OCR Text |
Show Take Your Tax Notices totEj Polls This Year, Too J Democratic State 1 1 71 Democratic CoimJ and Lejisjative W tllSpenilg TKT ! 1 Kr Cmm' T' U ""Pi F or United States Senator II 3. if f" G S f fitllCCl J0HN CHlLD P WILLIAM H. KING VIlttl jgViS X "UVW J"LD p WHISPER NO 1. That sugar refining interests are spending thousand, of for Commissioner, TwJJf? I dollars in the state to assist Senator King's campaign. Term feU For United States T.HE TRUTH. That no political organization of the Democratic party, and no CHARLES E Km1 I ' n individual, officer or candidate has received money from such interests for PETTFnpPnr Ml Congressman such purposes. lUfcKIW MILTON H. WELLING WHISPER NO. 2. That Senator King was opposed to protection for the beet lfe sugar industry. h or bounty Clerk and AidJ THE TRUTH That Senator King personally worked among Democratic sena- ERNEST L. jUs tors opposed to a high tariff for sugar and secured their support for a WILKINS0 m& For Judge of Supreme Court $1.72 differential tariff against Cuban sugar. That he voted for the sugar r pn PAnrMAv schedule. That had the Fordney-MoCumber tariff bill, with its robber pro- kLMHiK ft. L OK MAN visions on EASTERN MANUFACTURED GOODS been defeated, Utah's por Countv Sh ff fc SUGAR would have still had protection from the tariff law in effect. FRANK P HTTP? mfca WHISPER NO. 3 That Senator King was opposed to the Woman's Suffrage ANM; r c i r o ) i amendent. r or superintendent oi rublic , , , r- r -r I THE TRUTH. That Senator King was a staunch fighter for this amendment, ror County Treasurer BS Instruction ancj worked and voted for it throughout. As a member of the Supreme DAVID W. EVAW I1' n C1 TFmFTNJ Court in Utah m territorial day:-;, he was the only judge to render an opin- LP. j. JrjlMoHiiN j0n favorable to the voting of women upon the question of adoption of l, j constitution of Utah. For County WHISPER NO. 4. That Senator King worked against the Volstead act, and GILBERT THATCrTOst r rv t j against the Prohibition cause. iKjiixms ror District Judge A m THE TRUTH. That Senator King worked for the Volstead act, and for every l. THOMAS J. MA GINNIS every part thereof which tended towards a strict enforcement of the law. For County Recorder fill That ho wrote the first prohibition platform adopted by any political par- MRS M4F FNQTPvW ty in the State of Utah, and that in 1914, when the leaders of the Republi- 4 PP Unum I can party opposed prohibition for Utah, and when Senator Smoot declared tKAilWELL For State Senator n kis speech to tho Republican convention at Ogden against prohibition y ' in Utah, Senator King campaigned from end to end of this state for the 1 W. J. (JAKE) PARKER cause of prohibition. r or County Attorney M WATCH OUT FOR MORE WHISPERS. HYRUM A. BELNAPbT When partisan politicians face sure defeat, they resort to cowardly wea- ftn r Ct D pons to avert it. Falsehood is one of the common methods employed. If any u r c m' l or State Representatives per30n tries t0 mfiuence your vote by statements such as the foregoing, de- miPOM t WM AT l?v PDrnro mand that they make affidavits to the facts. Bring that to us, and WE'LL JAMES M. LENTZ Bn! AlIliA tfKriVVliiK MAKE THEM PROVE THEIR STATEMENTS, OR FACE PROSECUTION 1 A T CATVT RT?rkW7VTTlVTr UNDER THE CORRUPT PRACTICE ACT. 1. dAlVl DKU VV miN (jt DEMOCRATIC STATE COMMITTEE, For Constable, Ogden GtjBV TOHN M RATTFV By D. C. Dunbar, Chairman. Precinct I lYi. DEMOCRATIC COUNTY COMMITTEE, TH0MS 1J MURRAY K. JACOBS By s. p. Dobbs, chairman. CUNNINGHAM Wfi Did You Take Your Tax Notices to the Polls: (Paid Political Advertisement) m 1 j'VJjuwB |