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Show GASSAWAYS FAVORITE GREAT flHD GROWING WEST POE (Henry fiassaway Davis favorite is "Envision." Currant nut..) The shades of night were fallia. Irrigation Will Change Deserts to Gardens and Prjvida Lands for Millions of Homes. Fork over." What seek yef cried the one h seek the barl; I'll find it I'll get that check we want, yUH Ua sang, aa Davisward he aet: Fork over." "I FRIENDLY STRONG. ROOSEVELTS HAND that Increases the Sum of Human Happiness and Enlarges and Strengthens the Republic. T1IK MISSOURI Hm OKfroiu heart. ll br 4ii Hikp R1VKH." VM Ullt tliai lie loved -t tuore. but lb -- til. east 1p. way. tlip IN f.lt Hut, in country at 4r iliil not properly appro aisle 4liis rniil., lain tirdlier. win imiiliii nniitWr'il tlevetopHieiil ami UipiiM are de. iiipl In bring tli. grontei tn th. family tlie N. Niiip .ui li-litmil. II. nut acquainted will. tbi. bin iratlir anil found out tlut b. w.i wurtb toning aud aaviiiK- - IN started mil at mu upon bia patriniic and philauthropi IlHaeJlIH. Mr. Roosevelt firmly believe mil Unix Im SihhI fur the west. there i. II tu pul that aecllou next to ita iiiinieanir-slilful nr., by tb. Natbmal Irrigation Ait; whirb, it U universally admitted a law without niulil nut bar. til. argent personal influence In tb. House, any nnira than without bia ai natura aa President, Tb.u, there la bin in China, and tb. '011.8 I a. ir polii-1auaiua Canal, assured aa ii.rtiian.iit highway to tlia world, commerce. These meauire art vitally associated with tha e a wt. . Kaaai and Nvm tha Nu othor lVK.bl.iit h.a Waal. .r.r aNkea at aiiib lenetb nr an explicitly on tlia aub-Ju-t of irritation. It la equally trna that Mu nth.r President rrpr hud ao will, an aiiU.iiilaiic. with tb. siilijmd a. Mr. ICihuwipU pmeww., Ha Is, aa It were, au adopted child of lb. went auil kuowa It. want, and aympalkiara with (brut, Tba pmHMpi reservoir iu connection service will hua-In- i wHk lit. od for tb. great rmpir. bryoud tb. MiMbMippi tba water necessary to add tb. desert reaches there to baldtetbui. and prudwtirily. TUi will in.ure th. Ilia enduring (.talitiea of bia fame. knowMit. of tb. wmt aliinea through all bia tuterawra. IN liolila that la tba ronihig napmidty, anil that by it our natural reanuree ran ba to a degree undreamed of aiul our population and induMtry inore than diMilil.il within our contiueutal liiuita. Hi. work bare will mark tha special ai'liipr.ui.iit of bia adiuiulKtraf Ion, and hi. irrigation prin'lauiatiim will go down In history aa on. of of th. greatest mta of any President. Petoaeg of National Act. Th. National Irrigation Act la gaugrd im aa honest, lnt.lllg.iit, extensive plan, widl rouald.reil, anil will lie wlurly parried oik. Ity it wa will lie sble aa a lation to ail.l tu all funner trinuiidia of thia Itepuhllp new lllnnt ration, of our IHiwrr In iln thing., Ity a system of judicious forestry almost tha autire area an be re forest. I. In a hundred year. Tli. rliinal. isiulil lie iUanged and Improved. Wa ponld give an iinprtua hi ppry kind of trad., whirh, with our new advantage. In tlia Orient, woukl wore I ban rtonlde tli. rnliini. of our present pomnuMKial traffic. In tbi. area of intense agrieullurnl ami hnrtleuliural drv.loMiicnt will be created a field fm tli. exercise of every kind of akill and .very ait.iniiieiit of tinulieraft. Here many of th. vexed social amt oxinomlr questions are destined to ha aettled. In giving to th. Nalion a rare of a rare of men and women will lie inaured who, by Inlere.l, lii.liin-- t aud ehoire, will be patriot.. Iwn ita Hsm.-Owsl- a t Iteslro. There ia an Innal. desire In the heart of the American tn own B home. There ia an iulierent yearning of tli. i oimiion people, apparent on rv.ry page of history, tn uwn iu fre .ini pie bom. Hrtioii of tb. earth. Tlie deidre ia alill aa keen aa it ever wn. Of all of our pri.liieing eli.a, the farm-eneed, a li.nne most. II. must hare lal'il, be slinulil by all menu, own It Hi. farm neol nut lie an large a. aoine uppne, but it elionld lieliiiig tn tli. farmer, not to soil: one els. Tbi. I. Imeause or the lug only to the faruer, hut because of it. sdvnitsges tn the Nalinu at large. It i. lb. cnriieratnn. of our National life; k lie. a I the rent of all tm. and all uncial iuipmvenieiit ami irri-g.tb- Anglo-Maxo- n w.-tlt- r CiHiteiit. Hire a mail a home upon lb. anil ami 7'il bare inide him a palrhil who will thfend your in.iilulioii. at tlia ballot bit or on the Kiltie field. Open the door, of this greit arid wpat. with the Nati-makey of not worry l Irrigation, ami you need Knt toe future. Is the people have eny aivea tn the lain) ami must f nor other trouble, will settle tlieniHi'lvea. The property owner i. a pvni.erv.tive man who lovea hia family ml ho nnet ry lot the proMrty owu-er- s lie a. nniuerol. aa piM.ible. Hop. fop II meal Toll. The NHional Irrigation Aet, paared by a llnpnliljean t'oiigrew at Mr. l(i.Me-teltearnest reipiest and aa a result of his persona! efforts, baa already lit work f lucasureles. go,Hl In American rilienliii. t is placing within the rea.-l- i .rf the landless man nr inanless lend. It ! tu spe.k with a voire I'hsl iainiot lie inisiin.lerstisHl. Ity is.iut.iiring the two powerful of Irrigation .ml reclamation, hi its work f the Nati.ni. its niis-inwill Im well night irrestslilite. It will li.v fnnn the pathway or the bread inner tlie dead weight of poverty aud congestion which ha. otMirucled our na tinaal progiwM, c rent cl iiiterncine struggle let went capital and labor and threatened tn ahipsin-our future prosperity. a u fii-lnr- a In mnmrinlna, plaint It I here that tb. gnv.ru-luepngNiae't tu apply th. working, of th National rrig.iliou Act ami tu reclaim all of th. arid land which may in asrertain.d to lie arable aud which is found to Im aaseeptibl. of reclama' tiou by th. amount of water availnhle. (ioverutiient expert, estimate that the Iireneig amount of land which uiuy lie irrigated is aKmt on. hundred milK acreit Thia ran be reclaimed by aply-iu- g the amount of water now available, direct. It i. also esti mated that after irrigation baa lie.ii aipli.l to th. anil for three or four years. Ires quantity of water I. urresmiry ami hence an additional area uf perhapa fifty millknia ti res more may possibly be added to tba reclama lion area. aud valleya. Natura k Ki.aasivc Areas of Art low. Th. and region, evt ending in the maia frern the Missouri Kiier tn the l'acifie and fn.ni M iiv to Canada, .n area, generally wimakiug, of about le.MI iniies eiiln-- r way. Here is what ia kaow u .a aiij Amarira. Th On. on he went, by hill and dale Until tha night nt dawn grew pal7 And then nt last, with heart .i.u He murmured to th candidate: ut IH4 "Fork over." He saw the barrel round and fair Alas! ha saw no bnnghnla there! The candidate without hia spec's To read tho banner did not rex "Fork over." "I nnot hear a word." he sighed. ion heard when you were notified' The earnest youth at once replirf And then more vigorously cried: "Fork over." tha Naadfal, Nature aeeuia to Lav. employed every at its miuiiiaud to make tb. mountain and plain regiou tli. most favored portion of tba cartha aurface for tba halutation of utan. Tbia aectiou will on. day ba tba aeat of empire of tb. I,' lilted Rtataa, and, consequently, the world. For a di.tanca of more tban a thousand mile there are eucmaaiv. chains of niountaiaa, iu general course runuing worth and aontb aud oa parallel liura, with Dunienma vall.ya occupying th. immediate ground. Each valley, large or email, has Its stream, rarrying, with raiid fall, tha melting anuara of th. tributary mountains. The grade, in general favor the ieratlon of Irrigating ranala which tube tba water from streams and carry at a moderate fall to line, above tha cultivated land. Aa tha spring season advances, the rainfall decrease., the cmjsi Bred more and more water, which ia furnished automatically by tb. gradual lucres, of tli l.iiiperatnre along ami up th. mountain aide, reaching tha lightest deposit of aiiow iirat, and then, during th later and hotter months, drawing upon tha reaerva of the deeper and lea easier melted ice at the higliiw altitude. Fertility of ArU Moll. Under tha rains of centuries mnch of the soluble plant foods iu eastern anils bar brea washed Into Hi sea. Where nn rainfall esiats the plant food remaiu. The government analyae of soils show that the arid lands average three time aa much potash, ala tinire aa tuncli magnesia aud fourteen tinire a much liui. as tli. humid lands. Any farmer will tell you that a liiurstmi country it a rich country. the food taken hy growing plants the eastern fanner resorts to fertiliser aud manure. Ktart-liiwith a rich soil, the Irrigation!! also tiud fertilising strength iu tb. water he use. The ninmirial value held iu solution Iu 3il Inches of water the amount applied to on. acre iu a season at th. of Arisoiia amounted to University Ten acres under irrigatiim averr age Mter returns than crept) hi th. usual way. g 40-ac- Land Vary Yalnablm In those coiiuuuiittire of th. west winch have been created by irrigation, th. average yield of wheat, potntore and small rruil far .acred thnt uf th. best farming distriit Iu Iowa or Mismri or th. Iiret part of th. Mississippi Valremote ley. Although comparatively from th worhl'a markets for prolucts, an acre of laud under water right in the very heart of the arid regiou, will command a higher price tlmn an acre in th. humid Mississippi Valley. The f aimer hare Iremed that 4tl acres, well tilled. will yield more profit than 4U acre, farmed Iii th. old, haphnaard way. Intensive farming and larger profit frem smaller farms are making closely settled eoiiminnitie, establishing nearby neigh-Isirachisils, churchre anil liltrarimi, and th. isolation of old farm Ilf. im luugrr exist. The farmer make more money, slid the deadly monotony of life does mg drive his cliihlreti from home, or his wife to th. insane asylum. UoMtvell laimortallsd. Tli. paasag. of th. Natbmal Irrigation Ait ia tantamount to saying that A (produced from Philadelphia and Afaw haryag tit flrat-itr- a COUNTRY the face of the earth, if you believe in throwing open the doors of opportunity yonug men, if yon do not believe that Fact Which It Is Desirable t ltaar to ainoka-atachart a proper place for la Mtad. b and birds' U yon would Evidently Judge Parker baa hist track rather boar tha whirrneats, of revolving wheels of the fact that th United States has than tho murmur of diocootont, if yon become a billiou-dollcountry, whila ha has been dreaming away hia man- believe in happiness instead of nnhap-pineaif yon believe in courage and hood on tha beuch at Albany. Otherwise inIt i impossible to account for hia ac- honesty, if yon believe in fnyiknea stead secrecy, if you believe in deeds ceptance of Tha Bepublicaa challenge rather ofthan promises, if yon believe in to a compariam of Democratic and reason rather than ignorance, then cast auniinist rations." -If three ia any issue before th Ameri- your first Presidential veto for Roooo can pmple npon which the Ilppublicana volt and Fairbanks. are mure ready to appeal to the voter than another, it ia that relating to tha NOT USED BY DEMOCRATS Iwlniatratiim of national finances. But they will not let Judge Parker, or the Adjectives for Which Parker's Folhungry aggregation of Democratic edilowers Hava Ha Uaa tor to whom ha addressed hi Kip Vtn W know what ww mean when wa Winkle remarks, ignore the fact that apeak of an houeat and table currency," the United States of l'.KM deals with said President Roosevelt ia hia speech BILLION DOLLAR a eob-we- ar billiona, where in Cleveland's first administration ita finances con Id ha in terms of nine figures. Neither will they permit him to compare net expenditure under Cleveland with extraordinary appropriations under McKinley and Uooaevelt. When he makes his com pari sons be8 tween the expenditures of with those of ha will not be per mitted to ignore such facta aa the increase in postal expenditures from In 18H3 to $1.1S.TH4.48T in 1003. and that the excess of expenditures on account of tha postal service over receipts last year was only I4JWO.OI4, a compared with I&381.572. Aa an index of the growth of tha United State in every direction that marks advance In national welfare there can be no better standard thaa tha increased use of an ever improving and extending mull service. Neither will Judge Parker nor tha editor to whom be nnhoanmed a choice medley of ideas from th wit and wisdom of Samuel J. Tilden and Grover 'levelaml, lie permitted to "point with Democratic pride to the enforced econl, omic of Cleveland's second term without lieing confronted with the following deficit that waited on Democratic policy and Democratic adminisdie-cuss- ti acceptance. In no official utterance at the Demo eratie party, or of Its candidates for President or Vice Preaidont during the last eight yean, have the adjectives honest or stable ever been used to designate tho kind of currency Democracy demanded, and this notwithstanding the Democratic phrase makers will nse adjective freely and recklessly whenever they have any paramount" or "tantamount" idea to advance, like in the platform adopted at St Louis, which aid tha existing Republican administration has been SPASMODIC. ERRATIC, SENSATIONAL, SPECTACULAR and ARBITRARY." Alton B. Parker says the gold ataad-ar- d ia "inexorably established, but ht does not aay that hia own personal belief in it as affording an "HONEST AND STABLE CURRENCY" has been irrevocably eatabli.hed, nor, furthermore, that ho deemed tho Democratic party wrong, whan In Congreau, in 1KW, it to a man voted against the establishment of the gold standard. Aa th gold standard of value was then "irrevocably established." not by the Democratic party, but by the Republics party, the only gold standard that the Democratic party can honestly claim to have "irrevocably established la the tration: gold standard of silence on n subject on DRKKTTfi Dint NO CLEVELAND'S SEC- whirh k never did talk except to tower OND TEIIM. itself in the estimation of intelligent peo1rt4 Itti t'AAiltff ple, and to bread apprehension ia business circles. 1SI.3I1.2M WS With no exceptional expenditures, ovet was added to the public $2lg.INN),IMNI PULITZER'S MISTAKE. debt during CleveUnd'a term. And when they are discussing the He Doaa Nat Uadarataad th Attltad expense or running the government of af Parker. people that has Increased nearly 50 per Joseph Pulitser did not attend the cent, in population and more than 100 gathering of Democratic editor which per cent, in wealth since Grover Cleve- met ami communed recently with the land was first inaugurated. Hepnhlican Democratic candidate for the presidency, will not forget to remind American vo- but he wrote a letter, of which this waa r ters of anrb facta aa these: the Concluding paragrapu: MONET IX CIUCfLATION. It la bees us. I ao desire Jndgc mm. ims. Parker electbia that strongly I apeak an plaluly on 42.MT.tU2.UD. this aiilijn-i- . I rarueatly beg of yoa when la National Hanks. are him at Ksnpna. tn urge $i.intt.iik.ii7. f.'t.3u.am.L you that he accept also the full responsibility of Id laving Hanks. hia position; thnt he will not the fl.im.172.ltT. f2.!K,3rt.ftt& campaign In Nrw York the pivotal Plate lcHsilta In lists Banks, lie to amail tho mismanaged by politicians SM4.MT.ttlH. fl.Ht4..o0.ta. iMwet bint. iilolts tn Loin and Treat ronipenlea. whoBeset!" flNH.tl7.2DX indeed! Utile ia "Beaet, Total Imports. Alton 1L Parker "beset by th small foTT.SCT.82f. fldtC3.T10.237. liolitirians to whom Pnlitxer alludes, Total Export those who have, for years, been the vasf1.tC0.ltl.C70. fT42.lN0.T3X, VALUE OK FARMH. sals of David Bennett Hill or nmong (Kstlmatnl ou Census returns fur 1XN0, 1000 the Alton B. operators for Tammany. ami iissi.i Itwx mug. Iarker has been une of them himself. fCC.ono.wiu.tioo fl4.asi.ivi.onni Foxy political manager for Hill, who lai Value of Firm Animals. repaid him by an appointment, and who, Xb01X5ta iu the present year, has repaid him furI'nsluetloa of Miners I. ft2T.NtW.HNui. f1.3U.0t0.2Kt. ther, he ia not likely to be "lie set" by hi tuns rerrlrd one mil. by lieliway own associate. Mr. Pulitser most be Toil. Tnu. 52.tsr2.i70,.12D. 1T2.C21.CTXIWX wandering in hia mind. It ia npon those tat l.ot emits prr (at .TH3 cents per from whom he wiabea Mr. Parker to distoil mllr.) ton uillr.l sociate himself that Mr. Parker depends Wages la XauBfactnring Industry. INno. for wherever vote he may get in New iiua fOtT.tnXTOS. f2.328.fl01.234. York Tammanyitea and th Hill bench- and ItewiMrriug incomprehensible a are these billions in many respects, they a demonstration of the Tha Pleased Democracy. jet present growth of our country ao clear and simple a to be within the comprehension of child. Only one word need be added to rectify what might be an erroneous impression from the figures as to the value of farm animals (a). Daring the second administration of Cleveland thia value shrank from $2.483JWM.C81 in IMG to fl.727.0-1i.08in lSD. from which it has siuc risen to over (3,100,-000.0- 1 at 18CT-INUt- billiou-dolla- t,ae...-Wrt.ll1- lt the west is already redeemed it ia now a questiim of time, l'erliaps ao law has Iren imssoI siinw th. foundation of this governmriK wu.ch has been or can lie so rlific in great ami last-lu- g results to th. United States. No Isw has ever I men enacte.1 which will add so milch stability, wealth, happiness ami general prosperity to th. pre-pand th. giiv.nini.ut as th. National Irrigation l.aw. Here is a new field for the most hopeful speculation. It cannot lie that any liiininii mind has yet lscn aid. to estimate the the fruitful result which will follow iu th. wake of this National Act. Unrein is Imnmrtal-be- d for his Emancipation l'roclamation. Itooscvell will lie immortalised because lie lias done that which will io free frem th. thrakloni of th. congested centers of popuhtthui, millions of famitir ho can and will fee grateful to him and his memory as they aK under their own riu. and ffgtire and enjoy all th. coiiifons ami cont.ntni.iit of their arer ami enlarged life of health, happiness and usefulness. i. Kri-lgl- Make it ay for th. arerage ritiieu breome laud owner and yon strengthen teufobl hi allegiance and deMl votion to his country and fondly. It almost seems aa If tho earth and ran now get him. iu the irrigated the kine refused to forth their West, uud.r th National Irrigation natnral increase under bring a Democratic adAct. ministration. By actnal tret in southern California First V stars Faad Thia. it 4is been found counting the urban Roosevelt and Fairbanks are both and rural population toget lire that on ua are a majority of the lead-er- a and oue-baacre of irrigated land will youngof men, the Republican If yon The Donkey Hay, bnt thia ia fine; support on. persmi, ami it fa estimated believe In progress, if patty. yon want to see That's th Grot tine I've been able to that this can ultimately h. redured t onr country the richest aud ita people make these two wings work a single acre for each individual. together ia tho most contented and prosperous on tea year. Minneapolis Journal. 4 to Mil-lio- if They found him, froxen stiff and sit His banner still within his And now they send no strings davlea. They aim ply aay: "We want tba Hre Inquirer.) Im Vermtmt. s only n tiean O, May, vain youth," an oU mi a mp,! At such appalled. "Dost think hia name ia Utvrawirw The youth sang, through tha dyinx di "Fork over." "I rouiKry almumla I HMrr.it When Presblciit IiKIdiMi yet5 u.. "Try pot that task," the rnaidea But only fraitiewly ah sighed, For ho replied: W need the atnt And chortled then in accents cru "Fork over. A Policy r hen up through West Vir.liii. A youth who held withiu hia baud" A banner with thia strange counuinj Fork over." OUR FOREIGN TRADE. THEODORE ROOSEVELT. Rapabllcaa aad Col- la pooa Uadar Democratic Policlaa. On of th great arguments of the Tho Feopto Tenet Hina Beth aa Han and President. free traders haa been that with fre Mora and more, ns tho presidential trade we would have access to th markets of the world. Well, the only time campaign develops, it baronies lpw. nt that ona man upon tha Amtrima the fra traders have had control of tho government ia recent year waa ia people have fixed their affectiom ail their and admiration, that ia Mm this the second Cleveland administration. a aereu and perfect trust Ibu They did ant put actual ftoa trad into repose man Theodor is Roosevelt operation, bat they cam eloao enough Four years ago tha Republican! if to it to put moat of tho facto rise of tha rank ami file demanded the iMudi. this country out of operation. We did not get the markets of tho world. They ttoa and secured the election of Tkw doro Roosevelt for Vic Prcaidml may have been open to aa, bnt onr were going eat of business ao Against hia own wishes, against tht at fast under the ruinous tariff schedules vies of hia nearest friends, Berner the Democrat had put into effect, that accepted th duties forced apoa kin they could not seek the markets of tha by bia anthuaiastic admirers. In th dark days which followed tht world. Their own home market, the best one to them, waa invaded by cheap for- assassination of McKinley the belorsd, th old aphorism that "tho voice of tto eign goods, however. Then tire protective thriff system was people ia the voic of God" waa called reinstated by th peopl of this country, to mind ao th American nation noted and immediately th factories began to tha gravity, sincerity and thorough n Within ten petenry with which tho man they had torn their wheels again. for Vice Prerident took tpa yean w have demonstrated that the chosen way to get th markets of tho world himself th duties of tha Preridaacy. Aa tha years bare passed edmliitha is to protect our own market against invasion, build1 np our industries, and and respect for Roosevelt hare grovx, until now ha ia without doubt tha mote then branch out for foreign trade. We have not had anything like free popular man in tb round world. TM trade within those ten years, and yet wa hia popularity ia well founded aa on am selling millions of dollar! worth of who known tho ehrewd judgment tf American will question. No awn eu good every year in tha "markets of th occupy tho Presidential chair for oat world. In Congress, last winter, Congresamaa year without being jnatly measured ud Hill of Connecticut, told of a recent estimated by the people whom chief exvisit he had made abroad. Ha said: ecutive he is. From a popular idol, ao ia whoat "I stood oa the deck of a Japanese liner in the harbor of Vladivostok, Russian personal gift, manly qualMas aud Siberia. In tha hold of that ship waa practical work all men delighted, Rouao over 700 tons of American agricultural veil has grown, in these thnt yasts, to implements that had ooma across tba be the ideal President of th moat poho world Pacific ocean from America for the use werful Republic tb tnr of the peasants of Siberia, and shipped known, the hood of one of Oa gratM there under the Dingley tariff bilL That nations of the earth at tha preamt Hij. e Theodore Roosevelt the ana night at the hotel I met tha representRoosevelt the President ia a fr ative of a locomotive works in Philadelphia who told me ho had jnst pnt in are to bo proud of. In every mi k 100 locomotives, for use in the Siberian every net of bio Hfe, there qwtki I rip rourageona-bearterailway, shipped them under the Ding-le- y oroua and incorruptible imbridatlity. tariff law. "Next day I rode 500 miles up the Ua ia the champion of civic probity, d banka of th Amur river over American national patriotism, of religioat fit steel rails shipped there under the doin, a worker for and believer la tto Dingley tariff law. Then I got aboard beat opportunities for all bmo, wilbrt a steamer to go np tho Amur 1,500 miles. regard to clans, oocnpatioa, thanlaftal It waa American built, towed two steel opinions, politics or rec or color. Th young men of the roaatiy km barge made in Pittsburg, shipped there ia th President one to whom they m aadcr the Dingley tariff law. "In the village of Gorhitaa, Siberia, loyally took aa an example of vifttM ten thousand miles from here, the vil- manhood, rejoicing as a strong mai pr lage con.iating of a doaen log houses, paring to run n raco. The staid rfcbm ia a little store not over 8 hy 10, w toiling In the heat of the nouodtj d bought a package of candy, wrapped in life, turn to Roosevelt ae hi choice paper nn which waa printed the picture of all men to hold tbe cans i of William McKinley, to popularise that .poneibilitiea of th public botiaew k randy among the peasant of Siberin. hia clean, competent hands. Tht a all shipped under the Dingley tariff Republican, he who haa borne the IM law. of the last strenuous geu nation, tlw That tonka aa if we had a slice of area of the great war for bumaa t tho markets of the world, bnt we never dora and the preservation of the Ca beholds in Roosevelt a man wurtkj got anywhere near them under Demowear the mantle uf Lincoln. cratic tariff ideas. Tbe limn of the day, the mas f 8 Vila Arrotana Hia Own Partvt hour, is Theodore Roosevelt- - He h Former Senator Vila, attended the great President because he la F Wisconsin Democratic State convention man. U has come home to held at O.likonh, where harmony waa publican within the first week A lacking, and made thia statement in campaign that the main strength of closing the debate on the adoption of Republican cause this year ia It the platform: date for President Firmly la hi I rante to tbe Democratic State Convention hoping fur harmony and waa joyful tied in the affection and the Mfj In that hope. Hut 1 find here that the thq American ireopl. All Bapahw Democratic party la nothing, known nothwill vote for him, and thonsaudi F ing Miami the great principle nn which It thousands of men from other parti wan founded and which has made It a power, and must throw Itaclf away on a rote for him because be I mere question of tmlttlcal machinery strong fibre, tbe sort of maa tbit rtW Ire crafty politicians. other man naturally lore tad tr Mr. Vilas has been a tong time in There is no weak spot in the finding out what a majority of the vot- acter of Theodors Roosevelt thew ers of the nation learned yean ago. There is no "yellow street" OotP" Wa re not constrained t. keep allnl fesrless. definitely forceful, hia are well known ay vital qaaatloal wa ara d ivldod and opinions and hkt work "J vital qatla onr poller in con countrymen, as straightforward aad clear cot d to th name for all sechia ideas. , tions d localities. There to aothlag y He will be onr next President oaporlmaatal abont tha amvnraaxaat wa ask tha paopla to coat In aa la powar, will carry with him into the e for onr porformaacr la tha past, aar be ia elected the entire confidence proved gavaranMatal a Beta a cy, to a American people. gaaraatoo ao ta aar promts far tha fOtara. Prmdaat Korneva!!. Tto Wisdom of a Cast1 Benjamin Brown, of Richriaw. On private redamatioa project 'near Phoeoix, Aril., created a taxable prop- haa been somewhat neglectful Kowa erty at over ton million dollars in loss hia regirtretloa aa a voter. than twenty yean, and that from land registered, because be want to Roosevelt. Th only renurkaW practically worthless an til Irrigated. about thia caw is that K& It waa ander President Harrisons Browa to just one hundred y Republican administration in 18)1 that But after alt even thi th Bret Federal forest reserve was es- remarkable, because no Ancss &( tablished. Thia was the beginning of sea who ha acquired Ao m nctool growth in national forestry. hundred years could do au7tf th ia than vote for Roosevelt At tho average rate of increase In tha part we will have over ldO.OOU.OOO peoTO irrigate to to popalrt within the ple In th United State for ita ancce apno ST next 90 yearn. The west must supply depend Colonisation in th VP,'"f meat of those with komox erto nnocrwpiad tracts "f It Ex panda Vmdmr Tkw-dor- clean-minde- d, d, . kJ f?V |