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Show JI1 ran ;ifellAT0RJURROWS ilfcti Hide in llif Smoot Case Kv .hist i tied ly Recent . Developments. RiAM WILL MIT BiCAIX SlTl'ORT APOSTLE 'ijBu'iis Is Object of Many At- I t . Mpls ami (imstitiieiits ot KAgniM;TnN. M .- li Id. -Smator Kg, from Senator liurrowt -vlftllt ot' ).T. 1 lie things' ' '"Eel nick' : f i n k -- ShBesiti'r Mr ::, ifliii j k - " '! !, I in favor j Htjtmj: - t i : i T r - i -Hut tl-.r ."n-; liini , Mty-i; 7. . i.-i.. m" i i rrm I'vpirt-s U KLh 3, flii. -,, lii--; '!' lie I ' nil:i: '.I' Kline "'' r' ' ' "' " '' t'i'iii ' nil' Ln;i-r II i "!' Illinon. n Im-'!.- scatinj; Smoot, is being liotlv attacked bj :tl sorts of women's organizations throngl ' riHnoia V- Hopkins's lorni expires March ". 1009, and li" is an avowed candidate fot re-election, the women ;irr making hint squirm Liki wise, Hopkins ha been assailed by some of the religions publications of his Stale, but has quieted some of them by Introducing a resolution providing provid-ing for a eonstiiuTion.il amendment foi bidding polTganvj anywhere in tbe United States. The resolution is fast asleep in tbe Committee on the .In-diciarv, .In-diciarv, a Penal or Hopkins and everybody but the religions papers knew it would ho. and though it will pever be disturbed again, it has served its purpose. Beveridgc In Danger. Senator Beveridgc pi Indiana, a Gentile is in iniioh the sam fix as Hopkins, excepl ihai Ins term does no! expire until 1911. Ho also was olo quent, with real noUana eloquence, ; in the cause of Smoot. and now the deaconi and the elders and the lilies in all corners of his State are show nm, by unmistakable iKrns tl'nf tney sre Betting deadfalls for the Senator. In this they doubtless have the secret support of the Fairbanks machine, as the unctuous Vice-Presidenl loves Beveridgc aboul as Smool and Burrows love ' so h other. The eocktail incident Is about lo bo revenged. Senator Sutherland in notifying his j colleague of ins change of heart, told i Smoot that ho thought as much of him personally, as ever, but that he was in a position to know that if Smoot jecured re-election there would bo another fight against seating him, and that while he did not olvjoct to a Mormon sitting in the Senate, he did not believe it v.iso for ono of the twelve apostles of ihat church to do so Honce, to be perfectly fair, he felt called upHjn ut thin lime to tell fonator Smoot thut he could 110 longer aid him. Hermtor Burrows regards this rh in sujinort of his position against Binoot, ns it follows bis lino, of argumeut in that case. That some of his worthy eolk-tigues who voted in favor of bnioot should now be in trouble because of that vote is, of course, a matter of deep regret to benator Bnrrowu, regret that they did not aoid the trouble by supporting the Burrows side of that contention |