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Show THE iNTER-MOUNTAIN Republican the Ientered as second-class matter Feb. 10, 1906, at the postoffice at Salt Lake Clty Boe the Act of onan March participation 1879 Only pore Salt Lake lican bt SUnSC ae RIP TION Newspaper in RATES. Paid in Advance. =. onth, Daily and Sunday....$ .50 © Months, a nd Sunday... 1.59 "Months, Dall y and Sunday .. 3.00 Year, Daily and Sunday .... 6.00 Sunday only, One Ye 1,50 eee ee eee on Six Not Pald in Advance. One Month, Dail y and Sunday....$ 75 Three Months, Daily and Sunday 2.00 Six Months, Daily and Sunday.... 4.0 One Year, Daily et Sven eee 8.00 Sunday only, One So cemeces 2.00 Subseribers will please give explicit notice to the C DIRECT, and not to carr ors or solicitors, on a f re delivery of paper. Please former as we o when ordering chan der to discontinue ouet will be ored only when subscription is PAID IN FULL. Offices-Dooly Block, 208 South West Temple street. Phones-Bell, Exchange 25; Pamenentene 3190. EASTERN OFFICES: 3 ‘4 ° 4= aA ~wv ew York Office, 604 Cambridge Buildin, Opposite Waldo ey Chicago Office, 311 Boyce Build sole fer tanentatinn east of the Rocky Mountains. NON pion. e Ci Ca SALT CALL LAKE FOR CITY, APRIL STATE oe oo Mittee, Salt Lake 6, 1908. Pursuant to the Repub lican 9, 1908 CONVENTION. ee City State Utah, ComApril call because against city and and congressional Republican party LIT THE PAST Get in with the this Presidential the success of they the party which shall not exclude ticipation the making in any party of party yoter from councils, tickets or from now. The Republicans everywhere he fairly ' snicidal, eleiwieavisiaivele aieiw(e ame Washington ernie se . or BNO ee Ue We sivnce ees @ a nieiaie Miia Ae oan Perse for $53 GBT, 244 5990 9 7 3 44 42560 473 The chairman of the Republican county committee in' each county is hereby directed to call together the ounty committee and provide for the election of these delegates, either by a county convention or by primaries et in the several voting precincts o Sone nly those electors who will support sid Republican national, state, legislative, judicial and count ickets will be gi nd allowed to participate in the primaries, or serve as delegates to the comeaton: VESLEY GEORGE K. WALTON, Ch alrman. B. SQUIRES, Secretary. LELEGATES TO THE MAY MEETING. That was a wise provision made by the Republican state committee in its meeting on Monday, which prescribed the eligibility of voters at the coming Republican primaries-the place of choosing delegates. In order to have a Vote and voice in selecting delegates to the convention which shall send delegates to the National Republican convention, one must be willing to pledge himself to vote for and support the whole Republican ticket at the November election. Surely that is a fair rule. If a man can not vote the Republican ticket, he has no right to assist in the selection of delegates to a Republican convention. If he is going to vote against the party candidates, he ought not to have a voice in molding the very essentials of the party plan. Indeed, the rule of eligibility is very generous, We have our peculiar political conditions here in Utah, as citizens of other states doubtless have theirs. Here, for example, a good many men who have been Republicans, have been opposed to the Republican party in state and judicial district, in the selection of congressmen, and in county and city affairs. They have never abandoned their allegiance to the national ticket, and are still Re publicans when it comes to Presidential candidates. They are not barred for a minute. They have done a great deal of damage to the Republican organization, and to the Republican party. Some of them may not have inflicted as great an injury as they desired, but they may flatter themselves with the reflection that they have hurt, Yet they are welcomed by this rule, and may regain place in the party without a thought of ex. clusion. All they have to do is de- itself out, and would stop. But when it goes on year after year for twenty years, enlarging the field, uniformly advancing, rarely losing any ground once captured-why, then it is time to note the growth of a mighty sentiment. It can not be sneered down, nor ignored. Setting aside the merits of the question entirely, any sensible student of affairs must see that the people of the United States are displeased with the saloon, with the liquor power. They are showing it in very certain ways. They are advancing as the anti-slavery sentiment advanced two generations ago. They are proceeding precisely as the sentiment for railroad regulation proceeded. They have organization, system, courage and persistence. In the list*of Illinois towns which went "dry" at the Tuesday election are many in which the saloon men are known to have controlled ever since the towns were founded. The people there know what they are doing. They are doing what they want to do, We of Utah may as well understand the matter. Our people are as other people. And the record of this temperance movement shows clearly what other people think-what they propose, and what they do. It will not do to say this is palpably a plan to divert attention from the Smoot question, or any other question. There are matters of dispute in Illinois, too; and it is not likely the people who voted no-license cared a great deal whether their victory obscured the view of the older questions. They were attending to what was to them, and at that time, the dominant question. That was the liquor question. The men who opposed them utterly overlooked the fact that what the people want, they get. It will be more to the purpose for our people to ask themselves the question: "On which side of this matter am I going to get? What am I going to do? Am I going to fight the temperance movement, or am I going to help it?" They better get on one side or the other. It is the history of this struggle wherever it has existed, that men were placed, no' matter how inert they remained. Their lack of action has been more often put down for cowardice than sagacity, or superior wisdom, The people get wonderfully in earnest about it. They demand declarations. That is what they are doing here in end government of the not line, assume to at and the that (Am Beas aS, Aa! yl4 Cw) ALN Sat "IZ. C. Onr FR Where BEERS you the best - Drog Store :112-114 Main Pas e Street Pe Pa- Russia! interfere. But the nations have had experience with that If Harbin is left to the govpower. ernment of the railroad, it may be taken for granted the nations expect| Russia Today ors and that elose out those have been on sale over a dueed week "at. re- prices, BANK to resume control of Manchu- ria. And because that is true, we do | not believe the claim of the czar's {diplomats will be at all conceded we will show new style sail- seven S' MILLINERY STORE 116 SO. MAIN STREET. regret that one representative of the Kearns party should have felt moved to declare in open convention that he was ashamed of the President of the United States. But even men who have so declared are here given part in the selection of delegates to the Chicago convention, where the national candidates will be named, where the national policy will be declared-IF ONLY HE WILL PLEDGE HIMSELF TO SUPPORT WITH HIS VOTE THE REPUBLICAN PARTY CANDIDATES FOR COUNTY AND JUDICIAL AND CONGRESSIONAL AND STATE AND NATIONAL OFFICE. exercising will par- national party has suffered-in every element, and from here to Washington -because of the refusal of what is ealled the American party to sustain the national administration. It is not disputed it would have been a happier consummation if the biggest city, the capital city of Utah, had been in accord with the national administration, is cific they claim they never have abandoned. That is the meaning of the rule. If they have been yoting the Kearns party tickets in the past, that is to he regretted by those who have been steadfastly with the Republican party, but it local elections were held in many towns and con- | citles of [linois. A very strong camgress was 42,560, ane on the Poe paign has been fought there between apportionment the convention will c sist of 475 del Genttans, \ apportioned: ae the Anti-Saloon league and the liquor Ppllows: interests. And the result is that County. Vote. Dels. Beaver ..,. vheeess sevens 47703 8 | three-fourths of the towns where the Box bHlder . cneae cee ktee 19 question of license or no license was ON sac gfe ca eve Poeseceeebos 40 8 submitted have voted against license. 13 8 That sort of thing is pretty con5 clusive of the progress of the move2 7 ment. It is strikingly like the record 14 4 made in other states. Where the mat2 ter is submitied to the people-and it 4 4 is being submitted to them more and i 4 more extensively every year-their Balt: take oo 2.c ccc. 11993 133 Ban Juan sco... cece eras 95 1 decision is against the saloon. If it Bannete-~ 2...«e Beacieree 2648 239 BEvVIET oo cnccsccsccee sae Los. 14 were just for one year, one could conBUmmiG hs sseens ace ce ese - 1247 14 clude some ephemeral breeze was MLOURID (60s cicles ar essceus nes 942 10 NRT UINERE cr orcnie oe nts elevate meiaie ete 603 7 blowing, and it would presently blow oe Paiva vere Pucidcmeriog bes 4720 63 a Howell e voted county and judicial candidates of the in the past. GO. Republican party in year, and work for of the National Republican hereby called to > theater in Salt , the 7th - of o'clock a. or , eC e aelecntas and six alternates to the National Republic onvention, which will 1 More than that, can not in Chicago on the 16th day_of June next for t ination of President | asked. and Vice President of the United States, Less than that would be and for the transaction of such other business as auee properly come before ae the conven The aoporicument is made of deleILLINOIS GOING DRY. gates from the several counties of the state on the basis of one delegate for On Tuesday of this week each ninety t for the Honor- Ve. have +S) Ma! Taal ahs cellent and lloyalty to which, next to concerned, record of had heen tion, of the example ability accounts of the the was that they can say it is a poli- GET THE SCHOOL houses just as quickly as it can be done The board is entitled to eredit for waiting as long as it fairly could wait. The bonds were voted more than a year ago. The board could have sold them a year ago, and very likely at a better figure then than now. If that body of citizens had been moved by the motives actuating the Kearns city government, the bonds would have been issued at the earliest possible moment - whether needed then or not. The spectacle of having the power to get money and not getting it seems to have amazed and infuriated the Kearns crowd for months. They don't understand it. If it had been their case, they would have realized all the money they could, at the earliest possible moment, and would have had the benefit of handling it, whether or not they built any school houses. But the condition, while pressing, has not been so imperative in the past as it is now. Of course the pressure has been growing more and more insistent. More schoolroom would have been good a year ago, but pupils and teachers could get along, and the board has considered it best to defer expenditures until no other course could wisely be followed, Now it must be done. There must be more school room. The high grade of Salt Lake schools can not be maintained with the conditions now existing-condiltions that become more difficult and unsatisfactory every day, There should be an East Side High school. Whether that is now in contemplation, or whether it must be still further deferred, there are demands for grades that are to be taken immediate care of. The people are with the Board of Education. am tion which had vancement, but men with whom they conferred, They when I am opposed it organization have tion, help to wouldn't any no the have good to own have good. It done the would And in a _ | AND 15c and TOILE DU NORD, 16%c a yard, for 10c OUR DRUG STORE EAN ad- done defeated himself . price 12%c a yard, for be by the opposihave been any Republicans. put for I 4 Neac omg7 it IS AT 112-114 SOUTH 7 Aah Vila a s AG IC aM ion where he would have to be run over again. By the tactful and politic move he strengthened himself with party men from every section of the state. They knew he would fight if he had anything to fight for, but when he came to a place where his fighting had no effect other than to dislay his own stubbornness and egotism and inability to get results. he had the sense to quit. It was so happy an ending of what might have been an unpleasant incident, that we commend it to the study of politicians everywhere, and for a}l time. . were entertained Mrs. o William 8 H. ADns S75 st) Jy Le a Ais Re Wh | returned | bs Ee eas es yy) ee ft | @ Dieclson Feza8 TF ANSE Edith Davis and Mrs. Martha Snow | Keats. The rooms were decorated in flags and potted plants and about 44 man posi- FS MAIN ST. | Oe LENS \ WAS) ri ; WGZU 7 ae ; 123c 123c SEERSUCKERS, 16%c a yard, A. F..C., RED SEAL regular price licked. bis would been welcomed but it wouldn't 1 5 yi A yesterday from a two months' visit at | Cloyne Court, Berkeley, Cal, and is| now at home with her daughter Mrs. | Russell G. Schulder on J Capitol Hill. = Mr... and) Mrs.. J. EE. Chapman, of | Evanston, Wyo., who have been the} guests of the Fabian and Beattie families, returned ye yesterday | Miss Virginia He attie hy Coon are spending the days with o in SP 4 i p ° Thi rices Mrs.. M. B. Sowles will. leave. next Denver, to. Mrs. Harry e Mrs. J. Knox A . se Mr. and occupy yn SMART s in the smart | Karl 5 A. Seheid new street nin fleet E. time for in COATS i and Rajah : will | are de- x : re side nce | the fi "eee veek S| Dressy | os Net = Waists-$5.00, : ; ; Colored Walker and brother, ~ the arrival of and . $7.00. : > the new in white and Linens. this week Wear at spec ial values for Street Hats Nobby $6.00 te Waists Line of Tailored A Complete B. Sprague, will go to Califor-|f§ Dr. H. Some gentlemen object to fire escapes on school buildings because these iron stairways detract from the beauty of the building. That is a very weak position. Fire escapes are never intended as ornaments. They are built to prevent the still more distressingly unornamenta) picture of children killed because of inability to get out of a burning schoo! house Albert OF Chiffon Taffetas in All the Late Shades. . Mrs. 25 0 * $17.50 to $50.60 handsome Brigham LINE Afternoon Dresses in Silk ceidedly enticing. aerate Mrs. their East in My, t $9.00 to $20.00 THE SPECIALS FOR THIS WEEK "Idlewild," the beautiful country home Walker 59 ° in Coverts, Pongees and Mannish Stripes-the very newest and' Mrs Mrs. Winnifred 5. Walker informally Percy Sadler will entertain Charles afternoon for Mrs Friday Spencer Mann of Los Angeles at Mrs. 17 9 x Bodel and small const e I. ee Light, Summery Effects in Stripes and Checks. visit. with her G. Roberts. > and SUMMER SUITS an W Is Knox Bodel have joined the Rev. J: where the latter in Anaconda, Mont., in the has charge of several miss fons vicinity. of L. Hazel holi-| Reading,| 4 week for daughter, C] wf NEW SPRING Miss Easter classmate Pa. BOTH ARE. ‘DEMOCRATS Hard to tell which is tHe? more industriously Democratic-Herald or Tribune. One of them puts this heading over its Washington report for Wednesday: "CLOVEN HOOF SHOWN BY REPUBLICANS." And the other- "REPUBLICANS PACE COWARD ICE CHARGE," By the reading you couldn't tell which is which. But vou are safe in one thing: Both are anti-Republican. the} e j Mrs. Arthur B. Witcher of Ely, Nev., | is visiting at the home of Mrs. WIill-} iam Witcher in Oakland, Cal., where she will remain until the arrival of the ; fleet Mrs. Charles from a Holy Cross M. sérious Owen is surgical | recovering operation at} aoe | ' Mrs. A. few days Mrs. J. C. Ensign SOCIETY Current THE PERSISTENCE OF RUSSIA. Nearly every man has some strong characteristic. The same is true of nations. Russia has been proved woefully weak in war. But it has for a hundred years been recognized as leading in diplomacy. Not since Talleyrand and Metternich have countries been represented so suecessfully abroad as by the emissaries of Russia Time after time they have gone into conference with the ambassadors of other nations with no apparent likelihood of getting what they wanted, and time after time it has been discovered that they have outplayed the licked, se move tbat the nomination be made unanimous." And if went through with a whirl. He conld have fought the nomina-} tion of the representative of that fac- the HOUSES. Surely the community will sustain the board of education in its resolve to sell the bonds that have been voted into its disposal, and with the proceeds construct the very badly needed school I 4 regular price 15c and named past BATES A supporters opponent AND 7, splendid Utah. And the question is already past the point where men can safely declare it is a ruse. The point is where AMOSKEAG men there. After he for the nomina- strongest successful the to select from in the city. goods of quality, of for the party defeated one his instructive organization-the for a lesser office on the same ticket. And the defeated candidate instantly rose and said: "T believe in conceding the fact tical move. That subterfuge has been exhausted in every town in Illinois which on Tuesday made declaration And it will be threadbare in Utah, The question is: What are you going to do? e;or: Theee Days Only.-Taday. Friday, and Saturday. The very latest si New Stapl e Goods specially priced. this kind of of assortment largest designs and the ' TOOK HIS MEDICINE. | One of the candidates for governor lat the Indiana Republican state convention a few days ago, gave an ex- Review 8 ef Salt ose spending al her sisters,| Mrs. D. H. «@ is visiting her sister, Miss Sylvia Dee of Ogden in the city this week with Miss Hannah Dee. Lake's es Mrs. Se Thomas L. Stevens of Fitzgerald, H. returned yesterday T. Mrs. avenue, home the at Niles, winter Mich., Mrs "| on sister of| to Caz the ir | spending L r oul pr = a mil Mrs. a . Mrs. daughters, - . s meeting ¢rneen at Flowers and *° 5c 6.90 ee and CUTLERY' THE ORIGINAL KNIT GOODS 36 MAIN ST. Ee HOUSE OF UTAH w is : . A ; ; Distinctive Product of Our Sd Tailor Shop is White Burial Suits e 1 he| bring. & cases . . « L. will about thing 2 thé shop in 24 is clean is always up to our standard. feature White of this line and very solicit Broadchest hours and or, Kivery- less saritary and worl: We make. a special such business. TAILOR MADE CLOTHES fro Licenses, , Annie} Salt Lak ¢; Hill, Raymond, Alberta. Brewerton, Stella Lake; Samuel Barber, Salt Schultz, Salt Lake Emil Elm, Bear River: Dora Jepson, | = E. Florence A. Lockyer, Kennedy, Salt Lake. Read n our pees $3): have style and Trousers fit right. $3.50 f 3 y m3 ". e en ane extreme notice-in meri on We i - wy or from made boys, and youths up Snits these make ean for men, cloth. 7. um Salt Lake Hermandus fa Mis-! homo, the Hach: member™mey Marriage ; ‘ me 252 eae. uwanta fair satin ages apply Satir cream and Satin ski fs 1 o powder. Samuel v0 5.00 wis} a Dorothy; ti allle Refreshments will, speak, Tf skin tridge rk beaty, #4. 00 to. $ Silver" Piling Teercre ee 0 we. i} a ug 36 MAIN ST. =| and First Baptist aftThursday at LCV. 1e. Aidid the oe igs MAIN ence eae «+8 mad@)..... - $10 tL. A. the ou élock 20 3 e . served. guest c cascee (finest * of of societies be held will = i tM. * . Iva sionary ehurech i ‘i SOUTH ef he ik is * s Joseph Misses joint Set 15 YEARNS' GUARANTEE LADY ATTtwy tee Flowers, have returned from a! visit! to Los Angeles and other coast points Eand are now at home with Mrs. M.-E. EKatghn, 1032 South Main street. A Waki "ee y chapter and sf o topic. es Mr. 5 - loretodayice atoe10 moral o'clock the American The Daughters of the Revolution, Spirit of Libert holds its regular meeting t Mrs. D. B, Mudgett, 959 Third avenue, ee L. H. Stohr will act ea Mrs. W..D. Donoher will entertain this afternoon at a bridge tea in honor of Mrs. Charles Spencer Mann. Re 275 aes Wk a Sixth | here. uiterary club meets at the club house, give and 761 after : will AMPLE GOLD $3 CROWN, 22k DO |¢ !2 s Gertrude Lewis, mother and The wedding of Miss Clara Sowles and Forrest Walden took place at 4 o'clock Wednesday at the home of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. M. B Sowles. Dr. Paden officiated in the ceremony, Which was witnessed by only the close friends of the families The bride wore a going away gown of tan color with hat and gloves to match and carried a shower bouquet of pink roses. After the wedding supper Mr. and Mrs. Walden left for a short trip:. They will be at home after May .1 at 130 °,South Third East street, * se «6 are masters of the art of diplomacy. . a ° They never quit. They are the most Mrs. l. D. Peaslee will be hostess persistent expansionists in the world. at a six-hand euchre party on SaturWhen the war with Japan was con- day afternoon given in honor of Mrs. cluded, the world supposed that would Bean and Miss Bean of Chicago. There be the end of Russia in the far East. ee ve Pee wit i mack ssist, Mrs. Especially in the territory of ManMarshall entertainea| F. James Mrs. churia, where they made their last yesterKensington a at guests thirty stand, and where they were so utterly » > , whipped, it was felt they would retire, ed Peniatialili' Whe ‘NEeRae wan never to return. But they have al- assisted by Mrs. Countryman. > s me ready returned. They claim control Mrs. Arthur Snow gave a luncheon of Harbin, one of the cities which JaWednesday at her HORS, 129 G street. pan took from them and gave to China. The guests were Mrs, O. C. Beebe, They had the right according to or- Mrs. J. H. Walton, Mra. Willard Can-| 5. iginal plans, to collect a license tax non, Mrs.-A. H. Mayne. Mrs.iy from the merchanis of Harbin. And Wright, Mrs. Kingsley, Mrs. B. Snyder, and Mrs. W..T. Cannon. it is recently discovered that they still . s ° are getting the money. Mr. and Mrs, Arthur E, Snow also evening Other nations-especially China- entertained at a delightful oppose the resumption of dominion party Tuesday night for friends who are visiting them, the feature of the rights by Russia. And the diplomats evening being a progressive curio conof the Bear calmly sit down with the test in which prizes were won by Mrs. J Hottman, is in Ogden with Armstrong and to $19, the Republican, 50c a Month ay;: glee. Bea. of PPS ep REG ei) Nay Inter-Mountain Republican Co. Official - Party in Uta ie Ss By , 1908. representatives of other nations anda proceed to prove that Russia alone of all the world was by the terms of peace logically charged with the gov-| ernment and entitled to the revenne of Harbin There is a little joker in the method of the Russians, They declare it is not St, Petersburg but the RassiaManchurian Railway company which ~-_ Morving tee 2? th Mvery mm cide to support the Republican ticket THE WHOLE REPUBLICAN TICKET. That is not unreasonable. By no other rule could the Republican party be protected. No one asks that they be refused Inter-Mountain Republican Published REPUBLICA NW, SALT LAKE CiT ageoee q |