Show SHE A 1iE1ocRLTrc ABUKESS To tho People of Utah Delivered at Salt Lake City on Saturday June 16th by the Territorial Democratic Conventi Resolved That as the convention was not called to make nominations or formulate a platform ot principles the following be adopted as the sentiments of the convention to be presented in the form of an address to the people of Utah We the democrats of Utah in convention con-vention assembled hereby declare our devotion to tho time honored principles of the democratic party as enunciated in the national platforms and imbedded imbed-ded in the harts of its members We are emphatically in favor of equal rights to all and special privileges privil-eges to none of the greatest possible liberty to every individual compatible with the public welfare of the advancement advance-ment and support of home industries of the maintenance of local Belftjovern mont to the fullest rightful extent and of a strict construction of the na ional constitution We are in favor of such reform of the tariff as is consistent with the in tercets of the consumer and the producer pro-ducer and declare that duties upon foreign imports should be levied upon the luxuries so far as possible and not upon the necessaries of life for the purpose of providing revenue fQr the necessary expenses ot government and not for the special benefit of any class or private enterprise We are opposed to the bounty system by which the many are taxed for the enrichment of A few We demand the speedy passage < tf the bill for trriff reform now pending in the fceiwAc iuthiilina the provision for an income tax by which those large property holders who are best able shall bear their just share of the burden bur-den of taxation And we denounce the i obstructive policy of the republicans in congress by which a heeded measure meas-ure to provide public revenue is delayed de-layed causing uncertainty and doubt In commercial and manufacturing circles and thus paralyzing industry and arresting trade To the factious hindrances which are still thrown in the way of the Wilson bill by repabli can senators are due to the slow progress pro-gress it is making and the disasteis that are consequent upon the delay We demand the restoration of silver to the coLstitutional position it occupied pied as money previous to the act of 1873 by which the republican party cast down that historic and essential money metal and caused the increasing increas-ing disasters which beginning with the panic of 1873 and bursting forth at intervals with terrible severity depressing de-pressing the agricultural interesis of the country creating unrest and discontent dis-content among the oppressed laboring classes and increasing the armies of tramps which swarmed over the land culminated in the panic of 1893 and still spreads its blight upon trade and industry We call attention to the undeniable fact that the republican party took the government from tue democratic administration ad-ministration in 1889 wnh more than a hundred million dollars in the national treasury and turned it back to the democratic party in 1893 with a treasury practically bankrupt We denounce the silver policy of the republican party as a system of miserable miser-able makeshifts to palliate the republican repub-lican financial crime of 1873 and de elate that only in and through the democratic party can the people of the United States expect the reestablishment reestablish-ment of true bimetalism which includes in-cludes the free coinage ot silver at the ratio of 16 to 1 with gold We believe that this can be done with safety and profit to this nation by American action ac-tion independent of European agreement agree-ment if international cooperation cannot can-not be Immediately obtained We denounce the republican policy of protection as embodied in the infamous infa-mous McKinlej law and reaffirmed by that party in its most recent utter an e We regard it as an assistant agency to the prostration of silver in producing the poverty and distress and social calamities various kinds which > still afflict our country We deny that the high tariffs placed apon lead and wool and other commodities commod-ities have raised their price or benefited benefit-ed the producer of such materials while they have been oppressive and detrimental to the consumer and the country at large We cordially endorse the democratic congress and administration In repealing the obnoxious federal election law and thus promoting the freedom of ee tions In formulating and endeavoring to enact a bill to reform the existing exorbitant ex-orbitant system of tariffs In revising the pension lists so that Awhile all persons deserving the aid of the country for services in its defense shall be secured in their rights impostors impost-ors and fraudulent pension agents shall not be permitted to further bleed the body politic In the exercise of the federal forces to suppress lawlessness where power to do so is clearly vested in the federal authority au-thority and declining to interfere when it would intrude on the rights of a local government In the restoration to the church of Jesus Christ ol Latterday Saints property prop-erty confiscated under the provisions of congressional law and we favor the immediate restoration also of the real 2 J Wft SM thatno pretST remains for charging that the majority of the people of Utah are in opposition to national authority In the passage through the house and its report in the senate of a liberal and excellent bill for the admission of Utah as a state on an equal footing with the existing states and we urge its speedy enactment as a measure of simple justice to the oldest and mopt prosperous of the existing territories In the appointment of bona fide residents resi-dents of the territory to the various offices in the gift of the government instead in-stead of men from other sections of the country unfamiliar with our people and I the situation of our affairs as was the rule under republican administrations administra-tions And we further endorse all efforts to maintain the dignity and authority of the government and remove the effects of over thirty vears of republican misrule mis-rule We endorse the official acts of our delegate in congress Hon J L Rawlins Raw-lins and offer his able and successful services as evidence of democratic energy en-ergy nd fidelity to the interests of the nannla of Utah I people peopWe denounce the hyprocrisy that I portion of the republican press and party which infamously endeavors to charge the effects of the legislative errors of a third of a century upon a party which had but just entered into power when those terrible evils overspread over-spread the country The logic which argues that effects precede their causes is fit reasoning for a party which affirms af-firms that the foreigner pays the tariff tax on the imported goods purchased by the American people We arraign the republican party for its treacherous course in relation to the socalled industrial armies flaying flay-ing brought the laboring classes into tbd poaditione uncjer which they suffer t oUlhthe < rieion legislation of t long career of power republicans have fosteied if not originated the movement move-ment upon Washington by thousands of the unemployed They have interfered inter-fered with the efforts of the juliciaiy and the executive in different places to enforce the law They have encouraged encour-aged the massing at the seat of goy ernment of thousands of homeless men made desperate by republican legislation leg-islation hoping that their presence would embarrass the administration administra-tion and convey the false impression that the party in power is responsible I for thirty years of republican misrule In this arraignment we include those local republicans who have endeavored to cast ridicule upon the governor opprobrium op-probrium upon the judges and insult upon the militia and the constabulary while those officers were engaged in preserving the public peace and seeking seek-ing to turn back the tide of poverty which was flowing into the territory We deeply sympathize with the distress dis-tress of our iellow citizens the unemployed unem-ployed working people of the country and particularly of those who are dwellers in our territory We deplore the policy which has brought into our midst large bodies of destitute men who have been supplied with the very means that was required for the support sup-port of the resident poor and some of whom sought to obtain the work which was needed by our own population We declare it to be our conviction that only by the reforms which will be introduced in-troduced by a democratic congress and administration can relief be afforded to the oppressed and needy working population and prosperity be assured to the toiling masses We denounce the false pretenses recently re-cently Liput forth by leaders of the republican re-publican party by which they seek to decieve the voters of the United States into tile dellei that iiwf sra friends to silver by linking it withthe heresy of protection The terms bimetalism and the enlarged ase of silver by which they seek to dazzle the eyes of the west and the south are only catch phrases to fool the unsophisticated They do not mean the free and unlimited limited coinage of silver at the ratio of 16 to 1 which is the only true solution solu-tion of the money problem and the only genuine bimetallic policy We denounce the national republican republi-can party For its false pretenses of sudden regardfor tne people of Utah against whom in its platforms and by extreme legislation it indicated intense hostility from its inception Its simu ated affection is coincident wth the appearance of a possibility of republican can support in the territory and that its support was the only cause of its new attitude It is the unselfish tenderness tend-erness which the spider feels for the flyWe denounce the only republican legislature leg-islature of Utah territory For its waste of pnblic time and money in vain endeavors to manufacture party capital For its opposition to the educational interests of the territory by refusiu1 to appropriate sufficient funds for t agricultural college and to carry on tl university according to the provision of the law creatine the institution an requiring the establishment of necessary neces-sary departments and also by endeavoring endeav-oring to cripple the public schools in a scheme to take away part of the revenue rev-enue necessary to their support and divert di-vert it for the purpose of giving bounties boun-ties to benefit private enterprises For striving to commit the representatives represent-atives of the people in memorials to congress to gross misrepresentation ol fact and egregious blunders in principle princi-ple For defeating legislation which would be for the general interest but not favorable fa-vorable to republican advancement For making appropriations after refusing re-fusing to give necessary support to the educational institutions and the deaf mute reform school insane asylum and I kindred institutions and neglecting to provide sufficient revenue to meet the appropriations inconsiderately made The spectacle of republican legislators legisla-tors running away In hot haste to avoid an issue which they had raised themselves them-selves evading the officers sent to arrest ar-rest them and hiding until a republican majority could be assured thus stopping 1 stop-ping the progress of public business in the upper house of the legislature and wringing that body into public contempt con-tempt was a scene unparalleled in the annals of our country and exhibits the republican party in an attitude of cowardice and absurdity The republican legislature showed more bombast and less capacity more parsimony and smaller economy greater partisanship and narrower statesmanship than any other legislative legisla-tive assembly in the history of the territory ter-ritory We endorse the action of Governor Caleb W Weal in the interposition of the veto power vested in him by law 1 to prevent the enactment of vicious and partisan measures and insulting and misleadingmemorials by which the republican legislature would but for his action haye injured and disgraced the territory And we recognize in the governor a firm discreet and able executive whose influence has been cast on the side of law and order and the public welfare generally We confidently apoeal to the citizens of Utah to stand by and support the pp party of the constitution and the people peo-ple from which alone political redcBM tion can come to this territory av H nt naUIJBjBJ aU rfrY 1T which will demonstrate the superiority of its principles and policy as soon as measures of reform it has inaugurated can be put into force and produce their effects wnich works for the greatest good to the greatest number which is the foe ot monopolies and the friend of the masses which does not depend upon any one man however powerful for its guidance or Its victory and which will maintain and bear triumphant tri-umphant those sacred doetrhrr n L stitutlons for which the fatbe i > cr country fought and bled an w s we hereby pledge our faith v v > tion and our energies wi c L conviction that success will cit r efforts and Utah will enter the lllt as a free and vigorous democratic state WILLIAM H KING Chairman Wir K REID Secretary DAVID EVANS JOHN T CAINE 0 W POWERS JOSEPH MONSON 1 J STKWAET N Committee |