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Show j Nevertheless, Judge Parker has not i yet said that It was right to Irrevocably J establish the sold standard. To show Ills versatility, Mr. Bryan will go Into the campaign to do tilings for Judge Parker and to him. Possibly our bnsoball club has be-1 be-1 oome so accustomed to bolng in fourth ! J . place that It lmlcs to leave it. I It would have been a far more plcas- int summer for the fish In Buv.zard's " pay If Grover had only been nominated. August Belmont does not care -what the. Democratic platform says about 1 the trusts, as he knows Judge Parker. 1 Good talkers will be needed by the Democracy to reply to the speeches of Bryan and ' Tillman in favor of Parker. Democratic orators will , undoubtedly he considerate enough this year to carefully refrain from saying anything i about goldbugs. "HH r Gen. Kuropatkin could tell the Dein- H or rats that making unwarranted claims Hl Is not one of the very best waj-s of H winning a battle. , Salt 3ake has been good while the City Fathers have been away, and , trust that they arc able to say that they have been the same. I Mr. Bryan will support Judge Parker, but will he feel that the people have done right If they give the Judge more votes than they gave him'' II 'While the national Democracy may - be changeable In mere matters of principle, It Is consistently devoted to the sport of rainbow-chasing. "HHHm Ttah delegates lo the St. Louis con- H enlion praise one another's work In a H , most generous and friendly manner, Hj when they speak of it publlqly. . An the "Russians did not hear any Japanese Ja-panese firing at Port Arthur for two days, they naturally thought that at least 30,000 of them must be dead. I' Ih Judge Parker one of those Eastern statesmen who understand that the I country's western boundary is somc- i where cast of the Mississippi river? Ii That Salt Lakers are pretty spry j people is certain, as there are nearly 1 fifty automobiles in the city, and no one ' . has been seriously hurt by any of them. ' In retiring from the chairmanship of , the Democratic National committee, James TC Jones can defy his successor to predict victory any more than he I .lid. IJ Mr. Roberta is being told that his attack on Senator Dubois shows that L he Is utterly unable to recognize a S great and good friend when he sees II How will somo of our Democratic I; - speakers be able to make any kind of-j of-j a Bpcech this year, being forbidden to y pay anything about the Standard Oil ; trusl? : I If the Hon. Jim Moylo Is given the r Democratic nomination " for Governor P. once more, will he agree to be satisfied, t and not want to' be defeated again four I ' years hence' j III As the Hon. Dave Evans is not going ' around the world this year, what ex-, ex-, cuse will he have for refusing an Invi- tatlon to accept a. nomination and liberally lib-erally subscribe? j Ii As the National Democracy does not expect the Mountain States to give It much support, the Mountain States will not be rude enough to force any electoral elec-toral votes on It. II It Is already evident that the part Dave Hill Is to play in the campaign Is that of boarlng responsibility for any wicked things It may bo thought neces-Bttry neces-Bttry to do for Parker. The atrlko of the butchers and cutters of the packing plants does not show tho expected progress in settlement. There is no Immediate prospect that there will j be a settlement at all. The. big,. fat pub-lit pub-lit Is too easy to squeeze.'' and moro money. can be uiado by. selling lossmoat at an advance that gains a cent or two a-nound'evoryday. And; then, there will be the skinning of the shippers to attend at-tend to later on, as the pens fill up, and the market remains slack. Tho strike Is too good a thing to allow of any sudden sud-den stop. And. the sympathetic strike that is talked of will simply give excuse ex-cuse to prolong the situation. |