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Show UTAH STATESMAN Liberty (Ehr - Editorial Comment - Educational '0 THINK about farm relief, what the farmers of Utah OUGHT the fanners or the senior senator f Utah Contributions - (Endorsed by. the Democratic State Central Committee) A Democratic state newspaper, published every Saturday at Salt Lake City, Utah, devoted to progressive ideas and to promotion of the progress and prosperity of the state and party. WOMAN Edited hr Sirs. D. M. Draper FREDERICK L. BAGBY, Editor C. S. GODDARD, Business Manager Our Slogan: u Second Claes 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 Summons, 5 times men what Yale and Harvard were to men. Clara Barton Is shown on the field of badle, typifying the clemency which made her successful In the founding of the American Red Cross. Picture No. 9 Is a scene showing the hazards which women of the north willingly faced to help the escape of slaves through the underground railway. Picture No. 11 represents a group of temperance workers kneeling In prayer for their cause on the floor of a saloon, to the amusement but apparent discomfiture of surrounding patrons. This canvas, the work of Harry Townsend, gives the impression perhaiM more than any other In the collection of the perseverance and almost complete with which women sponsor a cause which they have elected to support, and by which devotion they consistently win success for it. The story of woman's part In the building of the nation has recently been told by pictures. This collection, which has been named "Milestones in Women's Progress, " and originally. Italnted for use as rovers for the Woman Citizen (recently renamed the Woman's Journal), haa been exhibited in many American cities. $5.00 .50 3.00 4.00 5.00 THE PILGRIM MOTHER. The first painting, by Clark Fay, represents the landing of the Pilgrim Mother In America, j One iBmHdeawaie, by the significant expression of the mothers face, of 'bleakness of the scene st which she must be gazing and aware also of the courage within herself which helps her face it so confidently te Phone Wasatch 852 BOOM FOR SENATOR REED THE FIGHT FOR SUFFRAGE. Campaign headquarters have been opened in Washington, I). (!., Mr. Townsend has painted afao the final picture of the collection In which and in Missouri, to promote the candidacy of Senator Janies Susan B. Anthony is being sentenced A. Reed of Missouri for the Democratic nomination for president. to prison for "illegal voting. Among the striking incidents of Miss AnSenator Reed, we believe, is one of the outstanding statesmen in thony's life was her arrest in Rochesthe party, but from comments already heard on his reported presiter, N. Y. when she and 14 friends dential aspirations, the Democrats consider him a little too radical Ml's Hutchinson, mother oi a large tested their right to vote on election . 1872. under the Fourteenth family and a woman or deep religi-'das in juh ideas to be a safe (annulate at tins time, and too, thr convictions, emigrated with her amendment. They were indicted and son Democrats of the party apparently can never forgive nr forget husband to Boston in 1635. Although tried in the United States circuit known for her acts of kindness, she 'court at Canandaigua. At the conclu- lus open antagonism ton aril ,, resident Milson. was persecuted for maintaining her sion of the testimony the Judge direct- llowever, Senator Reed may prove a formidable contender for religious beliera, tried, condemned ed the Jury to bring in a verdict or and banished for traducing the min-- ' guilty. Mias Anthony snnounced that tlm nnmniniin,. nuiiiiiiiiuoii. Ilsiers and their ministry." A statue, she would not serve the sentence and ! i y, Mil-jou- ( j j I erected to her memory before the Bos- she never did. A study of the pictures leaves with ton state house shows that time lias ( rased the Judgment. jthe observer an indelible impressionof the winning battle against hardWANTED A VOYCE AND VOTE jship, against intolerance, against dis- ,i. if II 11 f ' ' ' a,l" , splendid ItfJit foi the, An thp portrait crimination. ignorance. Injustice, auf- lm,ireg,ivtl uanvag lnterests of I tah and the other upper basin States ill the recent1 of Mistress Margaret Brent or Mary- -' ! ferinK intemperance and prejudice Boulder Dam hearing before the irrigation committee of the senate.' tottC weXin'g o! The governor is a master of the subject and his statement of the named by him executrix or his estate. their fellowCrountrymen of today situation to the committee was clear-cu- t, 'T.he Picture shows her in 164S before! intelligent and i. oSSirTSSS? S! enlightening. Have The bombastic banterings of .Senator Hiram Johnson couldnt confuse ausedSgreat0rsnrarVynroquesnghi In vote No and Rest the the Utah executive for g moment. proceedings. lvoyce" The governor has made a brilliant fight for fundamental rigbts.adeputyrhiTgtwenior'sroUieras.Men Allowed, well as by virtue or being a laige in this important issue. payer and landowner. History records Ithat neither request was granted A1 Smith dinner last night broke ail records in Montana, rathers feared a !c,u, the founding ,!xam,le ror Je w,'s of e co1 The echoes must have readied to the sidewalks of New York. Butte Miner. THE SPIRIT OF 1776 a week or complete relaxThe heroic message and contort- - lnf wom 7 n, rsst. Iii the Democratic party, A1 Smith seems to grow stronger every bearers of Revolutionary days are rep- a, ' day and we do not believe that he can possibly he denied the nomiiia-- Xntcnedtdhrouirth lif.eof awa'- lishlMhlngChl1 inhibited. Yml tion. Furt hennore, he will lie hard to heat. Aurora Democrat. General Hows army in Philadelphia to ,0 1,e abrt n lhe morning is obliga- I General Washington at Valley Forge. ,0'TNow the Cedar county rest camp is important information. Hoover says that the nation is prosperous with the exception of, (receiving inquiries from all over the a few spots. A more careful scrutiny might disclose a amraiMhm women nuip somewhat sacajawendi?n?re of a French the conceived h,r, plan. They argued acresembling the coat of a leopard. Iliehlo Times. woman and the to .Interpreter only company the Lewis and Clarke expo- - ,haf everyone had organized leisure dilion, is shown, against a background ,'x,ept themselves the husbands at Whatever one may say or think about Governor Al Smith, one or forbidding mountains pointing mu ,1" an.nual Mate or county fair and must admit he had the guts to refuse to recognize all the insanity vin'dror"abtroMhtaroro was rented pL'hrou wSr"hoagu1S('''ap. dope placed before him by professional alienists in behalf of murder-- : ' tain Clarke and the expedition down an, ,he,re,ll? vrrage farm woman's ' Vellowstone river to the discovery ers Sender and (irav. Ft. Lupton Dress. of the great northwest. Nook; be-Th- e I - j i - 1 - . - j ; i . Xarc-is-s- Whitman, first white woman to cross continent. Whether or not lie considered the political angle of it Al Smith represented as the . Pioneer Mother of the mak tlnl himself no harm when lie refused to modify the death sentences .ing the covered wagon Prairies, Journey wiili ,Mr a missionary to the west- of blitli Snyder and Judd tirnv. Las Animas Leader. ern lands, in 1S36. AN EARLY REFORMER Picture No. 6 presents a small child . in cap and envelojdng it is r nightgown mute tin- - sentences r Ruth Snyder and (.rav convicted of murder, working hy candlelight to remove senfor se from a groat book with which, Tom Heflin, who is a living reincar- and the day of their execution, vesterdav, probable witnessed tlii t ' Most ,h.. will ..Imir, Ihr ,.vil '.I, K.C...h stand the governor took. He savs lie is not governor to thwart tlie;l,a5 s,anton. As a child she heard tacks in the senate on windmills, real her rather. Judge Cady, about tin- - and imaginary. Is a cancourt ilecisioiis lut to do what lie can to enforce law. Ilavden He- - from injustice of the laws relating to wo- - didaie for the presidency. In a spirit men. She decided to go downstairs of and publican. lie night armed' wiili the scissors and is willing to assume the role of a cut those offending laws from the siai- - martyr and become the (hamidon .r Governor Al Smith lost none of his popularity hy his blunt refusal U,H Fortunately she was round all the hill billies who se "rod'' at the ,0 sa..v,. ,h" li,brary- - "'Vlien mere mention or Wall Street and the to listen to the liiie-snu- n theories of Imvveru einieertiimr psxclmlogleiil you ,ime grow up." her rather explained. Church or Rome. In the Interest or " Albany and get the ihe race, we hope that J. Torn ran be vagaries which might he considered hy way of saving the lives of Mrs. "HU "'"f to new laws" Tims dissauded. We are fearful nr the legislature an. liidd Snyder (.ray and thus popularizing the sport of killing early did Kiizabeth Stanton acquire on the nation's mortality rate. liusliaiids with iron window - weights, He is not easilv off his ,,at iMission fur abstract justice which Just the other day a Scot ag.-chin an dlpci devon-throughout her liie m in Chicago and this is the epitaph feel hy appeals lo the sentimental side of his iiature- - "" t111 ,",t !,t she the causes of anti slavery, pmhihiii.in ilmt unwHilorna Ills tiimb: nil to the lllll.lTnsmcut of nil executive in either slate or national 1,11,1 suffrage. M'Tosli is dead gane lo his rest: office. (In elev News. a WOMENS UNTIRING DEVOTION i Though 'niang his freens I was the fdiili Mitchell Prolliwilz has paint- best. ,M' sar' r M"UI11 Hly- - T me lie ne'er did l,,,,n,l,r crack a smile, How dares ihe Utah Farm Bureau iiiiestiou the neetirnev of .oke College, as she went about on a dr wi' a . the limp beguile jest r s Smoot Senator statements roiicerning the attitude of Utah fariiiers,'l,'To-doocanvass for runds to make In (ruth lie was a dreary soul: ana gowrr he wadna bo'wl; toward ihe MeNarry-IIauge- n farm relief hill? Who knows best ITlo'ilVjcc nooi inai kouuI ih to ucv H nevor Hang ho nnvvr chafft'd; 1 The Laugh That Killed. -- . t ,viK "C'qIZ M."ULTdX' ii ' i 1 jss meeting of the Utah Farm Bureau. Senator Smoot was quoted aa remarking that he found no one demanding the passage of the bill in Utah, Idaho or other western states. . David N. Beal, president of the breath. Sat doon an laughed himself to death. Farm Bureau Federation, Issued the statement that "the fanners of the Politics western states are strongly in favor of the principles of the Senator-Ele- ct bill and insist upon their inclusion In any farm relief measure Smith passed by congress." The firat of the contested-sea- t case which have been before the senate for many months, that of senator elect Frank L. Smith from Illinois, was EDITORS decided by the senate by definitely refusing him the oath of office and 8TATE RIGHT8 AND THE declaring hla seat vacant. BOULDER DAM. The final vote was an overwhelming rejection .of Mr. Smiths clams, 61 to 23. four senators who had (Cache Valley Herald) To the busy citizen of Cache Valley, previously supported him In demanding admittance to the senate, among Isolated aa he ia from it, the dam may hold little or perhaps them William E. Borah of Idaho, switched on the final ballot and voted nothing of interest. Yet, aa the writthe Reed resolution excluding him. er aeea it, it la one of the most Senator Smoot voted against the propositions ever thrust upon Reed resolution, and Senator King, the people of this state We say reported to be against excluding him, "thrust" because there are certain inwas absent, being paired with Senator terests now trying to railroad selfish legislation through congress behind a Edwards, who was for it. The exclusion or Smith was based moke screen legislation which jeopardizes the interests of several states primarily upon hla acceptance or in contributions to hla primary In favor of one, the evident Intent of fund by Samuel Insult. This was the big hurry being to put over a deal only part of the 84SO.OOOO which Mr. before the several states in question Smith was supposed to have Expended, can organize their forces and agree which expenditures were declared by upon a common solution of the great the senate to be contrary to sound problem of the equitable division of public polcy and harmful to the dig- the waters of the Colorado river. California ia notably avaricious benity and honor of the senate, dangerous to the perpetuity of free govern- yond measure, and If cunning enough to put over her little deal at this time, ment." The case of William S. Vare, of will deprive the state of Utah and Pennsylvania, still remains to be de- her slater states of billions of dollars cided. Mr. Vare la charged with oper- of revenue through the loss or these ating a powerful political machine great taxable resources, and the loss which by ballot frauds and corruption of valuable priority rights In the use of the waters of the Colorado river put their candidate over. and lta several tributaries. Our state is fortunate at this time to have at its head a man of the caliCause ber and with the convictions possessed Still by Governor George II. Dem. His firm championship of the state of At the close of the third conference Utah in this and other weighty maton the cause and cure of war, held ters arising in the past few years hre recently In Washington, Mra. Carrie more than noticeable, and he should Chapman Catt, chairman, admitted be commended for his ardent fight for that today the real cause or war re- the vested rights of our state. mains as much a mystery as ever. AL SMITH ISSUES "The object of the conference," sic said, waa to try to educate ourselves With the growing belief that Goveras to underlying cauaes or war. We nor Al Smith or New York will be examined the reasons given in histor- nominated for president by the Demoies and in propaganda, and we list- cratic party, there waa great interest ened to authorities on all or the phases in the message which Smith delivered or war. We heard a great deal about to the New York legislature. It may economics. We found, that no one continue to be said of him that he does knows just what the cause or war is. not straddle issues, and that is to hla We learned that much in three years." credit. Mrs. Catt said the conference acSmith turned to the homespun complished much, however. In creating philosophy of Abraham Lincoln to a greater desire on the part of women fashion his political creed. His mesTor a thorough knowledge of the ques- sage waa built on a belief of a govtion, a more complete understanding ernment, of the people, by the people of (hose branches or the Investigation and for the people," this with few which are not mysterious, and it modern digs at an issue Lincoln never brought forth the belief that If people faced prohibition. want war stopped, there is always a But, around Lincolnian principles. Smith haa outlined his national stand way to stop it. clearly In preparation for his coming fight for the Democratic nomination English for president. The message, the longExcluded est written by a New York governor, touched not only on atate, but imitori-an- t Women. national Issued, which surely will Miss Maude Royden, British Lec- confront every aspirant for the partys choice. turer, and member of the Make the people the government, for Peace and Freedom, was his basic League theme, expressed as folIs visiting the United States. Miss lows: Royden came lo America expecting "The old world roncept of governto lecture before numerous women's ment but her free expression the was that the people existed for organizations, The underlying government. on cigarette smoking failed to please theory of American democracy la that msny or these women and her speak- the government exists for the people, ing engagements were cancelled. In reply to the criticism of her. Miss and the government which is closest to them and most responsive to the Royden was quoted as saying she did demands upon it, economically and not care a button whether she smoked in America or not, and that efficiently managed, ia the best form she could not see that the question of government." On this basis, Smith took up prohibihad any religious significance." tion without referring to the right or MeNary-Hau-ge- n McNary-Hau-ge- n . . WITH OTHER Every Reader a Contributor Portraits of American Womens Progress. Matter, July 18, 1922, at the Postoffice at Salt Lake City, Utah, under the act of March I, 1879. Wl gloominess the mon was daft. No mirth in him waa visible. An yet hie end waa rtalble; For yin brlcht morn he read in prent, "Tran Heflin la oot for president," An then auld Mae drew yin lang Frank Excluded. Sponsored by the Salt Lake Womens Democratic Club Office Room 111 Atlas Block, Salt Lake City, Utah Entered VOTERS DEPARTMENT Justice - er-le- rt Boulder-canyo- $200.-00- 0 of War a Mystery. Lecturer by American 40,000-wor- d Intcr-Na-tlon- Admiral Magruder Hits Intolerance. oi-g- Speaking at a gathering in Philadel Magruder, cause plila. Rear Admiral or the recent -- navy investigation, wrong of the law. Democratic government. he said, "loses its force and vigor when an a nixed minority by trick or device circumvents the will of the majority. He believes in government ownership or power resources, fewer laws and la opposed to indiscriminate temporary injunctions in labor disputes. Of the latter he said: "In the field or Industrial relatione generally, I renew my recommendations for enactment Into law the declaration that the labor of a human being shall not be treated aa a commodity or articles of commerce, and that legislation be enacted that would prohibit the granting of a temporary Injunction in industrial disputes without h de- nounced Intolerance, wholch he said was exemplified by the recent exchanges between Senators Heriin and Robinson. I am against religious intolerance and racial prejudice, he said. "We have Intolerance today. We read or it In Ihe papers when one senator attacked a man because he Is a Catholic. We Protestants have to remember we borrowed our religion from the Catholics only a few hundred years preliminary hearing to ascertain the ago It behooves no man to get up facta." and say he has 'the religion or 'the' The governor advocated fewer laws, this or that or the other thing. a minimum wage law, and the direct convenprimary in plare of Ihe tion system. The message proposed to take the power or sentcnrlng criminals from judges and place It in Hie hands of an examining commission He ruriher ravorod marketing Tor farm relief; abolition or grade crossing; an waKxrejition to a purported slatcim-n- t connecting the Great takes' or Senator Rnmol published in the terway with the Atlantic ocean and Hie removNew York Journal of Cnmmeire Oc- al of all lawa discriminating against tober iMli, waa taken al a recent women- .- Steamboat Pilot. Utah Farm Bureau Takes Exception to Senator Smoots Utterances. irty |