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Show The European nations, as well as India, China and Japan, are heartily sick of the demontization of silver, and even in Germany they are now calling loudly lor another monetary conference, confer-ence, bo that relief may be had from the panic conditions which really commenced com-menced when the move upon silver was first made. The United States lost the best opportunity she will have in a hundred years to put herself in the lead in the great business of the restoration restor-ation of silver when she failed to pass a free coinage act at the extra eeeson. It is coming as sure as that tomorrow's sun will rise. The commercial world can no longer do without silver, ltj must have it either by national or in teimational action. Of all the characterless, impudent and ma'icious liars on the top side of the earth, the Splatterblotch of this city 'heads the procession. When the editor of The Dispatch edited the New Mexican for six months in '83 for the A; T. & S. F. railway, it was not a political paper. The road bought it for a certain purpose and that accomplished, accom-plished, the paper was suspended. It was, after some time, bought by Col. Max Frost, an ardent republican. Lately it was boucht by Goy. Thornton Thorn-ton the democratic governor of New Mexico, and is now edited by Col. Geo. II. Cross, who was city editor of the paper when we were leading editor. We defy the Splatterblotch to publish evidence that wea eyer affiliated with republicans in a political way anywhere, any-where, while we are proud to sav we have many warm personal friends in their ranks. Because, while we have ever been known as a hard fighter, we are rated a fair one by all. As to having hav-ing been a populist in Grand Junction, that, like the New Mexican charge, is a lie so ridiculous and mean as to be unworthy of notice. For mean, petty, epitefulness, for weak pulling malevolence, malevol-ence, we put the Splatterblotch and its editor and manager ahead of anything we have ever come in contact with in ah our long professional experience. No wonder this community has practically practi-cally tabooed him and the filthy false paper he publishes. The country is fast becoming sick of this Hawaiian question. It occupies too much ot the attention of the people and the papers, to say nothing of the government. Settle it up in some way and be done with it. A greasy, unchaste, un-chaste, ignorant woman because she is queen of an insignificant island in the faraway Pacific, has been able to hold the boards in this country, at least for several months,. The. game isn't worth the candle. There is another rebellion in the Samoan islands. That little speck on the ocean is playing its geography for all that it is worth. They want more warships in that part of the world. A few ship loads of dynamite to blow the island out of the water, is the proper remedy. The tariff reform is a big question to be sure, but just now the restora-' restora-' tion of silver to its old office of money is a greater one. The world demauds it and a general panic, in a few years, will force it if it is not sooner accomplished accom-plished in other and milder ways. Jtjegk Smith's leading objection to the legal profession as a pursuit, is that one can't make money in it and yet the truth is, that more lawyers grow rich than any other professional people that we know of. Waite's extra session is now a better bet-ter show than the Denver Wonderland ever presented. The actors are all very funny, and in a high comedy some of them are illustrious. Rather Steep Than take in any other torm is what many people think and Parks' Tea is made for just those folks. It cures constipation con-stipation and though not a cathartic moves the bowels every day. Sold by Smoot Drug Co. |