Show THE REPS RALLY It Passed Off Quite Well Last Night CANNONS GREAT EFFORT Did Democracy No Harm Booths Slush Had Better Have Been Left Unsaid Anna Atkin Welcomed Frankie Graham Gra-ham Needlessly Insulted 0 A Glazier Republicans say it was grand Democrats say they were disappointed disappoint-ed that they expected the republicans could and would do Letter The parade displayed to very good advantage Ed Looses caps and capes and handsome drum corps suits and little else The opera house was packed but it was a cold unappreciative audience The applause was most meagre C A Glazier precinct chairman called the meeting to order and introduced intro-duced the Boshard iv Pyne quartette Boss Graham jacked young Glazier up for his impudence and thereafter he took temporary charge of the meeting while Glazier went home After some doggerel from the Bo shard and Pyne Brothers quartette Ringmaster Graham introduced Clown Booth UR permanent chairman of the meeting The clown found himself a little out of place not being at the tail end of the program In his little opening speech he said that two years ago the state bank qustion was an issuethe democrats demo-crats have broke so many banks since than that it is longer an issue Some years ago it was either a bounty and a sugar factory or no bounty and no sugar factory We got the factory and Hall beegmiller and some other dem > cr ita voted for the bounty This was convincing Bounties are right Gratitude is a mighty good thing but we have paid for our prospect of statehood with very good cropping This territory was worth 117500000 on the first Monday in March 1893 Grover Cleveland eat on the property of Utah one year and he Equeezad 8180UOOJii out of its valne Weve paid pretty dearly for all the democratic demo-cratic party has giyen us Because of this the debt of gratitude which Utah owes the democratic party is yery light If the democratic party had come into power twenty years ago the hard times would have come then if they had staid out of power twenty years they would not have come for tviinzv years Booth forgot to refer to the fact that the hard times were coming tlvt the dear old United States was during the administration of Harrrison enduring the agonies of labor the result of which was that before Be ne became a private pri-vate citizen the ugly deformed and ill begotten republican child hard times was born Doctor Cleveland was called He would throw his patient into tits because be-cause he could cure the The troublj is he hasnt yet cured the fits Mrs anna Atkins in one of those fits would welcome Frankie A nie spoke her little peice The prompter was not on hand but she got through with her lines fairly well She said that the republican ladies like gay colors but they prefer black hair toed to-ed right here Don Coray winced Frankie has black hair Thats not all he has he has winsome wave hed a ladies man and we love him so there The Boshard and Pyne quartette rendered Down on the Farm quite creditably Being encored J R and Harry tfoahard sang a parody on The Upper Ten THEN FRANKIE was introduced amid loud shouting by Herb Pyne and two other men upon the stage and one down in the audience audi-ence Then a la John S Jjindeay with his voice filling his throat and spreading spread-ing his hands all over the air he thanked Annie Atkin for her welcome The democratic party demand credit ffr granting statehood to Utah and for returning the escheated church property prop-erty The repiiW < can party holds it responsible for driving five millions of the people of this country into poverty pov-erty and starvation Up until November 81892 was the season of greatest prosperty this country ever knew Eyery man and woman in the United States was employed em-ployed at good wages The government bought monthly four and a half mil lions of ounces of silver This law was an evidence to us that before we lost it we would have a better Under protec tive laws money was flowing to us not from usit came in to settle the balance ot trade On the 8th day of November 1892 Grover Cleveland was elected so was Joseph L Rawlins but Frankie didnt say so On November J 192 the operatives all over the laud went to the factories happy and hope ill but a little while later the news began to come that the wheels of all the mills had stopped as m a night Democracy had control of both houses of congress and the president The threat of democratic legislation was what caused the wheels to stop The producers knew that the cost to the consumer was to be reduced by demo oiatic leg s ation and so they concluded con-cluded not to produce M lions of babies in this land had togo to-go without their milk while we waited for the arrival of Esther Cleveland During all this time the common people peo-ple oi the United States were calling for an extra session of congress to pass a reduced tariff bill Later the fold bugs called for an extra session to repeal re-peal the Sherman silver purchase bill and Cleveland granted the request Fraukie holds the republican partv responsible re-sponsible for the crime of demonetiza tion Of silver in 1873 but he holds the democratic party tenfold more responsible respon-sible for repealing the Sherman pur chase makeshift because the republicans republi-cans in 1873 sinned not knowing what the effect of what thgy were doing would be Monetary science was understood un-derstood well when the democracy acted BO that the democrats Binned with knowledgethe republicans sinned innocently Had congress been called in extraordinary session to settle the tariff question and not to repeal the Sherman law Frank thTnkft hat the Coxey armies would not have been known It took him an hour to explain ex-plain to the audience that this is his opinion Then he touched upon the Wilson bill and discussed the tariff question at some length from a republican standpoint not forgetting to say that Joe Rawlins demanded a 20 per cent tariff on lead and that Bynum demanded demand-ed a tariff on tin lie did not forgE either to quote the New York Sun and charge what an investigation committee commit-tee of unquestioned honor has long since proven as false as hull viz that the democratic congress held ino tariff bill and refused to pass it until the senators sena-tors had time to make fortune i by investing in-vesting in sugar stocks It is said that the industries of the country are beginning to revive but Frankie says that they cannot revive eo long as democracy is in power Then he read to the audience part ot the New York suns report of Congressman Congress-man Wilsons reception by the chamber cham-ber of commerce ot London This reception and especially the fact that Mr Wilsons English hosts applauded what Wilson had to say and laughed at some of his remarks gave poor dear tenderhearted Frankie the shudders What were those pampered aristocratic sons of British soil laughing at Ill tell you the story of only one of the five millions of Americans at whom they were laughing laugh-ing And then with admirable stage effect and in melting tones that brought tears to the eyes of many he told of how a young married man in San Francisco had been saving to pay for a home how he was thrown out of work and ooliged to pawn his wifes jewelry trinkets and finally her extra dresses and some of the furniture in order to live Atrlast he became desperate des-perate and determined to steal bread and if any interfered to Kill ACLT ting t-ing to Frank Wilson had brought five million Americans to this condition and it was at these men the British nabobs were laughing Frankie seemed toforget that he haw iled to Drove that demo rJ Lc legi fek had DKn Gttlrs 1 eJndith w and seemed to be entirely oblivious of the tact that there were hundreds in his audience thinking that it being true hat five million Americans are in th s condItion the republican party should fore > er hang its head in shame for haying hay-ing left the country in that condition after af-ter thirty years of ruleIt was an excellent excel-lent incident to relatefor the cause ol democracy The speaker next took up the silver question and struggled hard to make it appear that silver would be befriended be-friended in the future by the republican republi-can party Should the democratic party between now and 1896 fail to give us some satisfactory silver leas lation and should the republican party be elected to power in 1896 and during its four years reign should it fail to give us what the people want Frank was free to confess that in 1900 a third party would go into power for the express ex-press purpose of giving us silver legislation legis-lation if we do not have a revolution before that time Getting on to this theme the speaker for the first time admitted that the east is the enemy to silver as the east and not the democratic party as he had along claimed up to this time Then he touched the statehood ques tionit was the people who got it Providence I FranK has quit giving credit for the boon He is willing to give praise tp anybody rather than to J os L Pyawlins the democratic administration ad-ministration He thought the people of Utah would vote gratefully and conscien ciously this fall and thanked his audIence dIence for its patience and sat down Then a bevy of beautiful girls who haul been sitting shivering behind the wings all the evening ran out from either side and presented Mr Cannon with several boquettea of flowers MISS Sadie Graham making the preseuta tion speech It was a pretty effect Singing by the quartette and hand shakIng with Frank closed the meeting meet-ing |