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Show A Bright Outlook THE outlook for the American party was never brighter than at present. Mayor Bransford stands vindicated, tl:e thought being that If he has made a few mis- takes in the past, he has made less than other men in his place would, and that he will not re peat them. His associates on the ticket are men who have earned their places, and hold up for exhibition records without a stain, and moreover, records of achievement in the past which supply a guarantee guar-antee of full effectiveness in the future. But the one feature which will go further in multiplying American votes than any other is the fact that whatever may have been the mistakes of individual members of the party, its general record is one of progress such as was never seen before in Salt Lake City. j It took hold wht vice and crime were un- i checked; when business was dead; when enterprise enter-prise was in a state of coma, and it has caused a transformation and made sure that this city ' is to go on and be the greatest between the Missouri river and the Pacific. It has done this in the face of the abuse and falsehoods of two daily papers, which for years have seemed to have no object in life except to paralyze the arm of industry here, and cover the city with shame. The party never entered upon so hopeful a campaign as this one before it now. |