OCR Text |
Show 2 THE SALT LAKE TIMES: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1892 . THE SALT LAKE TIMES A. L. Pollock, Lessee. "PRST OF ALL, THE NEWS." THE TIMES is entered at the PosrtolSoe of Fait Lake City for transmission tkroujjh the mails as nceond-elaa- s matter. I'TraoiiTrleairing THE TIMES delivered at their houses can secure it by postal card, order or through telephone. W hen delivery is irregular make immediate complaint to this otiiee. " Fifty Cent per 3ontU. , WM. E. 8MYTHE, : : : EnrroK. L. It. BRIXTON. : Business Makaosb. FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER P.O. 18V2. Mi Saw Bank & Trust Company. No's. 1- -3 Main Street. WILFORD WOODRUFF, President GEO. Q. CANNON, Vice-Presiden- t. GEORGE M. CANNON, Cashier. Cash Capital, $300,000. Cash Surplus, $300,000. Zion's Savings Bank is the oldest and largest Savings Institution in Utah. We pay interest oa sum from $1 and upward. Interest com-pounded four times a year. Our de-posits are greater than those of all other Savings Banks in Utah com-bined. -:- - We Desire Your Accounts. -:- - DINWOODEY S Euriiitiire Company. RUGS, 26x54 INCHES - - S2.05, RSHYBHA ' RD&S, 30150 INCHES - 2.45. O 9 CHAIRS-SOL- ID HARDWOOD CHAIRS - - .50 Capital, $250,000. Surplu3, $50,000 American National Bank. Salt Laka City. Organised, October, 1CSO, Interest Paid on Savings and Tim Deposits. DI7ZECTOKS James H. Bacon, Preai&t&t; H. M. Bacon, Vice-Preside- F. I HoTTtaa, Caahier; W. B. Holland, Assistant Cashier; 8. ii. Jarria, 7. W. Em, Judge J. W. Judd, Secretary Elijah Sella, JudjoD. Q. TnnnlclifZ, A. 2. Grant M. J. Gray, Judge C F. Lotrronrow. CGERCIAl NATIONAL, SALT LAKE. Capital (fully paid) $30i,0y0 Surplus General Easing in V Its Branches. li"ies certificates o. deposit payable on demand bearing interest if lelt speritied tir e. iwdl drafts and bills of exchtmje jn :ll the principal citK's of the United S'a'e and Kurcp Geo. M. PrvMdent; Yv. V. Noble, Thomas Marshall, fecoed t; John W. Donnclian, Ceshier. Pirectohi F. XT. Auerfcach, Jiio. J. Daly, D.J. Salisbury, Moylau C. Fox, Thomas Marshall, V. V. "oMj tiporcre M. Downey, John V. Don-nella- Edwin Kimball. T.RJ0NES & CO., BANKERS. --s( 163 Maia. m K2TBays Ora and Bullion. THE NATIONAL Eank of the Republic. --s 47 Main. - Capital, $500,000 Fuixt Path. Frank Knox, Pwrldrat; li. C. Karrick, J. A. Earls, Cashier. Transacts a general banking business. Money loaned on favorable terms. Acounts of mer-chants, individuals, firais and corporations so-licited. Fiva per cent interest paid oa savings and time deposits. DIRECTORS L. C. Karrick, Emil Kahn, W.E. Smodley Frank Knox, Q. S. lioimrs, J. A. arle, (. A. Lowe, H. Xu A. Cnimer, J. Q. Sutherland. 60. M. SCOTT. JA3. GLENPENNING, H. S. RUM7TELD, President. t, Secretary. Geo. M. Scott & Co. lsooroBATr.) Dialers Ijt Hardware, Metal, Stores, Tinware, Mill Findings, Etc Agents for i'se Dodge Wood Pulley, Roebling's Steel Wire Rope, Yacuum Cylindsr and Engine Oil. Hercules Powder, Atlas En-gines and Boilers, Mack Injectors, Buffalo Scales, Jefferson II arse Whisne, Blake Pumps, Miners' aad E.acks amis' Tools, tc 163 MAIS, SALT LAHE. RE D U C EdTrICE ITlAJMB ERTeTO. : E. Sells & Go. ' Are closing out their whole Stock of Lumber, Doors, Window and Building Material at Eoduced Pric93 for Cash. ASerialtor j Everybody likes a Story. THE TIMES will lieiii tomor- - 5 row the publication of a s ) i e n 1 i d serial, entitled, S ''From a Higher Stand-- j jioint." It is translated from the German by Mrs. S s Mary A I my of Salt Lake, ? and is after the style of i Marion Craw ford. S Begin the Story tomorrow? ? and follow it to the end. s You will be delighted with 5 5 it. W. J. MONTGOMERY Buys and Sells Mining &Water Stoch OSce 168 Main. WELLS-FARG- O CO.'S BANK. 4 c.lt t..V. H Err. C, C SHINNICK, KcT.S3patliisl cud Sergsaa. In addition to receral pTACttce gives special at&ction :o oteearo Chronic Ifjjanes, both ineuleal and ssrgical. eirnie9i ifik S'-h-dene i E. 1st S. 47. 2isl. 517. Cases deemed incurable by othe phyeicteBS a to call. flBTlBClfi L1MBS Braces for Deformities Elastic Stockings, Trusses, Etc SEND FOR CIRCULAR. OUh St., lalf tek&SMn PBLXLIP SFKYy ' Merchant Taikm M PKST-CLAS- 3 SUITS Made to Ordr. TrrfrtM Guaranteed. I carry fU Un ctt FnuseW English, bcotch and OocKStio Good. 2$ VtJ Tenpie street, epp, Tempt Block, Sale Lak City. BTTTB Md Mil eze&rag, makes terahto on tha principal eitiwa of the United bta'M and Europe, and on all poinj o tha Ztr cic Coast. Issues tsttars of credit STtilaiJe ia the principal cities of tka world, eip iai attan-tio- u eiTtn to tha sflllns of ores aod bullion. Ad-vance inace on "consisnzRsnts at kwct ratsa. Farticnlar attention )riTn to collations tiaroaaiv-eo- t Utah, NsTfida adjoiuinx Territories. ts solicited. COBS 8FOXDE WTS Wl'a. Fw Ca., Lon'ton; Walls, iargo o., Ner York: Na-tional Bank cf the Republic, Boston; Flrct at.onl jotrnk, Denver; sta-- o Satioaal Bank, D"!nTer; Merchauta Saional Back, Chlcag-o-oatmefi'a Btuik, bv Lais ; W el t, Fargo C., taa iTancisco. i. &. DUULY. Laikier. M'CORNICK&CO., BANKERS. m Salt Lake. Eftahltsbea. 1873. A $aaeral ban hia kaetns transacted. Collections promptly madft oa ail point in tht West and Northwest Caiful a-- l. TitioapiKnn to connigtiments of ore and bai-liv- e. jtichsnre and teiejaphie tran-tir- on tke principal ciUes of tka Onitod Bta'caa and la Europe. C0SSE3P0JiPEfTSVew York, Importers' 'iraders' hatlonul KQai.tae eras.; C'hliWsoOcaiiSwo'.al Kat;wtil Ha-k- ; Omaha, Ot-,- ah KfUonal Bank; San Fraaciaro, Piri Kcxon.i.1 Psk; Rt. Lcrais, ITetwa Dank tt C'oramsrt: sataa City, Nafincal Paak of F.ts City, first Wafonal Banlc, Airerlcaa Klic.l Beak; BenTar.IenTar Nt?er!il Punk, City National TV.k; PfDla, First .Ssi) at hank; Portland, Ot., Urst Xstinsl Rani; lo-,(!;i- JfrarOo'a Iink (Uraitsd), U3 LoukoxJ Blrset. glCYCLE . . . SYLPH Po3325a!ic and Cushioa Tires. PHOENIX PBggmatic 2&i Casbtoa Tirss. IHOjt'OlSCasMsnTlres. Call or end for catalogue. A tall line ot WHKKLS ei ail gra4ea. Scecial Frfa-e- a te Clobs on orders of ikra ot more WHEELS) for caab. Cycilag Suadi-tem- , OU, tc gportlns Good, Ouaa, Ammonltlon, Baseball j ice;. Cutlery, Etc. Ciaaeral Rapairtaj , ' and Loeksmiiking. M. E EVANS, J S9-S- 4 VT. ad So., Slt Lake. lias removed tack to his old quarters, No. ICS Eant beccd fecrxh street, first ricor norta of tka Rlcjrer ilachine Co.'a offiv. His sotk comprises new and secon-d- hand elolbu:g, and he a!.o makes a specialty o reptiriiiji and cleaning. Uood wort ad prsmpt attontion assured. Uld friTOtis snd paurons ar always welcome. r' r.'-'tt- l public solicited. UNION NATIONAL BANK. Successor to Walker Bros., Bankers. Eata'alished 1SV). Capital (faily paid), 309,000; scrpins, 84C.0OO. Unitfd S'.ateg Depository, "rsnsa ta a general bankirg basinee. hafe deposit vaults lira ar i i'Prriar prool. 1. K. Waikcr, President; M. H. Walker, Vica- - rrofeiatmt; 11. J. CUearsan, Cahi?r; L. Ii. Far, worth, Asri-iaa- C Cahior; J. It. IValker, iz., AKitaBt Cashier. B. H, SCHETTLER. ""ho Js a General aaking Sostascs AT If O. 60 MAIIf STHEET, Opposite the Ca-o- .) aod pays in rest cb da-gl- i, ae--ir- o yaur aceouats. Eai ) (Tho Tunnel si Orlnk) (The Tunnel I Pl2v OilSiird at Tha Tunnel, i Wimutm K 111 CWESTERMj 11 IS If llSSlj STANDARD 6IUSL Current Tins Table, In effect Aug. 28, '92 ' Leaves Salt Lakb. To. 2 For Provo, Grand Junction and points east 9:00 a. m, Xo. 4 For Provo, Grand Junction and ail points east ...9:2 p. m o. 6 For rrovo, Payson, Eureka and livr City 4:06 p.m. Xo. 6 For Bingham and San Fe Val-ley 9:10 a. m. Ko. a For Og.len and the West. ....H :53 p. m. No. 1 For Ogiien and tha West. 11 :i5 a. m. Ko. & For Ogdan and tha West 4:50 rj. ntt Arrive Salt Lakb. No. 1 From Frovo, Grand Junction aad the East X1:Q6 a. m. Ko. 8 From Provo, Grand Junction aad the East. ll:49p, ta. Ko. 7 From Provo. Payson, Eureka and Silver City 10:10 a. m. Ko. 5 From Bingham and San Pete Valley 4:48 p. m. Ko. 8 From Oprdn and the TTest 9:00 a. m. Ko. 2 From Oirden and the West 70 a. m. Ko. 4 From Ogden and fhe West 9:15 p. m. Pullman Palace Sloepsrs on all through trains; Ko changes; close connections; safety, Bp aad and comfort. Ticket Office No. 1200 S. Main St. D. C. D0BQ2, Gen. Manage. A. E. WgLBY, Ofunl a apt, i. A. BEN iiH ST. P. VJL. GABEL ii TAILOR ftiTX 65 W. 2d So, JmhA MftUsie-cnis-r - S I S ts $55 ipPiiis " - $3.50 ts $15 u, hi SafU Kda la 10 boas. ?gU f'--I Biacie In 8 houra. B tds , workman iu tki City, II ' -- H and when you feel tired and exhausted after a hard day's work, drop in and rest at THE TUNNEL. THE TCKNEL Is the popular resort of Salt Lake City. Patrcnired by the het class of people. Eudwelser, Acheuser, Milwaukee and ail imported German beers on draught. 42 and 44 West Second South St. Formerly Walker's Pavilion. UtaSi Business Collage --0- 0 nd B2BTSCHB0L 4-- OPENS SEPT. 12th, 1892. filce, 10 WasateH Bids. Book-keepin- g and all Commercial Branches. Penmanship a Specialty. For Partiouiar Apply to , . L. riFJI, H, Acs'ts, til. S.t Prepr, ZDr. BISCZIOP, DENTIST. THROUGH CAR LINE. U MFrl Si Is Your Sigfii Dsfeativs? WHY DCOTT YOTJ ?EH BEEGES! - The Optician. v Ko charee mnde for examination. A perfect fit fnaranteed. Glasses sold cheeper thnn yon can wh era. Ppactacles and Eye Glasses repaired. P.emamber the place, 19 W. South Tem-ple street, opp. Teuipla. JOHNDuBEIj'Ssiis mtl ts CESER-U1- 0E to WE).B. StJITS: OVERCOATS: PAKTS: $!5ta$53. $l5to$43. $3io$l5. A Terlect Fit Guaranteed. 239 W. SECOND SOUTH ST. Teeth extracted without pain- - Fillings 75c up. Best set of teeth, $13. Work war-ranted. Onen Sundays. 4si W. 1st Bo. SU mwmwmm g liclers AAKE TH PACE. --1 j Victor Bicycles are the best that -- 1 experience, trains, still and capital r""C3 ! Sw Can produce. Victors lead the " ' world. 3 j. S. JENSEN, piwj Agent for VUtjr BicyCiC. K. Pir-- t S"'h ft. Pl -- 4 Effective Sopt. 11, 1892. Trains arrive and depart at Salt Lake City daily as follows: ARRIVE. From all Eastern points 8:00 a.m. Front Butte, Portland, Frsnclsco... 9:05 a.m. From Cache Valley and Fark City to:40 a.m " f rom all Eaetrn paints 12:40 p.m. From Cache Valley and Ocdan 7 :10 p.m. JKrota Milford, Eureka and intermedi-ate points 10:00 a.m. From Juab, Provo and Eureka. 6:10 p.m. From Terminus and Gainold 4:06 p.m. DEPART. For Ogden and all Eastern points 8:03 a.m. For Ogden and interim!. ate points 6:40 a.m. For butto. Portland, San Francisco and Cachw Valley ..10:05 am. I'or Cache Ya'ley and Park City S'iiJ p.m. For Ogden and alt Eastern points 6:30 p.ia. IS or Frovo, Eureka aud Jliuord 7:40 a.m. For Eureka, Juab, ictern.ediate points. 4:25 p.m. For Cariield and Tooele... 7:43 a.m. Daily, Sunday excepted. tTraiu between Juab and Milford do not run Sundays. City Ticket Office, 201 Main Street. D. E. BURLEY, Gen. Agent Pas. Dent, . 8. U. II. CLARK, Fret, ad Gen, M. - E.DICKINSON, Asst. Gen. Mgr. E. L. LOMAX, G. P, & T. A. "Whoe your tailor?" Try Buckle A Son, Main 1st., opposite Walker house. There is nothing to equal Hygeia. Kelly & Reilly's Bij oil Saloon. e&fe. -- - 23 Mr & ret- - "' ,fff CHoicost of Wines, Liquors end Cigara. Tie Papular liasort of Cslt Iak.a. R. STENZEL & CO. (Late with Noblb, Wood A Co.) Of 4 E. Third South Street CORKER MAIS. We repair and altar all kinds of Sal Garmenta into Fariioable tihapea by tha moat exparianced Grmao Furriers. Brin In your iu work now and have it ready for winter. We csrry the moat complete line of Fnrs and Skin of any hoase ia the Wast, aad guarantee prises as low ss any heuse in the LroUe, East or West, quality and workma8fatp combined. ; Perfect fitting Seal Capae, Jacketa, Saco,ea aad j TJlatersdn stack an made to order specialty. If you want to borrow money, go direct to head quarter. ... Sam J. ILasYoar. Room 'i Hooper Block. of Buffalo, made no response. Later, when he was drafted, he borrowed money and hired a substitute. This enabled him to attend Democratic meetings daring the war and declare that the whole- - business was a failure. When he became president, remem-bering that he could himself draw no pension and thus compensate himself for the money he paid for a substitute, Le fell a victim to vetoing pension bills right and left until he finally earned a reputation among old soldiers of being the meanest man in public life. These are unvarnished fact3 about Cleveland and his war record. Of course, if any old soldier wants to vote f6r him it is his privilege to do so. The old soldier is generous and perhaps he has forgiven the gentleman from Buz-zard' s Bay. - A REMARKABLE DISCOVERY. The enterprising Democratic press has made the startling discovery that members of the Grand Army of the Re-public are pleased with the war record of Gkover Cleveland and propose to vote for him in large numbera. This announcement they base on the alleged fact that an old soldier, while peering into the White house grounds during the reunion at Washington, was heard to remark that in his opinion "Cleveland and Baby Rtrra would live there for the next four yeara." The Democratic editor figures that this re-mark indicates that about 30,000 of the 80,000 old soldiers in line intend to vote for Cleveland in November. The discovery, that Gkover Cleve-land is popular with old soldiers is not & whit more remaukable than the line of I reasoning by which the Democratic editors endeavor to prove it. i Mr. Cleveland's war record is very eimple and easily understood. When ? Likcoln called for volunteers, Clev e- - land, a fat and hoaltL.y young lawyer V ., r into the nearest large store. Let him ask the proprietor what was the price of those goods two years ago before the duty was raised and what the price is today. Then let him ask the man who buvs the stock for that store whether these goods are manufactured more ex-tensively today on American soil than they were two years ago. The workman will find that these ar-ticles do not cost him more today than two years ago. He will find that many of them are cheaper. He will find that nearly all of them r8 manufactured much more extensively by American workmen than they were before the en-actment of the McKinley law. These are the facts and they take every bit of the wind out of the Demo-cratic sails. They prove that the tariff is not a tax, but a beneficient measure of protection which stands between our laboring men and the starvation wages of Europe, builds up great industries here and widens the home market for the products of the soil. Do not take any chances on being fooled by campaign orators or political newspapers of either side. Just inquire for yourself and then tell your neigh-bors what you found out. INQUIRE FOR YOURSELF. In its wild effort to convince the workingmen that they are being terri-bly oppressed by the McKinley law the Herald goes back to the ground oc-cupied by the Democrats two years ago. It publishes the duty on several articles of common-us- and tella the workingman that he is taxed the exact amount of this duty. This was good campaign buncombe two years ago. It frightened the work-men and it threw into Gts the gentle housewife of the land. But we are dealing now, not with predictions, but with facts. The question now is not what the McKinley law will do, but what it has actually done. The McKinley law did increase the tariii" on a large number of articles of common use which we were buying from abroad and ought to manufacture here. Now, let the workingman take the Herald's list of these articles and go FOIt PEES1WEXT: BENJAMIN HARRISON of Indiana. FOIt TICE PBESIBEST: WHITELAW REID of New York. J'OK t'0.HKS8: FRANK J. CANNON, of "W etoer County. Protection for the Product or lTtali Billies. Factories and .Farms. "NAILING A LIAR." We publish on this page today an ar-ticle written by a prominent Utah Dem-ocrat in reply to remarks of The Times on the wool duty. The article was originally published last Sunday in the Herald, and the reader will observe that it attempts to put us before the public in the pleasing aspect of a liar. We ask all our readers to study this article, because it is presutoably the best argument that can be put forth in favor of the monstrous proposition that Utah should vote for the removal of the doty which protects her great wool in-dustry from miaous competition with foreign growers. In tocaorrow's Times the article of "Peiuclus" will be fully answered, We will then demonstrate the follovving propositions: First, that The Times has not lied; second, that the Republi-can protective tariff secures for the Utah producer a far better price than the foreigner receives in free trade markets; third, that the wool industry has always risen in this country under adequate protection and has always been depressed under a low tariff and the menace of free wool; fourth, that the manufacture of woolen3 in this country has expanded enormously un-der protection; fifth, that the price of American woolen goods has not been increased by the McKinley law, but that their production at the hand of American labor and capital has been enormouslv increased under that laW. This question of a duty on wool is a matter of vital importance to every voter in Utah. Their interests demand that they should be thoroughly familiar with the subject and that they should vote in a way that will truly express their desires in regard to future legis-lation concerning it. The Times believes that the second industry in this territory is well-nig- h destroyed by the Democratic free wool policy and is ready to debate th6 ques-tion on its merits with our Democratic friends. From Late Herald, Sept. 25. ? NAILINGr A LIAR.- - A Republican Ananias Easily Con-victs It imelf, AND IS LAID OUT VERY COLD. Shacselcss Falsehoods of a Republi- can Orsan Its Contradictions of Itself on Wool Its Slentlacity as to Sugar. The Salt Lake Times has entered the ring to win the belt of champion liar of the whole world. It attempts to dismiss the facta I quoted on the wooi tariff by a series of whoppers like the following: It declares that my last article "demonstrates that protection has not increased the price of wool cloth to con-sumers." Let U3 see. WHAT THE ARTICLE SAID. A T.IAR-- S TERSIOJf OF IT. We imported in 1S90 The Iltrald's corre-clot- li thai cot abroad spondent demonstrates &6,5&,4.!. Tha tariff that protection ha not tasee paid on this cloth increased the price of borvoeurgiit the cost up to wool t ) consumers, just $1)4,000,1)00 to land'a that newspaper tri-i- t on oar shore. And umphautly demonetrat-b- y tiiH time the cloth ed the other day that the reached the consumer McKinley bill hud re-- it would cost them over duced the cost of the i bis nuK'h cesHitie of lilfi and had foreign clcth, on which thus . disappoint d its the tax of 6U per cent, authors, who iiad framed had teen paid, was told it with themaiisru ntent in our market last of increasing the bur-yea- r. It is sold slJe' by'dens of the people, side with domestic clothl Thus our contempora-an-d the price at which !ry furnishes evidence to this imported cloth sells sustain the Kepub it an axes the price at which ;clatni that the tariff .s all the cloth sells, 'there not a tax and does not cannot he two seliinirladd to the cost of pro-pric- for the same artf-- tected articles, e'e in the same market at the same time. The tax we paid to the gov-ernment on imported foreign cloth, we paid to our "manufacturers on the domestic cloth. For every $1H00 worth of woolen Vloth made in this cour;ry the m.nu- - . fatturer is authorized by law to charge $ltM, the extra $b90 being his pro-tection of bit per cent i against "cheap foreign laoor." American wool cloth and clothing cost twice what they would with-out the tariff tax, while cheap cotton and shod-dy effectually keep down the price of American raw wool. Not only does the Republican paper falsify my article, but it also lies about the Herald. The Herald's correspondent demon-strated that protection has increased the price of woolen cloth to consumers, without increasing the price ol home-grow- n raw material. The Herald did not "demonstrate the other day that the McKinley bill had re- - vital to our prosperity." The mendacious organ says: L'nrter the tariff In the four years between 1SS0 sn-- the number of sheen in the I nited S.ats increasod 10,riOJ,o.Ki head, or from 40,500,-Uu- o to 50,ftOVJ0O in round numbers. Hut the facts are that the last number given by the . organ, representing the greatest number of slu-c- this comr.ry ever had, is the number in lfct4 and 1SS5, or just two and three years respectively after the slitrht reduction of tha wool tariff in the early part of 1883. Thus, every figure the ' organ "quotes" is false and perverted. Its answer after the "challenge'' it made, ought to be published in every Democratic paper in Utah and placarded before the eyes of every shatp owner. Its answers confirm everything my article proved and especially that the wool tariff is" of no benefit to the wool grower. The following also is without palliation or excuse: A sensible legislature not the one that met last Wiurer provided a moderate bounty for sugar manufKCt-irth- i m this territory. As a result, a SoOJ.tWO facrorv was erected iu Lehi. llnncirtds of farmers ha 1 a part in tho new agricultural indus-try therebv establish 1. Tne bonu - cost the people la vear $11,000, and they save! gl2,t;0J bv the reuuc ion of the price of California sutrar, wLi h was made while t e Ttah product was ou t ie maraet. S i the bounty cot the peo-ple nothing, au:i taey made a cash profit of gloOO by"Tthheeroeperation. was no reduction in the price of California sugar, on account of the Utah product. There was a fall of about one-fourt- h of a cent per pound for less than one month, not at the time, however, when the Utah product was first put ou the market, nor did the fall continue during the time the Utah product lasted. The fall originated in New York, and lasted about three weeks. Then the price of sugar went up again. This territory saved no more than any other place by the fall in sugar. If .he fall in the price of sugar had lasted' all year, the saving would have been 1 12,500, as The Times' asserts; but it lasted only a few weeks. If the fall had been con-fined to Utah, then it is conceivable that the fall in price might have beau occasioned by the comparatively small Utah product; but the fall was general. If sugar were not al-most constantly rising and falling in price, The Times' assertion might have some sig-nificance. These and several other trouble-some "ifs" are in the path of the ludicrous reasoning of a paper that hesitates not an instant to set down the most ordinary, low, and common falsehoods, with an airy care-lessness, 83 if they were well-know- n truths. What the Republican paper quoted above is doing, every Republican paper and every Republican speaker in America is doing. 1 am an American, but am ashamed of my countrymen. For fifteen years past nearly a million sheep owners have regularly voted the Republican ticket, because they believed tha wool tariff enabled them to plunder the rest of their countrymen to the extent of 10 eents per pound on all the wool the latter wore in cloth. This bribe has been openly offered by the Republican party and openly accepted by the wool-grower- s, but it has never been paid. That, however, is only an incident. The real point is that the Amrican voter is in favor of a theft if he gets it. The wool-grow-has seen the tarllf trust beneflcarics grow rich through protection, and simpleton like, he has imagined that he, without form-ing a wool trust could get a share of the " swag. It can be shown by any one that cares to figure it out, that if the wool-growe- actu-ally received their protection of 10 cents per ponnd on all the wool raised in this country they would get less than ?:50,UO0,0O0, while the consumers who wear this wool would have Lo pay many times that amount by the time the wool had fairly reached them. The tax on imported wool cloth is twice the amount the wool-growe- would receive if they collected every cent of this protection. The advanced price of domestic cloth must be five times the total amount the wool-grow- ers could by any possibility receive, even if they were able to form a trust and sell oaly at "the average price of foreign ffrease wool (So cents) when landed in this country. Yet they are willing that their country-men shall he taxed $50, provided that they receive $5 of it. They are willing to believe that the tariff of 30 cents on wheat or 10 cents on wool is added to the price they eet, while the price of these very articles is higher in Liverpool than the price at which they sell. They are willing to believe that the tariff lowers the price of manufactures, and in-creases the price of agricultural products. The manufacturers, few in number, are banded together into 450 trusts, bound by oath not to sell under the foreign price with duty added. The farmers are too numerous to form a trust. Iu some few manufactures a trust cannot easily be formed, as in some of the cotton mills. But ia 450 other cases the trusts are a success. Some are willing to believe that since the tariff makes manufactures cheaper (as Re publicans tell them), therefore the manu-facturers can afford to pay higher w?ef; and that tho manufacturers ask for tariffs in order to tret less for their good and to pay more to their workiuirmen. O'hers are willing: to believe that the tar-iff increases the price of agricultural pro ducts, the producers of which caanot form a trust. Manv are willinr to have their pockets picked" by the tariff trusts, so th'.jy In turn fret a rrnnv'c to be permitted to pick the pockets of others. This ;t clssi seems to te the most nuin-mero- u, and the appe-- d that H now being madu to thu Republican voters is a mere ap pel to their cu"uid:ty. So long as the Dem-ocratic party appealed merely to the sense of justice of the Voters, It did not fcaia many vote. So long as it adhered to the opinion of tha supreme court ia the only real caa of this nature that ever came befor3 it, nobody paid any atten-tion to it. To lay with one hmd t'-- e o' th jrovern-m!- it on the pro, erry of th citizen and with tie uueeu me cost 01 me necessities oiiiie, but it has been shown that the bill did in-crease the price of the manufactured goods on which the tariff was raised, as in the case of tin plate; that It reduced the price of manufactures on which the tax was lowered; as in the case of sugar; and that on the great mass of farm crops it had no effect. A paper that will thus deliberately lie in regard to what the wool taritf article con-tained an article accessible to any one and deliberately pervert recent Herald edi-torials, deserves careful watching when it quotes "statistics." Will a paper that lies on a point of easy detection be truthful on other points? Notice once more the words in which Tne Times says the Republican claim is "that the tariff is not a tax and does not add to the price of the protected articles. Just three weeks ago this lying little braggart said: So man' who gives the subject a momer.fs tfcoctdtt can deny that to remove the duty on wool would be to cheapen the selling prlc of the Utah product. It is not only the people who fell wool and work in mines who are injuriously affected when wool is cheap. W ool and le id are only two of several thousand artic'e protected by the tariff of 18'. Jio ody but loafers can say that tht5y are not, directly "benefited. We chsll-ng- a any Democrat in Utah to tell us how the people of this territory can be benefited by reducing the price of their wool. Times, August 27. In one article it says the tax keeps np the price of the protected articles, and challenge "any liemocrat" to dispute that proposition in rezard to wool. When cornered by the facta It hastens to say that tho '"Republican claim" is that the tariff "does not add to the price of the protected articles." Vv ht do honest people think of this Re-publican hypocrisy? Look at the next and only remaining "argument:" Of course the Hera'il will now want to keow how th.t tariff helps C'taU producers i! i: uo" ntt increase the cost t c.'Ksuniers. The Republican tariff kvp foreiuu comptKi tors o ;t of the best market ii th" worl 1 the American t build a wool ludnptry in ibis country, nnd preserves a flald for it ugainst all-comers. The way the wool tariff "keeps out for-eign competitors" is that it causes the yearly importation of 600,000,000 pouuds of raw wool made into 133,840,050 pounds of finished cloih; and it "builds a wool indus-try downward" from a value of 133,0X),-00- 0 in 1667 to a value of onlv Sl5.000.0Ju iu W.r2. It Tee Times is not an as. what ia It? After thinking over the subject for a week longer, however, The Times thought best to get back to its original ground that the tariff advances the price. But with the Republican statistics to the contrary staring it iu the face, what could it do? Nothing; here are its very words. We dismiss the whole subject of statistics. Wa repuuiate all works on political economy. This is the answe-- r mads by the paper that "challenged any Democrat" to discuss in its columlns the wool tariff! It dares not let its readers see a single lina from my article. It dares not face Republican statistics. One thing it does, however, here as before. It lies, deliberately and with malign afore-thought. It tells its readers that my statis-tics came from "works ou political economy, written in college libraries." Not a sen-tence, line, word, phrase or figure in my article is taken or rjurport to be taken from any "political economy." The census, the statistical abstracts, Mulhall's dictionary of statistics, and Republican statistics especial-ly, with volume and page specified in every instaa.ee, are my authorities; and the Repub-lican " braggart knows that it lies wheu it deliberately tells its readers that ray statis-- ether to roftiw t up-- favor d Individ .tal to aid private enterprise a d b lilrt, up priva e fortauei" is none the lees a robbeiy beenvue it is dvne under the forms of the law and is cai!ed tax-ation. That a certain thing was "robhery," made no difference to tho" American people; the only question with each of tiiern was, "Is it profitable to mcl the interests of others be & d!" And preachors, lawyers, manu-facturers and wool growers vied with each other in their efforts to obtain portions of the public plunder. It has therefor become necess '.ry to ap-peal to the selfisbne-s- of the great majority, the cousumers of taxed articles, who are a hundred times more numerous than the pro-ducers of these articles, and also to the greed of those producer, who, like the wool growers, get none of the swag they thought they were getting. This universal corruption of public morality has been wreught by protection. Both sides are now appealing to the self-ishness of the people, on side having always done o, the other side naw beiag forced to do so from the resulting state of public honor. The credibility of the witnesses should ho considered. If the tariii trusts win, it means millions poured into their pockets. If the tariff reformers win, they will rain nothing that others do not gain. Which wftaoss is tho most likely to speak the truth? Pkitclks. tics "pretend to coma from Republican sources" and are "copious extract from works oa political economy." But then comes the crowning mendacity. The paper that "repudiates" official atatis-tic- s, proceeds to manufacture a set, thus: Prlc of PLronidcotn inop Differs nee Tear. fine Ohio Avttra- - qf the two Ji e e e e Hetnarer- - prlcet. scoured. age Jleeee scoured. JSS1 $0.Bfi JO.KS $0.3 t'O .53 .87 1&S3 83 .51 .85 18-- t .0 .48 .43 1385 .71 .41 .30 18S6 .14 .41 .83 1H87 73 .43 .81 09 Ai .20 18iJ9... 73 .48 .25 18fl0 .73 .44 .29 18?1 .70 .40 .80 18a2 63 .."S .80 The hamelesi paper compares the price of fine Ohio scoured wool with Australian avera) fleece, thus flgurirg out that Ameri-can wool Is higher. In all my experience I have never seen a more pitiable subterfuge. What American grower has scoured wool for sale? What American grower receive from twenty-fiv- e to forty cwnts more for his wool than foreign wool is se ling at? The actual price of Utah grease wool is just half what j the Republican paper implies as his ad-- ; Jitioual price. Where may these alleged "statistics" be found? - The sbuve selections constitute; all the facts the Republican paper can put forth. It concludes by saying that sheep men think the tariff a good thing, therefore His; and that ''there ia uot a Democrat iu Utah who doesn't know that the taxiffi oh Utah weol U EDITORIAL NOTES- - Gai.leazi came out of the fight the upper dog. Pkesipext Diaz of Mexico seems to have settled down to a life job. A team consisting of Na"Cy Hanks and Mascot would beat the world. A stage robber yesterday held up an ed-itor in Colorado. He didn't make a scoop. Eveky dog has his day. The Salt Lake dog has had two nights in the city council. Miss Walxup lias been appointed school teacher in a Kansas town. She must bo to the manor born. The Y. M. C. A. gymnasium is trying to get up a football club. Youag men, wait until the Democratic nominations are. over. There will be no lack of kickers then. The prosecution of Labor Commissioner Peck in New York reminds one of the fellow who cried "hold me, or I shall do him up." The chances are the case will be held until after election. However bright the Republican prospects may be General Apathy can defeat them, and General Apathy always betrins at the registration list. Republicans, be ou the registration list. There must be another discord in the Democratic concert that calls Cleveland suddenly away from Buzzard Bay to restore harmony. The candidate might save trans-portation by remaining in Tammany hall. Since the action of the board of equaliza-tion in raising the tax on Salt Lake real es-tate by ten per cent is not to be tested in court until sufficient subscriptions are raised to meet the expense, we opine that the realty holders will pay the ten per cent. The miserable Times. A miserable whelp in the office of the Herald. The A"eit'-i- s a vicious and peisibtent veteran liar. These are stray samples from the editorial columns of tho Tribune this morning. If our liver were affected that way we should send it to a doctor for repairs. If we understand the doctors' lingo arig-h- t it is consumption in the last stages "from which Mrs. Haerison is suffering, and that indeed means death. Tho spasmodic im-provements are characteristic of the disease, but they are only the last flickerings of the candle of life which may be fcnulfed out at any moment. How pitiful this is! The Times will tomorrow begin a serial story entitled: "From a Higher Stand-point." It is from the German, but reads very much like one of Marion Cuawfohd's stories, so simple and lucid is the language and so charming the plot. Still more inter-est, however, attaches to its publication from the fact that a Salt Lake lady is the translator and the copy for Tue Times is taken frcm her manuscript, never before published. The lady is Mrs. Mary Almt, well known in the literary world, her last volume, "Cloister Wendliusen," being one of the best of the Globe series on the book-shelves in the country. HE IS TOLERATED. The latest news from Weavek's Bouthern campaign is that the Demo-crats down there tolerate him and let him speak. Tf this is all they will do before elec-tion, does anj-- sensible western man be-lieve they wiil vote for him when the time comes? Of course not. Then why throw away a vote on him in the West? MRS. HARRISON. The sad news is flashed across the wires that the wife of the president will never leave her bed alive. There is a touch of nature that makes the whole world kin. There is a human sympathy that overleaps all barriers of partisan-ship, even in a presidential canvass. We believo men of all parties sympa-thize today with tho loyal husband and the patient sufferer, and that the sor-row of the people, when the tidings nf death come, M ill b very deep and aincore. THE INDEPENDENT VOTE. It is evident that there are soma men in the West who sincerely believe that they can best serve their interests by voting tha Weaver presidential ticket. It is strange that anybody can figure that way. but we are informed that there are men in Idaho and Oregon who are planning to throw their votes away on the candidate of the Third party. We believe this sentiment will larxelv pass away between now and election. It certainly will if these honest and earnest men will let in the light of rea-son. In the first place, General Weaver is not a man to be takeu seriously. He ha3 been on all sides of all questions, lie is not the kind of a man that the American people make presidents of. In the second place, if he were a clean and able man and perfectly sin-cere a vote for him at this time would not advance by a single day the re-forms favored by the Third party plat-form. This is so because he has not the slightest chance of election. In the third place, most of the men who are proposing to vote for him in Idaho and Oregon are Republicans at heart. By voting for Weaver they accomplish nothing for the Third party, but they help Gkover Cleveland, the enemy of everything that is dearest to them, to get into power. Tho Weaver campaign has no logi-cal basis. Harbison has done all in his power for silver. He and his party have been and are today the reliable friends of western development. The success of Cleveland would retard every reform that the Weaver men de-sire to see carried out. We are satisfied that these conclu-sions will be reached between now and election day by nearly all the thought-ful men in the Third party movement. There ia no other way to look at it. un- - less a man has reached a point where he has arrayed himself against every-thing that is and prefers to take his chances as to what may be after an ex-plosion. THE LAMB IN THE GARDEN. Hon. W. II. King of Provo ha3 been Vegetating in San Pete county and states in an interview that the Republi-cans are making some gains there be-cause there ia occasionally a man "who has a lamb in his garden" and thinks he is benefited by the duty on wool. Mr. Jvikg thinks, however, thatha has coun-teracted this sentiment by showing "these benighted creaturea that ven the Republican party had come to see the hardships worked through a tariff bn wool and taken it off." This twaddle is unworthy cf so bright a man as Mr. Kino, who h38 been justly regarded as one of the promising kids 4n the Democratic kindergarten. It will not do for him or anybody ebe to depreciate the wool industry by say-ing that ther is occasionally a man Vho lias a lamb in his garden. There S.re a great many lambs under the broad Bky of Utah and they constitute a mighty industry, whose prosperity or depression means something to every-body in this territory. Neither Is it wise for Mr. Kixa to fnisrepresent the attitude of tha Repub-lican party on the wool duty. Repub-licans stand for protected wool and Democrats for free wool. If Mr. King thinka he cannot faco the music on this quesrion he will save his reputation by retiring to his law office tmtil the clouds roll by. Neither he bor hia party has anything to gain by tmch patpable nonsense as he talks in liis interview. TOLD IN BRIEF. News of tlia Morning Boiled Down for Evening: Kemler. Ilerr Telle has been elected burgomaster of Berlin. The tolls of the Suez canal are to be re-duced half a franc. Englishmen deny that Great Britain will put a tariff duty on wheat. An Eastern doctor is believed to have dis-covered a new remedy for cholera. The Irish Federation has issued a mani-festo to Irishmen in Australia and America for help. - James Scott, colored, was hanged atBran-dou- , Miire., Thursday, for the murder of his wife last year. President Huntington of the Southern Pa-cific confirms the report of the purchase of the Aransas Pass railroad in Texas. President Diaz of Mexico was, on Thurs-day, formally declared president for four years more, beginning December 1. Tbo seventh annual convention of the Brotherhood of St. Andrew of the Episcopal church is now in session in Boston. Six hun- - dred delegates are present. The mills in New York controlled by the paper trust, of which Warner Miller is presi-dent, will be shut down next week until the middle of November. Fifty thousand men will be thrown out of employment. . . Kotlca to Campaign Speakers. It Is requested that ail persona writing for appointments to apeak upon the Republican stamp in Utah during: the campaign, will address their communications to the Chair-man of the Territorial committee, at Salt Lake. Republican paper throughout the territory please publish this notice. m Colorado 2tae Iveaprra Association at IoDimont, Jctober 28th and 29th, 1S92. For the above occasion a rate of one and one-fift- h faro, on the certificate plan, is authorized from all points within the state. Selling days, October 26th and 27th. Cer-tilicat-for return passage to be honored one day after convention is over, and will bo signed by II. Knight, secretary. Yours truly, S. K. Hoopek, Gen'l Pass. & Tkt. Agent. Territorial Convention at Trovo, Oct. 5. Special train conveying to Provo the Og-den and Salt Lske delegates and others, via the Rio Grande Western, leaves Salt Laue at 8:30 a. m., and returns thirty minutes after adjournment of convention. Fare, II round j trip- - |