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Show I i! FORMER MAYOR I OF MILWAUKEE I IS COMING I m i Eugene V. Debs, the Socialist can-M can-M ( dldate for president, will not speak M i In Ogden during the present carnal carn-al ' f palgn, as was announced a few days fl ago by the Socialists. Word Just H i received by the Ogden organisation H jj from the national campaign commlt-H commlt-H c tee of the party is to the effect that H' 'I the well known orator will bo kept In Hl . districts where it is exppcted the party H ' H will have a chance of sending repre-H repre-H t' sentatlves to congress. H .r, The biggest meeting which the So-B So-B I clallBts of this city are planning for B ' l the present campaign will be held Oc-H Oc-H t( tober 8 and will be addressed by Emll m V Spldel, former mayor of Milwaukee fl ' 1 and candidate for vice-president of H t the United State. This meeting will fl . f probably be held in one of the local H " 1 theaters. Seldel, while perhaps not the H " 4 equal of Debs as an orator, Is consld-H consld-H ! V ered one of the most powerful expon-H expon-H i ents of Socialism In America. His H fc election as Socialist mayor of Mllwau-H Mllwau-H . v kee has given him national reputa-H reputa-H " (J tlon as a conservative Socialist who m t has really done things In progressive l 7 politics. , tf -' i Geldel's defeat at the last election 'i i In Milwaukee was brought about by Htf . a combination of the Republican and Hfi ii Democratic parties, the vote which ho M V received at the time of his defeat be-H be-H - II lng several thousand larger than the Hi I one that carried him Into office. H ' i Beldol has never spoken In Utah and B the members of the local party are H J looking forward to his visit with a H great deal of pleasure. the largest in the world, being -filled I with thousands of vents, hot springs and geysers, afforded us unusual sights galore to photograph We stayed over night at the Old ' Continental Divide twice on our way j to Yellowstone Lake. After lunch I took the boat trip of some twenty-tlvo miles to the Lake Hotel, a pleasant ride across a lake, the largest at Its altitude (7,7-11 feet) In North America. We fished In the outlet that afternoon and had trout for dinner In the Colonial Colo-nial hotel that stands on the shoro of the lake. The third day we passed the Mud Volcano, and after a delightful drive through Ilayden Valley, reachod tho Grand Canyon. We saw the Gorge with Its brilliant colorod walls a thousand feet deep; at its head tho Great Falls 3G0 feet high, and the Upper Falls 112 a little above it I took many vIcwb of tho falls and canyon, can-yon, and noted with Interest the changes that the different lights made in tho coloring there We reached Norrls Goyscr Basin before noon tho fourth day and saw its many steam vants and geysers; 'and In tho afternoon drove twenty miles to the Mammoth Hot Springs where the great terraces are, My films were getting oy, so 1 photographed photo-graphed on the way only the Obsidian Obsidi-an Cliff, the Golden Gate Canyon and some deor among the Hoodoes. The last day we returned to Norris and passed on through Elk Park and tho Gibbon Canyon to Gibbon Falls, thence westward past National Park Mountain and down tho Madison River Riv-er to Yellowstone Station where we took tho train that night for Salt Lake City The service in the Park was surprisingly sur-prisingly good throughout. Telegraphic Telegra-phic news bulletins were displayed daily In the hotel lobbies Tho hotols all of which are modern and well equipped are well ahle to handle their large business. One coaching trip from the time wo left the unique stone depot at Yellowstone, until we returned there, was Ideal. It took us through a strange and Interesting Icountrv. as my kodak album shows. But while we saw the Park well on the five-day trip, a month could have been spent there with profit |