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Show I main. and Insist upon our roi. IV- act- sional delegation urging the ment of such statute. 10. We favor the. etactmen of laws providing for a systematic con-struct Ion of highways throughoiil I the state and for the adoption of pifmpt and vigorous methods of building good roads, by which tbestate an the various counties thereof shall to the very desirable end bat -- This Is The Winning Ticket! Following la the Republican Ticket to be Elected Nov. 10, 1908. IfrlLLIAM -- or Gilmore! of the United Statea: HOWARD the United 8tatea: AMES 8. SHERMAN, of New York. Utah Republican State Ticket For Preaidential Electora. THOMAS BEVY. Garfield County. LAFAYETTE HOLBROOK, Utah Co unty. HENRY COHN, Salt Lake County. Republican 8tata Ticket. FOR JUSTICE OF SUPREME COURT W. M. McCarty, Sevier County. TOR REPRESENTATIVE IN CONGRESS Joseph Howell, Cache County. FOR GOVERNOR William Spry, Salt Lake County. FOR SECRETARY OF STATE C. S. Tlngey, Juab County. FOR STATE TREASURER David Mattson, Weber .County. FOR STATE AUDITOR Jesse D. Jewkea, Emery County. FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL A. R. BARNES. Salt Lake County. FOR SUPERINTENDENT OF PUBLIC INSTRUCTION A. C. Nelwm. Sanpete County. POLITICAL CALENDAR. Nov. 3. National, state, county and judicial election. REPUBLICAN PLATFORM. - The Republicans ot Utah, assembled In state convention, proud of their party locally and .nationally, present the following for the consideration of their follow citizens: state Repub1. Before another lican convention shall be held the Rooseof Theodore administration velt will have paased Into history; we, therefore, deem It a patriotic duly to express at this time our grateful appreciation of his brilliant His adand progressive leadership. ministration In Its high purposes and great achievements, consonant with the highest Ideala of government, haa xempllfled in full and rounded measure the highest and noblest aims of American manhood. He haa couragebattled for ously and unfalteringly higher standards In public and prl ate life. Our people are better and stronger and our nation wields a greater influence because Theodore Roosevelt haa filled the exalted office of president. Ws pledge our adherence to his policies and measures. 2. We congratulate the voters of Utah upon the opportunity given to them of voting for the profound Jurimist, eminent statesman, able andAmerpartial administrator, and true When ican citizen. William H. Taft. l.e shall take the oath of office as he will r resident of the United Statea Imbring to the performance of his portant duties the ripened experience of many useful and honorable years spent la high public posllons filled with rare and uncompromising Integ rtf-lor- ilty. We congratulate them also upon the opportunity of voting for James eon S. Sherman, the distinguished gressman front the state of New York, the Republican candidate for vice president. 3. We heartily Indorse the course of our congressional delegation, the Hon. Reed Smoot, the Hon. George and the Him. Joseph Sutherland, Howell, and we Invite attention to the splendid record they have made In the present congress In securing ihe enactment of lays beneficial to Utah, and promotlve of the material Interests of our people, a record not equaled by any preceding delegation We especially approve of the effective and generous support they at all times gave to the reform policies and measures of President Roosevelt. 4. We unhesitatingly express our sympathy with, and approval of. the declaration of great principles made in the platform adopted by the national Republican convention at June 18. 1908. The history of the Republican party during every year of Its existence attests the pregnant fact that it has the courage of its convictions and the honesty to keep the promises which it makes. Our people may. therefore, rest assured that Republican supremacy in the nation will mean the continuance which of policies governmental make for Justice, equality and fair dealing among men, and for national prosperity. 5. We again declare for the polltcal doctrine of protection to home industries and Aoiieri-lectlvtariff is to he made we demand that it be done by those who are friendly to American interests, and not by those who would strike down the wool, lead, live stock and other industries vital to the prosper ity of Utah. We remind the people of Utah that when the Democratic party last had industry of our state for the benefit of foreign eompetitors. G. We heartily endorse and commend the honest and able administration of the affairs of our common-- . wealth during the past four years by the Republican state officials under the leadership of Governor John C. Cutler. They are entitled to and should receive the thanks and gratitude ot the people. 7. We reaffirm the action of the last Ttemiblican convention In declaring In favor of anv and all legislation proposed for the benefit of the surviving veterans of the republic. Uhl-cag- time-honore- e the opportunity it placed wool upon the free list and sacrificed this great They are entitled to, and should receive In full and abundant measure, Ihe evidence of the nation's gratitude. We hereby extend our Ihnnka and express our appreciation to the Grand Army of the Republic, representing ns it does the magnificent fragment or the triumphal army of the Union irom 18G1 to 18GG, In conferring upon the state of Utah the distinguished honor of holding its forty-tMr- d annual encampment within the confines of this state, and we hereby recommend that the legislature, at its next session, make a suitable appropriation of the public funds of the state, lo he extent tlmt its revenue will permit, to the end that the visiting members of that organization may be suitably and properly entertained. 8. We declare In favor of the establishment of postal savings banka as recommended by the president and liostiu aster general; for the building or a greater navy; for the establishment of a department of mines and mining; for the creation of a national bureau of health; for legislation In further development of irrigation. and for the enlargement of homestead rights on lands, and for the continuance of the triendly policy of the present administration in aid of the development of the great west. 9. We demand that the right be lias a deep Interest. 12. We ask for our candidates, state and national, the support of every citizen Interested in the welfare and progress of our state. We again remind the voters that Utah is rich In great natural resources, which need the fostering care and aid of triendly legislation, and that we must look to the Republican party for this The attempt now being legislation. made to make political outcasts ot the voters of Utah by destroying national party lines, if successful, ran have but one result, and that Is disaster to our state. We call upon every lover of our commonwealth, who bellevea in the future of Utah, and haa faith In the Institutions of bis country, to unite and administer to these marplots such a rebuke as mm! TAFT, of Ohio. of Vice-Preaide- Alaska-Yukon-Pacif- Gilmore! NATIONAL TICKET. ;or Preaident system of well constructed, substantial and well kept highways shall be made in every part of the state. 11. We declare In favor of our state being fittingly represented at (be exposition to be held at Seattle In 1909. We favor apropriations in aid of proper exhibits at the annual meetings of the irigation snd Dry Farmers' congresses, in the success of which Utah n THE RENOWNED Palmist, Clairvoyant, and Spiritual will forever silence their vindictive tongues. The attempt to build up a party here on the Ignoble foundation of personal malice, slander and hatred will fall, and the people of Utah, actuated by nobler motlvea. will march forward, shoulder to shoul der, working unitedly for the unbuilding of our commonwealth until it shall take ita place as one of the geest states of our Union, and 1 n that day her detainers will be fot gotterf. In conclusion, we congratulate our fellow Republicans '"unon the assured triumph which awaits them in the state and nation in the coming Adviser. Postlvely, Gilmore la tie only dead trance medium traveling through this country. 8TRAIGHT FROM INDIA. Gilmore la known the world over as the first White Person ever permitted to 'enter the Ancient Order of the Silent Brotherhood of Adepts and Yoghee Philosophers. GILMORE A MAN OF POWER. To him everybody's lift la an open book. You tell Mm nothing. He tells you everything and cures every disease. CALLS YOU BY NAME. Gilmore calls your name aloud, tells you If you are married or single, when you will marry, number in family and occupation; be gives the names of the dead as well as the living. GILMORE A WEIRD CHARACTER. This man Is strange, but not mystifying. Anything you wish to km.w, no matter what, Gilmore tells you. He haa a speedy remedy for every evil. YOU MAY WISH TO KNOW. If It la advisable to mak a change In business. In love, In marriage. Will I succeed in my new undertaking? Can I obtain my hopes, and my ambition? Will I ever enjoy the luxuries of wealth? Can I trust my friends? Who are my enemies? When will I marry? Will I ever be separated from my husband? Does another share the love that belongs to me? If ao, give me the name. Ia there a rival In my love? When will my troubles end? Will my life ever be happy? How can I make my lire and home happy? Why do I not receive a letter? Should I invest my money? Will I win my lawsuit? These and all other questions Gilmore will truthfully n- wer. A WRITTEN GUARANTEE. To every one consulting Gilmore he glvea a written guarantee. and absolutely refuses to take one cent If you are noi entirely satisfied. POLITICAL POT PIE. Words aralnst deeds Is the wsv Governor Hughes sums up the national issue. And the American people always put their faith in the man who has done things. Roosevelt's method of teaching politics by correspondence in a few hard lessons combines .a nlessure to himself with profitable instruction to his pupils. maid-serva- Yes. gentle reader. Judge Alton B. Parker, you will find, if you will refer to the almanacs, was a candidate for president in 1904. .5 tft V nt deer-horn- - ks gun-rack- ft -- Judge Taft didn't find anything the matter with Kansas, and Kanss didnt find anything the matter with Judge Taft. There remains one nubile service which Governor Haskell can dis charge If he will be can assist us to forget him. Down by the Rio Grande. Introducing CHAPTER III, the Honorable Russell Maude. Balcones ranche faced to the east In front of It ran Arrays Pena, a clear atream, shallow for the most part, but having deep dark pools in places. Its banks were thickly grown with wll and pecan Iowa, cottonwoods, trees. Indeed, Lola had seen the line live-oa- $1 $1 $1. Toddy" and "Mlggs" In aa instant and smiled at them brlgktly. They grinned Instantly in response and came forward a little more briskly. Grouped at the back were several nea whom she did not notice and to whom ihe was subsequent Iff Introduced without remembering their names. Placing hla child carefully on the hard white ground Glynn assisted his new governess to alight, said some words of simple welcome and busied himself about the disposition of the trunks. In a high thin drawl, extending two fingers of her right hand, Mrs. Glynn said: "Vey welcome, vey welcome, Indeed, to Balcones ranche, Miaa English. I true yon ah not tiahd. I would show you to your room myself, but 1 am not well. This climate tlaha me." Misa English was not at all tired, aha said. The long ride on the train had naturally wearied her, but the trip to the ranche had been most enjoyable and refreshing. She smiled gratefully at Allyn as aha said It and he amlled frankly back. No one having thought to Introduce the children Ixria gravely shook hands with Toddy aa became hla eleven years, bestowed a shoulder-p- at aa well aa a handshake on Mlggs," stooping to whlspsr to him that ahe waa hungry, whereat hla face lightened wonderfully, and then ahe gathered the little girl Into her arms and kissed her With that divination on the cheek. which la shared between children and Palomlta Inthe lower animals, stantly snuggled close to her and piped to her father: M My governess haa come, papa. went Glynn laughed and the party Into the house, along whose front rata a gallery, also roofed with water grass. took Hera a tidy English Misa Englishs hsnd luggage and led the way Into a wide, dim hall whose s, walls were covered with and ao- forth. whip-racs, In Diverging Into a aide passage, which turn made a aharp angle to the right, she found herself after a walk of fifty room, with feet In a large furand comfortably walla snov shite A narrow door led into n nished. bathroom beyond. Two wide window In the east aide of the apartment opened upon an interior court, n quarter-acr- e In extent, which waa gay with snd flowers, green with dwarf-palm- s fountain center a In ita and palmettos, tinkled. Thla patio, or court, was not roofed. The Maine girl found that the house, as la the case with many houses in that climate, was built around the interior court, forming four aides of a square about 1L There were benches here and there In the court, which waa paved with flagstones, and the fountain had a cool refreshing sound. Pointing to a hand bell on the 'center table and Intimating that It waa to be rung If anything were wanted, the girl made way for the Mexicans bringing in the trunks and withdrew. An hour later, having emerged from a bath of cool clear water, which ran through wooden plpea, and clothed herself In fresh raiment, Lola opened her door to TBla r 1 1"Trrll,llt In front aha saw nothing, but glancing down there were ber three charges, "Toddy In front with a dusty bottle of claret, a glass and a corkscrew, "Mlggs next, bearing a large tray filled with broiled chicken and light biscuit, and Palomlta" last, also with small tray, on which waa a teapot and nlzed nu J t of them when five miles distant The arroya, after traversing the greater of tha ranche land, emptied into part YOUR FUTURE CAN BE TOLD. Grande ten miles below the Rio the Locked In that mysterious sleep when the soul shakes off house. Being "pennsnent water" It Its mortal shackles. Mr. Gilmore., the living, breathing proof of statute to permanent easement withwas of priceless value to the English the marvelous power of clairvoyance, reads the future fate of Inin forest reserves for public roads, Ircolony which had planted itself In that dividuals and predicts the outcome of their dally affairs. rigation ditches and ranala, and res- THIS IS YOUR GREATE8T OPPORTUNITY. The house Itself covered far spot ervoirs for storing water, the same an acre of ground. It was of GILMORE, C8 East Second South. Suite 17. nearly na la now granted uhhi public do one story and built of adobe, or - cups. Salt Lake City. I thought you were hungry, Mias slabs of clay, and It was painted a glaring white with lime. Its roof waa English, said Toddy, depositing tha of tule, a description of water grass, bottle, glass and corkscrew on the talaid on to a foot In depth and Im- ble. so I brought you thla. said I thought she was hungry, pervious to the tropic downpours She said she waa hungry. Mlggs. which, though Infrequent, yet prevented the country from being a desert You thought she was thirsty. Toddy. I thought you wanted tea, said All about the ranche-bous- e were hills, the land having lost Its prairie char- Palomlta, nestling agaiust her. Lola set the teapot on the table, took acter five miles to the eastward, and 29 these hills were, for the most part, the little one in her arms, sat down, bars, though there were occasional and said: You were the Tightest of World-Famousmall forests of mesquite and wlda all. my dear, and asked Toddy to stretches of cacti of many kinds. The carve the chicken for her. Proud of yellow, turbid Rio Grande wound ita the task, the boy set to work while In a way to the sea two milra away at the Mlggs" looked hungrily on. lunchback. On this river the ranche had a quarter of an hour a four-side- d frontage of more than twenty miles. eon was In progress and nt the end of In all this portion of the stream there It the new governess and the children were but two known fords one called were as intimately acquainted as if the Carrlso ford from a growth of they had been friends all of their live. wild canes near It; the other known aa The newcomer found that they did not know much, but that they were not Palafox ford. Beginning a half-mil- e to know much. She found. In expected behind the ranche-honssuddenly showing In perfect form on the side addition, from unconscious betrayals of a hill and running straight to tha by the youngsters, that ahe was exriver and beyond, waa a wide smooth pected to keep them out of the way of road. It penetrated far into the In their mother, and that waa all, or terior of the Mexican Republic, It was nearly all, she wu expected to do. It said, and had formerly been much used became apparent after awhile that ahe by goods trains of carts, but of late not had been Imported more to become their guide, counsellor and friend than a wheel had touched 1L Though It retained its perfection and tha anything else, to keep them out of mishoofs of straying cattle and horses did chief, to teach them a little at such not mar Ita surface. It waa supposed hours aa she might select, to form their manners and, above all, to preto be a creation of early Spanish Whoever made It, they did vent them Jarring Mrs. Glynn during her constant headaches. their work well those old-tiengiI don't know why It la said Todneers. Near to the ranche-hons- e proper, not more than a hundred feet dy, who bad been permitted one amall sway, stood a similar but amaller glass of the claret, but when Mammi building, which Loig knew Intuitively haa a headache ihe lies down in a cod and reads a novel hard. I cant to bo the bachelors quarters," of place which hsr companion had spoken. read when I have a headache. Putting the little ones out of tbf Grouped In the rear were various outhouses. sleeping rooms for servants room with the remnants of the lunck-eo- n on a tray In the hands of Mlggs," s, and a kitchen and so forth. The corrale several of them were a Lola drew a sofa close to a window and lying within hearing of the founquarter of a mile distant Aa the ambulance dashed to the tain, dropped Into pleaaant sleep. She door, the mulee stopping without pres- waa awakened later on by n maid who sure of rein or word of command a told her that the dinner hour was pale lady, with limp figure clad in a even. It waa then half-pasix, but loose wrapper, with hair she dressed, aa she did all things, rapdisslightly ordered snd a bottle of smelling salts idly and wall, and at the time entered DISC AND CYLINDER In her hand, sauntered forward. Thli the drawing room which led from the hall near to the front entrance. was Mrs. Glynn. She waa followed by It waa a chamber thirty feet square, Glynn himself, a tall spare man, with a pointed beard streaked with gray, a furnished with many evidences of wealth and In excellent taste. A grand high forehead, hooked nose, the of limb which seems Inseparable length from piano stood at one aide and nt tha tar the colonizing Englishman and wide fireplace, mesquite logs end. In ant brown eyea. He held In hie pleasarms crackled, for the aun had gone down a pale d with a tiny, eweet. and the November evening waa chill. pathetic face. At hla heels, hanging It waa a arena for which ahe waa not back, were two small boya, evidently prepared. Near to the fire stood Mrs. spruced for the occasion and evidently Glynn in an expensive dinner gown of uncomfortable about 1L fashion two years past, talking to LoU revog-- j sun-dried- All Our Country Friends Should Call 327-- Main St. and Hear the s e, f i i '4 dls-use- d. '.l t cow-hand- raJEiii3nix Fit any "talking machine and make it almost as good as the COLUMBIA GRAPHOPHONE. I st glrl-chll- . |