OCR Text |
Show r,--- page two: - THE PRO VD HERALD ..- . Editorials CONTRAST CLARK iiiiiia WWII I aolerer Fundamental Difference Between the Two Presidential Candidates, and Champ Clark's "Gratitude" to William "unin-structed- Savoyard Discusses FDelegates not Instructed At the Democratic primary held Wednesday evening f his week jn the csnirt h ?u?e3t was ..decided toend the to the state convention uninstfucted, farther delegates than that, they were to faor a progressive Democratic j 1 posing tbatrhe had the naoathgf an "concerned closed through the princl. We know that no money came frpm Tom Ryan to help Wilson, fdr the sim- thar pie and in. Virginia. Tbm lives it. Ryan jected In. the is the It, Old Dominion to send an delegation to Baltimore. Is move? Perhaps, hat n i has never at any time been in the least reluctant to violate the lawa of courtesy ethics, and honor, and to misrepresent and make public private matters and private correspondence. a " free-- ' a He no laws what booter. amenable to ever, but anxious to hold others to every law that will bind them, to his' He does not"inihe least advantage. believe In the idea ' that " any one claiming equity must. dp, equity,-h- ''. free-lanc- But here is the concrete fact that Wilson would" uld emphasize not promote the .ambition of Jim: smith. Another is that t'hamp Clark is' T'profoundly gratefi'l'. to William R, Hearst. ut j . And here is- - another thing. The-- he wants others to do equity- - while to while he violates every great "Democratic "masses equitable rid their party of its Jim Smiths audi pririeiple. .Others must but its William K, Hearsts. he must be Tfee, regarding- - no law o and no obligation" of honor, equity, And all the H'Ttr: or jryixl fatth i .Altn.vanrlAlnli j ""candT(Iate'iof 'VresTIt;in. This Ts nnd(7uT)fe(lT7a" "vvise niove (n the .part .of the city convention. The delegates who are now clu'sai to represent, this-citin thestate j liuv.i- a chance to use their oi n Judgment, somewhat, rai her'' than o there. tied hand and foot. "In fact. I.onn'ttwKthint that a delegate who goes to the tote e .tiieiition iiiMrtnied i. not much more than a figure head, and those who sept hfm had very little him omiu' chance hwh.i V'J'j'---ia- vf !o exereise liis ,,vn volition. man' individual judg- . I )emtw--vHt4M- U)e trr at ioat hy (hc him down with instructions and send him to a tate con ' a vention .l''at''''K: his.U'i(Trrr;t thinking citizen. little later we wid enter into a diseussioiTTit the relative merits ui Speaker ( lark and" (Invt-ri..Wiln as cainiiuats tor Hie ri .minati' u ot president on tlieJJei "' ocrauc ticket. ' Mr. Wilson could have had all Jim Smith's millions for a campaign fund ' cuiK-tntiojWoodrow WilsOn has made.- - William in, 1912r1ad he been content to fold -his arms and allow Iifn Smith to re It. Hearst is One of the friends Champ turn to the senate, there to betray, Clark has made. Mr. Clark says lie is -the' Democratic party as ,he had profou-iHiJgrateful to 'Mr. Hearst. twenty years earlier. Would Mr.-coni'i-iee-lln-i'nWjlsonl8 charged with inj?rati- - Champ Clark have, been' "ungrate-- ' timebeCa inie3lbai..t . , nine lowaru Jir. Minui. ir men are ful?" Every advocate of the noniina- . tar'ki d, even when he himself de- -10 ..be ...Judged Jjy. . the ... friends .. .and 1 J Lqp of Chaiiip Clark haye .heard, it,.; the first blow. livrs enemies they make',, here is a .con- denounces Vo8r,6vv Wilson for his "Roosevelt continues his clamor as shown to Jim spicuous and a .striking .illustration "ingratitude" The follqwin editorial appeared in t, , bi n r,5, jnielTS;s gainst him. taat tinns jut clear' so aiiiiiii." iery wen. I nen n roinrws: 0116 of !he leadiiig parly ihauhe wiio runs may read. It that had Clark been elected governor the..hls interests, so individualities of the two 6f New Jersey when Wilson was,Jie fthi state a few days ago and shows far as ,hey ;,jVe spoen( are for j,im r men Ciark and Wilson. waxTtns-Trrgtirnregrd-Tlrewouiu nave Deen graTeruT, tiirrnTT lm;n;fT3MHMer t Perkins, Tate T 1910 "Jim" Smith,- the owner iu u,s uanus, anu annul, ana not for Roosevelt haj e . Morgan iiHprests,. and .of theand manager of the Democratic ma- .Martine. would now be senator from . Allow us to remark that if the ma- Harvester trust,1 concerning which -chine of New hey. thought he saw New ..Jersey. What else do The poignant sorrow ,,i L'. 'loud Loose am his jonty of tne; Keiubliean party.. ei;a one of 'has j. an opportunity to return- to . the mean. wile over the untimely death of their stalwart son ihu'st as ' believed Clark isis ztfo a man is Lnneu atates senate. was an no He here big interests grateful, ansen,' and tl:ere have been ineasiirabl y lightened yesterday 1v ihe eviwhat rich wrote he as Koosevell, made Hearst so the of enormously man, the leaders in t'ie e.o'.u.'ry th.U .eomrares with, .many' by day after dences ot sympathy ot) eerv hand from the moment certain schedules .of the Jirotecfive the JUjnujs primary ; "I 'am pro-- ; would not. recognize their, neighbors: - 4-- e Steel-Tru-- 1 - andJln-powefaTffr Tfi'eo lie r.'Trtnr aTdedlirj-- " of Rut Col. RoosevelT' "is thv ney until they reach l'roo. where the nridc-o- f their hearts Mr. Smith when United States senator ea rry i nglilinois for me. l cai.i- Among Roosevelt in his .Tiad grow ti' to htnldi iiianhood.. ''he n that . s was the aid he lent certain protective thein-wathe powerful influence of paign must necessarily make tlu special pet' of that interest, and it e- with others in mleii-it- v nfiW- and the resneet-'-i'itiwas lie that set it upon its feet and who injected Democrats, into the the .Hearst newspapers-- which Have ;;soWih s.'nmd judgment of t'Ue d tiojj iff which the people Wi t'tah county hold their friend ' ' Wilson tariff bill of 1894 "party perby me .loyally, manfully 'and try gespec-rhat his mind is gave it the treiuendou power and and neighbor was i, ever -- o inanifested as when they fidy and party dishonor.". Mr, Smith He jK'ily from 'the beginning from f ranged. has been paradii.t; monopolistic control that i: has. gathered yesterday to bear with" him his burden of sor- - 4 is a shrewd politician and he saw a Massaehu.-K'ttto California." i'through the ca.in'.rv for ,ve ks lieai'- I is of blasted-hope- s. these 4m4 'Under circunis.anees, what low, imhappiness .J friends, and ' tiemocraue Ling abi.- - u.,'i fiesidoi:' T i'f t arl vietory Hpproaciung in that term includes the entire .citizenship of the ' state, ' r hytoerisy it is for .Roosevelt to but he knew Jtead that, again. 1910; that his machine What dues it 'his adminisira;ion, inisreiire:-einin- g stood w ith hlnV yesterday either in person or in spirit, would be powerless to redeem the "lean; the .President, and doing every thing talk about big interests being for ,' at the bier of his dead hoy, ami gave him. that understand- - , state a respectable - If it means anything,.. It is that, that, he could to discredit hn. before Tat';: The big interests are for him ... till leffs it. "made alnnc can rob death of a portion of . ' ing sympTirhy-tha- t ticket. ' Cliamj) ("lark's "profound" gratitude Hhe country, eve?r to. illJili;;;:iS 'n unuVHslionab!)', and ir - largely 6n lts terrors Hr those who are-lebehfi Herald Jrepul)will call. William R. Hearst to be a falsehoods which' he know' were lalse-pilla- r their accomit tliat his candidacy ... There was Woodrow Wjlson, is lican As a writer of his administration. If he hoods, and yet which he deliberately pushed. They- reasonably conclude, respectable. . on political subjects 'he, had showtt-f-shabe cliosen President. t trust case, thai''' . Now, ; Used. And now, Taft ' from- the himself not' only jrrofuiihdly versed in compared wkh Hearst, in a. political tin 11s upon him, and shows the falsity "none of them will tie prosecuted If. the history of' statecraft, but one sense, Jim Smith is immaculate, a! of the charges he has been making, .Roosevelt ran lie elected President. The only purpose o lifeboats is to provideriieaus of deeply groith'ded in ihe philosophies. son of the morning. . Every bemo-- J Roosevelt (tuts up a whine 'that lie ,js ."The maniacal frenzy with which escape when the ship sinks.' The Titanic carried enough hea-thereofr-'A- s i f ebitt-hetltl--t:mt;:-of one of the crat, who was of any account ap- - abused and viciously hird of her fuH'o-mplemen- t attacked, as Roosevelt makes his assault upon t.f crew and passengers. The ipiestion. AVhaf would hap- - ' institutions in the plauded - .Wilson Mw-Tefusat to suming that the campaign has just President Taft.anJ upon Republican-- ' world he had discovered administra-thallow Jim Smith to longer boss the begun, and that President Taft is the leaders generally, shows him at his ' pen ro the other. two 'thirds if the ship sank?1 was. never He is reckless, utterly' un- raised. 'Until it was too late. capacities that rendered him fit party in New Jersey. aggressor. for But Mr. has put the seal of any executive station in civil life, "All this is grotesquely ridiculous. serapuloiis, and openly oblivious of from the government of Creat llritain and and ha took the initiative in reforms his approval on the boss-shithe United States would have compelled every liner 4b of Roosevalt has been no passive candi- any erstrietions with, respect to suggested them. That marked liim ilearsr in'lllinois. If Wilson shall be date, as he said that he would be, truth, friendship, or ethics. Hia'll.'. carry enough lifeboats for all on board. That 'word- Avas a constructive administrator and chosen President nobody will see but has been on the as of everybody not spoken. The governments toi.k the chance of an unstump vigor-- ' frantic denunciations rf Hearst and Smith near the White busly and " in his way mark the decadence.- - ' practical man. recklessly assailing every necessary loss of over sixteen .7 i 111 And If so of House. is we his Clark the are Smith, one that seemed to stand in his way. President, .political prestige, and indicate his sX&xa&hl a fire ordinance KhliugAo theatres. To of practically 'ass'ufed- that Hear.st will He has been and resentment of the boss, aided in the nomination enforce it rigidly would have put the manager of the unsparing in his critiy .Woodrow Wilson as the JJomocratic head the "kitchen Cabinet," if he cism and condemnation, and has no: f:'..'t. The People, Whom he 1netends theatre to quite a little trouble,,i'nd exyen.se. It Was ' candidate for governor of 'New Jersey shall be content to put up. with that. in the least regarded anxious to serve, but whom he not rigully enforced aiid hundredXdied when the theatre the rules of A former Republican WHson did not need. Smith; Smith senator, Du- honor of truth, nor is he regardiins: has been shamefullvXattempting to burned. Prom a score of sickening examples, Xew York needed Wilson. Wilson was elected bois, is tho' Chief manager of Mr. these rules"-nowknew the danger of firetraps-f&- e lie reiterated the ''1" 'five, do not come to his supportthe Triangle shirtwaist A Mr. Dubois is a charge in his ue expected- - thpy would do. but by an enormous majority, and Smith Clark's campaign. speech at Worcester,! factory; hut it '.didn't cart-finterfere with the profits of 'he had acquired a gov- representative of. the Wool Growers' Massachusetts, that the .Department which they'cannot argued that 'ihc landlord until after 'the catastrophe!- possibly do 'in. ernor among his other assets that association that demands a tariff tax of Justice acted in 'collusion with of his attempts to overturn ... Many sores rnthe Utiteil States are , he owned Woodrow Wilson. Mr. Clark favors such oju raw wool. senator in producing the l'hljcan institutions and set up a inaijequate exitnarrvv aisles, and counters piled with ' a There tax a Mr Bailey and every eorrespontlence as had does been for of primary his in the Harvester Phonal autocracy own, inftanvnahletuff.thftt would go up like tinder if a fire Mr. trust case, payns no attention to thVrdan3rous alike to .popular rights Republican, though started. Tlte government knows this, imt, generally f United States senator and Mr. Mar stand-pa- t ' line was the nominee. Smith had Clark was formerly .vociferous-.- and dejiial. of that senator. But firsr''''of and to the Republic itself. We look sj.e.'ikiiig; will do nothing" ab.ntt it 1.! (he injury bfx . yC' .... 1. l r . owned the party in New Jersey for voluminous in of Roger ail. R,Wseve!t denied that there' waslt0 see Massachusetts ,r.tU. i iioioiaiist somewnere lorces its iiand. give Taft a i A Mr. twenty-odMills' he wool. and Idea el of free believed he Q. .1 e n c years, m: inline, never unows. It reads I'l.tlU' steamer's ikmv sol djj ega tJgjqjnjgjLLIuuand- - la. 1 en nis ttuirt and ' yet owned it, so he proposed to can-- Pi:ttigrew is another of the like ilk. thai it is unaiuced he eharses h vio-- i see from, thenceforward a. ranid m m i n g pnnl n f t h e t h ea t rJs hand t'ne iirimary and be senator him as uiioois , snanug eel wnn mm me ; latmn of ethics and M honorable con-- , "ecaaence ot the Roosevelt of ; tlecorations sortfe the store's bargains public ' It wna Mr Smith fnnnil self Clark of the Thpif campaign, duet. Tha.t is, he expected all con- sions." v agn c rsii ra nee that , & the' this college president a lion, and He, too was a Republican .'.senator rel n, d fr, ' 0 .there are laws and inspectors to make things safe. ,,ith M,. , He ehanirAil a nroteetinnlst. Hiis and ...t al. wnson ..i was mat not wouiu result oy.i... 11 find to was 111 iuuu out the hi a ueii.vuiK i.iai mere Congress proposes for low Mr. Smith even to run for sen- his vlevvs On the tariff? If so, I the Titanic jragedy rests.' It rcsjXiirst of all, upon the correspondence, since he seems j of it. - A representative of to a've imagined that the' rrles of ator, an office Mr. .Martine got be heard nneu uujira ami wrcat nruain. f vuiimviu fi cause the people who made tip the auiuuara un auu ot r.or and would 'c'e-t'ie Democratic real party of Xew the whiskey trust are two. of MprlmouihT of tao i, , .1... j. in ' Kentucky, correspondence. V Jersey.; had nominated Mr. Martine. Clark's managers if was, therefore, a W The theory of liihj protection is that rverylwdy shall And thai it was that madeJim Smith Where .d'fd this moiiey connf from dellbera'te .if.ai". "'',:i oa"riT part to I I r ip u lolla'r hat. ' which shalL-'- Le vigoV(tnly.; ' 41M11U (i.LLi..--hMia L.ty 4fi?,ove lie, supTT shaken ;"theu crybody will get Jiis dollar back Advocates of the Urcoirv, however, are verv" parficulaf as to who . f . . ... . . si. ' 1 x iiwiws .1. r""iiieji.u. .ppiteu 10 snip sti.DSKiy tne argument is,: Let n,c treasury copiously ; e will ...build many-,- . By Savoyard. Smith is orie of the enemies - vfim - . j t- . -- "IlfOLIIALIiC": -- . tne-tlnu- -- s orgajisgfa...i,, r -- - Friends and the Reaper mT of-th- - 1 - ' mi?)Mtareally' ' : r. st mnatrfoiTO'"'af f-nl . rres-identia- c.ouu-stoo- l: s - . ft . ll - when,-Pre.Tffi?n- Authorities That Take Chances . j 1 i e lHindre(iJ.isv.;.. ' . , - Iro--quo- is ai"' ! . piuis .,0:.. s j I" njHn d 1 I . . . preton-managenie- - ...... i nev-r,SU- r.. iiiii A New Protective Tariff iuiyi y - inr acw kick with aifofiV.' A a w a tt pctittTttj z.cii's optfic 1 ' f es t to plircnase tin" market and sailLt un.ler the flag of the I mted MauTon a eompetitiveasis of cost with thetrinuage'ftftfvcr' natioit.C" . In adoptirig the resoltidou. it wa'pointed 'out that Englandsrftir sHhsidicpply to only-ninper cent, of her -- - St -- it'K t iiamher'i .ioin!iu,rce,4ia.s-much It resolves' that navigation Jaws should t. ti.m , I - -- M tliC ,WorId ha4 lKfv s, fcitiscd'' to accept subsidies from'-- .its governnientXKxperietiecd shipowners have declared ' ' coff d ge t t h s a s cheaply as Englfslt and i tit them in eTTom e coul nerjTunKipcvnero pelc" iiiu iidviir: un ine s i n i i :in nr. pvii utr our " bnym . , tlf nt,UAAAIA, llnncn't l,.,fo rxrrit waitt to get the veselsat, a high price and be In other words, compensated out of the publiotrt-astiry- . to Tioldthe hat. 5iau"irday Fvennif Etistr want tliev ' I ve'?al1?afy,bv 11 I r I " - W . " carporter? . . , . a . ( a -- palace -- - .,1 V,.n.-.-' 1 . mimm thcselij-Xam- cl R t.Al H boards?-- -. ' I yy Floor Outfits, which varnishing, flcirpi! $2.75 OB at 4iJrni ice samples X lhi work, have a kstoci'tfu "f55 wktre the puhlic are come to rrac'tce rth tee oef! Intrtx!uctcy Ua-ISam- ci y- rhonea 104-10- 5 . v We wel- - uraiaer. BeebatumH er ,y fH, MISMl S ' , ---- tt tft B il Go. IT-- ',f ' FTfaw ,- -; ' V.'W. I "This Testim onylConvinces y y ' y eendani nf .. nn .... f., fia Mar snail rl...,.;. . -- EXCURSIONS in British Dettlnatlons Columbia, California, Idaho, Montana, Ore- .flon and Washington. Los Angeles, "Calif., and "return via direct route, 35.0O; San Francisco ana return via direct route, $37.55; San Diego, Calif., and return via ,dl-reroute, 139.75; Portland, Ore!, and return via dlrectTotite.Vjr IpiVefSe routes allowed with farea .allrtti in excess' of tha above. Tickets on sale April 29, 30. May 1, 2 3,. 4 and 5; June 15, 16. 17, 18, 1920, 21 and 22' 191 August 31, September 1 to 7 in - ri" write Mr. I. A. Benton, Salt Lake City . VACATION . n y p. , "'" a. )' y RATES. , To laiious eastern deaUnaUona via Salt Lake Route. Tickets m.ai various . dates.' Mavr 18th uc ii i.m ed.".See your ipr via t,us Ante lea T.lmlt. ldcalgent for partlcu-- v..,. jara.T; THE CLASSIFIEI) "' Z s'lv.. 11 xii x ; GOLUMN. '. ' ( ...w- Provo, Utah. - " agent, or G. A., . - - natttt. days. . ,' For further' upon Union Depot Ticket - ' y 'nf - lJr' I U St., Little , "ock, Ark., a aZ, . . families wrifpa- - '"r coionia- After taking Foiey Kidney PI11.7 few have no , -- Tr have coretl me completely ;.Iac. r y For sale by the "Hedqulgt Drug Co." W-F1H- feet Z ' y K m al oger m Arable. the pain left me and now : ? JSiiang n,.. KiJUi!-- t n ant fra'I and raatenlJ W treabwnt cr iCQuars of surlace. cor.Uuv tventhir a ' 'mmmmsyA I - ifyou owa one cl y rCoudn't he get"a job - '.'A ;3 AH Between Two Scnday ""A man who was'once a railroad president is now a New-Yor- - - and p tracing Mai lookswood. wea.a'like varnished hard vAnd have your old carpels maa y mtc a rug - beggar in i V With ,1- ;.':- ! Dark Colored Flows 9i n air i y CcnccaLIihz wid q cracks between ... y condi- in Orciron niiiitical out savin? Thev.are "that " o . tions arij not preventing the masses of the. plain people from putting money in the savings bants. StilL they arc hoping that political conditions may s6on'e solmprQved' that they can put more, monevnto the savings banks" .:.. English stamps of common denominations. postage T,.j are to te issued m rolls rather than in sheets. In thia ' country .the orily striking change Imped for in this par- ttcnlar is for theititroduction of a stamp lliat vill sticky ' when licked., ; ' .'Im' : .g-'iM.:- fBzz , ,7-- 0 y y r ' ' '. ; ztK ";' :y 11 iTcTT-St- a T" : i chea-peK- " lC hf '"lP siiiipier-expeaien- iM - -- U 1' ' : :.. tke "country will get its money s I 1 ch : i |