Show A TALK VITH JUDGE JUDD Utah Will Soon Be Admitted to the Union p1on THE TARIFF QUESTION IT HAS THE RIGHT OF WAY IX CONGRESS i Words of Praise for Delegate Raw Jlns Tliat Fake Interview Published Pub-lished In the Tribune Punctured Sentiment Becoming More Favorable Favor-able to the White Metal Tell your patient multitudes for us that we have heard their rappings upon up-on the outer walls that they are fraught with the metallic ring of patriotism pa-triotism and that we are going to report re-port favorably on the bill providing for Utahs admission Tell them too and let it be from us that the bill will pass and that their land of thrift will soon be seated among the sisterhood lof this union This is the epigramatic message that was confided to Judge John W Judd by Senators Faulkner and Bate of the Committee on Territories during his recent visit to Washington and which he spreads before the people of Utah this bright morning in May through the columns of The Herald TARIFF HAS THE RIGHT OF WAY But in a supplemental way continued con-tinued the judge say for me that the tariff has the right of way that as with all legislation of such vital importance im-portance it is pregnant with unavoidable unavoid-able delays and that until it reaches the destination to which it is now speeding over the wellballasted tracks of Democratic wisdom all others must remain on the switches We are restless rest-less I knowwe are uneasy but everything must give way to the < through express and when it shall have disappeared in the dusty distance dis-tance when the news has been spread that the tariff has ben adjusted and I that under its benign influence all industry in-dustry is thriving when the clouds shall have passed and the horizon shall have cleared then will matters less vital have come in for congressional congres-sional attention I know its a long wait and at times a tedious and exasperating exas-perating wait but you may be comforted com-forted by the knowledge that in Wash I ington these waits are as well known I as are they among those who are waiting I wait-ing here at home ADDITIONAL JUDGES And the fate of the memorial relating relat-ing to three additonal judges for I Utah I A matter that reached Washington I after my departure Mr Rawlins I I see by The Herald has it on Ms budget bud-get however and 1 desire to say in I his behalf that he has developed a wonderful and most gratifying influence Influ-ence in all matters affecting Utah and the west generally He is looking after I af-ter and esposing the interests of this territory and this people with unceasing unceas-ing vigilance and no suggestion he has made but that i has awakened spontaneous spon-taneous cordial and sincere response from the Democrats of the House No territory has ever been represented at Washington by a delegate who has acquired an influence so well defined or so powerful as that which is exercised exer-cised by Mr Rawlins today His movements move-ments were modest almost timid until i un-til finally the portals were reached and in the Democratic households as I they are separated into committees I no members views are accorded more respectful audience His first task was to familiarize himself with the alphabet of national legislation legisla-tion and then to reconcile himself thats the fundamental horror you are awareto its delays I is not the man of fervid oratory and irridescent eloquence elo-quence who achieves the results in Washinton By no means sirit is the man who has mastered patience and perseverance all the while keeping his eye upon the speaker and availing himself of an inch when the adult stride is impossible This lesson was quickly grasped by Mr Rawlins and today he is in close touch with the leaders his judgment i respected upon all questions affecting the welfare of the nation his committee work has been willingly and intelligently discharged dis-charged and he is in position to accomplish ac-complish the most gratifying results THAT FAKE INTERVIEW Your attention has been called to an alleged interview with the Tribunes correspondent at Washington The most inanely stupid thing bristled the judge that a correspondent correspond-ent was ever guilty of and I hardly conceive it necessary to brand it at this time as entirely without foundation founda-tion I did meet him in the rotunda of the capitol and perhaps discussed with him for five or ten minutes the political situation in Utah So fa however how-ever as ever indulging in such an affront af-front to the wool growers as that with which he charged me in the dispatch to the Tribune no man who knows me will entertain i for one minute Cate chised by him upon sentiment in theo the-o concerning the tariff I replied re-plied that i was very fairly expressed in the election for delegate to congress when the tariff was made the raw issue and Mr Rawlins who espoused a tariff for revenue only as against the robber tariff upon which his opponent had taken his stand was elected Asked by him next how the wool gower would take to free wool I stated to him then as I want The Herald to quote me now that I believed the vast majority of the wdol growers in Utah were our friends that they were Democrats and if they did withdraw beaus of any unseen objections to free wool they were not as a political quantity mind you I say political quantity formidable enough to overthrow Democratic supremacy in Democratic Utah where the vast ma jority were for tariff for revenue only and unalterably opposed to that robfrer that masquerades under the misfitting and misshapen mantle of protection protecton This is what I said to the fellow who misquoted me that his lines might meet his false conception of the market he has so grossly imposed upon and if i there is anything in that position that psiton is Inimical to our wool industry then I am ready to offer an apology He should at least have rated me as some thing above a fool and indulged in the suspicion that the readers of his journal jour-nal were of average intelligence and astuteness JUDGE HILES PASQUINADE You saw the pasquinade from Judge lIlies pen No sir i has not been my pleas ure but a good things are imperishable imperish-able I expect that some day in read ing history I shall encounter it But the judge if I may be charitable was misled by the statements of the Wash ington correspondent and had there been any foundation for them I should have endorsed what I am informed rmed the judge has said as eminently time eminent ly eminently fitting In the future I am in hopes he will take a reef in his credulity and not allow himself to be misled by statements so wildly and in sanely improbable as thse reputing to have come from a Democrat who left his home in possession of ordinary fac ulties at least THE SILVER QUESTION You heard of silver Everywhere At my old home In Tennessee the one refrain dismissing tariff is free coinage Along the mid dle and upper Atlantic where the Atantc reception re-ception has been freezing cold condi j tions a more favorable In Washing ton too conditions are more favorable because hostilities are less open or at least less violent an hysterical You see the congressional conventions are approaching and with a stiff breeze blowing from the west a warm breeze I blowing from the south the candidates must look to their ps The most astonishing as-tonishing thing to me however was the firm hold that free coinage has taken ta-ken upon those at my old home and I was informed that the same thing prevailed pre-vailed throughout the south Is not this sentiment liable to become be-come a dangerous thorn in the political politi-cal side I is very likely to find expression in some terrific warnings between this time and the next presidential election They are as sincere in their demands for free coinage down there as are they in their demands for a tariff for revenue reve-nue and a graduated income tax Deny them free silver and you are very likely to find them wandering over on the borders of the Populist campGive them traiff for revenue with the income tax clause and they will reunite Deny them free silver however and let me warn you that in the future the solid south will keep somebody walking the floor and everybody guessing They wont be cajoled < Then you believe their demand for free coinage is sufficient to imperil the future of Democracy if that demand is ignored I I believe that their determination to restore silver to its constitutional position posi-tion is as firm and as fixed as is their allegiance to the principles of Democracy Democ-racy and with the genius and energies of the south and west intelligently directed di-rected to the end that free coinage shall prevail I dont believe there is any combination that can defeat i The judge characterizes his voyage as a glorious one but at no stop did he find the weather equal to that of this valley |