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Show f -- THE UTAH STATESMAN, SEPTEMBER 28 ,1928. Editorial Comment Liberty $hf Utah statesman A Democratic state newspaper, published every Friday at Salt Lake City, Utah, devoted to progressive ideas and to promotion of the progress ana prosperity of the state and party. Endorsed by the State Democratic committee, Salt Lake county committee, Utah county committeeOffice Room 111 Atlas Block, . Salt Lake City, Utah. BERNARD L. FLANAGAN, Editor. C. S. GODDARD, Business Manager. - gntered CUM Mutter. July 11 list at the Poajofflc u Ktcond Lake City. Utah, under tba act of March t. llit. it 4 4 0 .50 3.00 4.00 00 ALS TRIUMPH. " Sponsored by Salt Lake Women's Democratic Gub. Edited by MRS. D. M. DRAPER. . Business men are now generally convinced that there is old idea that election years are always bad for business. Many of them, however, still cherish the delusion that the maintenance of a Republican Administration at Washington is essential to the country's prosperity. The Democratic campaign textbook gives a list of the yean since 1861 in which, according to the national bureau of economic research, there has been severe economic depression. This shows that since the outbreak of the Civil war there have been twenty-ai- x of these bad years. They have come at fairly regular intervals, as students of the business cycle know. And they have been no respecters of political parties. There have been seventeen bad years under Republican six under Democratic administrations, and three when both the Democrats and the Republicans were in power part of the time. The only reason why there have been more bad years under Republican than under Democratic rule is that the Republican party has been in power a greater portion of the time in this period. If any one distrusts what comes out of a political campaign textbook he may turn to a similar investigation recently made by Col. Leonard P. Ayres, a noted business statistician and vice president of the Cleveland Trust company. This study showed that the proportion of good and bad years since the Vivil war has been exactly the same under both Republican and Democratic administrations. Such exhibits of facts should effectively demolish the idea that the countrys prosperity has been intrusted by Providence to the of the Republican party. Business goes along very much the same regardless of which party is in power. Neither party has a right to claim credit when prosperity comes nor to blame the other when prosperity gives way to depression. New York World. muck-rakin- so-call-ed open-mind- old-time- rs clared : Hoover was absent from this' country from 1897 to 1917 and in that twenty years this country was made over,'' said the senator. A man who believes this country good enough for him should be chosen for president rather than someone who spent most of his time away from home. Hoover had to have blood tests to see what party he belonged to. He now has been a lifelong Republican for nearly eight years. That over in Estes Park federal prohibition agents put on a fake wedding, sent out invitations telling their guests to bring along the drinks. The supposed-to-b- e ceremony developed into a raid and several arrests. Thats a poor way to enforce the prohibition law, in our estimation. That Morris Sheppard, author of the eighteenth amendment said: I regard Governor Smiths acceptance speech as a convincing and able deliverance. That he will give us an effective enforcement of prohibition as long as it is the law no one can JustJy doubt after noting his declaration in that respect. I oppose the changes he has suggested in the case of prohibition but I shall not permit my devotion to that great reform to blind me to the fact that other questions are calling imperatively for solution. Delta Tribune. Who's Hoover? by William Hard (Dodd. Mead.) BT FREDERICK FACT. MRS. PALM FOR SMITH. secretary of afata. a the delegate of Utah to tha North American gtwIlM tax conference to he held in Memphis Oct. 1 to I. Inclusive. wo announced Saturday. Mr. Crockett, who la vice prcaldtnt of the conference, wai appointed hy Governor George II. Pern nnd the mate road cnmmlcalnn. The conference la expected to he nna of the meet Important of Ita kind In recent years. HERE IS , ike Salt Lake City, Utah. Inclosed find check for which please send me The 111 ATLAS BLOCK, .,,,,,, .months, Statesman for SUBSCRIPTION TRICES City .years 81 Year; 50c ..,,, .Street Name MMIIIMM governors Wife Travels Extensively in Europe During Recent Years. Under the title of Electing a Prealdent'a Wife, In the April, IMS laaue of the Woman'a Home Companion, Fraderlck L. Colllna. deaorlbea Mr. Alfred E. Smith and gives hi Impression of hsr aa In tha setting of' tha Imagined State 6 months. - pra-Rap- r JSLhvH' hi ' "Tha Smiths are tha homiest YOUNG B. Y. UNIVERSITY STUDENTS FOR SMITH. bodies In public life." Mr. Colllna wrote. I am a married man and - Cluff, a young B. T. U. student and a number a Re- a father, la the way tha governor publican family, stated recently thet he le supporting of Governor put It, and I have to have my Smith. Mr. Cluff eays: "About 1 come of Repub- myself, it le true wifa and children about me. It's I admire hie cour 8.m,th true." age In taking a stand on Issues. I do not egroo with him tka hie proposals, but I would rather work for a man who Perhaps there la more light to ba ahed on Mrs. Smiths fitness to than for one who talka about ? from an understanding of what 21, and The Ideal of happier homea' I want experiments' Joclal to aha is than there can possibly ba what will be done to reach such Ideate. The tacord of the from delving into what aha was. nothlnf wlu bi dona unless it means more She haa traveled a good bit. mraey She knows London and Faria and Rome. And aha haa traveled with MRS. SMITH WINS HEARTS OF WESTERN WOMEN. a aerloua purpose: no blah and On her western tour with hah husband Governor lota of atudy. Nobody abroad knew Mrs. Smith won the hearts of thousand, of women both thJL ui that aha was tha wife of tha gov- who wore fortunate enough to moot who merely took ernor of New Tork and aha didnt her hand or glimpsed at her as she her, and those by the throngs of enth-- u tell . them. She saw things and elastic admirers. Every where we passed heard such remarks as "Isn't made up her own mind about she "4 How charmingehe is. even prettier than her them. She liked London batter lure! And thorn few who werelnvited to luncheon given in herpioh than Paris. She would. onor, if had any mlogivingsat first aa to her ability to grace A few years ago aha fitted ov-e- d a social they function, came away admirers Just a little tha old executive mention In ashamed perhaps that they had allowed the tlnieet bit of preludice Albany. With tha help of New her to ever enter their heads. Tork decorators aha did a mighty against Mrs. Smith represents what every true American woman wants good Job. Tha place la difficult to represent, a devotion to home and children, a desire to be kind anyhow. But lately Mrs. Smith haa and agreeable, to hurt no one, knowingly. No hostess Is embarram-edeveloped a discriminating leva In entertaining her, for aha Is so Innately genuine, and one isd for American antiques, which la at case immediately In her presence. transforming tha formal gradually An crowd of Indiana, laborers, railway engineers in barn-lik- e rooms into a home of overalls, amailng society women, state officials and mothers with bahl.a great charm. If tha family misses packed the lobby of the Eklrvln hotel In Oklahoma City and took tha chairman for an hour or so, Mra Smith to their hearts with a tremendously enthusiastic we! snd she Is tha kind that la missed, come according to a report that came into Democratic headquarters they don't worry about her any from women observers in the party. more. They know aha haa gone Mrs- Smith, her daughter. Mrs. Emily Warner and out Into the country to look for Mra Previously Daniel O'Day. vice chairman of the Democratic etste com. a piece of pottery or a mitts had been gueete of honor at a luncheon to 100 given by wobed. men of the Oklahoma City Democratic club and Mra O'Day had She always did Ilka good muale. spoken from the portico of the capital . She la developing a taste for tha attractive In black lace with a black Looking and aerloua drama. She can hold up wearing Cecilunusually Brunner rosee, Mrs. Smith won the tribute list of tha her end on a good many crowd in her gracious reeponss to the greeting of Governor Prank subjects that P. Johnson end wife, and the commanding officer of the Soldiers people talk about. Sha hasnt of the Confederacy, who welcome Mra Smith as tha next Mistress been the governor's wife nil these years for nothing. And aa tha In Denver MhC Smith and her 'daughter entertained at lunchpresident's wife, it such ba her eon hy Mra W. W. Grant Jr., a socinty who pronounced fate, aha will make few mistakes her a charming guest, and at Helena. Mra leader, John E. Erickson wife and no enemies for herself or for of tha governor of Montana was bootees for the party at a dinner in her country. the executive mansion. No sooner did either of these women meet She Is today a very Mra Smith and they were good friends. woman poised. dignified, All along the route throngs of admirers met 'the trains, and serene much slenderer than her friendship wee shown the party by gifts of flowers, and pictures would indicate. She dress- even mountain trout and wild duck. I? number and candle, es exceedingly well. She meets mean anything no presidential candidate or his wife wereenthusiasm ever clospeople gracefully. Sha speaks In er to the hearts of the people- a low. musically trained voice. She smiles easily. laughs InfecInfluenced bv Insinuations against the good faith and patriotism tiously. She manages Whitehead, of a her butler and her household of candidate (or the high office of maid servants, aa If' aha had albecause of hie religion." president ways had them. Sha la watchful'tra Nicholson, whose maiden name waa Eugenie Kountxe, la a ly aollcltous for tha mental and her gueate. of comfort memebr of n family widely known physical Sha teama" well with her husbankers In Omaha Denver, her band at aodal function. Sha has and New Tork. birthplace, Is e a graduate of Vaamr and for She hi gift of making al sorts of peo-piyears naturha been n summer Ilka her. She la always of Mra Hert at Macklnaeneighbor al, always herself. Island. fn tbuSne" jf - four-post- er non-polltl- al fine-looki- Mrs. Nicholson Backs Al South For President 'These ara social qualities of no mean order. They have carried her successfully through tha Ufa ao changing conditions of her few years far. And In tb Pt sha haa added certain mental qualities which go far to round out her equl unent. Vets Form Smith Club in Salt Lake and R- - S. Matthews members of the executive committee. Following the organization of the league with 76 charter members, speech tthe group listened to the 'delivered hy Governor Smith In Denver by radio. committee will The executive meet Wedneedee nthgt end a social la planned for the night of Oct. difference between rookie players end rookie parachute Is that the latter ran I make even one error and stay In the league Naehvill Bonner, Review--) M ,r On ly t White House. Mrs. Smith la always natural, n, always heraelf and haa grown aa her husband haa grown in power and poise," tha article statea It recounts tha days when Sirs. Smiths parents moved from the At the call of Mrs. Joseph Westemelr. vice chairman of Weber Oliver atreet neighborhood of the Bd enthuaiaatlo meeting waa hald at Democratio Lower East Side, where AI Smith headquarters preparatory to making a complete canvaae of tha Uvea, to tha remote reaches of county. Mra Woatamalr made a to Huntavllle Wad ncad ay trip tha Bronx, aa Inaccesalbla In those night for organisation purposes. transit days as Albany. bean haa called at Ogdan STterSr if,, And how tha young Smith boy, at apeak, and on Wednesday, October dollars a ?! earning seventy-fiv- e Smadley of Colorado will addreaa month, first as a checker In the O?8"- SSn pUii" bridge tea Fulton Fish Market and later aa Democratic woman of Weber large at which Mra. George county a process server. Journeyed for MJ.Mra. William H. King and other Halt Lake women will be hours every night ha went In order to ba back home in Gore of Utah county will make a (peaking H?1 trip In tint for breakfast and work again mg 1,8 54y' op th "At0" committee, begin- OctoborS 4bUt tha next day. nlng Col. Roneerrlt will leave New Tork on Sept. 19 for Chicago and win devote hi attenDr.' R. J. Alexander waa elected tion to the campaign In the middle of the Alfred E. Smith areit and Rocky mountain states. It president War Veterans' league at a was determined. meeting held tn the men' headquarters In the TribWoman driver who killed a child une building, Saturday night. In Pelrolt waa arreated for negliOther officers elected woe the gent homicide. That e mi more following: Georg Faust, first vies rational than eeilinc It negligent president; Charles Forslund, secsuicide. Cleveland New. ond vice president; Charles Remcy, treasurer; V. K. Anderson, secretary: Elton Carroll. Thornaa Wll-llaMY SUBSCRIPTION Scott Anderson, F. Forteh THE UTAH STATESMAN L tab. ed (In Commercial William Hard's book is probably the most expert Hoover campaign biography produced so far. It Is abler than either of the two put out in mo to aid him In his unsuccessful race for the lican presidential nominationRepubthat year. It Is abler than one leeued totoerine Palm, formerly an officer of the Salt Lake City Juvenile Court under Judge Anderson, and at the present time Secretary of the Social Welfare League of Salt County; declared last evening1 that she is supporter of Governor Smith. If I disagreed with him on every other point," said Mrs. r "s? Palm, I would support him because of his attitude on Social Mr. Hard's best asset is a Welfare. Any social worker will for Apparent moderation. He gift aftestify that he has more fects Hoover ae for human legislation benefit to his credit than any man perfect.notHato regard Mr. thereby avoids the apliving. pearance of gush- - Tet the book. His stand on prohibition does not the Hoover worry me in the abilities,omuhaeiilng conceals as far as possible Prohibition and helped to elect the the Hoover weaknesses. beat sheriff Salt Lake County ever had, but I am convinced For example, Mr. Hoover now desires to emphasise that he la an only when the opportunity for individualist thaLHmperce at least In theprofit from illegal traffic la removed. The present system ory, opposed and to bureaucracy. On oners too much inducement to m&ke money. page II, therefore. Mr. Hard that Mr- Hoover when ho Mrs. Palm has been a leader in this state for many went to Australia aa a man, years in social welfare work and haa received recognition waa horrified at the young amount of both here and in the state of California for her services. It government control of the m'nca, end at tha provisions happens that Mrs. Mabel Walker Willebrandt, Assistant makingespecially ownership contingent up-- n Yet Mr. Hoover. In the Attorney General of the United Statea in charge of prohibi-tiowhose statements in support of Hoover have caused plentiful notes in his translation of Gorglous Agricola's De Re Metal-licsuch widespread comment, is a personal friend of Mrs. Palm. publikhed In London In till explicitly complained of American mining conditions OGDEN WOMEN BUSY. because x truth in the safe-keepi- ng ; Reviewer Says Our Slogan: "Every Reader a Contributor.' 1 Smith came into the West last week and the West went back with him. Never in the history of presidential candidate itineraries has there been anything to equal the march of triumph which A1 Smith has just made. Thousands and thousands of persons met Smith at every step and literally millions listened in on his radio talks. Smith knocked the Republican argument over like so many ten of the pins. Starting in at Omaha he pulled the props out Republican plan (lack of plan) for farm relief; at Oklahoma out into the open City he pulled the whispering campaign Denver he went on and then proceeded to box its ears; at which have not sites the control of power record for public reviewed the he Helena at into fallen hands; private yet corruption which has been rampant in Republican circles in the last seven years. Smith shattered every barrier which stood between him and carrying the Rocky Mountain region and the Missouri Valley. Not a radio in the nation but what was tuned in when the happy warrior spoke. Not a man or woman who GOING TOO FAR. heard him once but who came back the second, third and milmade Smith friends and along. fourth time brought Unless the Republicans find a acto restrain lions of votes on his trip and these will be added to as the tivities of such bulls in the china way as Williamthe Allen shop on. campaign goes White and Dr. John Roach Straton, Governor Smith may be elected in August with a verdict that will stand in NoHECKLING CURTIS. vember. The Burchards who are making religion an issue in the presidential campaign and forcing it into the open for Senator Curtis was heckled while speaking in Iowa the public discussion do not know the mind of the American other night. We do not approve of heckling but memory people. Just as sure as the sun shines in Butte today they takes us back to 1920 when the Republicans planted men in are sowing the seeds of a whirlwind of defeat for Hoover every meeting arranged for Jimmy Cox and Franklin and the Republican party. Roosevelt and refused to let these two worthy gentlemen .The withdrawal of charges against Smith by White is have a minute's peace all during the campaign. A couple of of no special credit to this g Kansas editor. As times the Democrats tried to heckle Harding and Coolidge a journalist of long experience in varied fields he should and were either tossed bodily out of the meetings or else have known belter than to have made these charges without tossed bodily in jail. Now the moral of the recent Curtis the fullest investigation and assurance of the truth. As it heckling is simply this: The fellows who did it got by with turns out, he has made of himself a contemptible and rihome state. How diculous figure before the people. Small wonder that he it. Got by with it in Hoovers hastens to Europe to hide himself during the remainder of the Republican party has fallen since 1920. the campaign. THE FARMERS ENDORSEMENT. Straton, a serisational, notoriety-seekin- g preacher, who is never happy when out of the spotlight and is a fawning John R. Coen, Colorado state Republican chairman, is sycophant to the Rockefellers, who built his church, declares now claiming that Colorado farmers are for Hoover. Coen that as a public man. Smith is the deadliest foe in America bases his claims on a meeting of 200 farmers and farm todny to the forces of moral progress and true political wisleaders who met and endorsed the Republican nominee. dom. That, indeed, is a rather severe indictment of the That these two hundred were hand picked Republicans goes people of the Empire state of New York, who have elected without saying. Press reports carefully avoided mentioning Smith governor four times. This statement, which must strike every honest, who the farm leaders' were and who they led. The two citizen as an insult and affront to the intelligence of hundred probably represent Mr. Hoovers total strength the of New York and the Democratic party that people state. sister our among the agrarians of nominated Smith. Straton has been called by the governor with a challenge to make good this charge. The challenge TO REMARK. WE PAUSE-JUS- T has been accepted and very soon we shall hear the first Big Bertha of the campaign. The friends and admirers of That Tammany is a small tabby cat when compared Smith have every cause to be resentful of the lying, atroVare with the allstar Republican organizations such as the cious reference of Straton to their candidate for president. machine of Philadelphia; the Magee machine in Pittsburgh; The Butte Miner is machine in Chicago; the oil Cox ma- It would make the samenot speaking as a pleader for Smith. the Thompson-Crow- e for fair play for Hoover, if chine in Cincinnati; the Matsche machine in Cleveland; the conditions were reversed. plea The Miner has doubts as to the fedWatson outfit in Indiana and the organized bartering of wisdom of changing the national administration from Reeral offices in the Southland. publican to Democratic control. It is an independent newsThat twenty-fiv- e years ago the wheat farmers were get- paper and will not fix its choice of candidates until it reads ting less than a dollar per bushel for their grain and were and digests the letters of acceptance of Smith and Hoover. paying 825 for a mower and less than $100 for a binder. The Miner, at this time and in the interest of fair play, Today they are still getting less than a dollar for their wheat only registers its earnest protest against such public utterbut are paying from $75 up for a mower and 8225 and up for ances as those of Straton and White and assures the Repuba bindfer and that's what is wrong with the small farms in lican leaders that the American people will not stand for it. America. There are in Montana who recall a campaign That in commenting on Hoover's candidacy, the Friends along personal lines directed against Grover Cleveland in intelligence (official Quaker publication at Philadelphia) 1884, resulting in the defeat by a governor of New York, publishes a letter from David Starr Jordan, president emer- unknown to the nation, of James G. Blaine, one of the most itus of Stanford University, to a friend, in which Jordan prilliant and popular statesmen of his or any other era. says: "The party leaders have climbed unwillingly into the Hoover will be an easy victim if these tactics are continued. Hoover bandwagon (which started in London, in August, Butte Miner. 1914. in the Savoy Hotel.) Gore has attacked Hoover's war policy CHOCK KIT ltKFRKSKXTK That Hooray! UTAH AT COXFEHLNCE. which obliged farmers to sell at fixed prices and at the same Z. II. Crockett, deof Appointment time forced him to buy at top prices. The senator also CHICAGO offlcl.il A1 Hoover History , Lacks Frankness Anti-Saloo- EXPLODING SOME OLD MYTHS. Justice 4 4 Women Voters Department Commenting upon the Republican platform, the Chicago Tribune says: There is a lack of candor in not recognizing the corruption under the Harding administration. The disclosures of the last four years, coming to full light after the Cleveland convention, have made it clamorous. The platform replied in a quickly choked whisper. The promise to regulate the expenditures of the coming election to avoid improper use of money would carry more weight if an alliance had n not been made with the League, which collects huge sums from vicious people as well as from moralists and spends them without any public accounting. no 85-0- Contributions LACK OF CANDOR. at Salt ADVERTISING RATES Per Column Inch $1.00 LEGAL NOTICES Notice of Assessment, 5 times Delinquent Notices, per column inch Probate Notices, 2 timcs Notice to Creditors, 4 times Summons, 5 times Phone Wasatch 852. Educational 4 4 Novelist's Wife Says He Has Met Dry Issue Squarely. mem-Jumpe- ra there was too much Individualism, too little government control, and too small a requirement that ownership should bo contingent upoa use. In an attempt to vlndlnle M Hoover's Republicanism, Mr. Hard Informs us that In 1113 In the course of the triangular contest between Wilson and Taft and Roosevelt Hoover's farthest thought away from Republicanism waa In the direction of a profoundly moved Interest In the Republican 'progresslvlsm' of Roosevelt. This la an amailng statement. In what way was this Interest In the Bull Moos movement manifested? Mr. Hoover wee a resident of London from 1003 to 117. He never voted In the United States until after the war. Even yet tha time when ha cast his first vote Is In doubt, the earliest claim made be- ing 1(23. Mr. Herd, In the same attempt to vindicate Mr. Hoover's Republicanism. declares that li.'s appeal In November, mg for the election of a Democratic congress was made In .order that President Wilson might be loyally supported at the approaching peace conference. But tn Mr. Hoovers appeal for a Democratic congress he stated In plain words that he wanted Mr. Wilson supports! not only In tho peace conference but In tho poot-w- ar reconstruction period. On page 171 Mr. Hard, la peaking of the 1 100.000.000 of the American government gift for the feeding of Europeans peoples in 1(11, early Implies that tha (allure to Include Germany In this gift woe due to the deelrs of congress and agalnat Mr. Hoover'a will. But Mr. Hoover, in oaklng for thin apropriation. specifically eked that no aid be authorised for Germany. And so It goes. all through tha book. Mr. Hoover le a n an of ex- traordinary abilities in certain directions. If a truly frank of him were published, it would not ba fatal to probably him- He ought to be able to surd It. Mr. Hard's book ia not frank. a Imagine biography of Mr. Hoover which makea no mention at all of tho Important part ho played M bringing about tho signing :t uis Jacksonville coal wage agreement! That agreement, which Mr. Hoover said In 1124 would help stabilize tho coal industry and fadlnai a saving measured in the of millions of dollars, has proved a complete failure and ha further helped to demoralise the coal Industry. One more word Is In order Mr. Hard goes to greet ns In- - t.i phasise continually that Mr. Hover Is a Quaker. One of Ihe f divisions of the book la entitled. Quaker Touth and there are allusion throughout the look to Mr. Hoover'a Quakerism. In a, when tha religions Issue Is being raised aeeinet Mr Hoover'a opponent. this emphasis upon Mr. Hoover'a Quakerism appsirs to l politically significant. Tlierefoie Mr. Hard, in falrneaa'to the reader ought to have stated in tailing of Mr. Hoover'a marriage that PHILADELPHIA HAR Mr. Hoover was married in tl.o LONG PROBE IN HAND. Catholic church. A plain atatement of that fart would stem to be th PHILADELPHIA The special reader's due In view of tho gt grand Jury investigating gang emphasis upon Mr. Hoovmurders, bootlegging end police er's religion. bribery in Ihle city probably will go on until after the new year, According to a wide rang of exJohn Monaghan, district attorney, changes, the weather haa gone all said. awry at thla time of the year as Sensational as hare been noma of usual the revelation heretofore, he eald, Mall. Charleston (W. YaO, Dali? he had reason to believe he had e uncovered only a small part of ilia Something telle us that on the "scandalous condltiona to date no party will ever At tha same time he dlecloaen showing Bill Borah it campaign colthat Samuel O. Wynne, federal maka lector Cincinnati Tlmee-tftaprohibition administrator for eastern Pennsylvania, turned over to From now on many a golfer will him today a black hook taken trom rease to ha known cither aa a a still, seised In South handy man around the house or Philadelphia. The book contained a great horns body- - Detroit Free entries showing that bribes were Cress. blo-gap- hy ;- con-sta- Mra Meredith Nicholson, wife of the novelist, has declared for Governor Smith, it was announced yesterday. She will support tha governor deepite the with of her closest personal friend. Mra Alvin T. Hert, vice chairman of the Republican national committee. In a letter to Mra Franklin D. Roosevelt, Mrs. Nicholson wrote: I am for Governor Smith he promises to meet squareiseuee railed by the shockthe ly ing and destructive failure of prohibition. The Republicans have hod eight yean to prove they could make this mischievous law effecwith the tive. If Mr. Coolidge whole federal power in his control haa failed to enforce prohibition, there is no reason to believe that Mr. Hoover would succeed. As a member of the cabinet ha haa never ehown the ellghteet teal In enforcing lawe which are notoriously evviolated every day In well-nig- h ery pert of the United Statea I am for Governor Smith and Mra Smith. The governor'a wife II won many hearts bv her admirable poise and dignity at the Houston convention. She exemplifies the most laudable qualities of woman-he- ll hood. I am a Protestant. No bar of my family la nr ever waa a Catholic. I should hate to think that any American womna could ba se e, r. SALT LAKE SCHOOL of Beauty Culture Complete tastraellea le permaecal wav-- j given wltheet extra charge with eet ' Tveilaf fall coarse af Scanty Caltar. Call ar lead fa lafermallaa. SALT LAKE BARBER SUPPLY T oaoi ,h 0? ioboe ATI KMTt PARLOR SI PPLIKI Phene Me. halt Lake City. Ltah. loaoc 30E30E OKI |