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Show Published Every Saturday GOODWIN8 WEEKLY PUBLISHING CO INC. A. W. RAYBOULD, Business Manager SUBSCRIPTION PRICE: eluding postage In the United States, Canada and Mexico, $2.50 per year, hr six months. Subscriptions to all foreign countries, within the Postal BY per year. Single eoplss, 10 cents. Payments should be made by Check, Money Order or Registered Letter, payable to Tho Citizen. Address all communications to Tho Citizen. Entered as second-clas- s matter, June 21, 1919, at the Postoffice at 8a It Lake City, Utah, under the Act of March S, 1879. 81 Ness Bldg. Salt Lake City, Utah. Phone Wasatch 5409 UTAHS REPUBLICAN STANDARD BEARERS precinct and from the most remote villages to the heart soul of Utah's most prominent Republican stronghold, Salt Lake there will be large delegations of ardent Republican adherents and at Saltair today, to make merry and to celebrate, ers congregated ranee, another big victory at the polls, which the trend of political forecast for the party at the November elimination contest. iVhile this jubilee at Utahs, most popular resort is, in a measure, a ring of the clans from far and near, of the G. 0. P., yet in larger it is an offering of homage, of devotion and of loyalty to Utahs Esional delegation the Big Four of Republicanism, who, headed national legislator, Reed at indomitable spirit and courageous promise to give the state that measure of sound and constructive mentation in the halls of the congress at Washington, which shall for a greater Utah and a grander United States, imest Bamberger, the dynamic, successful mining and business man, He son of Utah, who has been honored by the Republican party the nomination to the senate chamber, to fill the seat that Senator must vacate, is included in Utahs Big Four from the fact that s been guided only by the purest motives of a good citizen and a lid desire to advance and promote the prosperity of the state which helped so signally to develop industrially, in seeking this, one of :ghest offices within the gift of the people. ie were a tarloch, a political renegade, who would attempt to advance i to so high a political status in the nation without being signally ed for the major part he must paly to win recognition, not only for i but for the comon wealth he sponsors. And Ernest Bamberger, u' natural attainments and by public experience, is so qualified ; he 'tened to the call of public duty on more than one occasion and has ed himself with honor to his state and to the nation. His wide ntance, his strong personality, his large physique, together with his 'lews of state and national g active affairs, coupled with his iS lining, make him the ideal candidate for the high political posi- - From every 5 it, life-lon- which kh has he aspires. been singularly fortunate in all its selections of congressional ntatives through the years of statehood. No man has ever graced f congress from the state of Utah who has not been worthy, who been honest in his convictions and who has not reflected credit mself and his constituents. One such Utah representative has great renown in the senate. He has attained to a seat of honor Uencc in in national affairs which has made his name a im-l- s .m "here Republican doctrine is read, and has stamped the v sturdy Republicanism and his unswerving Republican national measure that has come down from Washington for bv-wo- rd devo-,e'er-- 5 of ator 500 decade. 3. kul of Smoot belongs to the nation. blah, ljorn and reared within the shadows of the Wasatch, like the great blazing orb of the morning, his political aurora penetrates even to foreign lands; he has attained to this distinguished position in world affairs by hard and consistent work. He has won recognition beyond the ordinary hopes of man by adhering strictly to public measures defined and fostered by the Grand Old Party. He now calls upon Utah to elect a man to the junior seat in the senate who will be able to help and sustain him in his larger work which will come with the inauguration of the next session of congress in 1923, when he will become chairman of the important senate finance committee. Senator Smoot will more than ever need the assistance and sympathy of a broad minded, capable business man, to help him round out the great things he has in mind for his home state and for the nation. He needs, above all else, a man versed in. the staid and tried political tenets of the Republican party ; that party which stands today inextricably bound up in the great progress and advancement of the United States during the past seven decades, or since the man, Abraham Lincoln, first uttered the modest words that made Republicanism more than a mere party slogan, and ushered in a new day, and a new night, for the greatest free country in all the world today. Senator Smoot needs the help and the counsel of a man like Ernest Bamberger, who will be guided and sustained by his advice and who will become a constructive factor in the present Republican regime, instead of a barrier because of divergent political beliefs and predilections. Of our congressmen, E. O. Leatherwod, of the Second District, and Don B. Colton, of the First, much may be said, both as regards their true-blu- e Utah inclinations and their manifest ability for public service. But their records in the congress stand out so conspicuously and so prominently even though it was their first terms that they need no cnconiums pronounced here. They have been true and loyal workers in congress for the reconstruction of the land following the greatest war the world has ever known. They have been devoted party adherents, sensing therein their highest duties to their state and to the nation. They have not let party allegiance either stultify or swerve them from doing that which they believed best for the people at large, and they have been faithful in all things to Utah and her manifold interests. They deserve your undivided support and another chance to demonstrate their unusual capacities for public work. Like the star that guided the Three Wise Men to the cradle at Bethlehem, has the star of Republicanism so guided and directed the Wise Men of this nation that today we have arrived at the place in worldly affairs to which a destiny, controlled by a mightier force and power than any that man is conversant with, or may ever know, has elevated' us. Under any and all circumstances, under any and all political control, this nation has not failed in its duty to mankind. True, its prosperity has wavered, with the changing rule of political forces; true it is that divergent views of home protection and a duty to foreign workers and foreign interests as a whole, have served from time to time to check the rapid ad- - |