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Show n . UTAH STATESMAN. AUGUST 3, 192&. Green Fields Beat Gey Walk in Democrats Plan First Rally of Year Monday Reclaiming Convicts, Davis Says; Gres Leson in Feeding Inmates Good Fare Given Prison Says Thousand Acre Farm Would Make Utah Instiera at Cost of Thir teen Cents Day to State. tution Self Supporting. ; . (Continued from page one) ( Continued from pact one.) Othnri aava thalr money and have with a farm thla ala ha can make tha Utah atata prlaon aalft it whaa they ara ralaaaad. and at the aame time Charitable, . what ahouUl be the la in used at iltminte tha monay Fart purpose of avarw prison 326 Last thoaa who arc reclaim work, namely charity Chrlatnia, waa given tu daatituta wivaa of In- reclaimabl He declares tha Minnesota and mate Ono woman whoao huaband had boon an inmata of the prlaon New York ayatama rank with tha and appealed to the prlaonera for beat In tha world but aaya thaaa can' not ba applied to help when her huaband, who had ayatama been releaaed, waa dying. 8ha got Utah because Utah 1. unable to such ala ho rats methods. It, got anough to keep her and her support kiddiea from starvation while her In thoaa states tha culprlta ar huaband waa dying in a local hoa-- separated according to degree of and a repeater la not pita! and enough to take her back criminality allowed to pass along hla coda to har people after her huaband to first the termer, Thlg means had died. Institutions .which Utah many Tha priaonera pay five per cant can not afford, but ha aaya, tha of their outaida earnlnga Into a can afford a thousand acre fund to covar tha coat of maintain farm. On thla farm could ba truat. the raised Out of all tha things which tha thia fund the ing prlaon purchaaed a book keeping prisoners eat. It wll aava thalr machine which la uaed to keep the upkeep and cut that much off the prisoner's account.. After actual taxes of tha people. Fart of tha eapenaea are taken out there la atlll farm ran ba turned over to auga balance which ia uaed tot varioua ur beets which many farmers do purpoaea aa directed by tha prla- not raise now becauae of tho expense attached to labor and that onera. three beat would keep a commercial factory going a few days Many rbpkil Change. each year, thereby giving Thera hava been many phyalcal alonger few more riuya work to the emuhangea inaido tha prlaon which of hava mad the prlaon better fur ployes Thethe factory.Fluor. Judgin' the men and bettar for tho atata. Another reform which Davia A coatly and ineffective heating would aee com about Is to like system waa discarded and an that of reducing tha atntus of a ayatem Inalalled at a cuat Judge to that of a trial Judge unly to tho atato of 32.300. Without without power to apcclfy or prlaon labor tbla would hava been tha length of sentence. 37,000 according to figured auppllad Thla would call for tho appointing haa ora. Tho bill coal whom by contract of a prison commission been cut in two and tha amoka cut business it would ba to see that hi four by tha inatallatlon of an every case In the state prison autematlo firing device which waa waa given proper attention. Tha of trial Judge and tha police offlc-er- a purchaaed from tha proceed by very nature of their dumonay made by running a little atoro inald the priacn for tha In- ties are seldom competent to pass mate Money from thla had upon a man once ha la Inside the to a convict, now prison walls, Davis says. They are gone tea apt to consider all as tha dead, who had the "concessions. type. Soma men are Warden Davl. haa been ably rrndy to go bark among theirenter helped In hfa work by W. F. Gilo a week after they deputy warden: L E. Thoreeon, prison, Davlo maintains, and clerk; Da 8. H. Bealey. phyaician; others never fit to go out In are Dr. J. Boyd Gordon, dvA.Iat; Owen tho world, Nebeker, factory manager and parDavis criticised that part of the ole agent and the following guardai Utah constitution which placed A. I Allan, George Brown, Wil- the present responsible upon the liam Davia, William Greer, H. R. hoard of pardons. One day a Georg month, by law Is given over to Halllday, W. J. Irvin Love, J. J. Mar-oe- r, considering the cases of those Longaon, Jam R. W. McTaviah, John Norri who deelr to get out of prlaon. wall ns it David L Reea, C. T. I'.uaaell, Har- Tho board function ry S. Shurtllff, Lyman Sherwood, ran under tha circumstances. 8. T. Smith, D. N. Sorenaon, Jo Davia aaya, but adds that it Is a the Turn bow, Georg Vine, 'Arthur rank Injustice to every on In act Waller, J. A. Walton and Jamea state to expect thee men tocaae Intellegantly on doxena of Weight. with tha scant time In which they have to etndy the situation. aup-porti- Mum .. . to ly MAdoo Follower ' Against Smith HARRISBURG. Pa. Opposition of Vance C. McCormick, former Democratic national chairman, to Governor Smith a tha Democratic presidential nominee, is crystallsedIn In an editorial to ba carried HarrisTuesday's editions of tha McCormick burg Patriot, which publishes. Tha editorial repudiates Smith for hla antidry views aa governor of New York and hla recant declaration to tha Houston convention for modification of tha prohibition lawa, and asserts Governor Bmlth'a "belated telegram to hla party's convention at Houston was a contradiction and repudiation of hla 1 partys platform." Mr. McCormick, as ehalrman of tho Democratic national commit- A Platform tee In 1910 directed President Wilfor son's campaign he was appointed Subsequently chairman of (he war trads board and a member of tho peace commission. Four years ago ho i of Personal William Gibbs McAdoo In hla fight against Smith at th New York convention. McCormick supported delegatee to tho Houston convention at tha last primaries. Integrity anti-Smi- and th of Auditor Accepted. Eleven mills was fixed Monday as tha figure for Salt Lake's tax levy for 1131 by th city commission. In making thla levy, the Recommendation Ability commission acted in accordance with th recommendation of City Auditor Alvin Keddlngton that thla years levy be unchanged from the levy of 1137. Tho levy will be fixed on n assessed valuation of approximately 3i3i.ooo.ooo. Division of the levy, according to Monday's action of th commission will h aa follows: Contingent expenses, 1.410 mills; water supply and waterworks, .100 mill; atreet and sidewalks, .TOO; Interest on bond and sinking fund. 1;IB0 mills; public libraries, ,tf0. Under tha new levy the city budget this year will have to be ftB.OOO Ices than last year, because no raise waa made and bseausn there was a 33,000,000 lose In the city's valuation and the authorised expenditure of I30.0U0 for a library at Rugarhouae. Thera ar Nawhouaa hotel Monday night at I oclock. Plana ar now lng worked out by th committee in charge. Five an ten minute talks will ba ona of tha fsatursa o? tha meat-I- Music and th introduo-tio-n ef soma new songs will make up part of th program. Tha commute in charge are: Jamas H. Moyla, Delbert M. Draper, J. W. Btringfal-loW. J. Halloran, W. W. Ray, F. L. Bagby, C. Lb Countryman, A, H. Rock, Parlay P, Pratt, Roy Barrett, Georg Maycock, Sam Duvall, TomT. M. Qulna, my William and Dr. R. J. Alexander. - . MENOCE IN CORN BELT THIS TO COUNTY. WARD. AND PRECINCT CHAIRMEN: It ia of tha utmost Importance that, your organisation ba down to tha smallest unit. Within th next few day you will hear directly from tha National committee direct Tha State Chairman haa aent In tha namaa of all Chairman acting In tha last a lactic n. Many of the namaa will not bo tho namaa of present chairman and tharafora Important mall may He unclaimed. Plaaaa call at tha peat office and claim mail directed to tho ehalrman of your unit You will soon receive buttons, poster and literature of train At your very aarllsat convenience, sand correct ad list of your eoln-plat- ad YEAR, PERIODICAL BELIEVES organisation member to tho State Chairman. District Ward, and Practnct chairman should report to thalr County Chairman, but if for any reason, thla cannot bo don report to tha State Chairman. Another suggestion: ' Call , the people of your district together In eottaga meeting learn how' they feel and report Matters of genera! interest will ba published inTha Statesman. The following latter wag taken from tha Naw York World. It waa written by gentleman who is after tha truth about prohibition. One point tha man makaa la that the Herald-Trlbun- a haa long boon an and la opponent of Volateadlam now somewhat aghast becauae AI Smith ta sponsoring modification. To tha Editor of Tha World: Republican news papers, supporting a dry candidate on a dry platform, ara at tha same time trying Youra sincerely, D. M. DRAPER. State Chairman. TEXAS BANDITS PUT SOFT PEDAL ON WORK) SAN ANTONIO. Bank robbery in thla state haa fallen off largely Inca tha Texas bankers association haa posted a 33000 reward for each dead bank robbar. Ranger CapL Tom R. Hickman, utatloned at Fort Worth and aaalgnad to bank robbery case sold when asked what ha thought of tho , advisability of Bay State Papeer to maka ua believa Raps Republicans For Pussyfooting that th even people who reaa an abrld-meDea Moines nt of their rights. TrIbune-CaPIta- l. plat- form of thalr party ia not ao dry aa tha Democratic platform. Th object, of course, la to hold th wat Republicans in tha fold. Th latest effort of this kind la made by Th Herald Tribune, which aaya In Its such a reward.' "Tha "We hava had but four or five leading editorial July 12: from (Continued Democratic platform waa aaveral page one) robberies In aa many bank month" ho said. "It seems to ba tha attack on Got. Smith, tha ques- adjectives dryer tt)aa the Republican. 1 There la not much eholc to on tha decline at present of tion will Republican 'Sincerity be aura, but an examination of tha wouldn't say whether that la dua to tha reward or not hut it'a fact naed to ba considered. An attitude two platforms Inclines to th ballet b of indlfferene Inferred waa may offered." that tha raveraa ia trua. Tha Damtha reward from a policy of avoldanco. It la oc ratio platform contains a plank of two sentences; Prussia haa prohibited spanking vary wall to hold Gov. Smith to a of ochool girl but not of school strict account of hta watnaaa, but, tho first la merely an attack on Wo should think tho dis- on tha other haud, la Republican tha Republican party for It failure buy (Continued From Pag Ona) crimination would ba resented by dryness all that could ba desired T to enforce tha law; tha ascond Senator Borah haa repeatedly states tha attitude of tho Democna sex or tho other, Cleveland said w hava not yet had prohibi- cratic party and reads aa follows: era In tha United Statea who ara News. "Speaking for th national detion because th law haa not been engaged in producing product that mocracy, thia convention pledgee adequately enfo.ced. He la good the cannot bo transported or'in renderparty and lta nominees to an Republican authority. Yet tho Reing services that can 6o rendered administration since honest effort to enforce th eightpublican and all other March, 1321. has been responsible eenth amendment only by those who Uva in tho Unitprovisions of tha federal Constitufor of Volstead enforcement th ed State. In thla latter riEUXCT. nsoT tion and all laws enacted pursuant act. It la not proud of Its are Included railway District 3 Joseph . fttringfcllow, aa a reading of tha Re- thereto." extant Thia does not mean, as Mr. to a T. A. and Jr. A. C. Hoffmaa and Horn, engineers, great publican press and even of tha Josephus Daniel claim, the Voelectricians, coal miners ar.d comDistrict 1 Delegates Dr. U Van Kansas indiCity platform clearly lstead act and notClng else; It means mon labor, aa well aa many others Cull. Mr Emily Halvorsan and cate 1 Suppose th platform had Just Horace Lewla. ay "all laws enactnut named by Mr. Huover. C. D. raid: "The Republican party polnta ed what D. Barn 4 J. District thereto" and Includes pursuant Tha protective tariff affects di- Forslund. with pride to the enforcement of only th Volstead act but any rectly the employment and wages District 0 Gaorga O. Smith, Paul tha Volstead act by s Republican not thereof a a future modification only of thus who are producing W. Manwarlng. administration th country matter of count. But its great Dtalrlct T Jamea W. McKinney, would easily transportable products, such have rockad with derlatv distinction from th Republican as textile good Amt tt ia fur this CL D. Creel. 0 Harold E. Wallace, laughter. platform appeara In tha words reason that prutertiv duties should HrDistrict la all that B. J. Baer and LaVon Penroa Can Andrew Thia whan In "honest effort charge of bo levied on transportable and District 0 Dr. D. W. Henderson, federal prohlbtlon enforcement, any party can honaatly promts and competing products in ordor that Georg M Sullivan, delegates; Mr failed to obtain from Republi- all that can ba expected of It Tha tha workers engaged In thalr man- Burton W. Muaaar alternate the new enforcement Republican platform, however, goes District 1 Patar Clark and MrDr. can Congress ufacture may ba placed on equal legislation ho deemed essential. So far beyond thia and pledges tha Reterms with other workers who are R. J. Alexander; Mralternate R. J. Alsx- - did th Antlaaloon league fall to publican party to both tha obserand Alice OIray not affected by th tariff. oecure very much that It had rec- vance and rigid enforcement of th Doubt leas the American Tariff a"DUtrict 13 H. a Walker, K E. ommended. Throughout tho laet amendment nlter-nMr. Hoover between Sawsrn, Mr J. L. Knight; league and The Herald Tribuna finds Itself two aeaalona Congress put up tha now and November will continue to Mr Flora Sjyorn. In a moat unfortunate predicaAnd noth- ment. C. H. sign. "Nothing doing." 1 W. H. Caaady, District carto the of point It haa for several year been higher wages ing waa doing. Gen Andrew who 81m Ogden, G. J. Knapp. Carlqulat, ana the lta reader consistently telling penter bricklayer plumbers District 14 Ralph T. Stewart. C. made a since rn. honest and gallant truth common labor In tho United Slate about prohibition and exposB. Moonsy, Hugo B. Anderson and effort to make prohibition proaa proof at tha direct benefit! of Creighton King; alternate Chariea th vlla thersof, and now tha resigned becauae hla backing ing first candidate for tho presidency But, In th language T. Penes, Mr K. I Charting. K. L hibit, protection. did not measure to hla up Stewart. who haa dared to tall tha truth of a distinguished statesman, "It Charting and Mr Frank That waa ila experience with about it happens to b tho nomla the bunk.' It la tha favorite Instructed for Vara L McCarthy aa a Republican Congrea attorney. of tha Democratic party. No district ine method of evading the real tariff To make prohibition auceeo), on needs to be told that District II Wll II am KUbet. A. modifiproblem, which la not only to place Crawford, Mr C. very much more P. Keys will to be need ba affected only cation can on transportable and competing Woodward. don federal the by hut through an act of Congrea Dlarlct IT J. P. Naaley. William To Illustrate, when government. goods duties that protect the work-er- a Emory R. th jountry will not have Bagby, aach Buckner was producing such goods In the J. Cowan d and F.of Ia vote. atth United Statea until th Congress people United State 4ut to mak such with District II J. E. McGInty. W. M. torney for th district embracing who elect tha Congress ar told protective duties free from apodal Swan. alternate Naw York City, h pointed out re- tho truth about prohibition by ona Mr McGInty; privilege and discrimination. Mr H. D. Swan. peatedly by prohibition earn In who can command thalr attention. Tho evidence la overwhelming I J. Hnpkln Mr W. District Cor. Smith In his telegram to th th federal court and ha ail vathat protective duties Ontve for J. Loom I a. Thomaa A. Woodbury, C. cated th Innovation of tha estab- convention clearly indicated that. Ethel and H. Smith Phillip been ba to bo badly adjusted as years If elected, he would supply this District 31 Val J. Oonmlea. W. P. lishment of lower federal courts to need. destructive of American industry. Ha said: Mr H. P. Taylor and relieve tha congestion. These proHarrington, this no better of Probably proof "I feel It to be the duty of a Clark. posed courts ho called federal pocan ba found than that supplied John and Vina H. chosen 33 leader of th people to point District George Th suggestion shocklice court liy the manufacture of woolen and David Rule. the way which In hla opinion lead ed conatltutloral tho of the lawyers O. T. District 148. G. Vargetts. sensible solution of a worsted gods. The crying evil of to a aan tatra rights school, and th Re- condition Sanford, D. O Willey which I am convinced ta this wool tariff conalata In placing RUIa.L.Allan-Tadministration would have five f publican Sending and Brandcngerhrr. nnaattafaetory to th pacific dJtlee of certain amourt Instead ef on under unit plan.) nothing to do with It. Yet the sug- entirely maea of our people. per pound on producta varvlng waa perfectly logical, aa great SECOND PRECINCT. gestion "Common rehonesty compels us to ' widely In value per pound. The Murphy. especially to a atata Ilka admit that corruption District 20 Paul W. Rohlln of law ensult la that specific duties equivaand applying 21 A. B. Naw York having no atata enforce- forcement official District bootlegging and lent t6 S per cent of the value Leone Bottling. law ment and overwhelmingbalng now prevalent lawlaasnem ar d of District 0 George Robinson and ly wet In popular sentiment. product and aufflr throughout thla country." dent for protection, rise as Mgh a P. C. Lellman. AnGen. Since of the retirement elected. Such Xo delegate leadership, coupled with District St 100 per cent of the value on the 33 Mr J. J. Forotar. drew th policy of tho federal adcommon honesty," applied to th lower-price- d produrt operating .is MrDistrict ministration haa been more and serious problems arising from proEthel Holme an emborgo on materials needed District 14 Mlnnla O. Harrl El- mora to concentrate on tho pre- hibition would ba something, new n by an Industry that denenda on la Henncaaey and Mary C. Baker. vention of the diversion of Indua- - in Washington. Though I have vot sources for nearly District 10 Ik A. Camomile. Huda trial alcohol and to abandon to tha ed as a Republican up to th of tha needed supply of raw ma- Duff In and Mr Panrl Baldwin. Datime. I do not feel Impressed states tha teak of law en-cIT Mr Ethel Cop. terial. Three-quartof tha for- vidDlatrirt forcement against those engaged In by th partisan warning that a vote P. Felt and Albert 3. Cep duIs to wool subject eign aupp'y of 'for Gov. Smith can only confuse II D. A. Carlqulat and ties varvlng from 40 to 100 per I..District F. Lawl Arnold; alternate E. B. Harrieon, (the Issue and daisy th growth of elected Ruby cent of the value. Harrison. District 4 No delegate! Stewart (sentiment for sound modification. District 41 Harold F. Thla Indefensible tariff, whlrh District 113 Frank My vote will not b baaed upon th Van Cott Barney V. Quinn. crushes thj Industry and compels and Rayhope for modification In th very and Brow 111 Louie J. District thirdMrprecinct. William E. T. Ryan; alternates, F. H. Riley near futur though It will ba tha the substitutions of ahoddy and cotJoseph Dlatrirt It ton for new wool. Is the result of ultimate objective. Aa far as I am Dr. F. F. Morgan. and Mr Tartar and Marguerite j 'concerned the Immediate issue now haring tha wool schedule written by Tayter Dletrlct lit David Athay. Dr. K ta Larncn. this: and Mrs. C. K. spec'al Interests and dictated to District 12 X. A. Martinson and g. Syndergaard memhera of Congress and presi- Hannah C. Martinson. Land, Thla Means 1 District 111 L A Iverson. A. M. th distribution trad Nathaniel Jackson dents who make no actemnt to unDlatrirt that In wet states, especially In the Woolley and T. L. Swarta. Instruct derstand tho effects of tho taxes and Georg Phillip. dia aa Cott Van vote R. Harrifor to ad Ray District 14 nrntnmln great cities where prohlbtlon ta they Impose. C. Wad trlct attorney. there ta virtually free rum. weakest, I Are the elections of 1031 to mark son and Joseph Mrs. 114 James Swyer. Dletrlct District 13 W. J. North. Tha number of federal prohibithe continuance of thla travesty on Mrs. E. and R. Far' R. A. Thomaa Barney District I tion officers assigned to Now York dies; alternate Mrs Joseph Young, Cltv ta ao small representative government? Th Herbert Vn D-- ai and 3. T Shnw. aa to be rldlculou answer must mma from Mr. j FOI RTII PRECINCT. Georg Becker and R. E. pnradlse. end aa Mr. Buckner said. The number District T J. H. Kimball. Hrhrr District 111 A. J. MooneyJames If. If onver and Governor Smith, Steven L. Moyle: alternate Kimball. assigned to New York state It no however, th wool manufacturing ; CL Jag andTTTiara T. C. Theme Dr. S. Oswald and Clyde A. Scott. j I see ridiculous. Friends of prohl-- i industry ia to he crushed bv a pri-- 1 J. Dlatrirt 111 B. L Morrla Barrett. P. District and Roy J. Bprunt Oilman, bition who har regarded It aa a vately written schedule at tho next Tanner. F. Hammer Fred G. Braining and rromtalng experiment have beea revision, as It haa been for nhrtl Dlatrirt T E. X. Carlqulat. Gaorga Cayian hoping for better enforcement, es COCNTY. rears.. let the text"e .nanufactrrers Georgs E. Maycock and Genre X. District 111 Joseph S. McDonald pecially In th urban area naturand workers b- - snared at less! Bacon: alternate. 8. S. Revnn'd Peart. ally and even violently oppoaed to Dlatrirt TO Mr S. E. Thurman. and Dr. Hrber from the humbug shout the wnera District 132 A. T. Larin. Thames tha outlawing of lta alcoholic ra- t.ueUa of rsrnenters, plumbers snd mown R. R. Thurman and Mr Mrs. Turnbow. and Joseph William, t)ona whet will tha Republican n tbs T'nltsd Statea and foreign Romney. Dlatrirt 00 Gaorga T. Bourn and do about It? woS.o , Itryt wU, countries. W. W. Calder. Jr., AutlaP. Miller, not infnc ,n this cam- 1 J. H. McKay and D Dust and Htber . Morgan; altercarded wom.rv vvrFAC-TlBVR- S T. District Gov. Smith aa 1m- -j dismiss to Ur-r- y. paign and C. J. Hanson L nate Kra vote have and half Tome. (Will AWCTTTOX. possible on account of hte wet recnot third delrgat each Tirana W. C. HUNNEV V. Dletrlct 141 Mrs AI Thomaa U ord and hla open advocacy of tuodl- -' named. I TMrsctor and Mr C. Taylor. A. Almqulat flcatlon of th Volstead act. Ona District 12 James Magwell and Jnstln Boston. Mass.. July 10. 1021. Peay. may fairly demand something Grorga A. Christensen: alternates. 142 Mrs Clean. District John Orann Allen and A. H. Walsh. a do nothing policy from the O'sen, Joeeph Reliant. C. M. Dlatrirt 34 Mr Anna T. rirrcey. John Out may fairly deRepublicans. Moyee. Joseph Shotwell and Thomas Mr Mr and Westwood Edith Georgia mand that thay offer a construe-.liv- e McGill Clara M. Richardson. District 111 Sitae Brewa and C. program uf betterment. District IS S. H. Lynch. E. Mathew. Mr. Hoover haa declared that FIFTH PRECINCT. District 1IT A. H. Roek sad Ua prohibition ta an experiment." Dlatrirt lit J. & Carrearall and Stewart. means tt haa not yot wholly C W. ,That Jonr. A. 111 and John District Barrett Her-! ATLANTA, Ga. William J. 1 OO lta On W. Bean arrived. District Frank J. present showing David Moateer. rl Georgia's senior U. 8. senator; Dl Kidd and C R. Smith. Dlatrirt 111 Nel A. Anderson; It ta Idle to ''firm that prohibition and a dry leader. In a formal atata-- 1 District 134 C. F. Dolby and J. alternate. ta an unqua'lfled auccene. A. Alpha Renenn. (Roth If th ment tonight pledged himself to S. Rarratt. pledged ta D. W. Moffatt as district country ia convinced that It ta a District 111 W. j. Allen and R. judge.) support tho presidential candidacy failure, Oor. Bm'th holds a strong of Governor Alfred E. Smith, and & Thurman. District 1IT W. W. O'Brien and political position. District 10T Xattle L. Nehek-- r X. A. Nelson: alternate. H. L. called upon Georgia democracy to j Many whn have sincerely atip- -. stand solidly back of tha national D.nd lleorga A. Fault alternate, II. toireon end1 T1 O. Robert Larson. ported prohlbtlon. In tha belief that Hiram Lancaster. Lowry. District ticket. District 101 Hrlgkam 8. Toung. every posnibl effort should ba District 114 R. H. Kenner and Senator HarrI who actively op- -, Hrrbert M. Schiller. William hrgrr Hales. r. mad to develop Its beneficent j tha nomination posed of Smith and Vera b McCarthy. Instructed District 1ST W. E. Collins. G. L. will view with apprhen-- I both before tha national convan-- ! (or Vara b McCarthy ns d'atrlet Countryman and F. W. Quinn. slon a Republican po'tcy of avoid-- ; tion at Houston and on tho ground attorney. District 130 H. BL Avan. nnra of thla question, with Gov. District 1H K. C. Iverson, Korn District 110 Sidney Tregsskta. thers aa chairman of tho Georgia Smith aggressive In hta criticism of delegation, said that th prohibiI nr oM hi Ion both in prantlca and tion plank drafted by tha party te theory. They know tha Republl-waa stronger than that by can record of falter and ralter In adopted the Republicans, and that tha elimdrying up the country. They sense ination by the prohibition Imuo the Republican fear of losing votes. left no other matter of such ImThey understand perfertly th exto bring about a diportance tent and strength of th wet sentivision In the Deniormt-ment In the RepuhMcan party party Declaring that he did not believa They remember that Renntnr that prohibition would Do endanGeorge H. Mope the Hoover field gered by th election cf Smith, th marshal on tho eqstn front, whlrh W srlll be berk la ear aid ham at IT and It East 1st Sratb ,d h wnl,M vote he calls th yandera of tha ftr him If I thought by not hla elecn blsser, better, and freebee stark ef BARBER S wber It. haa Called th olntead act tion Governor Smith could change a tacknm taw" aad need ter BKtllV PHOPt will b carried. In lb th prohibition laws." not Fomehe will fooled. They meantime let mtpply n ber at N. I XT Regent atreet. If la nting ta required from Mr. Hoover need of aaptblaa betere sue salesman reaehea pan, a mall order more If th farmera of th country prorreHve1y want mora pulltli-a- l 'nfluenco. why ban standing pat on a eonaltn-tlonIII be annrrelatrd aad prnmntly Oiled. don't they nil move Into ona doubtamenlment that can naver ful state? Kalamaxoc Qaacit nforc itself. . Judicial Ticket. at pur-pos- e. a modlfl-catlonl- st two-thir- . - I0-3- high-(rice- for-e'g- two-thir- prss-ever- al nt ha-aid-es Senator To Support Smith I , i ) International Motor Trucks Democratic Will Solve Your Delegates 1 Judicial eonveatlnn. elty council chamber I p. m. August 1 1 Paid Political Advertisement messaoaoBsss j! HAULING PROBLEMS Ol ECONOMICAL ntyK" 3PKKIIT" "Sea Oa Tads?" INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY OF AMERICA. 43a WK.rr 4tii soi tii ar. Salt Lake ( lr. I tab. . Uprising of Fanners in Middle Weet Her All Proportions of Cnuade. THE WESTERN BARBER SUPPLY CO mi lead-er- Interdependence is Revolutionary rebels ef the world wlU- - alga "a dalarattea of interdependence" . as their next great document, the Rev. C. Everett Wagner predicted at tho Union Methodist Episcopal Church. Ua aid: Th spirit of tha users of th 1. A. R. blacklists ta not a ehllu of tho thought of th Revolutionary rebels of our country. Th real successors to th men who signed th Declaration of Independence in 1T73, In spirit and pioneer purpose are th revolutionary rebels oJ our own ago who ar writing, teaching and preaching tha doctrines of Interdependence of the nations ot th world. Leaders abong thee true followers are Jana Addame, Dr. 8. Parke Cadman, Dr. Harry Emerson Foadtek and Mr Cania Chapman Catt. Tha crying naed for tho declaration of interdependence In this twentieth century ta Just as urgent aa th on In 1773 for Independence of email countries Ilka the IS colonic There waa a time when the Individualism of development should ba stressed, but th worm ta an entirely differei. o? IT73 world from that of 1321, and the demands of a worthwhile civilisation are also different. The Inherent moral, spiritual, social, economic and political conditions under which wa ara now living dement that wa shall work out In aonia successful way a scheme of living aa a in this old untver family of nation A step toward tha recognil on tat of th world's Interdependence of th th probable acceptance war renounce American proposal to polaa an Instrument of national courof icy. It need to b chot foil age and aaturated with International broadmindedness in order to be- to tho character and ability of th man who ara sponsoring tha farmers cause. The article goes on to ay: Two business man are the Minister Says World Keynote The revolt In th corn belt may be far mora serious than the political leaders of tho country think, th Gontlaman at tha Keyhole" tells ua In a recant Issue of Colliers Magaaln. Tha Oantlaman at th Kayhol" pay high tribute a of tha form revolt in th weet. If th farmer desert th Republican party In hundreds of thousands, this year. It wUl ba largely becauae of th activities of these two men. They talk boldly of a change in political year, allegiances this which will not only turn th country Democratic next November, but which will upset the political balance between the two major parties for perhaps a quarter of a century to come. We shall. If their vision cornea true, no longer speak of thia country aa normally Republican but aa normally Democratic.' Ona may diem las these predictions as those of men too much carried away by their passion for th movement they lead to nee things sanely; or on may wonder Just what ta going to happen when the farmer folk go to tha poll next fall. Theao two men are Republican or were fomcrly Republicans. Ona of them ta Oeorge Peek, who used to bo a form machinery manufacturer at Molina. III. Hla brother ta till a form machinery manufacturer at that place. Another brother ta vice president of the Dawea bonk In Chicago. The other man ta Mark Wood a banker at Lincoln Neb., a former, the head of a big corporation. Hta buelntm card read Woods Brothers Corporation, Lincoln, New York 8t. Loul Omaha. Sacramento, Chicago and Kansas City." I taka it that ha ta a rich man. a large landowner and a financier.' Peek and Woods are men of about fifty. Both look Ilk former ruddy-face- d aa If often exposed to weather. Both are friends of ! Me President Dawea Mr. Woods from early association lu Lincoln, where tha vies president practiced Uw In the next office to William Jennings Bryan, and Mr.- - Pack through later associations In Illi-n- oi . . come powerfully effective. Not by war but by sheer good will cau this Interdependence ba cultivateu. tu-ttto I would suggest that In the celebration of the Fourth u? July the attention of theournation mind be centered upon our Instead of d If the world ta to be ur co u-a- from tha catastrophe of another war. ba speculating ns to whether or not in It would upset all calculation tha next election. Inn 1324 th farm movement In politics waa tha Individual former Ilka a crusade. I aay It looks ike because Mr Mr Woods I also a cloaa friend Mr.cruaado Woods hav th qualltie th of General Pershing' It was ha th force, the paseton, who promoted tho Pershing boom 'energy, It look Ilk a crusade. form for president In 1320. when th make Mon important than all th general cam back from tha war. organisations In the political PfM-ti- c Two Adventurous ta th Corn Belt committee lighten. Mr. Peek got interested In the these two men an the Cron form movement wheq the hard and Belt committee. Then an othen In conditions of agriculture after th that committee, but these two an deflation following tho war cut I the llfo It. down the sale of hla plows In tha j Their ofexperience with larger Ha strikes you os fairs than farmers have had of a fanatic. man Ini- -' perlenca with, thalr sesources, their patient of men who do not under- - contact with important men, have tend hla Ideas and agna with enabled them to accomplish things them. Indeed, people aay that with which no dirt former could accom-pltaa little more tact and patience in In a measure They hav dealing with Congress, a little more transcended the Jealousies o( the readiness to compromise, he might older individual form organisations have got farm-nlilegislation and mada tha Corn Belt committee passed long befor thi the politcal weapon of tha farm-- r He ta the man whom Washington To take on Illustration: their chiefly associates with the McNary-Hauge- n bill. He haa been th driv- personal contact with Vico Presiing force behind It there. He In- dent Dawes enabled them to enltat McNary-Hau-ge- n vented the name "equalisation fee" hta support for th for tha tax to ba Imposed on agribill. With hta aid they got It Its pascultural products to maintain a twice through Congrea fund to stabilise agricultural price sage and veto on two successive The word tax ta unpopular. Tha occasions have dramatised the conword equalisation sounds persua- flict between the east and the west sive. in fact, it turns a tax Into a in ths Republican party. Mr. Peek and Mr. Woods ar cause, for equality la what tha formers are demanding. teaching tha west that tha eastern Mr. Woods looks cooler and mora Industrial Interests ara determined practical But ha too ia adventur-o-u to preserve their privileges at th Aa a pioneer In Montana, h expanse of agriculture. The fight started at on time to buy a million at the Republican national convenacre and when hta partners in the tion dramatised th Issue once enterprise backed out. ended with mors. the pomaelon himself, of 209,009 Opinions are wide apart on what acre there. tho former will do in November. H American th tone of the presidency latBut tha first planted mil macaroni wheat. In a graveyard in est veto of th McKary-Hauge- n Montana that being the only place la slglnflcant. When one side of a fenced against roving cattl controversy raises its voice In anWithout these two leaders !t 1a ger, the other aide ta likely to be r both politcal parties would now angry, too. - d,lV,n0kS 1 h. ef fiairilMiBiisaaiririFiiirlfJiiiar: I I I Ray V an Cott 0 Announces i I that he f t'r w The Votes Colliers Says Work of Woods and Peak Have Lots of Possibilities. I ; tard th traffic lights Solicits Tha first Damoc ratio of tha year will ba held at rally tha FACING REAL1 " REPUBLICANS Notice to Democrats I I I ." tt'P-PLIE- I a candidate for the nomination of District Attorney for the Third Judicial District of Utah. He will appreciate the support of the delegates at the convention to be held August 11, 1928 at 2 oclock p. m. in the City Council Chamber at Salt Lake City. Hla nomination was made by acclamation four years ago, and he spent his money, made the race, and went to defeat with the rest of the ticket. This year the political signs arc more propitious, and he feels that it is only fair that another opportunity should be given him to make the race. M He has served the party fer thirty-thre- e years, and in 1914, as County Chairman, he aided effectively in the election of the entire Democratic ticket in Salt Lake County. ron-tm-- al r (raid Polities! Advertisement) ifiiiBJfJiiiJfJniriJrdlpi(ijg 0 I ! I a a i il a I a i i . |