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Show ss THE wherea teacher teachers SUBSCRIPTION RATES, stand are the graduated resided REPUBLICAN, SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH, TUESDAY, each examinations year. required, If can they they are | No given Blocl PAID IN 208 LASTERN New a 3190, West Tem OFFICES: ee oye : eas representative ale McKinney, J.-P. Rocky Mountains. ve eae cy oe phapes (hs2\jequncl Tin at a es Lv SALT, LAKE CITY,. ‘TUESDAY, DEC. 1, 1908 BOOST FOR A NEW STATE HOUSE. Some time or other, some way or otber, Utah will have a new capijto building. Either the people will have to go down in their pockets and in the pockets of their children for the next two or three generations, or they will have to find some less burdensome means of securing 4 state give it. There are thirty-nine able by any possession form of the get one hundred simple by process Much of it can True, now acres of be gov- citizens placed can sixty aeres of this land living on it, and in each by improving the it. Uuder the Carey act a little better terms can be made, But neither method is sufficiently attractive to induce rapid settlement. As matters go now this thirty-nine million acres of public land in Utah will remain without demand or value for the next fifty years, If the government were to give five million acres to Utah, with the privilege of selling it at a minimum price of two dollars an acre, every acre of that grant would at once find market. And every acre would at once become income earning. Part of it would be bought by sheep men and cattle men. Part would be taken by dry farming companies with large capitalization, able to provide themselves with big steam plows, cultivating a hundred acres a day; with harvesting machines which cut and thresh the grain and deliver it sacked ready for market. _ AND WITH THE IMPROVEMENT OF EVERY TRACT + WITH EITHER. DRY a FARMING OR properly. better No No schools appearance work within than school in the do buildings of is will of the American tions of the Republican They are responsible They and are can have they before the HERE IS A curing these udmirable results are better.| candidates or to wil! to the to good and non of to no the to no to FOR selec- schools, candidates save NOBLE days of Salt us And that a member said a of of to his great just all, Ladies' SENTIMENT. ago Lake build is about get the Commercial fellows: city hcre as big together. y before a we die!" statement as | is | af: * GOGRVALUES B= $1.00 J7% + | before we die | vocale can do than by better we can working divided "working together, in together," There tion: seems What good to does its fight against the quite good as the They do the as state. continue constantly method that has vaneement of the indorsement. And city. they They will will suceed Provided not each other, capping camps. By union, Tribune he see could better service give it do warrant the not The They make charging to bad. are of To them. paper permitted to world long Lake are its people now a Salt get the a Salt is a Lake Lake in refuge that long as So long as is wicked the help, rest the sees that of but it walues for 2.0 values LOT to tells the its ? svee sh ceed oe es MALES. F LOTS l 1€5 lanne DOR TOT. for values for values for $2.00 es opis ra $1.0 y ee _$1.20 pz! cg Be RE for use ) for values hate ee aol Ski ette irts (2: tte ees a Cine as 40c | Goce values for ys cjere cists ad «ewe ethere Se 50c | 75e values for -60¢ $1.00 values for CHILDREN'S FLANNELETTE. SKIRTS-35c values for Your little one will enjoy a visit the state us whether the own DRUG will AEA) boosters. by its OUR dally- world own to visit to our Toy y ‘ou intend section. purchasing We eo invite or not. rest| the doing hundred det fame tells di a 55c | $1.75 80c} Goats shouldn't | and is of the it back-capping fil paper bear pl.2o L Flannelette Gowns ee fas: do back- Lake varacity : money. ad- strong to of the een DUCK WALIOS GAGSVAIMOS: 75e values general| It is the Salt it CHILDREN lp of there criminals'-as people ie for $1.50 hundred purpose need hurt of the paper So the Just that question take and lawlessness for and influence. doesn't community rather of aye you the ‘a so rest sentiment That | of continue citizens state witb | that | be ques- Mormons are the them in this Tribune Mormons? Tribune. for the bauck-cap helping opposing to God, and better benefit to man. And light he could see a completed state house. that any LODR.3 values DOr LOC re-election to the places they have honored. They| men in this town who, if they get together, can will be voted for tomorrow. It Is to the interest make anything of Salt Lake that they may desire of the public schools of the city that non-partisan| They can bring here any industry they want. candidates be continued in office. They may adopt any plan, father any scheme, adA VOICE FROM THE PULPIT. Dr. Short, of the First Methodist church, told his people some helpful things in Lis Sunday sermon. One of them was that we people of Utab AND Especially You'll appreciate a Flannelette Night Gown during the winter months. necessary ure they for little ones who in their restless moments throw the covers Buy now at these prices and off. They are very appropriate for Christmas Gifts. one party. non-partisan LADIES parties. people. "Let First for joint and ee behes' opposed the people, a the Democratic the only the be obey are and to no church are A few club Salt| party devoted answerable And country these party He The results are such that the work of the pupils! likely to be uttered by any man "Let us build a big city here took gold and silver medals at St. Louis and at Go on. Let's do it. Portland. How? The men who have done their full share in se- And of it is totally undesir- | which people. and million them make house. If Utah were to ask the genera) government for five million acres of land for state house and state roads, we believe the general government would ernment land in Utah. equip Lake. de seen Editori al de- York Office, 604 Cambridge Building. Waldort- Astoria; Chicago Office, 211 Building: the FULL. South : Phone SSBDAIneSs and & chacant 25; Independent, par trent only, Independent 237. of yi single pg LI INI ZAR Salt | STORE IS AT 112-114 MAIN STREET ae ERO Oy eae home. people that isin the hands of the hierarch, it will find | he loved her and that she had said it would break her heart to part from | him "He did not sleep mien that night, }and gradually as. the hour passed ing is one so advertising. That is the burden of the | get it only by persuading the nation to grant tha the difficulties of the situati on dawned Tribune educated throng, whenever they go away, | BY YALDEMAR ROLSTED.: upon him Still he was not prepared state some million acres of public land to be used and wherever they go. Strange the w ay things happen in to admit they were too strong, not by in the construction of a capitol, and in the making world, isn't it? a long snot It isn't true. Salt Lake is not in the hands of this assented and lit a new lazily, "After: breakfast. her. uncle had of roads. Aside from that plan there is nothing but the hierarch, no matter what his other name may | cigarette old | something stump of the from the to say, for she had right | taking the money by taxation from the people of one away told her aunt what had hapbe, Salt Lake is not wicked, and the state of Utah We were in the smoking room of the state. pened Sensible man her uncle was, is not a "community of criminals." Japan, homeward the Empress of built of the very best seasoned comWe can- not very well go before congress with bound Let us quit saying so. Let us quit believing so men sense stock from. keel. to truck a request for land without being confronted with a Victor Ganzel and I had chummed He spoke to the man it am telling you , Let us go to work on the magnificent sentiment of | together more or less natural being| about like copy ok-said his copy of the Salt Lake Tribune in which is daily the man at the Commercial club: just sufficiently unlike each other to niece had always ani used to luxwarrant for the New York Times's statement that find it Interesting We had so much| urlous and refined surroundings and "Let us build a great city here before we die!' in common. { was neither physically nor mentally "Utah is a community of criminals." And congress | "It really is strange," Ganzel con-| fit for any. other-could my friend is not going to give Jand to criminals onnees and sometimes it looks like | offer her such conditions of life as sh¢ Utah is not a community of criminals. Our} WHY ARE THEY SO SUSPICIOUS? d poor stage manage ment.' |had been used to? Did he think it Every day or so the Herald expresses the Beales "What do you mean was the part of a sincere lover to} people lead rather than follow the people of other "Oh, 1 was thinking of a chap 1! |; want her as his wife Ze he could not? o bad, my boy, as It seems. states in the matter of morality, and obedience to that the Civic Improvement league can decide upon know. Pretty ordinary sort of fool,| Istc., etc Or cours the sensible insured long ago, a details in the matter of a commission form of Zovperhaps, but white enough in his way. uncle was right, or ioe: nine peolaw. It doesn't especially hurt the state to have a There spake the nsible man. Jol he} paper outside charge crime against our citizenship.| ; ernment, so that the legislature may be asked for His people cleared him out of the old| ple out of a nundred would say the nke of the "wise ones" an country before he had time to cut his was. <At any rate he convinced the! And it always interpolates let us insure your property forthBut it hurts immensely to have a paper right here | a change in the law. wisdom teeth, because he was rather }man he was talking to. with Then when comes the fire a troublesome sort of break | a question if the movers of the scheme are acting They said good-bye to each other in the capital city say so. And when that Is the| you dread, you are sure of "salinto harness. Not that he minded that | a few days Jater when = -the yacht vage" and a new beginning. It seems to "fear there is a nigger chief burden of the song from day to day, every in good faith. at the pee or for a long time after-| reached Port Darwin t was rather wards. whoever looks after the) hard day in the year, it cam not-but have a damaging somewhere in the woodpile; that some "joker" may on both of them, but somehow If she felt it as and | it was done, be expected to bob up in the bills-if the Clvic luck was avin {ft up for aim, effect on the judgment of the nation gave ean one in a neck | as he 20im did when they parted forever league doesn't watch out Truth would warrant the Tribune in speaking Salt Lake city. Utab. Phones 5@@. w he n he was not pking fo on.a gray f * mniorning, I am _- Pict o for What. makes the Herald so suspicious? The "He got up the not: her. younge fair the people of Utah. Working together, we and more or less reverted to the pri-|} haps she did not IT hope she did hes people of Utah can get pretty near what we want. friends of the Des Moines plan are acting in perfect the | meval savage For years about Victor Ganzel leaned back nis | G | "FULL OF IDEAS" via ! good faith. They want the commission form of nearest he got to civilization was durchair and smoked energetically ay When one daily publication persists in defaming | ing one or two trips to Port Darwin. | hope to God she didn't," I he ard him government in Salt Lake They want the commisthe state, working together is impossible. Sometimes he was buffalo hunting, | say under his breath ‘Did you ever hear any more of And without that union of effort good results sioners elected by the people. They want a business- sometimes trepang was his game, and cap not but be harmful to of people living in the East We of the state need a the new state in the minds Salt Lake some state house. We people to believe it. And every one so AS FATE DECREEES believ- 1-44} can STOCK COMPANIES, THE VALUE OF THE REMAINING THIRTY-FOUR MILLION ACRES OF GOVERNMENT LAND WOULD INCREASE. It would be a money maker for the government. It would induce settlement more rapidly than can be hoped for jn the present arrangement. It would help every citizen of the uation. And it would can not be obtained, advance Utah as could be done by no other means. | / Let the people of Utah talk this over. Let them tell their representatives in the state legislature SOME THINGS MUST BE CORRECTED... that they want a state house, and they want Utah There has been a good deal of comment on the to ask the general government for land enough to railroad letter. published in The Republican of| provide that building, and for the construction ot | Sunday. {ts evident purpose to state the railroad | state roads. side of the present controversy on freight rates| If the state will stand together in this matter, may or may not have been realized. But railroad | there is a good chance to get both state house and men should not flatter themselves the letter settles better roads. dis¢ussion. That would be a very unfortunate yiew Will the people of Utab help? for them to take. Railroa« rates are believed to be unjust to the ELIHU ROOT IN THE SENATE. People of Utah: There is a strongly-supported belief | All the world is to be congratulated on the pub- that Utah is being discriminated against by the fished statement that Elihu R«.t will be sent to railroads. And it will take more than a letter- Washington as a United States senator from New however admirable-to disabuse the public mind. York. For example, wool men pay $2.12 a hundred for Not in many years has that state been repre- freight from Utah points to Boston. Australian sented by a man of his apility. And it is not to the woo] men send their wool from London to Boston credit of New York that this Is true. Small and for eleven cents a pound. And not for forty years young states have sent up men of whom the pation has the carriage on wool from Australia to London is proud. But New York has made herself a jest been as much as a dollar the hundred. by her selections. Out of millions of people cut of That is one thing. the richest commonwealth of the Union, men of Mine operators pay $1.25 a ton for freiglt on no ability, of no statesmansbip, of no recognized ore from Tintic to Garfield-less than elghty miles standing in elther morals or mentality, have been Experts say it can be moved at a profit for thirty selected. And the better men have been left at cents a ton. home. Both into and out of the state, both, long haul Elihu Root is probably as able a man and as and Utah haul, the railroads are believed to be great an American as there Is in the whole Empire charging our people too much. state. He has a splendid mind. He is a true One should not lose sight of the fact that' these patriot. He knows his country. He knows the Utah men have no good way of getting money back people, and their needs. He knows governments, into the state excepting by the sale of thelr big and takes a jarge view of public duty and respon- products. eibllity. They don't want the railroad companies to lose The senate will be stronger for the presence anything. But for themselves, they don't want to of Mr. Root there. As Pennsylvania advanced by the lose anything. And that is about the state of the selection of Mr. Knox. so New York will wipe out case at present. the memory of many embarrassments by the seatIt would be wise, and of public benefit, for the ing of Elihu Root. companies and the business men to get together, eae ee and agree on a rate that would be sati factory GOOD WORK OF THE SCHOOL BOARD, all around. Utah doesn't want to hurt the railroads. It is to the credit of the present members of And it doesn't want the railroads to hurt Utah. the school board that there are no causes of complaint against them. Their management of the POLITICS IN ‘THE SCHOOLS. schools has been admirable. The results attained Nothing can be more detrimental to the schools are approved by the people. The rank of the of the city than to have them controlled by partisan schools proves their efficlency and their excellence. politicians. It makes no difference what the party No one charges a single member of the board may be. Politica] partisans always work for their with one act of impropriety, or dishonesty, or of party. If schools are wholly in charge of any one partiality in udminjstration. No one holds for a party, those schools will be run more for the benefit moment that either member of the board or al! of that party than for the benefit of the schools. of them together. has done one act not for the good Here in Salt Lake the American party seeks of the schools. No one points to a single defect control of the schools, as a political party. The in their system, or a wrong course in their work. candidates of that party are partisan candidates Salt Lake is fortunate in having so excellent a They are put forward because they are members board. Those men have taken their places on the and nominees of that party. They are under obligaboard at some personal sacrifice. They have faltbtlon to obey the rule of the city committee of the fully attented to their duties. Not a member of the American party, rather than the people, if elected. board has been indifferent. They do not absent No man chosen a schoo] trustee on the American themselves. They watch every detail of the work. party ticket will be free to follow his own judgAnd the ohe rule by which they measure matters ment. In every official matter he will have to have is: the good of the schools. the consent of the managers of the party that electThe interests of pupils are taken care of above ed him before he can proceed. He wil] not be everything. Their education is the first and only allowed to vote on any question affecting the ingoverning consideration. It makes no difference terests of bis parly-and every question will be \ Offices-Dooly ic a }these else. | of {if elected. of his party if his party elects him. The true non-partiian candidates "Flannelette oi ces nea rde aubecriation | | cone SOS Skirt = TPs i Ny i STi i} } THEN Wr Co ~ when 1, 1908. i -TT5) only Ip candidate partisan places in the Utah schools. If they prove good The whole alm of the board One month, Dally and Sunday ....-++s-eesee> - oe teachers, they remain. Three Months Daily and "Sunday senses .s 00 | zet the best possiSix Months, Daily and § BY --seeceee verses 6.00] ble teaching force. One Year, y and Sunday .....-cesseerrecere £50 Sunday only, One Year'... ..scsvesceacseees . 5 In the other flelds of management the school board has also earned the plaudits of the people. Not Paid in Aavance. 75 As | One Month, Dally and Sund cp eevaaces 3. 00 | They have been honest in their expenditures. Three Months, Daily and buds. peneeene 4.00 economical as is possible with a subject of so great Six Months, Dally and Bunday ..ccssecssccsere 300 One Year, Daily he = ney eecsccenscnsrcere > O1 general importance, they sti!] consider their obl gaSunday only, One ¥ Pees canluisieesin eee 2 egermpeesest erste =ss tion to the people, and disburse money for the bene-! Subscribers will please give ere They plant schoo] houses where Pg ee fit of the schools. th e Circulation DIRECT, an Dep artment , on all matters couthese are most needed. They build the best, and Paid DECEMBER in the COPYRIGHT KIND OF HARD LUCK!"' ‘‘THAT'S = ke administratlon-the highest possibie to the people. And that Is just what The Republican has been asking if the people want. If they do, then they should have it. They seem to want It. From a'l data so far gathered, it is perfectly clear that the people desire this. reform in the manner of city sovernment. And that settles the question. What the people want-this government-they We regret to being a that the Republiean form of get note Herald is sO sus- piclous. That paper can help, of course, in bringing about the change desired. We trust it will not magnify its fears until they shall have the same effect on its case of the editorlal bond policy: that was he efficiency, with the minimum of cost. They want a city goveriment in which all elected officers are responsible noted in the election. | had a shot that maybe is something a jury can be of a reflection too on intelligent. the acumen | That of the attorney. Intelligent juries respond to the handling of Intelligent attorneys. They can be too intelligent for unintelligent counsel. But no jury can be too intelligent if the lawyers in the case are intelligent enough. There is an excellent illustration of this point in the story called "Right of Way." A Canadian lawyer takes a case which he knows {js bad. He is true to his oath, responsive to the princip'e that it isn't for him to say his client is guilty until after the jury has decided. But he knows his case. He is an intelligent lawyer, And the thing that wil) tell against his client, he avoids. The things which tend to help his client, he dwells upon. He directs his case so that his client is protected from the attacks of the prosecution's lawyers. He js as big, intellectually. as the jury. And he clears his man. Lawyers of defective mentality, of course, need juries of that kind. Lawyers of big mind, can't get too intellectual a jury. THE at pearling. He/ them," I asked th Ings in general "Then. one time when he Port Darwin' she came." er took the cigarette mouth, "Oh, there | was j It is from js always a ar W9-| At Odeon man in the case," I observed saplently, "Yes, I nave heard people say that before SiC eC TTT Er) of the luck of people, or Se nee, or whatever you want lo ca it, to Hope or fear or bliss or woe Flitsa shadow on the sod; Life era Death perpetual flow, Underneath them I am God part Whole; nL eet deathless ae tast, Ancient, uncreated, I ane not to birth at ieee Universes are of me. -Bllen Glasgow, In Harper's Magazine, a decent bring her all the way Mae a re Us: saken cornet of the earth to find: him out-wasn''t it? She was with her} veople, uncle and aunt and so on-it} Does Your|- Advertising Pay? inter- ase. along an an adult Ee Ss E R . Lake City, Salt aa Tne. riend, 3 class Does it bring noticeable, traceable, tangible, cash-drawer results? it If it does, well and good. But If it doesn't! If It's a draining ta i a prof itless speculatio have something very ante resting to tell you 7 "here isn't space here and besides we don't tell our story to overybdody! we'll tell it to you- you say. 5119 Bell-today. We'll get you results fot on Tuc phone + E NATIONAL agreed. } "On the yacht he was bound to be in her company a}l the time. She used to get him yarning about things| that had happened during his wanderings. ‘They were commonplace | yarns enough, but she thought it was all wonderful, and it used to amuse him to watch her listening with every nerve tense with excitement was | "As for him, he«thought he of sday 4300 DEPOSITORY. D whole purty of them-on a yacht. was Introduced to them as a man who} could tell them things and eventually| philosopher ucademy, | heginners | will be opened Ine 8 o'clock d. T BANK GilesMcAllister Adv. Agency, Utah. CARTTAL SURPLUS... o+.s00cccssess-.+-8000,000 gs00,000 he amusing himself, that was the kind of| foo] he was. For about ten years he} had not seen many more white wo-} men than you can count. on your fingers and toes. and most of those he| had came across were about as much | like this ljttle girl as cast iron is like} Dresden china. She seemed to him | ‘ike something meant e be looked at but not to touc he never| thought of their valatianstip as that | ot man and woman untll- g they were leaning on | the watohine a great) copper up through the | mist. It was getting near he end of} the trip, and a chance word dropped | about parting set a match to the der magazine. --... President Vice President . Cash . Castner . Cashior Safety "Iam in fairly good health, but subject to frequent cloudy head, and occasionally dull pain I get rehef witht two of Dr. AntiPain Pills. They are very beneficial to not Ilke LEWIS, to be without Cleveland, The first package will benefit; SALT LAKE Transact for s UTAH CITY, Established Banking If you've than | are ever taflors you've We coats show worn you | | ' a the For Drunkenness and Drug Addictions. SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH. Correspondence Confidential or overenat that there's made more real by the comfort Kuppenand style before. complete line of as as other and yery suit know had well Kuvvenhe'mer right good suits. makes. overPrices moderate. all | ; ixe or BANK ever new styles CUTLER { and patterns BROS. Co. THE ORIGINAL KNIT GOODS HOUSE UNDERWEAR AND HOSIERY that city, OTH ~ shor 19 eae ce Boe Gowns and Dress Suits 2 "spbelatty, also Fancy Laundering. 375 So. State St. Salt Lake Citr. 1873 Busi- Suits and Coats $10 to $30 } | be couvinced work In the Lots of Comfort, And Style in Kuppenheimer Clothes heimer | and best THE CALIFORNIA EXPERT CLEANING CO. SALT L LAKE CITY. I Pays interest on time Se Safety deposit cine for nt } Capital and Sorplus........ $250,000 ¢ Rodney T Badger, Cashier. | | | Gaty e us a trial turn out the Thos. R, Cutler. Vice Prest NATIONAL Agenc Rent General: & MeCornick. Prest. Block. cele ertising PF W. | O. If not, Bove Atlas oon we | Want to know the quickest and best way to stop it? Take Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills. They are the best because they do not leave any disagreeable aftereffects. Just simply quiet the nerve irritation which causes the distress. - What is equally important they do not derange the stomach-only a pleasurable sense of relief follows their use. Deposit 205-6 McCORNICK & COMPANY| BANKERS left alone to review the situation all | he could think of was he ha told the sweetest girl In the world that | Headache? yer see winds keep tryst with me, the stars share In my joy; Mewioe: hill or sky or sea, I create and I destroy. after res, I do! That is thy humior a "strange world --- DANCING SCHOOL. } IMMORTAL. Since my soul and | are friends, I go laughing on my road: Whether up or down it yendn: w have never felt my load. Smaller than the smallest Tger than the Rees One in the divided he And the universal Sine two did not make any money to speak of, val but he got along all right. He got to} "Yes," he answered, slowly "Th | be well known to a lot of the niggers} struck {jt rich about a year after she las well as to the crews of the Malay | married Theodore Wosenthal tine prows that came down to the coast | copper king." for trepang and shell and. on | "What! You don : mean the Rosenwhole, was pretty well satished with thal who went brok Oe -guide, CAN A JURY BE TOO INTELLIGENT? One of the lawyers in a recent case of some importance of Salt Lake has expressed the opinion or Prrits Utah have Walia bs City, may INTER-MOUNTAIN past, nor | made to affect that party-without the advice and what church sho may belong, nor to what party consent of the inner circle, the bosses of the Published Every Morning by she js attached. If she be a good teacher, she gets American party Inter-Mountain Republican Company. employment at the schools of Salt Lake. And if Partisan hip will ruin the schools. When ecanOfficial Organ c of the Republicad Party te Utah. |she continues to be a good teacher, she remains | didates pledge themeslves to obey the behest of Eee lees eee nein }here. There are more out-of-state teachers in these | the politicians, the schools wil never be glyen into ed as second class matter Feb. En 0, 1906, at} the DoE sto ffice at was Take City, under the Act of | schools now than there ever have been in the past. their control Congress March 3 79 Up at the University of Utah there is a normal It is folly to say the American candidates are oO nly Republican Dally Newspaper In Salt Lake They couldn't be if they wanted to school which is supported by the state, and where tenis naee THE INTER- MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN| /to OF UTAU. 36 MAIN | ST. » |