Show i CHILLING AT r BINGHAM I Judge King and A J Weber Talk to a Full Hall MUCH TROUBLED FOR SILVER J Weber Says tho Countrys Prosperity Prosperi-ty Docs Not Come from Republican Republi-can lTensures Implored the People to Stand by Silver Judge King Talks on the Financial Bill and Says the Republican Platform Means Nothing Denounces th3 Administration rnWUNE SPECIAL Binghnm March U Judge AAlllinm Henry King and Aguiraldo Jackson AVeber addressed a large and chilly nu dlenco at Social hall In Bingham this evening The distinguished exponent of Democracy did not arrive at the camp until almost S oclock and Il had generally been prcstl met that they had been lost somewhere In the shuttle However as their smoking horses and dustcovered vehicle hove into view the cry of Hero they are now rang up and down the canyon until at the hour of Sld when the meeting was tailed to otder the hall was comfortably comforta-bly filled A AV Forman presided CtS chairman and with becoming dignity introduced the distinguished leader J I from Weber county Mr AVeber of Weber county then proceeded to discuss dis-cuss the silver question and it was apparently ap-parently Impossible for him to getaway get-away from It He urged the people of ningham that as they were for silver III 1S9C they would be untrue to themselves them-selves and recreant to their trust If they did not stand for silver in 1900 Mr Weber claimed that the country was prosperous not as a result of a Hepubllcan administration but because be-cause of the famine In India and the Issuance of bonds lo carry on the war He also said that times wire better In England but he didnt believe the Ile pUblican party would demand credit for thul In conclusion Mr Weber begged the people with tears In his olce not to bow down to the golden calf and Mark Ilnnnu Twice during Mr AVcbers remarks unthinking people Interrupted him with subdued applause JUDGE WILLIAM JI KINO I was thou lnlr < ltieed and discussed a little of everything He Hlnched with the Uiiuncial bill giving It a feu hard taps Inlne breakaway handed the Porto Rico tariff bill a few upper cuts and belted the Republican Administra ion Judge King spoke In the highest terms of Hon James T Hammond the Republican candidate but he Insisted that he did not like the platform upon which Mr Hammond wa soliciting the votes of the people The Republican State platfoim he said meant anj thlng or nothing Just the way one looked til H Judge King then declared lint the people who wupported Bryan in 1S9G did It because they favored bl metallsm and the other principles for which Bryan stood and that If they believed In those principles then they could not honesily forsake them now Judge King criticised the Administra lion severely for allowing the military authorities to Imprison hurdworklng men at Vat ncl Ida subsequent to the bluln up of the mills at that place In 1SOS Ho was extremely severe upon time iiitlon of President Klnley In chang ing front upon the Porto Rico tariff bill I and declared that he had surren dered liis prerogative at the behest of tin I trusts I and monopolies At l this I Juncture the t Judge used that t beautiful t I 1 IJgure of speech aboUt the Constitution I following the Hag and declared that the principles of this sacred instru mer had been violated In conclusion i he took up the financial finan-cial bill I in detail and dlscussed 1 various I phases of It declaring as did I l1 rVI her that It gnve the national banks of the country absolute control of the peoples peo-ples money and that ruin would fol low In Ha I wake AJS usual In his public addresses Judge King again declared that he stood exactly upon the same platform that he did four years ago and that tho people who voted for him then I must vote for him now for the same reason that formerly controlled them The speakers will return to BIngham Junction by private conveyance tomorrow to-morrow morning CABLED DOWN BY A MINER A mining man who was present at the meeting took Issue I with Judge King as to bin criticism of the military authority at lJnlnc nnd explained to the Judge that L the lawlessness had reached a stage where the elvll author I lieN weJ unable to cope with It He said he was thtfe I at the time and was thoroughly I I conversant with the status I of affairs OK they existed Thf discut 1slon between Judge King and the mining I mi-ning man which was quite I animated I took place at the close of the meeting |