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Show 4 THE INTER-MOUNTAIN son's ; false THE INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN Published Every Morning by ee Officin! the Orgun of the March 3, * of Company. 28 Republican Party the news. ee Im Utah. it can | published ' SUBSCRIPTION Rais ty Advasee presiding 50 | crea se Six Months, Daily and ct el acl vsssrss7> 8-00] Sunday only, One Year --).......2/ssssss+--+ 1-80) 2 ee secre 14 in a pails' Month, Oné rn ene mos erado teachers was trom 4.00! worked aevuecevawwes > oy siminieminie.® ceearee | standing or the High without rivalry. It school. In a moment is Ike each ica deliv CE present Order rder to verer. nines ; Sey when paper ordering é awill discontinue PAID IN FULL address to el ol rornier ae eee 01) onored bechanée hono - ‘never 44q been abuse | | pons 2 | the at peace have for fifty Hizh Offices-Dooly Block, 208 South West Temple} « 3 Ore Pr*hones-Busrinesy Busin and editorial departments, | For no other Exchange 25; Independent, 3190. Editorial Ge- | thom. with been he now ork , are arc eee wuilding; J.-P. ‘ ee : CITy e 5 --- eee ee x oe oF oe to . see quarreling NOV. VOV, 22, 22 would and to est, ee ithe under time. of hatred te ; We the his Here was the he loved been been a ou to give Ae up the fortune. The St and are fair, has been generous-and would has Ik en 2 oy ACO || her |the | mands opportunity to if he had aoe rocky the the women road to to } | | é who travel. three ballot. in lighter Ughter And thal One want One of months in proved should with martyr has for the Imprison - the women re- : alternative of them that All men have, eck ve Mind 2 SAL J Wie Spe s and : ONLY fringed; on ance of a GRANITE And the | * i . / ce very ART bo a durable p 3: UA . P Stunning @ It is | insti- New Suit Styles ... hundred The |} ing ‘ fold! women to vote Some who In have England been can imprisoned do more for for the him to bring of needless odium on. The their "© | at partisan dictation, relieved obligation, of the free from | necessity be formed into states. "Usk~themerives the queatiad: "Do wa #4? English ears" sree Andvit Se capture the should. nae schools There ee will result ai populous at that it has the date seven of votes its entry into in electoral | organization two years ago were active in the move. the |} ment, proper conception of the possibilities the editor of the view of value in the mighty the Civic they we say league. have this year. of .the | whon was a time, not so far | West. Daule! Webster, it will be remembered to and The greatest men of the East have not even yet| again __|the forgetten. when the | relegated : been Wo they Members considering do not have mean perhaps not scorned | as pas been expected of them. Northwest. He) At the Salt Lake Tribune, Sergeant William Nelson, | wouldn't give one New Hampshire farm for all of Was a inember and the president of the school board. Oregon. And Daniel was mistaken. their Friday meeting of of the that Our matter the Drug 9 gold, along Neved himself right while all the rest of the world] was wrong, were punished with a reduction whem Tifice. so And that teaching in Salt Lake became a sac-| nee in the Tribune ; There bas been talk about teachers leaving the Salt Lake heads of other educational we want other of the Ww ehew, roads. ‘institutions.| 7, ut there has never in all the past been a day when teachers left Salt Lake schools in such bodies as was the case when~ Nelgon was a member o and prest- | ns dent of the board. We are going in a day y or 80 t to quote to you from his own report, giving his own! ; bores in deploring the defection of loca} teachers) || and some values East pe . that attract and simply the ~ ee Nota one_ principle i _ ner. business daminates tt neby which ods means EUS resources that Cin) South would by no the misfortune it is to the schools that's a number of the terchers are new each year. large| q > as Not > state house and 8 splendid system of atate With the money derived from these funds big the richest business on man on the same be earth tolerated could system by zystamie w vue maintain found In any} % for them to give : to Utah the opportunity justice entitles It to. ‘which | Com te i bill was passed by the house, and went to the senate. Sergeant Nelson, then and now editor of the Tribune, appeared before the senate committee and worked with all his might to prevent the enactment of that measure which would have given the public schoo] teachers of this city an additional mill-or| | TOM JOHNSON, OF OHIO. Maybe it is worth the stroke of adversity for a moan to learn how many friends he has. Tom John-| son of Ohio, in bis loss of fortune, has had the satis | faction of learning that millions of good men women of the country e Y Progress and i res . sorrow with him in the reason i 3 ve oe any the | them, for and pointing bis finger at Nelson said: was introduced. It was passed by the houxe and| rt there what from the beginning of time. next - Friday fetta Utah =F ISIN Cs 7a SSS ea] OKeeAN OAL! to Ike to 5 S is M ° journeyed Advertising aeaeere KIND ‘Not so bad, ‘ od, chad .s HE HARD LUCK!" my boy pane . m j, ago, as seems. let and = 7 , my the ranks of COPYRICHT OF - e the "wise ~ ecorvm 04 dein ones" Block. HEBER J GRANT & Gunn Ay INSURANCE . Salt Fy ae ae : Ses CLOSE ATTEN tT TION. oO ever i bined withcur SORT eae and ?/f rik hee evita ie aca vege nace ‘ Gen; fanned nning, Giles-McAllister dvertising Agency. And, besides, -= has : "THAT'S There spake the senaible man 205-6 Atlas ane CESS, gives the customer the highest value to be had In - laundering The only laundry in the city Softenng and Filtering all water Used, . co . 20-28 South Metn Lake. City, Utah, Phones roy un seth Phones UAUNDRY Both 192. 500, OF ry "QUALETE? 166 Main St. a | ive Cc f The The ane Bell Give wo has more of maryels Best g ‘fg t om But the topic is quite too They find {t difficult | tourists will find that behind trying Vv G interesting If they have nol worked out as he expected they |to be ignored. Some time the rest of the nation is would; if he has not been sustained by tho indorse-| £0ing lo become familiar with the natural bridges, | ment and the backing of the people for wie ne the cliff dwellings and the mysteries of the See | planned, {tt is not because he was trying to exploit | 49 they are with the geography of their own bee | mankind for his own advantage. It is simply: be-|Some day there are going to be stage and auto. 4 cause he is following the rule of public Lenefactors| mobile lines runuing all over Southern Utah, and the senate, and was signed by Governor Cutler, and | to help their brothers. But the good effect of their | nie x the extra mill was set aside for the benefit of the! work, the virtue of their sacrifice is not utterly lost.; public schools. That action was taken in 1907. No! That goes on alter the benefactor passes away. And | course. of in revenue from it was available until 1908, the long run the purpose is fulfilled. : In May, 1908, the schoo) board, knowing they had Tom Johuson was born in Kentucky in 1854, We | additional money for the benefit of the schools, and | went to Indiana as a boy, and was educated there- desirous of giving recognition where recognition | which may uccount for much of the good in him. was due, decided to set aside $360,000 for teachers' | He becamo a street railway employe, und invented | sajaries, and that amount is today being reccived|a number of devices which brought him a good} by s the teachers. The e board did not wait for Nel-‘deal of money. Then ‘he he bought ; ; 1ers, boar street railways in' e would , 5 he is merit 3 sell, we campaign for vou. We can make it profitable. a rr n oy us assist in creating a WwWdemand for what you offer for sale. We have satlsfled many others; pee belleve weae pan can satisfy paler Bell place o ee telligent report of his studies, ee and that he may never ceaso his Jubors for the good The place of the cliff dwellers' home and of ihe of the people. bridges is far away. Most of us will never get| He may have been mistaken Iu many of higs| there. We can find how marvelous are these obschemes. But they have not been selfish. ‘They |Jects only by listening to those who have mado| "There is a] have been very plainly for the good of the people, | the journey. te, ae never In all his fo smiled at the good | riune of any one," The seuate followed the example of the house,| and passed the bill. It is unfortunate that the bill was vetoed by the governor. Two years ago another measure, similar in effect, | ea | j eee cake in a verses that have come; that they believe in him,| there at some expense of money and labor and hardne ¢ senators, a an who had been on the | and admire the life he bas led; that the » he ship, and has brought home a very intimate 2) may soon recover his former strong school board who had then and still hus the {nterests of the schools at heart, worked for the passage | of the bill, After Sergeant Nelson had delivered his | argument for depriving the teachers of that lortyfive thousand dollars, this senator of Utah stood up SAN Ads 5 and | interesting objects in Southern Utah. knows s | ad-| the University of Utah, will deliver a lecture on "The Cliff Dwellers and Natural Beauties of Southern Utah." It is a| ‘@!© that should be listened to by every citizen of A Salt Lake. In the first place, there are beauties and Cummings SAP 4 rl se Ft Write | | TT P°PAN CUMMINGS'S LECTURE, At First Congregational church \ : of night Dean Byron L. Cummings re-| Dr. ry, cy a of e our ci fairs. Utah men. could develop their state, vould fill it eae istration aof hela wien fy ee eee § 2tte e s > *n¢E 5 with actual settlers, could crowd its valleys with Ae ES h Me . o senel) ee | cities and its cities with productive and profitable | PUsmee® way. Other cities have tried It. They| industries. = or , aare re found it a great improvement over6 the > old | r : ; rule-the rule which obtains here In Salt Luke. If Daniel Webster and Mr. Bryce made a mis- | . take about the possibilities of the West, maybo it | is a change desirable, or are our people so in7 ' ? time | | Seere at kw acos thatt ap , affor | is time for-the - Wastern sentiment ~ to change: cannot make > the a effort Four years ago friends of the public schools of| We want the government to cede five million| this city sought to get an additional mill of revenue | acres of public land to the state : set aside for the benefit of Salt Lake schools. Thati ; " = Main Street Ce - ee men suececceedaiein of the city. Meth Gs) haze, aia onduct Ed (he Ue that lie within our own state, With them we will | Sec spe RES BAS Recehtac: do the rest. With five million acres of United States : nine Th eee st.: privat aeoee iness on carth here lately governinent lard out of the thirty million acres ined an schools for| now held by the government, Utah men could build : better places elsewhere. Very Jikely the timo will never come when Salt Lake teachers are not in de- me with repay the digging. at 112-114 effeet | 3 produced inis The that aatiae their association is more or less inMinterent ‘Those who, were in good standing with Nelson got | and more precious stones than there are in Kimberly off with a slight reduction. Those that had offended, | not to speak of the copper and the silver and the had not truckled sufficiently to the man who be. a Store 1s While he was at the head of that body, the pay of There is one reason why people of the Bust| Of course if the' city does not want the change, | teachers was reduced. | ‘ ; ; cas : toveay al , Not only was that scalin ®!should correct their impressions of what still re- then wehavoe nothing more ' C { down during his administration, with his counsel , Jan TRPAnanlT Tail |e . 8 7 ae rt? by x i , | mains of the undeveloped West. ; Here is Chan | But it would seem that there is actual need for | ort, and by his influence, but the teachers who suffered | with more iron than there is in Minnesota, more [some reform. The present system Js not satis. | -==----= TAs rai} se a Teduction were selected by the board. Some were | coal than there is in Ohio, more oil than there i8| ractory, because it is deficient in good re mike The cut ten per cent. Some not more than two per cent. in Pennsylvania, more onyx than there is in India,| _- ~ E0 swe ° . _ ‘ |e ‘FULL OF IDEAS" " : i S : : *| corporation of Salt Lake is the biggest business} \ or and wisteria. especially attractive fea- erate prices asked for them. as active directors of chiffons ture of these suits are the mod- to bo critical been made broadcloths, smoke An 2 party candidates who are chosen for the good. of | pj, great work to the printers. Within seven years | the Des Moines plan, to ask themselves If they ure | the Tom Kearns party, and will if elected be | trom that date Oklahoma, was carved out of the! really in earnest. obedient to the city committee of that party, and | pqian Taysitors: aud aoentaa iain a ciate kadai ad EASE Losctao mancbalt Wametaiine the HAE not responsible to the people of Salt Lake. Was so We believe that the choice will not be difficult. Union belleve that the effort of the American party | college. : ; perfection of tailoring, and serges in black, navy, ea- obeying any boss of any name whatever, free to; ‘Things must move more rapidly in America than change in the form of city government? It.ig about | work solely for the schools-and the American} the able author could have imagined when he gave | time for friends of the new movement. friends of We and tawba, want have cleverest and newest ef- ‘tyle It is about time for the good people of Salt Lake to beantiful season <8 a. COnUSIE Ae etvh ined. | DOES. FHE. CITY. WANT A-CHANGE? population such as would entitle either of them to of most fects, combining | | ee iar Tike ta Somah, the Suits shown this : 1 ‘ just been opened. 4 / ishing kingdom. Three months for throwing a stone through the window of a prime minister who thinks he is bet-| depart- yHAT MR. BRYCE COULDN'T SEE. | ter than the mother that bore him, and purer than | ane In his celebrated work on the American Com-|the wife who calls bim busband, and more usefu! of its} monwealth, Mr. James Bryce in 1900 made the fol- than the women who wash his shirts, is too heavy| | lowing statement: |a punishment. Women who persist In struggling| See eee of want- cause me Lake.) an by the So that the people of Salt Lake will have to pro- | I reckon neither the Indian Territory, which les | in England for the suffrage are wasting their time. ceed to a choice between a non-partisan ticset made | West of Arkansas, nor Alaska; because the tormer by any $3.30 . ; : : patterns than the American party. And it is of record that And this excellent condition is not going to be} humanity by coming to the strong and rising West, | re officers elected from the American party are) qestroyed for the vindication of Bill Nelson or tor/and here giving the riches of their influence. than | +- answerable to the unelected and irresponsible man-/| the comforting 6f the discredited brood who are per- | they can possibly in the exhausted soil of a dimin | : chureh i ‘ of the schools-anywhere. No church,| have been appreciated, and where they would have or other, interferes in the slightest with | been returned some sixty, some seventy, and some or any Democrats. They positively refused to join | the conduct of the public schools of Salt their neighbors of the city in selecting men for that | Nejther party or church would be permitted place who confessed allegiance to any party other| jrystees to pretend ‘control. : ; wny 4] ¥ SRANITE, ART SQUARES, 3x3 yards sviceaite $4.75 with the sive 4 x , would have been welcomed For the schools are in good condition. They have | to have gotten out of Rome, or <Aspasia out of But they scornfully refused | been rising in efficiency ever since Bill Nelson was | Greece, and to have employed those same splendid of any school officials except-|{hrown off the board. There is no politics in the| talents in a community where the talents would agers of the American party. Here is their creed, mitting stated by them authoritatively, and published by | ceanse. thelr own newspaper organ: reversible, ¥ men who have staked their all on the recent county | tutions of England, and with Justice for a fulcrum ejection, and Jost-these same malignant and trou-| move the world of modern and established thought. ple loving marplots, demand the control of the very! But what is the good of it for the fellow at ‘the sacredest Interest in all the city. They dcserve a | trouble end of the lever? What does he get out of very bitter defeat. jit? How much better it would have been for Cato ing American party officials. They would not con-}conduct cede honor or good intention to any Republicans | Mormon trammeled and having ends, ae ee two ‘dgee ES }} : 4 REDUCTIONS Seamless colorings. appeat ICE i |there They believe that better | level of partisan politics. ties in the public schools. yeaults are attained by keeping the schools out of Never in tho history of any clly has so harmful | effete and exhausted vegions of England can offer politics. The American party managers declare a policy been advanced. The same men who have) them, There is a sort of demand out here for the their purpose to capture the schools, as a direct | mismanaged the cily, the same men who declured | vigor those women evince. Maybe they feel they| partisan political asset, and to administer them bY} their officers are responsible to the bosses of the | have a duty to perform. Let us point them to the| party and not to the people of Salt Lake, the very | needless sacrifice of merit in many a cause. of the school | men who made John Bransford break his word, the! 9 good thing, maybe, to put a lever under the | designs is cause here than out to be won things new eee Tr a aired ct tte ‘ R border all around, ae "| a POE REM ARK ABLE P FOR ONE WEEK AT preferring for eer te ea F of fines, - Rr GP earnest- material ® their : yale lo prove to in their de- of Other pay to them prison windows n some the to declining England the minister.. sentence: sentences. they by measure breaking prime the of them in crushed citizens. SUFFRAGETTE. fie England a consisted ceived sived glower THE sentenced for |bouse all) better desirable share in a demonstration intended men how earnest the women wero himself) tines. surly be in been was found to ON finding to embroil called been had 2 ce ee ay ma" ae ee Over and / are have less the are bigger a aD atie an Det 2is 4AZ = national a ib It day. every of hour The people of Salt Lake do not want poll- | of his party-for the degrading of the schools to the | samo chance at the ballot that Neither the mayor, nor the head of any Se oly Be erate of this city pe ful and honest management and conduct affairs - rr 3 ashe . schools. American party men in that arrangement. to help in the election RY ‘) er eats RS for the American party. In the effort to choose five members sit , Fi re 2 Sar | TO THE SCHOOL BOARD. and growl, to oppose and abuse, to defame and in-| which they believe ta be just. If those English women who want to vote will And | It would tot be easy to conjure up a worse CASC | suit every one with whom he came in contact. than that sought to be mado by managers of the {he ja the man who is fighting-practically against | make up their minds they are in the wrong environ-| American party, touching the control of the Cee Loe judgment of every sensible man and woman! ment, und will come to Utah, they will havo the and Mlrez7 ISLS 4 al 40 Pe AS board, there was every willingness on the part Of! Republicans and Democrats to have the American | party adherents join with them, and select trustees | for the five places. There could have been fair d!-/ vision of the offices between the three aprties, and) SCS NTE ae Mate ey ‘iW z SS ‘ vy rh ) cottage.| chances been has he ‘ 22, 1908. ; "81 is Uy Z IpPaves Sf,STIR iS ris ; rei FSR ‘ . SV > ? it fifty-four. But whether he eee be remains poor, the rest of whe that - iy Pe | NOVEMBER : ahs SO ste ad palace | again, game money a has homes| a to famlly his the and 3 Si congress- ee handsomest th have take another e very for of never had a g004| ness chance a was It other. | just be pleased never could constant decline ot , sl ec eB the management, Here board, He has laugh | SEVERE Bene broil grade each now tbe & try| > his the with he seek member by the teachers. element. : his | jn 1908 1908 a any of them. for anything. Noting ‘thing. . Ss Vachoois SUNDAY, ri SUN while | "Old Grouch" Boyce! word 311 Office, Chicago Gaeta McKinney, sole representative cast) i. cit ? resel a eee ee AKI. Nelson, a Buildings the SUNDAY, He) ic millionaire, of Cl of of will into regret willl | same ho f lives oe he ha because atmosphere wants teachers reason one, s case Bell, ere OFFICES: Cambridge achieve to ae. he get will | try one and autos, he a has mayor one . ; Cleveland. : in of misunder- | calamity when a man Ike that is crushed. Nelson any his years, school atreet. t VASTERN Office, 604 LO says he the nation a teachers | school grade the and together wril ‘ , Now | Maybe the against him-at The rich, or whether was association Clevelan C in time ‘cupied CITY, UTAH. and iron manufacturer, Henry George. He aug aeaerr led | and he if destroy the other. : Because notice 2 to nT| and pit the : one against EI 0 explicit please ° give expilc aon ae Department DIRECT, and not to in quarrels wherever he may be, because Subscribers the Circulation rell aa. 3 address ... s would LAKE 3 Detroit in a long f [OM a the grado teachers | : : Institution which he} he teachers' the of school High the a ois een os array array to which an of and . for last May. school-an officer | legislature i ie tae) ace i denies, | man, os and High school teacher. The committee leader de-| For, however impractical and utopian have been his| = puted to urge the aditional mill measure before the | schemes as to government, the man has been hon- | ae . acneey One Year, Dalty and Sunday sunday only, One ear aielnistaleree BUienes cerning Ad : desire The records | became printed the follower It now : pages and hated, which of course-as they always do jut certainly so9|teachers of the Higb schoo) did their share. <« Hunday Gelie ace REED MCLG. RATES. record, declares the increase of one mill was could-Nelson | secured by the grade teachers. They did their duty, Lake Salt in Newspaper Daily in its own ever -/has Only Republican City, Utz rh. that In his grouchy at B ; Of) Jo ainst the High 10, 1906, tho Act 1879 find a7. REPUBLICAN. SALT ; »- | | Indianapolis, dé-| wa was It upon by the board in May last. board show it., If the Tribune TPES 906, 2 second class matter . Feb. at Salt Lake City, under Entered as postoffice Congress Republican = Say harangues. or COAL, trial und be convinced ‘GALIFOBNIA" COBtS gt Rath; bake ownnelynid eee cart that elty. | Exchange, : Knee i r | Value PeMCON'S., Pants to or Craveniaties a ae $30 Reduced x We've. . p-aplendid variety of boys' knee D ants; all grades this week we offer 1-3 off. Bring the boy In and we'll canal vera ee peth. bien augy you. : oe cu | rai $8-$10-$12-$15 Boys' aed aaeNale ee ee ee: Direct Wire for All Sporting Events. ON CO than any other region on earth. | EXPERT CLEANING CO Our own people, who live so near them, should | ROTH PHONES. ; 7 | 1092. have # better knowledge than they have of the re- | sid Liress Gults whip leies re, Fenel| ancy | ye Laundering. cords of vanished races, e and the perfectly « = ~amazing | | arm en 6pSo. Sinte St. s Works of nature that abound in our own state. j -- a wks ity: Bul, any way, what causes the Herald's sudden | interest in Senator Sutherland. That gentleman has been and is vow 80 good a Republican that gurel 3 y f the Herald has no call to champlon him. Overcoat Secs with Kuppenheimer overcoats at Cut) ice 25y other combination. The reason ig that intinges ce oD high in quality and Cutler prices are low uppenhalmer: deine are We have Kuppenheimer and other Cleanest Coal j i ; Quickest Delivery. Phone 955. Ind. 137. us 2 THE ore eee Inter-Mountain Se ae shameless and iz LER » - : BROS. ee THE ORIGINAL KNIT GOODS HOUSE UNDERWEAR AND HOosIERY co. OF UPAH. 36 MAIN ST, |