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Show I mm The least that Cutler can do under the 119 circumstances Is to give Smoot a good Ilia Every word In the latest Issue of l Bryan's Commoner wears a sardonic ifl r,n- I MM Cheyenne can now sympathize with mn our own town of Fillmore, Avhosc glory llu as a State capital is only a tradition. IffJH The fairest and richest of Dowle's will converts has sailed for Europe. Some lUn one should cable this fact to Elder Grant. I Hit The Leavenworth Times asks If the fill Republican party will make good on Its m promises. Senator Smoot will be able 11 J to answer that question this winter. IljIN Prof. JlcCIcllan carried away from H Utah many laurels, when he went to jfi SU Louis. A careful examination of his IBM luggage upon his return reveals the fact Dnj that lie left none of them at the fair. If Gov. "Wells should be pleased to 1 note that his invitation to Demolli 1 to vacate Utah has been accepted by hundreds of the organizer's friends. Let I us trust Uiat they may find remunerate remunera-te tlve work and peaceful and permanent Wk homes elsewhere. - I H The St. Paul Pioneer Press is of Hy opinion that the present conditions In Dn Utah are intolerable from an Amerl- Ul can point of view., That's the kind of HI inducement which ecclesiastlcism and II Its Gentile aid are offering to capital HI and Immigration. I Carnegie is beginning to realize what a tough world this is. He can not give away his money to other people's satisfaction. satis-faction. He wants to endow an immense university at Pittsburg, and the whole State of Pennsylvania outside of that city Is kicking as If Carnegie was trying try-ing to steal the commonwealth. - I Davis county's area of arable land has been Increased by the recession of the lake, ' and farmers are again ploughing plough-ing and sowing the fields of a generation genera-tion ago. This item Is not intended as a hint to the State Board of Equalization, Equaliza-tion, concerning whose estimates of land values Davio county Is especially sensitive. (Good Father Morrlssey, who died nt Queenstown last Monday, had his dying dy-ing wish granted to him. It was a blessed thing that, after his years of toil for humanity, he could look on the emerald green of his native land before his spirit took its flight from his pain-racked pain-racked mortal form. May the shamrock sod rest gently on his grave. I Poor little Jimmy Michaels! After riding hundreds of horees to victory on tho great tracks of the world, and after becoming a king of the pace followers on the bicycle tracks, he had to die In a stuffy little cabin on a trans-Atlantic liner. Jimmy had alv.'ays expected and desired that his finish should he with a thorough-bred hors? tumbling on top of him or a motor gone to smash in front of him. I The Tribune is glad to Indorsp and approve the plea made by Chairman Albert W. Cas;y, and Secretary John E. Cox of the Salt Lake County Horticultural Horti-cultural society, for State aid to put In an agricultural experiment station In the great -central fruit-raising belt of this State. The report which these gentlemen preseiit to the public 1b forcible- and comprehensive; it states the case properly and well. The need of Guch a station Is evident; the good work which it would do is apparent. It is hoped that the Legislature will provide It, and to that end those interested must be urgent in their petition and In presentation of their worthy cause. Hj We must begin to revise our views of LL the perfect operation of English courts kwM of Justice, Following close upon the Maybrlck case, the tragic wrong of HJ which was first due to a maniac Judge kWk and perpetuated by the obstinacy of the LLY home office, the dispatches tell of one Adolph Beck, Innocent of crime and yet suffering imprisonment for five Lkt years because of mistaken identity; and Hl In this case, too, the Judge was at fault and the home office possessed the Information Infor-mation which would have set the' man free on his trial. Wo may bo less sure to convict the guilty in this country than in England, but we may lake the blessed consolation to our souls that wo don't convict the Innocent and hold them in confinement long after the prosecution prosecu-tion has become aware that they are guiltless. |