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Show UTAH STATESMAN, AUGUST 24. 1928. Democrats of U.S. Give Statehood to Utah Young Party Starts by Getting Tossed Out of Meeting ; i Sagebrush Dangled From Banners in' 1888 (Continued Kicks rd of Democratic dubs. The clubs, however, were formed by the liberals, for the moat part. It was on August 4 of that year that the organisation meeting of this version of democracy was held with Judge Nurrel chosen president. At thl meeting recognised and endorsed the Ogden convenUon which waa refused admittance to the Mormon delegates the Thurman Democrat had nothing to do with It. J. B. Walden, Charles Carlton. Harry T. Duke were ofifeerg in the club under Judge Kurrall, L. H. Drake and from page on.) Tike llld. of the firm of fllchnrdi and Richard of ftilt tho man who first Lake. w moved thut a true Democratic ParIn Utah. 8. ly b organlied court now supreme candidate. C. Ilia first vm Judge, to the front C. Richards cam when Ills again In 180 to II clashed with branch of Democracy C. C. Richard. (Continued from page one.) THE PLATFORM. Reaffirms th old Democratic principle that good government does the greatest good to the greatest number. Religious equality, self government. Flrf bullot Delegate to Congress Dr. pike, IT, Thurman, 12; 1; W- - H. King, 1; H. D. Johnson, 1; Byron Groo, 1; B. A. Kenner. 1. first Second ballot Dr. Pike 12, Thurman. 17; Byron Urou 2. sTis sL-rs.ftSsrs- SS&SrSKJi first Mormon to be appointed Men of Nation March MAI Smith Atlantic Monthly Givec Season Starts With Contest at Los Angeles With Reason 'Why Youth Trojan Grid Team. Rallies to N. Y. Man. October It Denver University at Believing that their gymnasiums from peg one.) flee, the refolve to build a new world out of th rulna of the old II thla had been keenly felt by Wilson and had been given magnificent expression. If ever there waa n American crusade. It waa this Intellectual and emotional birth of 1911 and 1919. Wilson cams back and began hla losing fight to convince Congress that his vision - were pioo-tlc- al aa well as ideal- Throughout tha battle, and long after Congress had rejected tha peso treaty, Wilson remained th leader uf th thought of America's young men. Publie sentiment generally veertd away from th President and toward tha nationalist programme If Lodge and tha Irreconcilable, but tha universities still held with Wllaon still believed In the league-Eveafter Preat. Harding had substituted normality for lutma. Harvard waa forming a strong pro under tha leadership league club of a son of Thomas W. LamonL Cecil When Lord apoke at Princeton, his reference to Wllaon drew thunderous cheer from th underand graduates, while the robedperfuu-clorlly hooded faculty applauded from tha platform. time the young men had For been given something to whlcn had proof they could ding. They that not all th world'roomburin for waa directed !n back selfish ends Th boy who had seen th war end Just before they were o f age to enlist could turn all their enthusiasm Into fighting for a new kind of peace. Dollar (Continued E. to a the second; Fred Kesler end J. U. I THE RALLY. Bamberger tha fourth and M. major executive office in Utah over Howies and J. H. Woodman th the fifth. The third was a period of 40 years, having with not representwhich compare November 4. Th Utah county position ed at the meeting. John P. Young, Democrats who were to Join the what is secretary of slate now. Judge Webb, w. J. Wil. Clarke and acted Richards, In nils capacity, Ilam Gill Mills were at th meet- Balt Lake eagebrushers were met at the depot by a large number of a governor of the state during ing. the absence of Governor West. with When It came time for the terri- Halt Lakers, in company frum the torial dangled Sagebrush election in the fall, whom they marched up Houth Tembanners of th Thurman Dcnio-era- howeverdelegata Main street to street and thence ple Its the Liberal had in tha parades of 18. hcnc candidate in tha field party as a Liberal south and west to th Grand opera tha term sagebrush Democrats. died an dtha Thurman Democrats car- house. Beior th old century hod hsr-no- ried tha banner of Democracy. Th men carried torches and another wheelhorse waa in the with uniformed bands, banners, harneee and ha been in the I etc., mad quite a show. At the I Tlic Tuacwrorw Fight. ever elnce. It waa James H. Moyle, 0 head of the column were & in th party, Ieople' imminent and J. L. Rawlins carryIn 1SI1-- S there was great actifermer prosecuting attorney, who a big bunch of aagahruah; the vity by the local Democrats In an ing took up the struggle when the Re- effort to have the people divide oil university students carried a banner declaring tho '.University Stupublican wave spread over the national tha demolished party lines. A Democrabut state and all tic convention was belli at Provo. dents Holid for Democracy,'' B. lb secured which haJ liberty party Jr., Thurman was elected tempor- Thurman, H.A. O. Bmout, and statehood. Senator William H. K.chairman Dr. llke, R. J. and F. & Richards a Rawlins,J, V. Paul, A. King was also one of tha original ary Jr.. Judge permanent chairman, lion. J. L. Dueenberry, ('W. Smoot, Democrat of the state. HCaeedy. Dr, Rawlins after a spirited contest It was the early Democrats, who, with adD. Faust and Johnson Hadley .Hon. Phillip H. Henderson d taking advantage Of I'realdent for dressed the rally. Woodruff's manifesto regard- was nominated as candidate territorial to Congress ana ing polygamy, luld aside tha old was electeddelegate the ensuing November fight of church and Jersey and stumped tha stats for a divibig fight with tha Tuscaror-a- a sion on national party lines. -a Liberal Demoof " crats came Inorganisation 1191. Th democracy Rally I Tito Original Varth-s- . of Weber county had a meeting on 1S91 HenSi, and elected ATLANTIC Th so --called political parties In February CITY Calling on waa doomed. Th indiry P. Henderson, chairman, with the district leaders of South Utah prior to HI were simply C. Jersey diplomacy C. for someRichards as vies chairman. to mobilise for a campaign fur vidual again counted wae Mormon and euch a Richards at that time was chair- Hoover and In th world. It thing canThe Drat waa called the Peoples man atata Republican Weof tho Mormon party In experienced didates, Enoch Is Johnson, Repub- movement ae England party and tha second tha Liberal wae ber countv. was WashRichards in party. .Thn first conspicuous move- ington tha night of the meeting lican leader of Atlantic county at with Newmanlem. Th th nation time had ment for the formation of a Dem- and waa forthwith' given the task ot a dinner at the Hotel lilts Carl- rich enough already; come tor something else. ocratic party was In 111. Prior the new Democrats recog- ton hero warned hla But the time hadn't coma, and to that a local Democratic club had getting that the not "la a far by nised campaign the by party organisation. the .been organised In Salt Lake City young men went out from their to a be sight aftea going heln pink tha of Chauncey universities in great confusion of and did soma effective work In a Through Black, son of Old Jerry Black, fair," and must be taken seriously mind. Instead of becoming more local way. because Tammany's 'aver reaching president of the national or- Influence that AmeriIt For many year prior to 111 and appeared spiritual, la Into of Atlantic Democratic clubs reaching ca had become infinitely more matha Liberal party had maintained ganisation Richards waa able to lino up with county how." a Democratic organisation which Congressman William U Wllaon, Tha dinner, attended by several terial than before tha war. Interapparently functioned only In years who later became a cabinet mem- State Republican leader Icnludlng nationalism waa part and parcel nawhen a president waa to ba elected. ber. Wilson came west on an or- Morgan T. Lorson. Republican of the Bolshevist menace. Tha to Tha organisation consisted of a ganisation tour, stopped la Utah nominee tion had turned Its attention for Robert governor; own rhalrman and secretary and per- for talks under the auspice of the Zachary, secretary to United Rta- - a Its own safety. Its prosperhaps an executive committee. ity lie own comfort. A ring of poll' democracy of Thurman and Rich- Senator Edge; Representative eighty-eiggovern-menthundred dominated tlclane Eighteen ards. Th Tuerarnraa were Invited Isaac R.icharach and State Senaagain was a Presidential year. Tha chair- to Join In with the new party but tor bringing with them a rule Rich Emerson was L. tho rds, man of tha local Democratic party refused and Wilson declined to talk opening of n ws are summer of corruption ofto which 'vigorous know tha full (Liberal) lasued a call for all Dem- to them aa a group. only beginning campaign," according to Johnson. details. ocrat to meet and elect delegatee Mr. Zachary raid Hoover waa to a Democratic convention flo be There waa no place for the The Final Battle part and parcel of the Coolldge held at Ogden In May of that year They had administration and would carry on young men In all thla. to nominate a delegata to tha nadenied the pursuit of wealth aa tha th of administration." final Th between policies the fight and for th tional convention life, and there was no th new organisation This message, ha said, cam from the goal of In transaction of other necessary cam in and other goal sight. A few went 1191 when, with th terri- Senator Edge. business. Senator I.arson declared he waa hesitatingly Into tha andiplomatic reorganised on party Unas, th Tha Democrats of th People's tory abortive Tuacaroras were denied aeata In elck and tired of being a member service; a few mad party concluded to respond to the th In New to Tammany attempt fight Democratic of a senate convention th and for nine Republican call. They held primaries In many two chosen Democrat years with a Democratle govern- York. One group of brilliant young countlea of tho state and elected war regularly lawyers offered their help to EmJudge Henderson and or." delegates to attend the convention. John seated. T. Cain were th successful ory Buekner In tha United State The delegates appeared at tha condelegates. Judge Orlando Powers "In the field of Industrial rela- Attorney's fifflee. Many wanted vention with their credentials and and Fred Xlesel were the ones re- tions generally, I renew my recom- time to think and went abroad, to sought admission a delegatee but fused. mendations for enactment Into law Oxford, to tha Sorbonne, to She th regular organisation rejected party was organis- th declaration that tha labor of a Far East. Others sought out agen their credential and denied them ed AinRepublican 1991 or 1192, and alnee that human being shall not ha treated elea of social service, th Rockeadmission. time tha parties have generally aa a commodity, or article of com- feller foundations, tha Internation functioned on national party line. merce, and that legislation be en- al T. M. C. A. It waa a period of I Rejected Dclrgstra Meet. Tha Hon. Rawlins Joseph ii acted that would prohibit tha haphasard effort. An editor of a Democartle Territorial deleThe delegatee ae rejected repair- while granting of a temporary injunction Princeton magaalne, leaving for to in Utah from gate Congress ed to tha old county court house In U9I4 succeeded In obtaining for In Industrial dispute without a Oxford, wrote bitterly of th hearing to ascertain faithless generation' faithless beOgden and there held a convention an enabling act for admission preliminary facto. The use of th big stick cause there was nothing In which of their own. They organised by Utah Into tha Union as a sovereign stats. tha In the field of Industrial relations to put faith. One of th ablest of electing the usual officers of a Grover Cleveland as president and Is a thing of the past. Th em- the young Harvard men declared political convention and adopted a both house of Congress were Democratic platform. They also Democratic, the first time that ployment of mediation and concilia- the best thing that could be said tion la productive of better results." of national politic wae summed up lasued a call for a Democratic con- condition had existed since the vention to be held at a later data Civil war. The people of Utah had Governor Alfred E. Smith In a by a line of Matthew Arnold's 'Because thou must not dream, thou to the New Tork In Balt Lake City. In response to made application for ad- message needst not then despair! A speaker tho call prlmarlea were again held missionfrequent in to th Union under ReIn th various counties of tha ter- publican administration but all of ritory for the election of delegates their applications had been r Jerkto the Balt Lake convention. The ed. Delegate Rawlins made the convention met according to sched- most of the opportunity to apply ule and a majority of the counties for admission while the entire adwere represented by delegates. Tho ministration was Democratic. platform adopted at Ogden was re- f vised and enlarged upon. Most of Tim Enabling Act. the delegates were of th Mormon faith but there were several promlie had no opopaltlon except inent among whom Csapble Inatrnrflon In permanent wav-te- a but they were were Dr. Walter A. Pike of Provo from Republicans elven wlthnat extra eharga with to defeat hla effort. The and J. L. Rawlins and Benjamin powerless securer! by him from regnlar fall reams nf Beanly Caltare. Rherks of Balt Lake City. Tho con- enabling act libwee one of the most Call nr aead far Information. vention waa spirited and enthu-slai-ti- c. Congress eral ever granted In respect to doof nations lands for public public The treatment they had received Th enabling art also refrom the Liberal Democrats at Og- purpose. lieved the people of the territory B.INHKR SHOP All) BKAITY PARLOR 1 PPLIKS den spurred them to action and of a heavy burden of Alleged InT Kant Int Heath Phaae Was. MM gait I .she City. Utah. provoked many uncomplimentary debtedness been which had allusions. The convention proceed- ed against them by the federalcharggov. ed to th nomination of a candi- ernment through a long series of date for territorial delegatee to prior to statehood. He waa Congress. Dr. W. R. Pike and 8. years nominated In 1494 by th Utah R. Thurman were placed In nom- delegate to hut not with ination. The result of th vote standing hisCongress distinguished service was almost a tie, Thurman re- In behalf of the people of Utah he ceiving a majority uf two or three was defeated by Hon Frank J. Can. votes only. Both candidates were non. the Republican candidate In Each of them 199$. The State constitution waa magnanimous. rpoke In favor of the other and adopted In pursuance of th enEach of urged hi nomination. art referred to. K waa subthem knew that as far a his elec- - abling mitted to the people of tha territion by tha people was concerned tory at the November election ot Mill Creek knows roads and how of 1 waa a forlorn hope. The conven-- ( that year and adopted together tlon, however, was determined to with Its election of the Republit put the matter through and at least can candidates for all the state ofthey should be built. made tha proceeding an entering fice. In 1891 the Hon William H. wedga to farther developments. King, the present Democratic Sena, Tha adherents of tha new party tor from I'inh, waa elected by the were tha subject of more or less Democratic- - party of Utah It His long record with the Democratic ridicule by each of the old parties. representative In the lower house The Mormon Democrats who par- of Congress. ticipated in the organisation were characterised by tome of their speaks for itslf. Senator Tom Heflin last Friday brethren aa apostates from the to Al alone Smith long enough Mormon Church and by the Liber- let at Will Rogers The al party aa trying to put something take a whack must have humorist's cowboy digs over to hoodwink the Liberal His conduct is above reproach. got under the skin of tho Alabama DemThe ocrat who Participated In the or- blowhard. Yuma Pioneer. ganisation were characterised aa ts ne 1'ru-feaa- or - Wll-for- anti-churc- h, Republicans Urged to n. -- , ht - Tua-caror- . Mormon kite. th principal th territory. counties an! cities of As was fully expected Thurman received comparativefew of votes cast at th enthe ly suing election. Ills oppnnenla, both th People's party candidates and th Liberal candidates, were liberally supported fur th movement had aroused more than ordinary interest. Tha seed had been town. e Liberals Have dubs. In th summer of 1114 there was also gome activity In th forming Utah Conservatory of Music. SIS Templeton Bids. Halt Lake t'lty, link. Local and rorrespondenea res me an Hawaiian Steel Guitar We Teach Direct From Sheet Music lavenllente One Method. Hr salts Guaranteed. Call ar Write far Detailed Infarmallsa. Prominent Idaho n, Republican Now Al Smith Booster foot- ball team will report to th camp to bo hild on th college campus. It la expected by pre-seas- the athletic department that more than 0 men, with a determination to make tha team, will report on thla date. Tha candidates will be housed, served their meals, and put Miles Cannon, former field comthrough a strenuous athletic program all on the college campus. missioner of reclamation under Such men aa Wairen Hawley, for Howard Lindford, Monro Cranney, Secretary Hubert Work, and Robert Gibbons, Wesley Schaub, four years agricultural commissionCantril er of Idaho under Governor Darla, Martlndale, Addington Nellson, Eugene Warburton. Noel a Republican- - haa bolted th G. O. Bennlon, and David Hurren, all F, ranks and will lead tha camletter men of the 192T squad, will he greatly missed thla coming sea- paign for Governor Alfred Smith In son. they having graduated last Oregon. Thla Inforitaatlon waa received by spring- - However, tho Agglea will start their work of rebuilding with Chairman Fred L Johnson of the an abundance of enthusiasm and Democratle campaign regional with soma promising material on headquarters here Saturday In a Glen hand. Captain Theron Smart, telegram from Charles T. Treacy Douglas Bergeson. of Portland, secretary to Mr. CanWorthington, Edmund Jenson, Elite Wade, Afina non. The wire stated that Mr. CanGardner and Robert Dahl of last non has accepted the position of and president of the Oregon years squad will all ba present witn association and will lead fighting for regular position team. frosh the campaign In that state. soma of last year1 The 1921 schedule include! nine Appointment of An. Frances R. games, seven Rocky Mountain Draper aa vice chairman of tha conference teams will b played women's department of the regionand two Interaectlonal contests will al headquarters, was announced by be held. The flrat game will he Chairman Johnson Friday afternoon- Mrs. Draper, wife of Delplayed with the powerfuf Univerat Los An- bert M. Draper, chairman of the sity of California 29.team Democratic state committee, was The other geles September battle will be with the an active worker In the Western States assoc la of School Mina, Montana State tlon. at Logan, October (. Utah Aggies 1921 football acha4 ult Plant food worth mor than UrWerrity September la washed away from R An&el-Los at Southern California tha farms of the United States every year. Thla la twenty times aa October I Montana Mines at Lo- much plant food aa la removed gan. from th land by growing crops. Tha toes occurs on gently eloping Amerthe of rose at the banquet hillsides and on fairly level land ican dub in Oxford to aaaert that subject to "sheet" erosion well and failed had Rhodes ae on steep hillsides. Proper terth plan internationallam waa only a long racing will often remedy the conword. Ona young American went dition. to Geneva, observed the League hopefully, and Returned to study tha psychology of tha Southern negro. Th young men were scattered, faithless, aimless, leaderleaa. And then. Smith. The young man have not coma to Smith with a holy firs In their eyes. They are still uncomfortable over the tongue In which th prophet peaks, and they wish hla vision pierced further Into th tv; ture. But he holds out a promise. Home Away He has something to offer. It is not tha glittering promise-whic- h From Home . Wllaon gave to youth, but It Is enough to hoist the flag of action. Tha young man want to march, Salt Lake City. and Smith can act tha pace. It will be time enough later to find out where they are going. mMMMIMSMMMMMi - nc nt WILSON HOTEL Salt Lake County Convention September 8 (Paid Political Advertisement) ( CHICAGO Tho American Farm Bureau Federation, in a statement aid tha acceptance speech of Herbert Hoover had disappointed th nation' farmers. The agricultural Industry, tha federation asserted, had "every right to expect a specific outlined proposal on farm relief." In view ot tha friendly attitude which various agricultural organisations already have manifested toward tha Democratle platform Pledgee, th federation's statement elevates farm relief to a place be-I- d prohibition among tha dominant leauaa of tha forthcoming campaign. An issue by Sam H. Thompson, president of tha bureau, th statement follows: "Farm people will be disappointed with Mr. Hoover's statement regarding agriculture. They had every right to expect a specific outlined proposal on agrlcul tural relief. In dealing with the agricultural problem, Mr, Hoover, in hie epeecb of acceptance, shows no progress in advanced thought that would provide fundamental principles for a concrete marketing policy for American agriculture. "Mr. Hoover doe not amplify tha broad general statement contained In th 1921 Republican platform adopted at Kansas City. Tha 1921 Republican platform is th lief. Others, however, were heal lent to announce their stand they said, until Hoover had made hla acceptance speech. They felt he might go farther than the party leaden who had drawn up th platform. International Motor Trucks Win Solve Your HAULING PROBLEMS ECONOMICAL "HA FIS" "HPKEDY" Uas Today" REAL ESTATE LOANS 6 On ehalee Haaslag sad Apartments g. ar IS Year Loans Monthly payments if desired. -- See INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY OF AMERICA. dU WEST 4TH r HOUTH Halt La ha Lily, Utah. baslassa property ST. TRUST years wlthoat a loos nor to soy Inventor 41 Mortgage Loans, thewesterF" BARBER SUPPLYCO jj ! For County Commissioner Four Year Term 1 JOHN H. COOK A working Democrat in Utah twenty years. Frederick L. Bagby Candidate for Democratic Nomination for SALT LAKE BARBER SUPPLY Support him at the Farm Federation NEW YORK An optimlatlo report on condition in the south wag brought to New Tork today by Joe T. Robinson, Democratic vice presidential nominee, who said upon hla arrival here from hie home in Arkansas that Governor Smith's popularity "la rapidly growing1' throughout that section. The senior declared that "earns d least lifaction exiete, but it Is now clear that thla will b more than offset" by what ha described aa an awakening in the Democratic ranks In the south. am In substance aa th party pledge of 1924. Many mlddlawestern farm organisations In the leet few weeks have analysed the platforms of tha two major parties and decided the Democratle planke held the greater promise of governmental re- A Democrats can consistently support. For dean, efficient, economical administration of county business. party of th Univer- November IT. Montana College at Logan. November 29 University of Utah at Balt Lake City. watchword- September 4, two weeks before the data of the opening of th candidates for the Wyoming A consistent Democrat whom East lall-emle- ra 1921-192- regie-tratlo- II sity at Ogden- November 1 Colorado Aggies at Fort Collins. November 10 Western Teachers at Logan- - SALT LAKE SCHOOL of Beauty Culture DOMINIC BURNS Notwithstanding drastic advice th new party waged a vigorous campaign and sent speakers Into all Denver. October Up for Smith Fails to Please Football Time Approaches and athletic fields are laboratories for developing better citlxenehlp and in an attempt to make tl)m such, tha athletic department of th Utah Agricultural college has even a more extensive program out9 school year lined for the than ever before- - The Intramural and intercollegiate programs have bean so outlined aa to give opportunity for participation In athletics of some sort to every able bodied student enrolled at the college. "Participation for All" will he the South Lining Hoover Address Utah Aggies Preparing Extensive Athletic Plan: COUNTY COMMISSIONER (4 year term) (Political Advertisement) l ' A man who has been a party man ways, in victory and in defeat. al- A man whose record and work with the Democratic party speaks for itself. A vote for John H. Cook at the County convention September 8 will be step in favor of real Democracy. 9 Salt Lake County needs a Man whose watchword is EFFICIENCY K H. C. CARLISLE 4 Salt Lake County can do no better than to support Samuel J. Lindsay for County Commissioner At the Salt Lake County Convention Sept. 8 (ra'd Political Advertlpement) A Candidate for Nomination for County Commissioner at the Democratic County. Convention I Stand tor a Clean, Decent Administration. (Political Advertisement) |