Show STIRRING SPEECHES The Rally in the Second Precinct Last Evening SNOW IMPALES THE LIBERALS Colonel Lett F IT Dyer William Burke J B Walden and Others on the Situation The Democrats of the Second precinct I held a large and enthusiastic meeting in he Seventh ward school house last night J H Moylewas elected to the chair and N A Parks secretary Mr Moylc expressed his confidence in the certainty of victory for the Democratic party on the 8th and introduced THE HOi n C LETT as the first speaker Mr Lett said that while he had only a short time to speak ho would declare that ho was out to defeat the enemy He then made a strong address to the audience and assured them of his confidence con-fidence in carrying the whole Democratic ticket on the eighth not alone througn its merits but on account of the dissatisfaction dissatisfac-tion in tho Liberal ranks GEORGE W SNOW was introduced and said It is now conceded by all that this is the last campaign in which tho Liberal party will appear ap-pear One of their prominent candidates said to me only yesterday Give us two years more of power and we will quit To all good citizens of Salt Lake I say Have a care how you trust a corrupt and dissolving ass elation with opportunities op-portunities for mischief Have any of you reflected re-flected upon what tho success ol this party which is so soon to be followed by dissolution means In order to bring to jour mind and emphasize the great danger likely to follow Liberal success let me cite one example with which you are all well acquainted Tho council elected two years ago on tho broad platform of city improvement had scarcely taken their seats beloro tho citizens of Salt Lake were aroused to a pitch it a great and scarcely restrained excitement by the information in-formation that they were seriously considering the Mile of Salt Lake citys water supply to a private corporation Just think of it This Liberal city council having behind it a constituency con-stituency of honorable people were actually contemplating the sale of uur water supply Why it was a crime to entertain that proposition proposi-tion even for a moment Had it been consummated consum-mated even New York in the pettiest days of Boss lweed could not have furnished history with a parallel case Well what prevented the consummation of this crime Was it tho honesty of the council No For the great and only newspaper boss of a great and only party was compelled in common decency many times to denounce its own council coun-cil as boodlers What then was it that prevented this great crime All thinking people know that the only reliable check tho American people have upon political parties is the public opinion of their constituents It was the strong murmur of disapproval coupled with threats of prosecution by the best element of the Liberal party which bridled and held this corrupt council to its duy But now what may we expect what may we not expect from the representatives of a party which has i no pride of ancestry and no hope of posterity Beware how you place opportunities for evil in tho hands of men who have no constituents for today the Liberal party is sick and next Monday night it will be dead Rellecting upon what I have said every good citizen Salt Lake city will say with me The risks are too great but what can wo do How can we prevent the risk of two years more of SCheming and dishonesty Well I say the the ony chance we have is to vote the Democratic ticket for that ticket offers the only hope of Liberal defeat There are no national issues before tho peo pIe In this campaign and party lines drawn by Republicans in this city should be Ignored for every man admits that tho Democracy Is the only party which has a reasonable hope of suc cess And I say that every man who votes the Republican ticket in this election not only does not help his own party but he subtracts one vote from that party which is the safeguard of the people I will say this that I have many warm per sonal friends in tho Republican party and on the Republican ticket yet in this election they should be ignored Gentlemen and honest Voters of Salt Lake I repeat havo a care how you trust two years of power to men who have no constituents and remember that the only way to defeat the Liberals Is to vote the Democratic Demo-cratic ticket F H DYER followed in a speech that carried the crowd with him Ho illustrated his and the Democratic partys interest in the workingman work-ingman and said that as Mr Walden was the only good timber left on tho old city government the Democrats had put him on their ticket He concluded by saying that he was going to Washington in the morning morn-ing in the interest of Homo Rule and would never leave until he received it WILLIAM BDRKE followed in of his always one acceptable I addresses in which he called most earnestly earnest-ly upon the workmen of Salt Lake to standby stand-by the good old Democratic party In which their best interests were centered and togo to-go to the polls on Monday determined to sweep the city by an overwhelming majority ma-jority Ho was loudly applauded P TV 31CATFBET a representative workingman was then introduced in-troduced and declared that ho had rather speak to half a dozen good Democrats than tho whole Tuscarora tribe He said that their costumes which were barbaric were simply emblems of their disposition and that they were now at the season for ghost dances that the Tuscaroras had simply fallen into line with their ancestors Ho emphatically endorsed the Dyer amendment amend-ment to the Democratic platform pledging to the workmen 250 a day and thought that it should command the support of every selfrespecting workman in Salt Lake A j DSILVA made an enthusiastic talk and told several stories illustrative of the Liberal management manage-ment for the past two years that brought down the house He appealed to the party to como out for the Democracy and said that the party who declared that the schoolhouse should bo the nicest house In the villaro and education the bulwark of liberty was the true Democracy WILLIAM CONDOM made one of his splendid efforts that have mado him so popular He declared that taxation without representation was totally unjust and that the constitution of Idaho was an insult to a free people N A PARKS was called upon as one of the organizers of the party to make an address and stirred up the Liberal animals profusely The other speakers were Mr George Cheshire and Mr Daley and both were loudly applauded Mr Cheshire scored Old Baskin and declared that he thought ho must have been brought into existence a fossil as ho had been such since he knew him for a quarter of a century The meeting meet-ing closed with tho greatest enthusiasm |