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New Owners Take Over THE YEAR 1882 WAS A busy and exciting one for editors C. C. Goodwin of The Tribune and Charles W. Penrose of the Deseret News. The year was notable because of the empty seat in Congress to which the territory was entitled; the enactment of an anti-polygamy law which was still to be implemented; and a sharp upturn in Liberal hopes of a victory at the polls by reason of a provision in the new anti-polygamy law disenfranchising polygamists. Goodwin and his chief rival on the Deseret News, as well as the writers for the Herald, were at their best in political infighting. So the three newspapers squared off for a lively and what looked like the territory's most important election campaign up to that time. Two Utah historians, who were on-the-scene observers, are agreed that the campaign represented a new highwater mark in politics. Orson F. Whitney wrote in his History of Utah: . . . for the first time in history of Utah, political parades, with bands of music, torches, Chinese lanterns, Roman candles, and other pyrotechnics illuminated the streets, whose stones re-echoed to the tramp of marching hosts filling the air with hopeful shouts and stentorian prophecies of victory. Each party put forth its utmost exertions, the orators on
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