OCR Text |
Show PAHKEIi S POEM T.V.ORITE HEW ERA FOR GREAT WEST I I . Wonder-Worke- r. Of ! . . I I 111 Ji c . il t a-- Ilf It lif'.i ! dll VVfiil r,. A it ll.l stit i an SflHi T. I'atJ iatmlnf tint (art hi tii ' !. ! f'litiu. t'lis f.ih r uf bi liirt'ijb - Ir--- ! irri t I it. ii tut tl I " put til t V 8ti.-- a ourl-- l twalai ml iu i.-'-i I - t k lrb s a i u . 1 u t I ti ll (hr spnit. ll ll( ul r j i , t.iti-mr- a aiotrement mnt be broadly founded mod ttrmly and liitalligantly niauagad. We are planning, not for otiraelvea but for futnrt ganaratlon. for we are the forefather of a mighty future in a mighty land. If wa are equal to our doty and ar epportitnitiea, we ahall make home for a hundred million of tha freaat man bo artr walked the enrtlt. Wa are living In an age of mighty achievement. Kngliieerlng work which the leet generation would have thought aa lmpoibility will be the completed task of thi generation. The New York nhway, tba great tunnel of the railroad, tba Nthmian canal and the Salt IJivar reervoir in Arizona and tber mammoth irrigition project will to aooa ataud a completed monument tba eonatruetiva gaunt of onr people anil tkta aga. Tha future is potent with util! grander undertaking which will, in a few brief ye.tr. aln stand a accomplished facta. Kgypt was for centurie the granary of the world. That land of ayatery and romance wa the cradle of nr civilization. For counties aga the (tile baa risen annually, to fertilize the land which has yielded, from year to pear, the austenance of teaming millions. Greatest Question of the Awe. The question of Irrigation which now senfronts the people of tha I'nited States Is eo of the most important of the age. It la of more importance than the Isthmian canal or a deep waterway to the aaa. It Involves the solution of the foraat and flood problem. It embraces the tutor Internal development of the United States. It will require years of work I perfect the system of national irrigation, but It will be the greatest benefit aver conferred on the western people. Mas may be cruel and unfair, but a la generous and utterly Impartial, ffbe earth, the son and the waters are a kind to the poor as to the rich. The oaee do not stop to look up a mans flaandal standing before consenting to bloom for him. They grow wherever cot-ta- g planted. They cover the poor maua aa gladly as they do tha rich man' Villa. tha I'enn-ylvani- a na-ar- Husbandry Make Patriot. Nation may spring into being, generated by the force of ideas alone, but the vigorous manhood, the mature growth at a Stat can only be nurtured and built up upon the abundant and manifold productions of the earth. The very existence and advance of civilization are Irmly grounded on material resources. Nation become great and independent a they develop a genius for grasping the forces and materials of nature wilhin their reach and converting them into a ateady flowing stream of wealth and com- fort. To hold a people in industrious, contented habits, habits of virtue end of patriotism, it Is needful to give them an interest in the cultivation f laud. This fact la seen along the ahora of historic time. Wherever has made laws which hav gives the people of the land Its occupancy a fair terms, then content and plenty have bean on every hand. Wherever It baa bees hard for the masses to obtain the us ef tha land, then discontent and dfifflcoltie have been rampant on ovary bead, and frequently national rain has bass tha result. The noblest us to which ay man or people can pnt history is to aka It either as warning or wiso Is tha United States we have ha isality, (aaatity and variety each aap- a, ot VIA II saiUt mi. t I i .lmn: rt from 1 ti ! Am )l Am I lit" tit it I i.it li ni l ktars - jar )U. wstch out! Hsvs your picture taken whit )mi wear Put on all th yaar to com. Alt Caa Hav Home. The nation baa land for every man who will make bis boms upon It in good faith who will break the ami, plant rn.p, biilM a boose and settle down to supiHirt his family from the soil, but tbo nation bn no laud at least. It ought to have none for the nun who merely seeks to forestall the actnal settler and sell out to him at a profit, or become a landlord, collecting income from bia ten- ant I.aml monopoly rnba men of a large portion of the products of their labor. It nullifies the spirit of constitutional guarantees which seek to give assurance of No man is free in political freedom. the true sense of the term who is beholden to another for the means of his and land monopoly make rcls-l- s instead of patriots. In the case of Ireland it drove more thin half the population away front its native soil, it tilled their hearts with bitterness and even sent some of her children into the ranks s of enemies in the hour of her great trouble. Kn.-land'- Will Help the Kast, The subjugation and settlement of the great empire of public land mean that every factory wheel in the United State must whirl faster, that every banking I'.vcie 94 V rmtorry, bat I raaf proiuotar of trada knows aa awift and regular tr.inisiruti.su The cninplriii.-n- t .f thi iranportst.'i I a ilea.Iy ami reliable flow of freight. Here irrigation come into play. Irrigation Insure regular crop and therefore a filed volume of freight: even a a reliable iramportafion insures regulir trade. These phase of national life are part and parcel of the evolutionary process that ha made the United State the trada leader of the world. The activities of tha country are rilng to the new economic standard. II who fall to aee this should aeek a new perspective. To the ordinary man the terra Asiatic He trade lack special significance. knows it relate to trade with Asia, and that we are constantly exporting to ami importing from Asia. He doe not realize that all the leading countries of tha earth are competing for the trade of several hundred million Asiatic, and that thi trad Is really the greatest commercial prize of the day. He doe not realize that thi trade may bt tbe making of bis own trade, calling or business. Your I'epaonat Interest. Farmers, ranchers, miners, lumliermen, merchant, laborers of the We-- t. do not vote against your own interests, that of your family and your and their future. Vote for Roosevelt and Fairbanks. They hare brought you glad tidings in the irrigation act. Its working have already begun. Under it operation there will he a tendency to balance interests nnd thus help in a powerful way to keep the government steady. It will settle the beef question, every acre irrigated would produce more than thirty times a much as is now produced tin any of our wilj arid lands. It will produce new towns of moderate size, where all the vocation of trade, of learning, literature and religion will flourish. It will change the face of the earth. It will change the face of the sky. It will modify the atIt will change tbe climate. mosphere. It will give life, health, joy and prosperity to the people. Work for Republican Party, When w come to contemplate tha whole field of natural western resources, available for food, for industry and for commerce, when we attempt to grasp in one act of thought the length and breadth and depth of the riches with d trans-Iacifi- trans-continent- Chi- mitb a atnag tie fit. The Postmaster General In hi cago. The steam lines of the Padfic report for 1902 said: "Th ocean nr meeting the transportation da- the postal revenues attests rn and, this the American commerce ful prosperity of tbe people with the Aniatlc East I inaurad by that tivity ef business iotsrtstt annual Increase in the wonder and the actbraaghoat look Uk fair; Take jour little plunge Into the Hsdsoa ei ir) ty. it tin- water when youve anyKeep i We u. been ihiii." would There have the country." It Imperi nt tn i v . thing m h m to but au are l.r .irg.nug proper fur the I.i.im t.r-I i.i v 1. Mind our Ihi-Iihis suggestion t ottl.-li- l MI lie brother fec.l.ti. of mir to atuil. re in wonder hi limit--Fliem-liI!I I n m i the the World: in fill pr..i-rit- the oper.it. o' give tie lioonevrlt ll be-i- you. the HiugU-- iar.IT law and other Repub- it all Slid to re ip ourselves the lietieflt KF YuF of it all. To submit to anything rise lican measure. Init such wa the fact. DONT WATCH would be silly. It is but a problem of OUT!" common sense. WHAT IS TO BE WILL CE TRIBULATIONS OF A GREAT Kiport ef Manufacture, Growth of tho Ao4tie Demand for Figures recently issue.) by the Depart I Product of the Unite Mate. GRANDFATHER. ment of fiiinmerce and Ixilmr st Wash Tbe Asiactic nation bare lived upon ii.gtoti show tint during the month of end rice stating thing iu a general way-(Orvr TcMyt letter.) of maiiuf-iiliireJuly last our Hlkli.n. U. u.. the Teutonic races have for some llluolllited to $ expirt 13, M04. lO.ISHl.tkSI. SiT.liust $dl. Foitiiv rnr letter niiI I've iiiMt fluMird rradla It has issi.Otsi of agricultural grueratious lived np.ra flour. no wurfe During bait Tmtpnt product. THtly'i become standard within the last year or June tbe export ..f inunufsctueea wee run slur I was lose'd In a blanket tbs Jack-aiHint nld rider. year Asiactlc tuugb the one grand of Andy at least that two, against f.'.7.."kl nearly rlei'teil for H seriiml trim. It nations ha come to live upon flour. of agriculttir.il product. This i the tirt tussra MilIIS up so lili:b tlist it seems as If l 1 boss desperate little fighters, the Jap-sne- time iu the history of the country that never enine dunn. I never did set a inier so full of have taken to hard tack, as did the exports of have eximl pidnt ns Hint letter, ami every the our own American lighter during ceeded those of the farm. This .Iocs not il i.ne of t like a jolt no tbe selsr Civil War. a a pirt of their subsistence, mean tint the exp.rts of firm pneiuet that Mete U so fund of talk! and the same regard a to winterer is are falling olT, but tint tb se of iti.inu Slinky. said Steve, a I ImMiled Int made from our wheat has already ex- fnctiires have greatly iucretse I. This is lirenkfiiMt tills iimriiln', tin flrt time tine tended, in a measure, to the more vast lue to a protective tariff which, while it t pusi'd ns tlie alms f Id eyes. ''.Slinky." says ht inout Asiatic empire of China. That clever KtringH American manufactures, also remind dues letter you of S William E. Teddys speak"nliy Curtis, crease the home demand for American correspondent, corduroy road?" ing of the extent to whieh our flour is farm products. Ilei'iiiise It's n full of bump." says t, ii m) rum hi the Unit crack. already used by Japan, says: I lu re s no! Iiiii' like a few Hlmrp lolls oa Had Record. Democracy While the Imports of flour within the -old an lie mans Intel-lto line sliaipen Isst year or so time leen mu. h greater When the veter in of the Civil War t Is. of the pr. paIlian ever before on Gen. were with before Richmond It a Grant ntlle long. under So thought you Here Is r rtition for war, lore of rond like that goes a long to expert a rout lured expansion of the or with Sherman unrolling to the sea, n A short h when isn't any .tour wiicoii are Democratic national convention declared tvny market. Japanese famllbs generally or straw on Hie liottoin, an' your old bum floor to- - tarlons the war a failure and dcmiinlcd a disbeginning to eso wlo-i- t k fat like mine la. now Is hold purpose Nearly nert hoes, I tell yon. Allon. that's the matter with honor tide peace. When the Im.sine using It to make the little eak.s and sweet'I lie I ic mo. i ,i I. I.nial vtu.-oi- i ha mi t aev men. the nnd honest men us. anv meat which they use with their s: g h nor straw for cushions, and A got eral time a day In large quan.llie. f all were rlasse for sound t In' all tired tiled fiirnlshlit' all battling I'm tba get still larger nmoeut of a iheap.-qu.ility of money and the gold stand. ird the Demo- - axle grinse. used for paste bv the mini-ran oa of doesn't nrtb-l.-This leiter Teddy's ratio pirty. as an orgimz.ition, wa Sereens, umbrella, fans and othT tiles He may mean will, but what of that kind. Mine the war began hard el.oiiinring for free silver at 10 to 1. riildit-- Inis he (try In' Into onr eonvtrHoiiaf Proud baa been Intindn, ed Into the army aa When the Republican party was contendM'luit linslness is it of Ids if we sre Ilk an alternate ration with tbe. The m a ride on the end of s steiillii' the mail Is to It for to the relb American manufacing prdteetion varhty: sees anything until Its handle and niriy, the nutrltbe value of a turers ami workmen, its opponents were train who neverwas aa old as I am. he'd he If a of la that passed? pound equal pound of flour Tbe Japanese advocating a policy destructive t both. files bis stars If be could see anything, and It eosts lea. of or before. behind eiM.rt their beat rleo to France. Kngliind What good thing has the Democratic This havin' foresight I all a Republics and t 'hhia, where It brings l.lg prices, being party ever done, anyhow? M'e Democrats havent got It. Me'r gift. t.f the tery highest grade. They Import I ways suckin' the hind teat. Xaat quantities of cheaper rice for the Not nlv the Qnestlnn, Important We never saw anything la Infant Indusof the coo'dcs sud the luhnrllig Admitting that the gold atand.ird is ir- tries till the Republicans adopted th class from Korec. Huriuab. China, SingaIndie. fixed," as Judge Parker says, foundlln' and brought It up ou lrotectlo pore and other parts of theto Eust substitute revocably milk. It Is entirely praetleuble though be did not help fix it, that is only low- grade We never saw that the Union bad to b for flour this ef brands cheap one financial so of . when many important quespreserved. If there were to be enongk and It will be easy to do with to go round, until tbe Republican their home ntfiees appecome tions that may up in relation to the soldiers couie It and filled the offices for ulgh oat tites for hard tack and wheut bread. financial matters. The question of the saved years. forty Could there be, under any circum- preservation and extension of our sysWe never saw that two things could nog stances or conditions, expressed a vaster tem of banking and currency; tb refund- occupy the same plnee at the same time that the Republicans ndo(ted the gold relation until trade Ides of the enormous ing of our national debt as it ntay, from nnd left us holding the bag bemust henceforth exist between America time to time, become due, and many oth- standard tween bimetallism and free and unlimited America sud th Asiatic countries! er questions of like importance may silver. learnI tell you, were no faculty for forearise. To place the settlement of these sight produces bread. Tb Asiatics bars and. as far as I can see, mighty ed to eat bread with the rest of the questions in unfriendly hands might reeither. No wonder tb little for We sre going to supply them sult in such a disturbance of business ss donkey Is our party emblem. Do yo world. know. Ive been Inkin in mothers lookin with lb W have to ship it across the would shock tbe whole country. glass lately, and I swan, If my chin whisPacific Ocean over the commercial pathkers ain't grown like a gnat's and my ear beneath and M made have we ill Not Win. Personal Abuse way which are gettln so long they droop. 8teve say There cable our superinwhich underlies system. Tbe Democratic party has been so Its only an optical hallucination, by too much brooding over Repubis nothing in the world that can stop long in tbe opposition and its every day duced lican cartoons. the Asiatic demand for the wheat prod- work has so long been criticism, that it But, say, Alton on the quiet bare yo ucts of the United States, and the wheat forgets that no battle was ever won consulted your glass since you made that to Charlie Knapp aud the othef products of the United States have made by sweu ring at the enemy. Abuse of speech Charlie horses? this country, to a great extent, the tre- Mr. Roosevelt will make votes for him. Donkeys have this advantage over meal mendous power it Is. He is s very popnlar man. Personal they enn get their ears to the ground withcrawlin on tlielr bellies. They talk about Imperialism! Thereis criticism will not draw away from him outWaitin see you put Teddy on the gridThis continent man who admires him, but it will iron. your toold uncle. I no Imperialism! any world stir his admirers to the more earnest supthe of rest the what HENRY GASSOWAY. producing conneeds, and the Inhabitants of this ad- port of him. Party Records. tinent, under the rule of RepublicanintelIn every national campaign for forty According to the Bankers Monthly for ministration, associated with other proon either side, August there are 7.305.228 individual years past tlie Republican party has ligent governments depositors in the savings hanks of the stood upon its record of tilings done, of pose to supply Asia with these prodthat fact The United States, and it is safe to say that laws enacted, of policies established unucts that Asia needs. its 7.305.000 will vote for the Republican der which the conntry lias progressed the United States has completed has ocean and ticket, at least all who are legal voters nnd prospered. The record of tbe pathway across the vast will. its intermediate stations, and its possesparty made in two administraso full of disaster, of commerwas tions sions close to the Asiatic coasts, ia but "No more Important qnestion can en- cial of industrial paralysis an incident of events which are part shipwreck, world. gage onr attention, and non should and business failures that its chief busiof the industrial history of the more earnest and thonghtful receive the present that in recent years has been to get ss ness Does anyone imagine people are go- consideration, than one which seeks to far away from its record as possible. majority of the American guard and preserve the high standard ing to neglect their ostensible duty, not of onr popnlation and citizenship. Parker Wonld He Unsafe. merely to themselves but to another por- Senator Fairbanks in tbe Senate, January 11, 18J8. They will Without questioning the sincerity t tion of the human race? The passage of the National Irrigation Judge Parkers expressions on th hardly do lb new era for the West money qnestion h was, by his own stateThis is but talking of tbs products of Act marked Its effect upon actual settlement may not ments, mors dvoted to his party, ia tha wheat fields that Asia now demands. It ki nothing to do with Iron snd steel unfairly be compared to that of ths 1800, than b was to his sincere conend th thousand snd one 11other prod- Homestead law, signed by President victions of right. That being th casa, our facto- Lincoln In 1862. we have a right to assume that he Bight, ucts of !! nr fiIds snd an extrema moment, again sarrendav at ries which they will otherwise demand. Under the Wilson low This Is bnt referring to th simple Is (ia principles for the eak of hi party. $94,000,000; in three years unof ono single product, but tt Such a man cannot bo held ap aa oaf der th illustration. an tariff afford Dinglsy to thsy lncras4 candidate for th higheat posit! oa la tta 9185,000, ooa ind Tt they talk shout govsramsat. - In-- ! rat house must handle more money, and th.it every railroad must transport more passengers and freight. This, in turn, means a large and busier population in every eastern and southern town, and that of course will quicken and enlarge the demand for all the products of the soil in the older sections of the country. In the meantime that which is grown from the soil, to be conquered by irrigation In the West, will go almost exclusively to the feeding of new home markets to be erected within the arid region itself and to which Providence has loaded tbi secthe satisfying of unlimited demands in tion: when we try to realize hour every tb Orieut niul in the frozen north. possible want, every materia! aspiration of man can be bountifully provided for; Limitless Oriental Trade, when we consider how measureless are Visible increase in American tonnage the values which will spring into being in trade between the Asiatic East and at the touch of modern Industry, and the Iacific coast is bejrond the concephow these values, when once created, tion of the ordinary citizen. This trans- are solid and real and become incorpoportation issue concerns tbe merchant, rated into tha enduring structure of huthe manufacturer and the mechanic of man society, we may begin to esthe Atlantic Statea, the Middle States timate properly the measure of reand the far West as well as the Tacific which rests upon this nacoast. These merchants, manufacturers sponsibility tion and its chosen rulers. This is not and mechanics have tbe same interest in to preserve unharmed the pricethe Asiatic trade that they bare In the merely less boom of civil liberty which leaves irrigation development of our arid and the individual citizen free to do bis share semi-ariland. The larger that trade, in work but to adopt of tbe greater the demand for tbe industrial inch measuresdevelopment, as will prevent the waste products of the vast region east of the of natural resources, clear the way of Rocky mountains, the greater the effl- - progress and promote the triumph of dv- c cieucy of transportations. ilization. xl)e mon, of tIle Republican the greater our trade with Asm. Bhows it to be a party of pragma. In a way the merchants, nmnufactur- era and mechanics east of the Rocky A Sign of Prosperity. mountains have more at stake than have There is no better criterion of general the Iacific coast States. Increased trade than the postal business. with Asia, especially an Increased de- prosperity times are good the postal revenue When mand for American food stuffs, meaus In- Increases, and vice versa. The report of creased agricultural, commercial and In- the Postmaster General shows that for dustrial activity on the Pacific coast, a the year ending July 1, 1805, the receipts larger population on the Pacific, and from postal revenue were $70.171, 000. finally, the most important of all, a For the year ending July 1, 1002, they larger home market for what the people were $110,958,220, an increase of 57 per of the Pacific coaat call the American cent during seven years of continuous East. Republican rule. During the year ending July 1, 1805, the receipt from the money Iwsprovsd Transportation. Tha transportation issue is settling order busines were $812,038; for th Itself. The railway year ending July 1, 1002, they were $1,. 889.817, an increase of 133 per cent durcompanies face a glob circling competition that forces them to rats tb ing seven years of Republican prosperity. of their systems, wast af re taubltg Viiuntv out lie keerful an ovi-rall- s a eon-Unit- s era that calla for tha bight atataamanabip. a aa U tlaa of conatrm-tlT- Uv kn-rfu- a Naa Kra. ftH l biw you talk first ha parry shout th frut If you Mini in ro.it one, better wait until it lnisr An th money q n ioui- - l iti'i bsv very iinn-to ay remetnlier Henry ! As to plutvcrat saws y! Stick right to a whisper, dont yon nevse dare to sh.nit. Or ntMwtrlt ll beat you, ef ym dout watch out! far upon a new and l.f .r youll )n. t b bis-bari- c Ii Itiloi il lie t Rimsvvvlt ll hr it I )ol An .i. . llu-ra- mt'i t telll! ! Gup- - y.nir M tb--- y ! a 11 ! !ia( I wore a fealn-- r 1 P.. t I de-e- thuughl 1 blsw ill ) tit) In' When th.jr m si me what I was, I aa- rs'tit. sprp r.p.l stt .l.ini" With sititihi-- r ahull read: 1 u a'r. i w Till a cych.nr 1 I' 'ii u. t ! S I bind ni -- Mamantowa ... ..,r t'i'f )rrir 4 "Wanat nnm 1 l ffa ara entering a, i out! J t rrestiu d n't watrh a. ara .J ot f' , (Mia. 11 1 ( v f la iml n it nieahMig that r .i ui.vii) uf uir in ara b gb ilia, . tbit In ii- - .. a bam a tttr i.v i ig l fesrf I I.. !.. I.r nnlU r ..tie. uni I ! t 1 the alil III. Ii ll, let. I ii fi I Hit si. iii...tii ii 1 li'i - lii il and n Iniual, e. et i. It ' I brtl lh 1 ill. i I "ill ai of the IiimI wall b. lre-i-l- Iff I f )Wt U Via ar a t 1 in nf pr.-ie- r Mara a la I Ilia I itaa mllli.ll ptraO.- 1. I. ft U la t (..mi. J Igmg fimn tin. I, atiun uf lb I I I Ptt II I n! .t nil tlit in ijr present if) i tii wt t'"aaa be l ir !r.id.ra i.Mt knu I. nil lli.li'li'i li ') I bi ala tt tb M I.1.1I tin-- ) liiia I I d 1. let Milll aii.na i u t"f man i .mi;-- ( Mbnt nns.nj triuiad to sul.tii.4-alilina alii I in It'iril ie-- l (knee ready llr.l,r P I pe..p!e M I Ki-- t the in pursul In allul t il... r ryaa, om-- Ibrif Innlltll aild ' w.il.-r'u- l t ait haitil. Oa tba other taka Hliilrrar I iiiran and ba ronianird i" ' " af pleMing a t. ; Ali.-fiiwill briiid rt 'tifT all bat ao auhrkeu aa cold cugcudvra nt.ra aoafttwia (.eue'if oti itb farm., baiL" bk-ara already covered Kamadv In Irrlaatad Karma. a ml tows. factor! Ill coiitrlliilatind tba dangrra of tba Ht lol.root rrolilaai to Ibia raj.iililia, fillura that may alin-l'la ear great UVt, a p..piilathiB of tba wiaa raarb out and a IOO.OUO.OHU might lira In fin ai wbilarar raimly may lc wit bin I la i Tbra rrery thing iuspire bia ram-- and aply it ao tbit all tba lia frr from reward their Industry tba chsrra of yaar to coma tuay ami cQaata ami of scenery, tba fertility of iliatiirbing fnrraa am b a ara alwaya at aolU tba oulinagliiabla waaltb of watar, work in arary liatmn. That ratuady foraat and wine, ami, across tba pacific, to ba. to ntt Ilia balam-- of our world to romi'UT. Our lugge-- t aiutlatinn bark on tba bind and karp It . l tba preparation Tln-rquestion ippiik to ba no olbar ram-adand enlouixstloti of this produelive area. Tba man wbn bia In buna upon mitbi-This oatmn must keep on ro it fa lt aartb, tba mill who dr.iwa hi work of ciriliz.ition. It must litiin; tr.iisrht from natura er.mary. iba tbit marvelous reciprocal process man who i fraa from all tba It lit. . rapidly risen to ini' tia of .1 by wbb-amplnymanf, tinaaaorabia bright of faiwar 'man ubo gitln-- r hi wifa ami children tba making of m-- o.mmumtie to faad nr m. in. nnu ba irtb!nlia and grt hi tba old. tba enlargement f l I miniiiiini- living by lit own labr frmn bi own tlaa to faad tba uaw. Tlia lnngrt l.iml, i tba nnrhnr tga of tbi nmntry. It to rie to tb pat taken to tbi and i a .pti"ti of Uir brb nnr otir irrig itimi cbially oicaslou and Imbue the American people piaa of ntiiniial tbroucb the Inutrumentality nf l'raiJant with a patriotic determination to turn Rooaaralt. It la a new policy, only at the balance of our population back to praaest in ita experimental at age, but the land and plant It there with home tboaa who know nmt almut It baliata It that no social upheaval can ever disturb. maaaura big with national fata. la This will safeguard thia nation for all U ( I ) .t - aa no ana govsra- ever bad Ufufa. (.j'li' - mi t lUnao la It f 8 It it I Miaul (t ab su Kiwlr.l 11.1 - f..f (" ittt.-.os- l h'lii.m Th.t it. I R.-- IV- I)- i'.aa ai..l rntin-a- a are liegiiiuing I'l "-- p-- t atl.) leil b.ui ) Ul I f Mass is I.t Its Il IIC A lilill' f W mist til. Health, Far UiMMirlt f.Uua 4 i . I ' ,1 "II i Up Iei.rat t i Vtl Soil-Republic- l I I Prosperity and Patriotism Fostered by Contact with Party Leads the Way. fMlil. .im"lllng uf III' wbi.-at lt Lanai Mstes lbr.ib (in- Di l j Avenue of Relief to Congested Cities grm lbs an' si t - .t Dr R CIIEEBFUl. IIJPPV ... Parser's . ' i Hi it -- - 1 1 4 ! ... ,V.m lions or It i . ) .i I.. .. u .. t. v M d it fa 1 IU ' I President fkosevclt's National Irrigation Act to Do a .. . Ih.-rs r r..rt 1 r.-- -t r t t- t $!2.urt. Mi-t- tii-i- pli-tii- ei 111! : wage-earner- s . rk-li- t .il.-r- h.ird-ia.-- rb-e- rb-e- blnd-slgb- Lem-oerat- at-fa- ir aiUI- tariff-exports ic |