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Show a TRUTH great quality. pintles, and act, with the rapidity of Quick to Think and Act, Safe Man fop ways Wisely Roosevelt the Presidency. Is president Roosevelt attack-i- d being to the country as & possible danger mind and acause of his alert, quick The scare-ca- t variety jrofflpt action. on down are crying him politicians bis ' issue. ' error, the belief that and lecanse a man thinks quickly, he Is a lCts promptly in an emergency, To the ash or dangerous Individual. ilow man, one whose mental processes It is a common re naturally labored, it is incredible another mind, differently consti-ated from his own, may arrive almost hat at the solution of a question rhich would occupy the attention of he heavier moving brain for. a lonp ostantly time. judgment and action are charactertistics of some very great men, though not by any means is this Whenever an attribute to them all. this quality is conspicuous in a man, his critics, friendly and adverse alike, accuse him of rashness. After a long trial Buch a man often convinces his friends that his instant judgment was well founded, his prompt action well taken. But his enemies never will allCelerity of ow this. practical illustration taken from A the most commonplace fields of life shows how unfounded is the idea that light, upon the mind's direction. Dispatch is the soul of business. This is the motto of every great manipulator in the field of business and finance. The money-maker- s decide instantan-eously- , in a crisis, and he who most quickly thinks, and thinks right, acting boldly upon his own judgment, is the winner. There was never any such thing as a successful fighter who was slow of brain, languid In motion. It is a great quality, that of being able to think quickly, and think right at the same time. It is said of some horses that they look over the whole There are men who do the ground. same thing, taking in the entire situation in one comprehensive glance. The born soldier does this. So does the born statesman. When the ship of state is headed toward the rocks, the executive officer must be quick to see and prompt to steer away from the danger. To wait would be fatal. When advantage to the state Is waiting, the executive head should be Instantly alert to the potentialities of the moment, and competent to act upon the case at once, for opportunity waits for no man. Because the mass of men are slow in thought, scattered as to attention, late in action, they should not suspect the quick, alert, concentrated' minds of men more gifted than themselves. As a matter of fact, the public admires, trusts and believes in the man of quick thought and action. It has more faith in the man who knows his own mind than it can have in the man who waits for help from within or without to make it up. Events have shown that President Roosevelt thinks quickly and thinks right: that he acts promptly and wisely. What more could be asked, brethorder? ren of the slow-goin-g thought and action are dangerofootball player, a o a woodsman felliWHY DID HE STRIKE IT OUT? ng a tree, all these at times must instantly grasp a situation, judge accuraRichard Olney. Ordered This Parately as to distances, chances and cer- graph Struck Out of Advance Copy of His Recent New York 8peech. CUT quick us. A horseman, a locomotive engineer, RATES EAST Here is Russia, for example, a great power that would' like to be friends : Benember that I am selling east boand excursion tickets at rreatly reduced rates. Low rates, to ail points east. Travel now while tickets are cheap. OEOSHELL'S TICKET OFFICE Nth Stmt. Ul Established twenty-fiv- e . PEPOWB 17 Yaan YEARO the publio Young Bros. Go. ev tsto agent! far tha following wall ksews PIAHOS Visi&Son Grow iBlchnonl Boyal Blaslnt 7 And paokard orqans with us, publicly reproved and aske to mend her ways because her Jewish subjects are harried and massacred by. mobs. Imagine the wrath, the tempest of rhetoric, that would descend upon the Czar's devoted head if he should suggest to the present Washington government that, it would do well to put a stop to the frequent and disgraceful lynchings In this country? The Jews, for reasons not wholly inscrutable, seem to be especial adminof nothing istration pets, and I know ' morel extraordinary in international . sent intercourse than the round-robi- n to all the signatories of the treaty of Berlin, complaining of Roumania, and her asking them to do something to.Jews because her treatment of her was cauelng them to migrate to the United States. -- As if It were for ns to bar out the Roumanian Jews if they are not wanted, as we bar out Chinese cooPes and others! As if a diplomatic demonstration, however pleascitizens ing to voters andIf influential demonstration the In this country. deemed must be by anv as Impertinent and offenforeign state sive. be not likely rather to hurt than to help the very cause in whose behalf it is made! --o IF YOU DON'T REGI8TtR TODAY YOU CANT VOTE. seTf-respectl-ng I i . bottom priobo. JJTPAYMBNTB, 3b MAIN ST. 0 ( Supplies Britain With Wheat, i Canada is., capable !of furnishing more than the 200,000.000 bushels of wheat which Britain has to Import every year. 3 PARKER REBUKED Democratic Newspaper Rape the Blatherskites of Its Party for Inciting the Filipinos. . The hardest slap yet administered to Parker was from the hand of an editor. There is in the southland no more rabidly Democratic newspaper than the Memphis Commercial Appeal, yet an editorial leader in that paper reads: Those distinguished blatherskites who have been ablathering about Filipino independence and corollary Inanities claim to be helping to elect Judge Parker. Governor Wright, who is on the ground and who knows, informed this government that all these declarations were being translated and published in Tagal newspapers and that they were having a deluding and deleterious effect on the natives. Now comes the report that the old agitators and professional patriots who have been In enforced retirement and whose henchmen are. the head hunters and bandits from the mountains, and the bolo men from the bamboo thickets in the valley have come forth and purpose holding public 'Independence meetings in Manila. If these, fiery exhorters arouse their, fellows to disorder and rapine by their fervid utterances, and if the task of governing the islands is rendered more difficult and expensive, our homebred will find that they are supporting Judge Parker with a knife. This country is engaged in the solution of one of the most difficult problems that ever confronted a civilized people and it is bending every energy to solve it wisely. Every word uttered calculated to embarrass it will be resented by the spirit of the nation which stands for right or wrong, our country. In the Democratic platform: and in Parkers letter of acceptance will be found that ablathering about Filipino independence and corollary Inanities, of which the Memphis Appeal complains. Mr. Parker emphasized his desire to have it known that he demands the giving of an immediate promise of independence to the Filipinos. ultra-Democrat- ic . half-tame- d Tagal-Ameri-ca- ns men with Democratic affiliations, deserted the ancient standard and came nto the life and vigor of Republicans. There they remain. The election in November of this ear will show that the men who ;oined the party of honest money in 896 and in 1900 have resolved to sup-)o- rt the party of honest money, of prosperity, of sound, virile acin the work of international imtivity, provements, of a dignified, strong foreign policy, of protection to American citizens at home and abroad, of equal opportunities and justice to all without regard to race, color or religion. It will reveal the earnest devotion of lundreds of thousands of first voters to the principles of Republicanism. Inefficiency, uncertainty, division in council, these do not command the interest and good will of the American people. The little coterie under the wing of David B. Hill In New York is going to have a great object lesson in : na-ion-al he near future. The country is safe in the hands of he Republican party. Roosevelt and t'airbanks are typical Republicans. Their Indorsement, by an immense majority, is certain. -o MR. BENNION DENIES. In reply to rumors which were cur-ren-t that S. R. Bennion, prominent Republican of Vernal and bishop of the Mormon church, was advocating the election of Judge Powers, tho Democratic nominee for congress, on the ground that the Mormon church authorities wanted Judge Powers elected for the favorable effect it would have to Senator Smoot in his fight to retain his seat, Mr. Bennion writes as follows: 1st. I never have supported O. W. Powers, nominee for congress, if I am of the same mind as I am now, never will. 2nd. Neither have I ever stated that nomination or election of O. W. Powers to congress would be for the best interests of the people. 3rd. As far as church authorities or influence is concerned I have never mentioned such a thing to anyone. The rumors about me are not true. All that I have said about candidates in any way is to a few at one time, that Moyle and Powers were going to make a good stiff race on the DemoDESIRE OF THE VOTERS. cratic side. Yours truly. S. R. BENNION. Roosevelt Will Be Elected and Repubo lican Policies Continued for Valuable Engraving Discovered. Four Years More. Messrs. Christie, London auctionreceived what Is techniAs election day draws near, It be- eers, recently as a first state with cally described comes more certain that the Republi- nntrimmed margins of J. S. Smiths can party is going to be continued in engraving of Reynolds portrait of power by the expressed desire of an Lady Catherine Pelham Clinton." It immense majority of voters. The peo- had been folded and creased in all diwas received through the ple had made up their minds before rections, and an illiterate note, with with the shouting and the hurrahing of the mail stamps for its return if not found campaign began. Recently, under the worth selling, the owner evidently questions of canvassing committees thinking its value not more than a few from both great national parties, they shillings. It was auctioned off for have revealed their minds. Every Re- nearly $2,800. o publican will vote for Roosevelt, no 8allors Spend Liberally. matter what local disturbances affect When the British Mediterranean his ticket Many who were Democrats warships, visbefore 1896 will vote for Roosevelt al- sqnadron, of forty-threited Smyrna at the end of last March, though, naturally, they say little about numthe sailors got a day ashore, and their intention, and a very large dehave openly of ber Independents squandered $150,000 In the town. One clared for him.' sailor, at the end of his day, found he The fact Is that the Democratic par- had $2.50 left So he hired ten boatty has shown inability ;to manage the men at 25 cents each to row him out affairs of the nation. Its weakness was to his ship, and arrived there in style.' so conspicuously displayed when it was o last in power that hosts of men became Americans Capture English Trade. convinced' that it no longer representAt a recent conference of the trade ed any .branch or contingent of the In- in Leicester; the president of the Intelligent people of the United States. stitute of Carriage Builders said that The free silver craze of 1896 and 1900 the whole of the wheelcompleted the wreck of a once idol- e practically making industry of England had been ized party fetich. Thousands .of Democrats, thousands of young captured by America. o e -- . old-tim- |