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Show DAILY UTAH STATE JOURNAL, FRIDAY, JULY 1, 1904. ROOSEVELT IS THE FOR ROOSEVELT WILL OYSTER HIM GREETING. BAY ALL GIVE Part in Coming Calebration of Nation's President Will Taka Birthday. NEW YORK. July 1. Oyater Hay ia planning a rousing welcome to Prealdent Roosevelt when he arrives tomorrow to attend the aumnier with hla family. The Republicans, with the oldest Inhabitant foreinoat, will gather at the depot to cheer him, and grasp hla hand when he alighta from the train. At Amity atreet he will be met by the high school pupils, hoys and girls drawn up In line, waving flag and singing patriotic songs. The last ovation will be from the public school, cluse by Sagamore hill. All of the pupils, In their Sunday beat, will stand In front of the achool house, and ugaln the president will lie greeted with patriotic songs. Though no formal arrangements have been completed, It Is expected that the president will consent to take part In the Fourth of July celebration that the people of Oyster bay are planning. They hoie to make It the most glorious Fourth in the history of the village. Another big time la anticipated the last of the month when the Republican leaders of the entire country will come to Oyster Bay to formality notify the president of his rt nomination. CONVICT LABOR IN ILLINOIS. i : ; t. t SPRINGFIELD, III., July 1. The law abolishing convict labor passed by the last session of the state legislaThe ture became effective today. measure, which was passed largely because of the efforts made by the varIs regarded ious labor organisations, as the most advanced legislation of the kind ever adopted anywhere In the country. Under Its provisions convict Inlmr Is abolished entirely. Hereafter the ronvlcts will be employed only In the manufacture of articles used by the state. The measure further provides that the convicts shall not be employed more than eight hours a day. DRINKS WERE ON GATES. Just before his departure for the south recently, John W. Gates, with several friends, was seated In the cafe of the Fifth Avenue hotel. Some refreshments were ordered, and there was a good natured dispute as to who should pay Mr. Gates was the more insistent. You know I am going away," he said, and I Insist this la my treat" But, J. W." said another of the party, "you are my guest, and I could not think of letting you pay." Another In the party suggested a compromise by letting hint do the honors. The waiter, awed presumably by the Importance of the men he was serving, had a sort of nervous spasm. He started to .wipe off the top of the table, and In doing so upset two Inrge highballs. The liquor poured over Mr. Gates' trousers. The waiter, showing Incipient stages of heart disease, mop. ped up the flood. You see, gentlemen, said Mr. Gates, "there can be no further disThe drinks are on me." cussion. New York Press. MANCHURIAN BRIGANDS. Much has been written regarding the trouble that the Russians have had with the Hunhuses, These mysterious people are not a distinct race of people, as Is commonsemi-sava- ge ly thought. They 'are only common, everyday Chinese or Manrhus, who find It more profitable and less arduous to wander over the country, seising wealthy merchants for ransom, robbing remote farms and villages, attacking travelers and looting carts on the great highways, than it would be to drive animals or till the soil. Their suppression Is not easy, for the vast stretches of wilderness which abound In Manchuria offer secure retreat. Bo numerous are these banditti and In some districts so perfect their organisation that they have con wtructed fortified encampments and large bunds not Infrequently attack Russian stations. James W. David son, In the Century. Jt A FOREIGN MILK "AD." Here is a milk ad:" "We in the south Of the open at Woo-Sun- g Telegraph company for sale the foreign milk, the taste are sweet the milk are pure and the price are Just haven't put any water In It, if examine out. won't pay a single cash. If you want to buy so you will know the for elgn cows chop. Gee Sung Kee." Shanghai Times. Woo-Bu- -- w' ng j The Chicago Platform j (From the Commoner.) the trust question the Ill rather platform appeal to memory credit claims It than inspires hope. anti-tru- st laws, Republican the for which the Democratic party failed to enforce and declares that they have been "fearlessly enforced by a Republican president" Here again, Mr. Cleveland Is charged up to the Democratic party. The odious record of his plutocratic administration still hangs like a millstone about the Democratic party neck. It is base Ingratitude on the part of the Republican leaders to seise the White House through Mr. Cleveland's treachery to his party and then use his administration as a horrible example. Only by contrast can President Roosevelt's administration seem Shown to be fearlessly anti-trus- t. publican party Is afraid of the trust question; it is afraid of the question of imperialism, and It Is afraid of the labor question. Even on the money question it dares not outline a policy. It commends the gold standard, but 1 silent on the melting of the silver dollar, the asset currency and the branch bank. Only on the tariff ia it bold. On this question It goes farther than any other Republican haa ever gone. A former convention favored a tariff equal to the difference between the cost of production here and abroad, but this convention makes that the mlnumum, while a maximum is suggested. Will the people indorse such a platform at the polls? Not If the Democrats do their duty at St. Louis. ASK FOR. PARTYS DICTATOR PLANNING PABST FOR A GIGANTIC Politicians Astounded at His High-Hande- d Method Dofsat Only Can Cheek Him. President Roosevelt has had hla own way, and will be free to renominate himself in 1908, says the Chicago Chronicle. The amaslng and unexpected surrender of the reconcentrados of the national committee has left him In undisputed possession of the machinery of the party. George B. Cortelyou, was sleeted chairman of the new committee and the president will name a working executive committee and re(From Atlanta Constitution.) serve the right to pass final Judgment Cleveland-Isr- n The voters of the country will upon all candidates for offices within against a background of look bright; search the Republican platform In the committee. almost any color but, standing alone and Judged on Its vain for some Indication of the attiIt Is currently believed that he has merits, the Roosevelt administration tude of that party toward the future already selected a secretary to succeed adis anything but an disposition of the Philippine islands. Elmer Dover in the person of Louis ministration. The existence of a mul- The preamble takes A. Coolldge of Washington. It is titude of trusts is well known; the credit for suppressing the Insurrec- the obvious purpose of the president extortion practiced by these trusts Is tion, establishing order, and giving the to surround himself hereafter with apparent Islands an effective and strong admin- friends and counselors of his own enormous and everywhere Is the president doing to des- istration, but there Is not one word choosing, and unload, as rapidly as What His friends point to a de- concerning the future. them? troy prudence will permit, the entire army In all fairness there can be but one of McKinley officeholders which came cision in the merger case, but it has not been followed up by the enforce- interpretation of this noticeable and to him as a heritage, and which he did ment of the principle that established notable silence: The Republican par- not dare to disturb while he was servIt, and the temoporary chairman of ty stands for the permanent retention ing McKinley's term. the convention is one of the most con- of the Islands and their admislstra-tlo- n The selection of Cortelyou as chairspicuous corporation attorneys In the according to the present scheme, man is universally recognised as the which is nothing else than colonial- first step in a plan to build up a gigancountry. The platform not only falls to prom- ism. tic Roosevelt machine which will be as ise any specific remedy, not only deThis silence is all the more notable formidable and effective as it can be clares the party content with the lit- in the light of the present agitation made.. If he is elected the president tle done by the administration, but which has as its purpose the extension will make a clean sweep of all the ofcomplacently classes the trusts with to the people of the Philippines of fices. He has made up his mind to anthe labor organisations. It says: some definite promise that they are to nihilate every existing vestige of the Combinations of capital and labor are be permitted to set up a government once powerful McKinley machine by the result of the economic movement of their own. replacing McKinley officeholders with of the age. This la a defense of the Surely the time haa come when the men who will publicly wear the Roosetrusts, not a condemnation. Then the United States should give such as- velt collar. But neither must be surance to the people of the islands platform adds: The president has perfected his to upon the rights who became the temoprary wards of Infringe permitted plans with so much secrecy that their Here this government through the fortunes and Interests of the people. full Import Is not yet intelligently unagain the laboring man la used as a of war. derstood by all politicians. They apThere can be no question that the preciate, however, that it Is his purcompanion piece for the trust Such continues the plat- Influence of the United States has combinations," pose ruthlessly to destroy hla politiformed for law- been, and probably for a time will cal when lawfully form, enemies, to offer or accept no ful purposes, are alike entitled to the continue to be, beneficial to the Fili- terms of compromise from anyone who protection of the laws, and both are pinos, especially In pointing the way la not willing to take the Roosevelt subjects to the laws apd neither can to the future administration of a gov- oath of allegiance without reservation, An the ernment of their own; but in addibe permitted to break them. and to become the most despotic boss trusts are now breaking the laws with tion to this, there can be no possible the Republican party has had In its Impunity this must be Intended as s question that every dictate of honor hiktory. warning to laboring men only. The and Integrity, and every consideration The selection of Cortelyou fob chairtrusts are holding the laboring man based on that love of liberty which man of the national committee conbetween themselves and the fire of was the inspiration back of the for- firms the most exaggerated suspicions As a declaration mation of the United States of Amer- of the public opinion. purposes. Cortelyou presidents against trusts the platform Is a hol- ica, points to Just one end. We should Is not, and never has been, a party low mockery: one must be anxious to aid those people In setting up a re- man. He has no ties other than those deceive himself Is he accepts the Re- public of their own. which bind him to the president to publican platform aa offering any The time has come to give them whom he owes everything he hope of relief from the trusts. solemn promise that they are to be In enumerating the deeds which treated as were those other former Until the president recently anthey regard as meritorious the writ- vassals of Spain, the people of Cuba. nounced that he proposed to make the ers of the platform rail attention to But there Is no hope of this promsecretary of commerce and labor tariff legislation, the establishment of ise ever being given so long as the chairman of the national committee the gold standard, the reduction of Republicans remain In control of the not half a dlosen men In the United taxes after the Spanish war, the res- national government States knew what party Mr. Corteltoration of public credit, the freeing of you belonged to. He was first apCuba, the suppression of insurrection BEST SELLING BOOK. to. a subordinate office In the pointed In the Philippines, the preservation of postofflee department during Presithe Integrity of China, the securing of The Bible la the beat selling book in dent Clevelands second term, and the a canal route, the encouragement of the world, writes Henry Rutherford then was that he was a presumption irrigation, the reorganisation of the Elliott In the Century. It leads, and Democrat Postmaster General Bissell army, the improvement of the militia by a long Interval, all other publican advanced him through several grades and the Increase In the navy, but there tlons In copies purchased In the ordinof the civil service, and finally recomIs In all the enumeration no act which ary channels of trade, without regard mended him to President Cleveland la declared to be In the Interest of to what may be called the official dis- as a competent clerk and stenographlabor, although without the labor vote tribution. Every bookstore which un- er who would fulfill all expectations. the party would not have a majority dertakes to carry a full line of stock That was Cortelyou' political beginin half a dosen states. Even in point- sella the Bible. Several Important ning. ing with pride to President Roosevelt's corporations confine themselves to the After President McKinley was Inaction In settling the coal strike they manufacture and sale of Bibles, and augurated his advancement was rapid. did not dare to Indorse arbitration as others find In the Bible their leading He became secretary to the president n permanent method for settling dis- feature. Of no other book can this be in 1899, and after the death of Mcputes between capital and labor. said. Kinley he remained as Roosevelt's On the great question of imperialSpeaking some time ago of the insa- secretary until he was appointed as ism the Republican party announces tiable demand for the Bible as an ar- secretary of the newly created departno policy and gives no pledge. It re- ticle of merchandise, an officer of the ment of commerce and labor. fers to the subjects and declares that Methodist Rook Concern said: Like Mr. Cortelyou was never knQwn to the Republican party has established all publishers, we have to keep watch utter a political opinion. He disorder In the Philippines, given security of the sale of books In even creetly refralnbd from talking politics general, to life and property and "conferred the most popular, so as not to get with his most Intimate friends and left upon the people of those Islands the overstocked. But this never occurs In everyone to guess whether he was a largest civil liberty they have ever en- printing the Rlble. We Just keep the Democrat or a Republican. Opinion What a proud boast! They joyed. presses steadily nt work, and if we as to his political predilections was were subjects of a king and were happen to find that we have 40,000 or pretty equally divided. Some of his ruled by arbitrary authority, and they 50,000 copies on hand. It no un- friends believed he was a Democrat, are better off under our rule than un- easiness. We are sure gives to sell them, the rest believed that he was a Reder Spanish. Is this all they are to and we go straight ahead publican. hope for? Then, too, "civil liberty has It might be more accurate to say been conferred upon them. What a Doesn't Respect Old Age. that Republicans believed he was a departure from the doctrlnea of JefIt's shameful when youth foils to Democrat while Democrats believed he ferson and Lincoln. Instead of being show proper respect for old age, but was a Republican. If he withheld his a great republic, holding before the Just the contrary In the case of Dr. political beliefs, Mr. Cortelyou did world the light of New Life Pills. They cut off not, however, refrain from demonwe have shrunken to the stature of a King's maladies no matter how severe and strating that he possessed qualities benevolent despot doling out llbertyy Dyspepsia. which stamped as a man of extraorIn broken doses to "Inferior races," Irrespective of old age. Jaundice, fever, constipation, all yield dinary force and ability, and it was assuring them, meanwhile, that our to this perfect pUL Twenty-fiv- e cent the possession of these qualities which medicine la more pleasant to take than Jesse J. Driver's drug store. President at finally decided Roosevelt the medhdne which they have forto name his ns chairman of the Re merly received at the hands of kings. If you want steel or wood filing publlcnn national committee. It Is not a truthful platform, net loose leaf ledgers or card Index The president saw In Cortelyou a cases, thcr Is It a courageous platform. The a card to C. S. Pulver. coadjutor who would not only obey systems drop Republicans assembled In national but anticipate his slightest wish a Ogden or Balt Lake City. convention cast admiring glances at 1 man who had no political ties that the past, but contemplated the future Come see the lonely and only John with doubt and misgiving. The Re- - J. Welch, at the Lyceum. (Continued on Page 7.) Preferred everywhere for its Purity, Ag and Healtlifulness. Made only from tTie choicest hops and malt, by the most approved methods. The art of making GOOD BEER has reached perfection in the Pabst establishment Always Pure F. J. 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