, or whether their with a 2. A control building must ba Mnt. petitions M1m to this According Hard, common overhead (o be maintain"In tha meantime there devolve preMnce there la to bo only aa eyevery division in tha ranks of wom- upon tho ed by tha city and county. Mata tho sacrod duty of witnesses of exciting convention, en Is their Whether there undoing. can not, of eoune, predict. and I. A system of email sustaining tha Eighteenth amend- weWomen la excuse for such any organisafrom delegatee will be promiVolstead act. They ment rentals for emergency fund and tha as the Women's party, or the are as much a part of tho laws of nent nt Houston. Tho Republican groups or indlridunle using the tions League of Women Voters la a ques- this state as our own laws and our did not provide for places for thorn Center and staff service. at Kansas City .except as 4. A central Mrvice with depart- tion on which all would not agree, own Constitution. of courao. but this much la certain. As far as I am concerned, tn ment! headed by experts. This Under our The Methodist general .confersystem of party govern- obedience to my oath to sustain tho teaching Mrvlc to ba provided by whrh will probably always Constitution of tho United State. ence once more denied them full the educational aganciea who shall ba tha oyatam, tha most effective I hav repeatedly promtaed the ministry In the church. Women should taka notice of way of working la within, not withpeople that, so far as it Ilea In tu out, the party, and tho place when power In the 'constitutional or stat- events calculated to restrict or enthe women's vole and vote will ute law, I will remove from office, large their activities their full count for moat la within her own upon proper proof being preMnted, equality with men. Boulder Camtmal district. It Is only by any fubllo official charged with era. enforcement of the law." starting from the ground floor, that laxity in No Straddle There. she may hope to gain that experGovernor Smith's attitude ! not Women Win Equality ience. If aha wishes to ba a leader or evasive. It is definite In World let her first ba a leader of a small straddling concrete. He would mak a group, and hor succcm In this In- and existto enforce the Mrioue effort Tha element of Mrugglo is one stance will give her whatever laws. In addition there would thing that la apt to bo overlooked lalm aha may hava for promo- ing bo a chance for tho voters to one mcs the ever Increasing when tion. thalr- views by means of ref- number of women succoeeca in Women Become Power. erendafields according to Mabel This Is Just what most women coma Any change could not threo-fourtConkllng, eminent artiit and past an coming to sea today, and no quickly. Tho approvall of president of the National Associamatter what may bo tha attitude of of tha statea would bo tion of Women Painters and Scula few groups of women, who rabid- necesMry for any amendment. ThoM who think that with the ptor. ly enter the fray, trying by Mnwu "Women occupy a. very Importlonal methods to make thalr In- election of Governor Smith they tant In tha field of art today," fluence felt, and no matter what might have more and better liquor Mlaa place "But I often cay Conkllng disparaging remark on tho on ar deluded. A dry who feels safe wonder how many people atop to hand, or exaggerted prophecies on from tho attacks of such organisa- think of tho difficulties they have league tha other concerning their power tions aa tha to reach that goal. would probably b much leas dili- had to overcome In tho coming election, may b v yearn ago, women hit duty wo- had"Thirty-flmade by newspaper correspondent! gent in performing In no chance the arts. It was TheM ar tho things which or other women settling down men a woman to have for are impossible era They considering. to artualltle and their Influence and frank- her work accepted In any exhibiwill be frit slowly along with the Insisting on faimeMstand for fun- tion. to want ness. They growth. By that wo do not mean damental and In addi"Today their work M a loomed principles, women not nt tion that hav given up, Prlxee and module want to vote for a candi- everywhere. they but Illusion no aa all, they hava who will face facta as they are, ar showered on women. There is to the place which they hold. Thv date no mx handicap left today tn the never bending this way or thut see very clearly that the fact tha. field of art. But through tho strugof political expediency. they wen gallantly given position gle to achieve this condition womaa t of wards and en artiste acquired qualities that In both pnrtlf had no Woman's Ability Highest have been of tromendoue value. other efrct than that of making In "Tha fact that today wa have Competition women In every branch of art of two very unwleldly organisation which except In few pse do not two year will be required whom It la Mid, She has no aqua I.' Nearly work o well together. ft thev to complete the new Bhakeepeare la tho nault of the Mrugglo for have set themselves the tek of Memorial theatre at Stratford recognition that made women deexnerien-e- d termined to overcome every oband In- which a young woman designed. becoming formed In order that thev mav The design, somewhat after the stacle through tho sheer quality of compete not as women again: style of m medieval castle, 1 that their work." w-- n. hut aa good cltlxena against ot M1m Elisabeth Scott, 33 cars br.d rit'iena. old. who triumphed over architect Women Weigh Problem. isnreMntlng eomo of the foremen Tho prohibition nueatlon wom- talent of Great Britain and Ameren are welrhlng more seriously and ica. It was MIm Scott's first atcalmly. It la facta and not hys- tempt in a big design. She la a terical statement which thev want daughter of a Bournemouth physiWASHINGTON Major General before they make their chore. No cian, and a cousin of 8lr Giles Gilcombert Scott, R. AH architect of Liver- Henry T. Allen, who newspaper eorre"ondent can mander of tha army of occupation with rertnlntv th- -t women wi pool cathedral. that ho Not only was MIm Scott'a de- on tho Rhine, announced vote this war or tlmt on Prohibito hie friends tion. for nftor all the- - are two sign. In the Judges' view, the moat hpd given permission to national nam tho hla suitable for a theatre, but It wee to present convention at Houaton Me to the nuerilon. and thno-iod- i of women who are neraonallv for held to roveal groat ability and Democratic The large for th presidential nomination. of composition. temperance of the strictest sort are power and Oeneral Allen, who balls from simplicity of handling pot oartlpol.rly charmed with the neM that a commlttaa other deslim, Kentucky, Mid would working of the nresent taw. Few- was unequaled by any b Informed hlo friends of takother point er and fewer o ftheni are going to the Judges agreed, to advance his campaign. In an tho suit consideration en into ot he Influenced hv wild naaert'ona of 'anhaAvan nouncomant prepared by Itn group wa. Ml hettarinent league and ministerial thi of fleer associates In allhourtta bank plcturaaquencfa association forth that ho had bean n until they find out modeling and conformity with advocate of tomporanco and believwhether their atatementa ar baaed and traditions Stratford. of th In strict enforcement of the on tha truth. new building which le e h ed eighteenth amendment, It la the question of nrohlhltlon ef The tha of temrmni the and rtone, General Allan organised the Phil-ul- d mors than any other which will inon destroyed by fir In fluence tha vote for preeldrnt In constabulary whan Chlet iippin to back. Justice Taft waa governor general Women are will aland back will the coming election. 1.00b icut pertheatre The f handled the El Can islands, the netting what difference the election ar refugee camp in Cuba during the of a 'wet'' or "dry" candidate will sons. . Scott ahe Ml explained that Spanish-Amerlcwar and wav make tn the nrtuat enforcement of thoM her style becauM of tho commander of tha Ninetieth diviprohibition Avon on with th alto sion (Oklahoma and Texas) durlna Tlie Knot of the Case. picturesque Will Mr. Hoover, as the heir of Ita trees and meadows and tha col the World war. Ha haa served ae In th church background. military attache at various am- the preMnt administration, legist "X wanted every line in the land- - Ibaaale abroad. impelled to continue la the wmc In-crea- In ry Sosti-natl- on an fei Art ox-pr- oa ie Anti-Salo- an THE SITUATION IN WEBER. If there Sponsored by Salt Lake Women's Democratic .Club. Edited by MRS. D M. DRAPER. vr ly after the national convention at Houston. Mrs. Weston Vernon of Logan, an able woman and a good committee woman, will turn over her work to Mrs. Inez Knight Allen of Provo, another high caliber woman. Mrs, Vernon haa done well in her efforts and her accomplishments. Womans part in Utah and national politics have benefited by Mrs. Ver- band-wag- Women Voters Department First tho variety. Walker and Farr era holding the themselvn aa far away (from Weargument which la ensuing in true ber rounty aa poaalblo. With Republican fortitude they are letting the numeroua party leaders try to put across the candidate for the big job. But tbo fact rental:: that thalr success depends upon tho defeat of both Dy and Wattle on tho convention floor. In cbm Dy and Wattle should bo knocked out of tho race the two lemey light would come to the front BUT. There are several other persona In this great state who aspire to tho fobs of secretary of stats and attorney general and theM aspirants are not going to sit tight and wait for Weber county to decide whether or not thet county wants a governor, a secretary of state or an attorney general. Thua If may come about that Weber county will lose their fight for a governor nominee and thut by that lima tho preconvention campaign haa gone too far along for Walker and Farr to get back In the running. Anyway you look at It, polities aa ahe la played, la due for a long tun la Weber county, be-ca- ul d's-ro- ha Justice 4 4 Present Prosperity Due To Breakdown of Europe Rather Than to Tariff Party; THE NATIONAL COMMITTEE. Wm. G. McAdoo. Important Place from page one) unit of dvlllaatlon tho homo, real largely In her capable but untrained hand. Heretofore woman has embarked on Ufon troublous sea Salt with har Intuition an bar guide. Maid, wife, or widow, needing help aa never before, ah haa learned vlclieltudea of Ilf through through Borrow, aickuoaa and death. Today, adult education open for her a now vlata, and ahe eeema to Phone Wasatch 852. ' Salt lake Fills Contributions Educational 4 (Continued 3.00 4.00 5.00 Summons, 5 tinies Civic Center of 4 JUNE 22, 1928. Theatre General Allen Opposes Smith lv Ufa-lo- ng - - Tho Womans Journal, whlah during tho campaign, la featuring a Damocratlo paga and a Republican peg, baa In tha June Imus an artlcla by Hon. Ogdon L. 34111a, under secretary of the treasury apeak- -' log for tbo Republicans under tba title of "High Lights on Economy" while Mrs. J. Borden Hardman, National Commlttaa Woman from th District of Columbia arguoa for thg Damocratlo eausa with her statement called "The Few Venue the Many" Mr. Mills elaliqa that tha Republican party has created from chaoa "a clean cut, definite foreign policy, undorstqpd and aupportad at homo and raepactad abroad," that an obscure thoy have developed department of government Into one of tho greatest agendas for promoting Industrial stfidancy at home and commerce onroad, and under tha American eyetam of protection have built np an unrivalled scale of wages and standard of living and mad prosperity possible, Nagel Qommleelna Gives Facta. Tha facta of the matter are, as even Republican economists will admit, (m report of Nagel commission) that tha development of American Industry sines th war has no bearing on tbo tariff, but la due wholly to tho fact that th break down of Europe during th World war gav to America tha control of th world markets. Ae Professor J. H. Paul, pointed out recently in tho proas, "Tha IncreaM In domertle export, under the low tariff ot 1111 to 1117 was oaa and one-fifbillions per year, while that under tha high tariff from 1123 to 111? was one-fifbillions per year, that under low tariff being six times as great aa tba increase under the present tariff. Professor PhuTe Testimony. Further, ProfOMor Paul states: "Thq industries of northern France were destroyed and tha very oil rendered unfit for agriculture. American Industries war not only unharmed, but many times multiplied In output by the war. France, with a population of forty millions lost about thrM million men, or nearly one fourth of hor adult mala population. Our country, with a population of more than 10 million, lost fewer than 100,000 man, or only ona man out th th able-bodi- ed of our adult, Franca' lost nearly II par cant of hor mal producers; Amerl- - , ca only four-tentof ona par cant of her adult males. This la tho chief reason that our , blatant "prosperity" to greater than that of mute, heroic, resolute Franc. Other reasons ar that wa ; hava at least twenty times tha Pro- ductiyo soil, parhapa a hundred times tha coal. Iron, copper, stiver and othor mineral deposits that Franca haa. Wa have similar comparative advantages la water power and In freedom from anelcnt war debts. Nor havo w th need that Franca has, for enormous military forces." After all rfur prosperity la only a prosperity of certain claaaaa, and uch aa It is th Republicans cannot claim credit for It by reason of ' thalr tariff rates of 1122. Democrats Gave Aid- Returning to th Journal, Mrs. Harr! man elatae that "In tha three revenue Mila passed by Congress Inc tha war, every provision giving relief to th smaller tax payers waa brought about by moans ot Damocratlo amendments to tbo Republican committee bills." that tha Republican party la primarily Interested In tha comparatively few People or great wealth, and th concern of tha Damocratlo party 1 for tha welfare of th people aa a whole, which la shown by the effect of th minority party on tho tax Mila passed. Mr Harriman points out that th Republicans hava perslMontly th idea that tho Democrat spread have fought tax reduction. when the fhet la they have fought only tho Republican plane to relieve a few extremely rich corporations and Individuals at tha cxpenM of th vast majority of tax payers who war called upon to bear a disproportionate part of tho burden of taxation. Other Interesting articles In the Journal ara "Whan Mrs. Is Mia1' by Constance Marshall, a discussion of why women In business hid thalr wadding rings, "Modern Joanna d'Arcs" by Mildred Adame, a story of tho modern French woman In business, and Fsaea by Pledge," a moM clarifying prsMn-tatlo- n of tha Kellogg and Briaml ' peso proposals written by Carrie Chapman Catt of SK0 able-bodi- ed males. hs abls-bodl- es . Houston Announces Plans Complete for Convention from page ona) day. Wednesday and Thursday, the 4I evening days, will be given to bund PICTURED IN DETAIL. music in tho CollMum. After tha balloting got under way, th no' Tha special booths that will lle program will ba dispensed with, hoiiM tha announcers and th con- Mr Garwood believed. trol panel exports ara being constructsd and the apparatus will be ids WATER in working order by tho middle of next week. Furnishing Iced drinking water Conventions have been stamped- and rest room facilities for coned for candidate, deadlocks have vention viators la a hard problem. n, been broken by a martial air It was pointed out by Col. Ik executive Mcietafy of the loplayed Just at tha right moment. In cal arrangements committee. Realising th power of music convention psychology, th comFred S. Fox, appointed chairman mittee preparing for tha Democrat- of a committee, has taken cars cf ic, meet ar making elaborate plana. this. The merchant and other Mrs. E. M- - Garwood in chairman In downtown business houM have charge cf tho muslo committee. As- most all agreed to put up "free tea sisting her la Gen. Jacob Wolter water" signs outside their doors who will secure and handle th and to keep additional coolers for bands. tho benefit of the delegate And . 1 In the Hospitality Houm adjoining I MAJOR SONGS tha CollMum. more water, rest room etc., will be found. If any anthem le featured during Tha Hospitality Houm will con-bo completed shortly before tho the meet, that anthem will be 'The Eyes of Texas." Mrs. Garwood de- vention open will It will coM about 121,000. Funds Then there clared Tuetday. b AI Smith's battle song, "The for this building will coma from th general fund of th local arSidewalks of New York." and rangements commlttM. It la beJim Reed, Governor Ritchie,camthe other candidates have no Mr ing erected for tho convenience of and other delegatee paign song or If they have Garwood does not know of them. distinguished visitors during the She win ho glad to include thalr convention. songs In the convention campaign I HOSPITALITY HOTSE line-u- p If the muitc la furnished, the said. The Hoepltallty Houm will bo tn Among tha hands which will ha two division th in Houston for th moot art Brown-wooOna section will ho In th form Old Gray Mara band from th Gold Medal band from of a Mructur 20 feet, wide and Memphis. Texas, the Dallas band, 200 feet long, running along Mo- tha Edinburg band from tho Rio Kinney. Tha- balance of th block Grande valley, the Magnolia Pe- will bo covered by a Mrlea of umtroleum hand from Beaumont, th brella roof tho eavoe overlapping Missouri Paclflo band from Pales- to give shade and plenty ot ventilatine. and the Cowboy band from tion. It le designated primarily to proSimmons university at Abilene, which will play for th rodeo to vide resting place for tho tired bo staged by BaiMtt Blakely it delegatee and visitor Reading me- -. tarlal will bo on hand, and drinkRice field. ing water available Mora than 100 men and women LOCAL BANDS will ba In charge of Hospitality Th Houston Municipal hand, tha House, beginning tha day before 143rd Infantry band of tho Texas tho convention and lartlng until It National Guard, th Kourton La- la over. 1 -A dles band from Houaton Height A I HOUSING PLANS and a number of other local aggregations will be on tan during Only tha official delegate alterthe days of th meet. national committeemen, Mr Garwood has received two nate At Smith eongo which she plane to newspaper men end others who havo preMnted On la "Al Smith" have definite business at th conby James Rooney and tha other la vention will be housed In the hotels Lets Mak Al Smith Our Presi- here, according to announcement of Roger Beaman: Mcretary cf tha dent," by C. J. O'Hara. According to tentative plana, tn hour before th MMlon of Tues (Continued on pag four.) (Continued I Ash-bur- out-of-st- d, - - . - HERE IS MY SUBSCRIPTION THE UTAH STATESMAN Salt Lake City, Utah. Inclosed And check for which please eend me The 111 ATLAS BLOCK. , an f1 I , Utah Statesman for SUBSCRIPTION PRICES months. years 51 Year; 50c 6 months. 4 Name City (Street .. Jt iWMve State w. ! JU. 1 ' |