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Show .POLITICAL ORATORY. H l The man who starts out on tho H I -stump nowadays has quite a problem B" .of psychology to tackle. Ho addrosst Bj es n different audience than the ono B which used to gather. In former H tlmos a rally consisted of people nc- H , customed to hear only ono side. They B) usually read only ono newspaper, H wlilch never printed speeches by op- BJ pohents. This audlcnco would Bwal- H low anything and cheer It. H Many of the speeches aro now made BJ. r on the streets or at railroad stations. Bk Tho audience Ih from Missouri and BT ' demands to be shown. It wilt not ac-H ac-H cept halt truths and unsupported as-BJ as-BJ sortlon. If n Mntement Is manifestos manifest-os ly unjust, It hurts tho party that BH makes It. BB Party tics hang loose. Most people BJ . read speeches nnd opinions from all BT ' points ot view. They know that BL t there aro good men In all parties, that BJj each has its own weakness and makes Hj ! Its own typical mistakes. BE Jj And yet a speaker has to be posltlvo H, to bo 11 rm In his own convictions. H i lie Is not calfod on to tell tho weak BJ points of ITts own case any more than BJ Is tho liivvycr who fs addressing a Bf , jury. Perhaps th'u reason why pollt- BJ leal oratory seems poor nowadays is BJ not so much that tho speakers have J declined In effectiveness. They have BJ to measure up to a greater level of BJ lute'iilgcnco In their audience. BJ At all hazards n speaker must seem BJ fair. Ho must be a thorough stud- BJ 1 cnt of public affairs. It so, he can BJ d plenty of weaknesses In tho re- BJ cord of his opponents. Ho can safe- BJ ly dwell on those to his heart's con- BJ tent. But tlio moment he makes a BJ statement that ho can't back up, tho HJ moment that ho utters an unjust BJ slur, that moment ho has slam- BJ nicd his audience In the faco, and In- BJ suited its reason and discrimination. |