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Show If General Lawler wiil go back home and make us a visit alter the next campaign is decided, we will take great delight in according honors to the commander of the G. A. R. Aa the order is explicitly declared a non partisan par-tisan affair and the vast majority of Its membership is republican, our suggestion sug-gestion will be seen to be perfectly fair, nothing else. In those years when important elections are on, all non-partisan influences Bhould do nothing which could be construed as giving advantage to either party. The republican party is inimical to silver, but in Utah all republicans are for sil Ter as well as all other people. General Gen-eral Lawler ought to consent to do nothing which will, or might, possibly, - . -. " : . rr a i in - ht n i ..m in i an i " hi 1 i i n injure his old comrades in the inter-mountain inter-mountain region. Senatob Vest believes that silver ought to be restored or gold be declared the money of the land. Something must be done. The present system cannot be continued much longer. Something decisive is needed. This half and half policy is murdering the business of the country. If men of Vest's metal will act in concert we can easily force silver remonetization and gold and silver is good enough money for anybody or any country. How long is it to be that Vest will sulk in his tents? When will he get out into the field and work for silver? The outlook out-look in Kentucky is a little troublous troub-lous and now if Vest began for Biiver in Missouri, things would have a better bet-ter ring. Gecrge C ! The hour has struck. Work. It begins to look as though Cleveland Cleve-land and Carlible are too strong for Blackburn, and that old Kaintuck will train with the gold bugs this fall. However, it wilLbe more of a peisonal victory for Carlisle than a silver defeat-There defeat-There is a little comfort in this view of the case, to be sure. With the conditions now prevailing in Europe, international bimetallism is worse than goldbnggery. Let db hear no more of this international nonsense. Independent American bimetallism bi-metallism or nothing, is the proper slogan now for the silver people. Sinck Kentucky, it deyolvea upon Utah democrats to be even more earnest earn-est and determined to win the state for the silver democracy. Utah can and will do her part in the work necessary to uado the fiasco in Kentucky. The Minneapolis Tribune is Mormon Mor-mon mad. It declares that polygamy is rampant in Utah as ever, and if the territory is admitted the people will all be polygamous. This is only urged to defeat the admission of the state. When Utah'B state democratic convention con-vention meets the free Bilyer note she will give out, will have nothing obscure or doubtful about it. It will have the ling of the true white metal about it, and no mistake. In Kentucky only one state has spoken. At Cleveland forty-five stateB spoke their lepublican sentiments. This is ft brief summing up ol the relative re-lative importance of the two events. Judge Merkitt j a bit stubborn when he once takes a position. This is a better quality than Judge Shiras exhibited. Shilly-shally .is no good thing in a judge. Benjamin IIakkison has at last succeeded in climbing to a college trusteeship. There is hope yet for the Hat. Xow, Lord Salisbury, go ahead cn silver, and let the English pro silver men have a fair chance, for once. The Herald accuses the Tribune of density of mind. This is becoming dreadful. Judge Mekritt is stubborn. He refuses re-fuses to rip up the Bancroft appointment. appoint-ment. The Yellow Fever ecouree at Santoa is something perfectly fearful. |