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Show V & THE PAGE FOUR1 HE' JOURN AL T PUBLISHED BY EARL & ' ENGLAND ) CO. PUBLISHING - every Tuesday, at and Logan. Utah, Saturday, Thursday second-clas- s matter. as at the .Entered e Post-offic- . EDITOR AUGUSTUS GORDON, 8 SUBSCRIPTION .RATES. ,, By Carrier. ji Months Month.- Months By MaiL Months 6 Monti , . v8 6 12 $L75 $3.50 -- , When not additional.'' . - 75c $LS0 $3.00 r' per year 12 Months id in advance , . 50c v Advertising rates furnished on application Democratic Ticket - TRI-WERK- 1 - natio- their destiny." For President WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN ' For Vice President STATE DEMOCRATIC TICKET Governor. JESSE W. KNIGIIT. Secretary of State. EVAN R. OWEN. Treasurer. JOSEPH E. CAINE. Supt. of Public Instruction. DAVID H. ROBINSON: Attorney General. J. W, STRINGFELLOW. f A , ' Don gressiq am. ? ... J , , L. R. MARTINEAp. - v ed - k , , Court. Judge. S. W. STEWART.' Presidential Electors. AQUILA NEBEKER JAMES ANDRUS. F. B. STEPHENS, FIRST DISTRICT JUDICIAL TICKET. J. D. CALL "Judge F. K. NEBEKER Attorney me away-from-ho- , - mo GROWTH OF DEMOCRACY" "The-Decratic idea is BY WILLIAM J. BRYAN. growing . The biographical sketch of Judge McCarty repub! ished by -- our - local contemporary from the Republican, was so strongof reminiscent that ,,of the manufacturer of ly. a certain popular brand ofpills, as. certified by the circular which comes wrapped around each and every box, that it might have been used as amodeJ. There is the same high Homt. tribute to' the poor but honest" and most intelligent father; the same elass pf departure from home of the son, the youthful hero; the same manner of triumphant return and lived happy, honored and respected ever after; only in one case it was a doctor, in the other a lawyer, who returned. Of course .the return of the doctor ip .thrilling manner driving six white horses, just in time to save his hqnored. sires life by fclw aid of the Indian rivets and herbs he h,d discovered and of which the famous pills jfepere subsequently whs- somewhat more spectacular,, but the inference-plain, that, following the more modern method, while young McCarty walked -- with- his spare shirt and so ;ks wrapped in a kerchief and a slice ,.of bread and bacon in his jeans, he returned on the Fullman with his diploma and money in his pocket, three .trunks and a hat box in the baggage car, and enroute took his meals in the diner and had good ones because of his liberal tips to the waiter. It would have completed the comparison had he returned just in time to save the old homestead by the discovery of some error in the record of the court which ordered the sale,4 but the moral is the same take --this instance McCarty to cure your ill. tn order1 to overcome the start this story gives McCartys campaign, it will be necessary51 to have candidate Stewart leave home minus the spare shirt and socks, barefooted and limping from a stone bruise, and have him return in an Aeroplane loaded with documentary testimonials and wealth, at the psychological moment to rescue a doting, lovely but impecunious and widowed mother from the villian who still pursued her. com-pound- . the term is no used in a partisan sense, but in that broader sense in which it describes government by the people. There is not a civilized nation in which the idea of popular government is not growing, and in all the nations there are reformers who d am urging an extension of the influence of semi-civilize- the people in' governments So, universal is this growth of democratic ideas that there can be no doubt of their final triumph. Monarchies, at first unlimited, are noiy limited, and limited monafchiea are recognizing more and to a voiee m ipere the right of the tpeople their own government. Monarchies and aris tocracies tend .toward democracy, , and re demopublics J;end to become more and more cratic in their forms and methods. . When the seed, planted in the earth, sends forth the bender leaf and then the stalk; when the grain appears upon the stalk and supplies thebread necessary, for the support oUoiir bodies, we know that there Is back"of the seed a force irresistible and constantly working. As and ceaseless in its activity is the force , the-pilk-r- in William Waldorf Astor, Jr., will stand for parliament," says a' London paper; but it doesnt state that parliament will reciprocate.' In each presidential campaign,- we would inform our local contemporary, the Democratic - party has resolved to make the fight and - in-vl- te support, those principles of government which at the time most' require enactment, enforcement, or the practice or abuse of which at the hands of the party in power most requires correction. Platform declarations are made as to mostjressing public heeds only, and are not claimed to carry all of the partys political behind political and moral truttuThe advo- beliefs. It does not follow because the 'Chief cates' of the American theory of government issues as enumerated in this years platform can, therefore,-- labor with- - the- - confident as- are not the same ones emphasized four,, eight, surance that the principles planted upon or twelve years ago,, that eitherthe party or American soil a century and a quarter ago are Mr, Bryan has repudiated the beliefs and destined to grow here and everywhere nntil of those periods, but that other isand be nowhere will known, power arbitrary sues overshadow them in present importance, miiil-t- h shall berecognize voice f the and.it would not be well to obscure the more ed, if, not as the voipe of 'God, at. least, as important questions by adding to them - all o? Bancroft describes it, aa the best, .expression the platform declarations- - of the past, howof the divine will to be found'upSthearth. ever true in principle. It is sufficient to knew Jn republics, as, in other forms of govern- that the present promises arespecific as to the ment, there, will at times he disturbances but subjeets . covered, and tbatthose subjects ere these come from a failure tof recognize and the ones most direct and immediate requiring respect1 the eftrrefit'ief mbHerepiaie.wif w tteafmerff. As IcTthe undeclared principles Jrre-sistib- Tuesday, October 6, 1908; not easily frightened and shook' favored by he Democracy, it will be found TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS his head." . MAN THIS BURY COST TO, when the time for action arrives that the IT You will pay'the police fine partys action will be toward the greatest good . 'with and' not' if For the rest, you to the greatest number, (Special Correspondence), infringement ' thouMoscow, Sept. 23 j. Ten would not have your husband upon the "just rights of none. sand 'dollars would appear tet he buried here at first and paid 400 Tith due respect a big sum to pay,! not for funeral-p- baubles to take him elsewhere. FOR WHAT STOOD HE? but for the right" to Now I must have my turn. I for the pleasing omps, J the where is it of record body of one V husband. will bury your husband as soon bury personality of Judge Taft,, tiatre ever manifested concern lest the selfish And yet, the 'widow of a Polish as' you like. But first you must itself of government for self injure the stabil- Jew has just paid that samfor put down on .this table"" 20,000 the privilege in the Polish prov- roubles for the communal schools ity "bf the republic! Before he became a for the presidency," when did he attach ince of Radom, Mr.. Neumark, 'a and hospitals. You will find it himself to any reform. When become known as rictrman, died within the limits cheaper in the end than paying th eleider m a movement to bring about bet- of his own commune of Radom, police fines and healthier, too, for ter conditions as to the fearful abuses which but expressed a wish, in his will the weather is hot and I hear the to be-- , buried in the' neighboring street guardians have been revealed in late years! 'tired of Roosevelt stood for something definite; commune of Kielee, chiefly be- - pouring carbolic acid 'on your Bryan was the embodiment of the proposal for cause his parents were buried husbands body." civic reform ; La Follette was a human dynamo there and he had , passed his At this the Neumjark family beas he generated power for reforms instate youth in the same place, But the gan to wail and plead and proand nation; Folk achieved reputation which rabbi of the commune of Radom test. But the rabbi was firm and stamped him as a brave champion of the peo- objected to the dead- mans wish- they 'went home without' coming es, saying that, by the rules of to An ple against the grafters. agreement. In the evening For what specific civic reform issue did their commune, a man must be a policeman called 'to remind 7 Judge Taft stand which differentiated him buried where he lives and dies. them of the impending fine. Next from hundreds of thousands of other good Yery well," said Mrs; the - streets guardians this rule was made be- morning citizens ! struck pay and! got cause the family gpe money to it. Soon after Mrs. Neumark ' It is pleasing to read that the warmth of a charities !at thejuine of the fun-era-L went to bargain with the rabbi. ' you '300 r or We the wiir give has not"' destroyed vigorous campaign But he stuck to his demand, and 400 roubles ($200) if you will gentlemanly urbanity of some of the prinbefore evening, with the police,: to the waive Mr right" Mr. bury that your Hence learning Bryan, ciples. Mr. Neumarka remains pressing Taft was about lb visit Mr. Bryans home body in this commune." The rab- for immediate attention the situabi agreed and Mr. Neum arks town, Lincoln, Nebraska, asked that hix tion became so -- unbearable that comto the hastened remove. relatives be she paid the 20,000 roubles and Bryans lithographic pictures of mune of Keilce to arrange for the the funeral took from public places and store windows,-o- ut place. " met with " funeral. But there occurred incident they to Another Taft. courtesy 4 at the meeting of the vice presidential nomi- quite an unforscen obstacle. The PROBATE AND GUARDIAN nees in Chicago on Tuesday, when Jam.es S. rabbi of Kielee bluntly refused to SHIP NOTICES. Sherman, the .Republican nominee, .invited bury the body in his commune. You have given 4$$ roubles to Consult County Clerk or the ResDemocratic nominee Kern, to visit him at his home in Utica, and to bring his wife with him ; your own commune and now you pective Signers for Further the meeting being marked by cordiality and expect me to bury your relative Information. to refuse said. in he I side. each mine," coqrtesy upon do anything of the sort. You must In the District Court of the First ' Senator J. PlGere, the famous blind senator bury him in your own commune." Judicial District of the State of The to family began bargain, Utah in And For The County from Oklahoma, received an ovation in Ogden, to rabbi the pay of Cache. . where lie delivered a speech the other day that theywere ready Kielee of same sum the had they will be long remembered by those who heard . ralbbi of the to Radon given NOTICE TO CREDITORS it. Of Joe Cannonism and, Joe Cannon' he Your No,".he answered, said: "We must not, however, forget Uncle rabbi gets 40 hundred roubles for Estate of Evan Owen, deceased. JoC; who sits on the lid and says nothing his poor for doing nothing. 1 Creditors will present' claims doing. And right here I want to say that Unde Joe should not again be elected speaker- must have 800 roubles for bury- with vouchers to the undersigned , at her residence in WeUsville, , in .1-' He is not a frieiid of labor, never has been ing Mr. Neumark." The weather was hot and 'Mr. the County of Cache and State of 'and never will be. I would advise the Neumark 8 body ought 'to have Utah; oh or before the; Seventh of this state that in the event of the election of their candidate for congress fie be been quickly placed Under u the day of February' A. D? r Bate of first publication, Oct. pledged mot to vote for Uncle Joe. If he votes ground. Has widowg determined - for him, then I say he is as bad, as he, and I not to spend 1,200 roubles on the 6th A. D. 1908. ELIZABETH OWEN, burial, applied- to the police to know he, is fit for the penitentiary." Administratrix. force the. rabbi of Kielce to bury the body without delay, on- - the NEBEKER. HART, NEBEKER The Utah County Democrat is to be congratof health. , The poAttys. public ulated upon the issuance of a very splendid ground! lice received the woman someHarvest and Mining Edition" of thirty-fou- r what Burned to Death. scornfully. pages devoted to the mining, agricultural What is all this fuss albout a Chicago, Oct. 4. One man was horticultural, educational, business and' indusasked. funeral!" The they Ihown to' trial interests of Provo, which are cremated;,- two others fatally, matter is simple enough. and sevep more -s-evere be most extensive. Typographically, as well Xhole must have the mian buried You burned today in the Grand Crossas from the practical and literary Aspects, it within a week of his death at the is an issue --that, does full credit to the city ing Tack company fcotry when as his heir, will a ladle of molten metal or latest, you, overturnis on and to the publishers. It heavy printed a fine of 300 roubles, with an pay ed. The ladle was suspended' 25 book paper and replete with fine illustrations. additional fine' of a hundred-roubl- es feet in-- the air by a huge chain. A pleasing feature are the excellent cartoons, for the every you keep day One link gave way and the metal the work of Mart Roylance, a member of the above ground. Where did body was thrown over those below. staff. Mr. Neumark die in which disThe dead; Jacob Swish, 33 trict!" years old. Fatally injured : Fred If bankers should not be required to eorrtri In the commune of Radom," Burchett, Emil iMSslka. bute to a fund to insure depositors because answered Mr. Neumarks widow, Seven others were identified by that would induce reckless banking" as the a fat woman of 45. physicians in the plant and were Republican politicians are arguing, then why Then by the laws of the coun- able to go to their homes. not apply the rule that whatjs sauce for the try, he must be buried in the comSwish was standing directly in goose is' sauce for the gander; why not say mune of he said Radom, finally the path of the molten metal and that banks should nbflask security from bor- and returned to his glass of tea was burned to a cinder. rowers lest thbpractice induce recklessness on andi his newspaper. Am investigation of the accthe part of the .individual; why not say also The -- Neumark family- - went ident was made, and it was found that .the federal government should not ask home sorrowing and ordered the that the link had been weakened the national banks to deposit bonds to secure street guardians to water the by the excessive heat arising from the bank note "money which the law permits ' Hem' to issue, lev: to require such bonds tend body with a solution of carbolic the metal. acid. Then they repaired to the to produce a race of bankers wlc would reck- rabbi and: told him that, after Hyderabad a Vast Grave. with the consulting 'police, they it had come to the conclusion that Bombay, Oct; 2. The correscollection ageht John Rankovicz,- - of the deceased, mans wishes could pondent of a local newspaper who Gary, Indiana, has the famous.Utah collection not be carried out because the has reached Hyderbad, the capiagency beaten. .John Rous owed him a forty law said he must be buried in tal of the flooded district, describes dollar rent bill; and seeing no other chance Radom. But this time the rabbi that city as a vast ", grave. The of collecting an equivalent Rankovicz tied of Radom was not so willing to streets and basements have been Rous fast to a bed and with a string yanked late Mr. the He transformed into Neumark. a gruesome bury out a gold tooth greatly prized by Rons both had got 400 roubles for his poor mass of jstone and mud and defor' utility and ornament. Probably the tooth and had learned, what happened composed flesh. . It. is impossible was more valuable than the mans clothing at the commune 'of Kielee. he o accurately to estimate the death and personal effects or; the landlord would shook his head and said nothing roll, the correspondent ' declares luve swiped them while his tenant slept. could be done, for a week, when but some natives put it as high as the commune council would meet. 50,000. Six' hundred, corpses - beThen ekse he could the be will of well Utah content taken out of the mud at one were put The'Democraey ". with the substitution of the name of Jesse fore them- - , Jr,:: J The. funeral spot yesterday. William Knight for that of his father, on the are husof But the body my poor burning day and night. pyres Democratic ticket .as candidate for.go.vernor. band must be buried at once," The damage is .estimated at rupees. lie, will receive the labor and other support cried the now distracted widow. urged upon his father, and should be peculiar- - It is in a terrible state, and, the lr acceptable to young Utah, having been born police" give us til the day after (When, you decidef that yo and raised in Utah . He is competent, wide1 tomorrow. Yourmust bury it ;and wifeliis earned allttfe'rest, ad- Uiit the 'rabbi Vais ' vertise for a household servant. qwake, and wil make an excellent executive. done with. I le ppl - f . , 1 candidate p 're - i ' 1 ( - Neu-mar- i vt t f k. for-doubl- e 'V. a (' f t( a ; 1 Inter-Mountai- n JOHN W. KERNc - JOURNAL. LOGAN, UTAH. Y stand by the side of a stream and. watch ,it glide past ' us,weCan in safety listen to the song of the waters, but if we attempt to dam the stream we find the water rising above the ' dam. If we make the dam higher still, the watter. rises still more,aiid at last the force of the obstructed water is so great that no dam made by human hands can longer stay ifr Sometimes, the dam is washed away, damage is doneto those who live In the valleyjbelowj but the fault is not in the stream, but in those who attempt to obstruct it. So in human society there; is a current of public opinion which flows ever, onward. If left to have its way it does not barm anyone, but if Obstructed, this current may become si menace. At last the obstruction must yield to the force of the Curthe rent. In monarchies and aristocracies is it so that is sometimes built redam high moved by force, "but in republics the ballot can be relied upqn to keep the channel of the stream open, or if obstruction is attempted, to remove it whale yet it can be removed with safety. The advantage of a republic is that the people, through their representatives, are able to give public opinion free play, and the more democratic a republic is,- the more nearly does it conform to the wishes of the people. ' No one can study the governments jofjhe old world without a feeling of gratitude that in. the 'new world the science of government ha3 been carried to its highest point, and we of the United States can rejoice that our n-leads the world in recognizing the right of the people to devise and to direct the government under which they are to work out ... f : ei ei lo h st w V di cc d If rc in in in ar iy hii a Repub-lieJfafe- ta Ss ai m - tri qo -- 7 an 5 sel .fia tei , - io-iur- - ( J , -- '" . rt 200,-000,0- i |