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Show SALT LAKE SPEAKERS AT WOMEN'S RALLY At th Worm's Repubian rally h!d VtW.iay afternoon JI --s Ann r;n-h.ck. !r3 Venn Gales and Carl Badger of Suit Lk--. delivered ft!rrlnc srhr-H that were r ctinj with n.ij.-h entnuMa.-m. Mrs. Croei b'ck. the firs.' en, ak- r on tr.c prosru. favored prooMi W. but r.w n.vnl, prohibiten. H-r iriirr.ctts wi-ro :v!'allr recae4 c,j ra:, d fort1! considerable ap- Mrs. Gro-sberk placed herself on record ,ih not b'.nt. In favor of ila'f- lie prtlbltl.-.n. claiming that until un-til public sentiment is more strongly strong-ly In favor of abolishing the saloon f-m I'tab rerulatlou ar.1 ccunty l-f l-f '-A option would do tiTp In the caui-c cf temperance thin the prohibition of llcec-ed dram shops. At many Juncture her Mate m'-r.t T.-i-ro cti eted with applause, the wo' r en In the audi" ceo howlnc even I Center n'tu!h'ni than th- men Mr. Sdih YojfjK Gate, daughter of the late l:rlrbam Your.fr. w h.j aJsO came to OricD from Salt Iiko City, fa. Wo rr.u't -tay In tho f'.cM an I t o ruu.-t n.a'f. "r try in ni.i.. th.? i ;-n In '0!i'i- :ct 1 1 K . j.-pnt!i-rn. n In-M-.4.J (.-. Ilk.- tvag.;. U-a-ts. ".- noi-t (!. :,a ..lil!c.- oi ll. fKind. r ;it-..1 Its tvrrup' ' Praisee Utah Repretentative. Mrs- t'.a! df(-LiJ..J (.'..m'-'.'su.aa H:;; asalnst thf- a 1 : j at ai-V. of la- or poiK-nt. arid r!al:.!.-l that ---a-?'or K' J i?U"-'t was on..- o( lo iur-fM, iur-fM, mo-t f mi'V-ratf ar.d .ipr't'ht mm v bctu ?h- had fv. r Li-:. In conclu-.-K'O .t adrU'-d h-r audltiTS. im-:i ,:n I ..ri...n ;i!ik.. to inarch to lh" 1 lis on C'.-i' Tii lay mornlnc and veto fcr ' tn.- r nrty t.-t k'ofs a ;.r-m-If h n It in a n.- ' W rr.u't I- arn krrta'.-r x-!f control: con-trol: wo nmt fit !n tho cita.!'1! of f ar own hi..-n. -i acd l rnU'rv.-s 'f Cur i wn d-ire-i jd.I ai f otu. i, , wo ma;', i f roonibr r tr a: t.it-ro aro clls Mkorno than drunk. rint--. bad tho.:ih It be; aud wo mu-t voto, not In punsUin, n...-bcaufo n...-bcaufo of t-or.t Iruont. but with roa-fon roa-fon atd dollbcratlon " TMj wa th. Sa)tor's T.nal admnuition L)ur!rK 'to curse r.f iho m-otln .'Jrs Uzzlo Thonias Kdwards dIlcht-cd dIlcht-cd the audleLC wl'h two wvll ren-J.Tf-d solos roth of theso wore pa-tt.otlc pa-tt.otlc bcn;s and wort- ftr--ted wtn r-uch atplau'.-". Carl Badger Talks. Carl !'.dt;or of Salt lakc City, hut fi.rrn.rly of Ocd-n. had tho dlllnr-t'. dlllnr-t'. n of bt ir.: tho only malo orator on i ho program. Mr. Badger was tb ljt f.pt-jk-r Introduced and bean LI., talk by rpvlwing the history of tho Ri-publVau party "For fifty years It has been tho r-irt ci prc'crons." ho said. "In tho lut-t hall c-ntury tho Dvmocratlc par fy ban bien In ab.-olut control for but two brief year, ajd for the other oth-er forty-Hghf years have be,-n In power. Darin tht, forty-ekht .-arb of Republican rolgn tho D"mo-i.atlc D"mo-i.atlc tirty has uctod In the capac-lt capac-lt of critic and are wllllnt; to con-ttdo con-ttdo rhat It has acqutrnj a Kroat d-al f ability a a rntlc. But during iho pjrno longth of time iho Hopubii-can Hopubii-can .arty has a Quired tho pow-r and allllty of doing thlnijH and of doing t'.vni well "Tho boinorrau havo been .ippor-funibt.-.. Thev bavo had no fixed pol-lc. pol-lc. The- Ropublltan party has had a fixed K.!lcy. It has not claimed thai It would do tblcgj that It couid dcv- r do. It has kept Its pledges ami under 1 1 -i guidance tho country has ;rown iroiu a f?w htutes oast of th MUtdsvlppI river U the Teai world power It is today " Applaud Names of Big Men. The names of tin- jreat nx-n whUh th- Republican party has produced, tiom Lincoln to Taft. were heartily :ipllaud-d t tho mention of ex President Ro.tev.?It the orator was torceij to pauo un ll tho ploved hands if the ladles had ceased thlr clap-Iinp clap-Iinp Mr. Badeer ouotod Cardinal Gibbons ;nid "KuhtinR Boh" Kans on tho subject sub-ject of prohibition statini; that then.? I'.m were thos-e who. knew that statewide state-wide problbl'lon would no; prohibit. On Liquor Traffic. "I will not belittlo the .--lis of the i:luor traffic, but' I will say that tho mere enacting of a law- against na-loon na-loon will not ubolih theso evils." ho (ontlnu.-d. "We must mold public f'l'lnlnn In favor .f prohibition benre wo ran have prohibition, and this rnoIdloR cannot hi- done by mere im. pat-slonod appeals t. the people's sentiments. sen-timents. am In faor of excluding tho saloon from every district where iL.tde the principal adJr8 of tho af. i-rr...un Mo'h rly In a p-ann.: e an I with a voire that coulj bo heard d!- tir.ctly In al! partn of the theatre, she l.-i.pre-ed her audience at once and th.-uthoal her tntlro tilk 1..-M the i:i;t at'-i.'irn of the crowd, j Mrn Ca!e$, !r. ojK-nlnp t.er addref. j iold that the rlnht to vote ha 1 been I rrs the w-oaeo In the jtate of I'uh by the bread minded and enlightened ir.'') of the Republican party. Sr. claim,! that the Lmotrat were endeavoring en-deavoring to have the people cf th-" tote ii te upon an lf?uo throufn blind wTitlnient without Ttoj.lnj to think deliberately what they rc dotnf Time to ConlJer the Isiuet. "We women have not em-rr-d from he kitchen and I hope wo never will." said Mrs. Gat.-i. "But even In our kitchens we sometimes f.nd time to ! ronMd. r the i-olliiral is?ues r f our I ftite. and I believe the women will ! vrte as reasonably uron the present Irvues as will the men. (4pplftuM I "I you think I Lave bon the mo'n-rr mo'n-rr of tm sons without taWnc an Intercut In-tercut In the temperance iie,tion? J believe I havo considered It as carefully as any mother In the state. To ray mind there is only one or possibly pos-sibly two men In the Democratic par-t par-t that are n!ncere ln their .letr.and I'r s:atewld prohibition, and I be-l'i be-l'i ve that even the 'e men know In tli. Ir h art that t rinnot bo enforred. I am wIMInif to dNcu-8 this epilation , v ith any '.soman ln the sUto. I "The Republican juirty wantJ to supf.rei iho liquor evil Junt as bad l as the I).-moeratie party, but w don't euro t o.tr up In the cloud, lor the Republican party !- a party of r'-ason. BelnK a woman, that Is v by I like It. Anything that tend to le s,i-n tho liquor evil I am with. There jyc onio women who Imagine Imag-ine that If this law of statewld' prohibition were euacted there would ! ro nitre liquor manufactured, sold cr dPir.k In the state. I am posltlvo that this would Dot be the case" Defines State Platform. The speaker defiuej the mate Uo-ubllcun Uo-ubllcun platform on the liquor quos-t:on quos-t:on and stated that the temperance ht-uo was a moral lsue and shouH not have been made the football of po'lUcluris. She made a very eloquent itlense of the .initials of the Re-publican Re-publican party, whom slio claimed had teen attacked and vllhTed by tho LMiiocra;io campaif.n speakers. 8he stat'd that s. e had known the governor liom bahhr! and that she knew hirn to be n rje.n and uprlcht i.p.n. ''Iho m.-n who have been de?. Ur.alo,J as the 'fo.;. r.il bunch.'" sho continued, "se. in to be the spec ial ob-J'-cts of the political mud sllnpers of the Democratic larty. I know all of th. se men and I have never heard c in.' word of truth that Is detrimental detrimen-tal to any on- of them; not one th In can i'o proven aaliibt the character.; of these officials. "I sometimes f. . I that women should May out of lttk. tint when I con-Fldcr con-Fldcr the matter more carefully I know that w.- cannot afford to do i It can be. excluded, but I am in favor cf doing It la u reasonable and bane J maimer, and thlj Is what tho Re-. Re-. publican party proposes to do. Wo j will tako the teuipvrouco question ou' of politics and e w-lll volt upon It j In the various counties lo a cool and unprejudiced manner. We will not line up on the question as lAaiocrat I or as Republicans, not as Mormon or ! gentile, not us Catholic and Protest-am, Protest-am, but us men and women, with J polities and religion aside and at a . time when thev Issues do not have i their Influence upon our minds." I Refreshments at Court House. t At the conclusion of Mr Badger's r.-murks Mr. Dye announced that th ' voung lady cl'.-rks aud employes of tho c-eurt house had prepared to serve refreshments In the coun'y building, ' and all of the people who had gather- ' e( ior the meeting were invited to j I nrtlclpate. About 100 women and a , smaller number of men, on leaving j i the theatre, made their way to the c urt house and there were served I vith Ice cream, cuke and coffee I The reception was in charge of ) Miss Annls Brown and was a very erjoyable affair. |