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Show We are glad to eee that the Tribui e denies personal epleen or malevolent feelings in its cruel and shameful treatment of Judge Smith, anent the consultation with Judge Merritt on the wealer caee. That paper doeen't like Judge Smith's telegrams. We take it for granted that in tbis the Trib. alludes particularly to the conclusion Judge Smith drew on tbe guilt of the wealers in advance of trial. Judge Mnith was present when the wealers were In unlawful possession of the train. He knew they were guilty and the formal trial was only to put the verdict in formal shape, while the con- eultfttinn ftplptrrflmsl irn ho,l rmtn m arrange eo that the convenience of the court Bhould not be intereferred with more than was necessary. Will tbe Trib. not eay how the Standard secured the correspondence, aud also why it did cot publish It cotemporane-ouely cotemporane-ouely with that paper? The Herald does not do things by halves. When it does step out to the tune of free coinage. It iteps out with b stride which covers tbe ground amazingly. amaz-ingly. Its other asticla of yesterday under the caption, "Silver and the Poor," is ecarcely less explicit than i tbe leader. Tbe only objection Tai purATCD haj, is that it bnda its own j grounds trenched upon by its illustrious illus-trious cotemporary and friend. However, How-ever, the Hral'i is grandly welome in the work for the entire democratic faith ann in the great work of barm ou'zim; the d tuociaey of the west and especially f the territory. There is now no doubt whatever ol the fate of Use pending campaign. This change of front rings the death knell of repub licanieui in Utah. When Uie loy iabied his drawing of oik; of thu four footed creatures of citation, the execrable character of the work forced him to write underneath, "this is a horse''' he was in the predicament pre-dicament Tue Dispatch finis itself in since it spoke of '"the many lawless acls" of Charley Richards and Judge Smith, at least so far as the Standard is concerned. The next time we have occssion to write of them in this strain, for the Standard's sake we will write over the article: "This is a joak." The Herald at last takes issue with the policy of the administration which unconditionally repeals the Sherman act and ruins the silver values aud dallies dal-lies with the tariff reform bill eo lung aud uselessly, Human patience sometimes some-times wears out aud this seems a genuine gen-uine case of it. Brother Huntingdon will pay fifteen fif-teen millions to Uncle Sam on the Southern Facifij account. That will prove but a mere bagatelle to our good brother, though to ub and the balance of the world it would seem a healthy sort of a pile to retire on. They are still harping on offensive partsanship. The Tribune is hard put to for an argument. This, and the great conspiracy between Judge Merritt Mer-ritt and Judge Smith, reveals its poverty pov-erty in the way of ammunition. The Herald's reversal on free coinage insures perfect harmony harmony means victory this fall in Utah. The democracy of Utah is for free coinage no matter whose toeB are trampled upon. The state bank bill is defeated. Thus is another hope of better times destroyed. The democracy of Utah is democratic on all the articles of the democratic faith. Thb democracy of Utah is in line with the party in the west and south. Victory this fall belongs to the democracy in Utah. |