Show ULet ns us have bave faith that right makes might and andin andin andin r in that faith let u us to the end dare to do our duty is U we WC understand it it Lincoln See Sec America First from v Woodrow Wilson no long r cast a MESSAGES mystic spell over his party His ills leadership lip has hns broken on the rocks of personal ambition an and stubborn refusal to see the popular mind and American interests Hence his message to Oregon Democrats urging that delegates delegates del del- be instructed to stand or fall on the Versailles treaty is not c calculated to arouse tho the interest that it would two years ago Ib lb is in the samo same form as tho W Wilson son proclamation to the people to send none but Democrats to Co Congress It can be no more successful Popular sentiment is already against the hard haid and fast program of 01 President ent Wilson Tilson with relation to foreign foreign for for- for for- eign affairs Even en the wisdom of his own political party is seeing the folly of insistence and is casting about for disaster which is leadership that will avert ert the party threatened by br a program ram which yields nothing to the American people The best evidence e of this is the popularity popularity popularity larity of Senat Senator r Hiram Johnson as a presidential can wn- a te He is what is known kno as an irreconcilable He Heis is against the league of nations in this or any other form He is not a a. but hut direct opposite of what Wilson represents in the league e thought He TIc has been acclaimed in every ery section of the country In itself itself it itself it- it self this should be a warning to tho the Democrats against an m unqualified stand on the Wilson program Undoubtedly edly it is so taken in many quart rs but Mr l fr Wilson Vilson cannot see it He wants his program or nothing and is quite willing to risk the future of his party part on this thic issue issue is- is sue when the real issue before the American an is not the salvation of Europe but a solution of the tho problems lems thai have bave grown out of a 3 war waged waed in her behalf The American people havo o reached hed the tho point where they believe it is up tIP to E Europe pc to do something Dg for herS herself her her- S self without askin asking the United States to finance tho the yen yen- roc turc They are aro tired of the profiteering which is the direct dit di- di t root result of a 3 sentimental altruism ism in behalf of Eu En- j rope At this juncture they s sec soo the possibilities of giving giring all to save Europe Mr Wilson WilSons WilSon's is s further from the 2 P o of tho the American people than he be was in Paris and this means maans a wide breach for it is now evident that his league was not the fulfillment of popular desire or cenin even en in an an acceptable substitute MV fr M r Wll n n hAY tn tA flYt In f noH i t v. v J r l' l 11 prestige in the forthcoming campaign c in the face of the facts fads or how Democrats in the face of his unfulfilled prophecies can hope for success with his declarations is ismore ismore ismore more than we can conjecture His ills campaign er cry He kept us us- out of war his points and his subsequent subsequent quent declarations at tho p peace ace ce conference before the league of nations was redrafted redrafted all all are aro calculated to destroy destroy destroy de de- de- de stroy faith in his leadership The he Democratic party has hasso hasso hasso so much to explain in the forthcoming campaign that we e can hardly see how the wiser elements clements of the party can enn afford to add the unyielding and unsympathetic European European European Euro Euro- program of Mr Wilson to its burdens The Bonneville Boulevard E. E ENTHUSIASM f of public officials over the high line 1 boulevard evard voiced in Sundays Sunday's papers is a cheering u l. sign Governor Go Bamberger was right when he said Never was a a. city more gifted than Salt Lake with natural beauties which merely grading and surfacing of this high road will reveal to residents and tourists And Mayor Bock who obtained l his s first comprehensive sive survey of the valley aIlo o of the Great Great- Salt lake from the new Bonneville boulevard was right also in his st st. statement state state- ment mont The liThe cit city has long needed a road through its adjacent adjacent ad- ad jacent mountains from which auto parties may sweep the valley and municipality below belo with a glance A- A County Commissioner Stillman who has been most I. I energetic in pushing this unique improvement is entitled to the commendation of the public However the tho road is far mr from completion and i it is to be hoped enthusiasm will not be allowed to until lag it is put into condition J from which the brightest hopes of its projectors may be realized When the boulevard is d completed surfaced sprinkled and kept in good condition for traffic so that a drive along its panoramic splendors may be enjoyed free iree from 4 1 dust or jolts or other discomforts it will not only become V a source of the greatest gratification to residents of the country co but will const constitute an asset to city county and state of pi incalculable value Kate Kato Field once said that God had done a great deal for Salt Lake but man very little The latter half of her statement never ne was true because because be be- cause when she said it man had even en then redeemed this valley from a 3 desert condition into a veritable garden of the Lord but with the boulevard an accomplished accomplish cd fact and strangers enabled to visualize what man has done no no such adverse comment can come from even the most pessimistic of critics |