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About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 16, 1904)
, ' lltansM,flB!.,v t'-SQfci,.. .-- .-r4.. , 4iiiu iyt v-f . w 'tMWMMIMMrfNM9 ',. v.- J ;. k .. A ilM"? ra41! ? ,H SUl'l'LK.MKNT TO Tjfle Chief Hod Clotnl. Ncl)., tM)t Ci in0i RECORD OF THE DEMOCRACY Its Professions and Promises Compared with Its Performances. VERITABLE CALAMITY PARTY Preaches the Gospel of Discontent and Wastes Time In Obstructing Wise and Dcncflccnt Republican Policies. Congressman .1. Adam I'eite tells of meeting !i typical member of Hie Imru of promises Mini calamity howlers. The Democrat liml jut coino out of a ki'ooh when In told Itede lie hul been buying miiiio lining for h!s underclothes. In leply to Jtede's ipieij ii.t to how ln wns getting on, the iinrorttiiiiiti' desciplc of Jefferson answered: "Tlint IiIm horse wut dend nnd Ids mute went In inc. Ami lie lost kIi rows In n poker came: Tlien a hurricane ciimc, mi n Miiiinii'r s iliir, And Mew tin' house wlicic ,c llwtl, suiii Anil nil caithipinke ciiiiio when tll.il i.i-t gone. Anil swallowed tin l:iinl tliat the house Mood mi, Tlit'll tlic tn lollertor soon Mill "r. nii Ami cliur'i'il lilm up wlili tlic holt' lu the gruuiul." Iledc said that his.fticud thought tii.it wns carrying tlic single tn too fur. Kill if you could nnulyze ills race and those of nil chronic enniplulucrs mill kickers you would 11 till that, out of a hundred of them, nt least ninety-eight ought to go out mid kick themselves. Short on Performance. Democrats do not know tin meaning of the word "performance.'' when ap plied to doing anything for tin gen cr.tl good, tin; iiihniHciiicnt of the hu man race, or the betterment of man kind. As a party it has been trying to write it for more than a full round century, mid yet it has not succeeded in forming the first letter. To do anything constructive- or of permanent luiiclit -crms utterly heyond its moral and psychic conception, or physical capacity to perform. Its normal attitude is with its face to the past and its hack to the future. It never sees an opportunity un til the issue lnis been permanently set tled by the Itcpublicau party mid public sentiment. Then it will stand up, with unblushing and Inconceivable effrontery, ami say: "1 did it." If the question of locomotion, with it, depended upon the two limbs of prom ise nnd performance, it would limp through it course a lonthsomc deformity. Tho promise lee would reach .several times around the earth and then to tho moon, while the performance member could Dot be found. Intact, witli a x erful magnifying class. It has liceti a helpless victim of promiscphobia lor n hundred nnd one years, and there is not a single symptom of relief iu siht. Tin disease Is conceded by the best author illcrt to bo fatal, but u slow death car ries its own peculiar form of retributive punishment. Founded on u Mtatnkc. Jefferson, its father, while a man of deep learning nnd consummate diplo macy, hated Washington, and early op posed the cardinal principles of the l-Yd-crnl (ioverument. He organized the Democratic party to aid him iu this op position. Washington and Hamilton wanted a strong protective government, Jefferson wonted n weak "(Joverninent that would govern the least." rounded on the idea of ivfcntincnt, resistance, ne gation, subversion mid an academic and false conception of pergonal privilege, the party has ipilte naturally Ih'cii "fnrninst" all sane measures directed toward the healthy progress of the coun try nnd the real advancement of its peo ple. Iteiug a party of opposition and obstruction its policy has been to preach calamity nnd foster discontent; to prom ise everything mid actually do nothing. l'nrty Oil I u in Under Jnckamt. If Jefferson was the founder of De mocracy, Jackson Is its patron aiut. Af ter the Jeffersoniau period, INOl-'-o, came tho ducksonian. INU.VK). Tho signifi cance of the JackMiu era of Democracy lies iu the fact that he wns able to build machine from tho rabble or the less educated classes, that enabled him act ually to assert his claims in conflict with the Constitution and against tho idea of Itepuhlicsiiiism. He assumed a pni tioi) between Congress and tho people, as it were; as a patriarchal ruler of the re public. Tho curse of Jackson's ad ministration was that it weakened re spect for law. Tho lirst clear symptom of the decline of n healthy political spirit was the election and re-election of Jack son to the Presidency. Ills administra tion paved a broad way for the demur ali'.iiig transformation of the American people. Under Jackson, (mlltlcs were vulgarised mid American society was de prived of its rightful Iiilluenco over gov ernment. I'nrtlaaim, Not Puti-iota. The twenty years from the defeat of Van Itureu in 1K-U) to the defeat of Douglas in tSlit) brought additional dis aster mid odium upon Democratic ad ministration. The strength of the party bos -always rested lu the Solid South, ami tho uneducated rllVrufT of our great cities. During the year mentioned the Southern Democracy pursued a polio, of territorial expansion, not out of patriotic or broad motives, but for the solc-pur-1isi of Increasing tin) number of slate Stales, nnd thus preserve the sectional balance iu the Senate, These jeiir.s are 'memorable lu history for the struggle j for territorial acquisition, the struggle nver the Wiluiot Proviso, thu Compro Itdso of IfWO, the repeal or the .Missouri Compromise, tor the long agony iu Kan- as'fUw the sensational Dred Scott de '.Won, and for the reconstruction of the 5 arty on strictly sectional lines. Kaplil Moral Dccny. During nil these weighty hlstory-mak-lug years, tho Democratic, party wns the willing accomplice of tho Southern l.ivr-liolder lu his efforts to perpctunte the institution of human slavery and to extend slave labor nt the expense of freo lahor. 'Ihe sacrifice of principle neces- I'sitated by this relationship led to rapid decay. The party censed to product neat leaders. Men of conscience mid courage, like Thomas II. ltenton, left Mt. The significance of this period Is tha llliistr.ili.tti It gives of the disastrous re sults of a betrayal of principles, to tho morals, honor and usefulness of a narty. The peopl hae not trusted the Demo cratic party since, except during the two brief nightmares 'of the Cleveland ad ministration. I'arty'a Khninefnl Record. Koiinded on the wrong side of moral ml political nhles, it spent the lirst fitly years of Its existence along tho lines of self-aggrandlzcuient and narrow I'ltrtlsnu legislation. While professing la its platforms to tic the fiiend of the musses, it persistence enneted laws vlileh IhhiuiI them to penury and (lis tless. While publicly advocating n lirond, Intelligent citizenship, it voted muilnn Iiiilhlilual freedom. Whllo beat III),' the tom-toms for prosperity to the Ij'oplc, It voted ncaln.t cheap postage, tie Ilomeste.iil law, mid the Itcsumptlon of Specie Payment. Claiming to be lu ftvor of a higher standard of living for lie worklngnimi, it enacted free-trade iit'.isiu-es which sent him into indefinite, ill forced Idleness, and reduced him and Ills family to the level of the pauper l.ior of Kuropc. Professing tho utmost patriotism, It gave all posslhlo aid to the rebellion. . Some (.'niiipnrlaona. Contrasted with the grand old Itepub licnn patty: the one abolished slavery. Il) other upheld it to the Inst; tho one pul down the rebellion, tho other sup- pitted-thu lebellioii; the one preserved tli.) National faith ami credit, and paid tin) National debt, the other tried every sclh'ine mid expedient to stultify the re public nud moid the debt; the one lire served the standard of valuo unchanged, the other sought to tamper with It and destroy it. (lata Wotmo Inatenil of Hatter. The professions nnd promises of tho Democratic party, during the past forty time yenrs, and the nhsenco of all per formance nre ns notorious as ever. They show the lack of ideas, or purpose, but abound iu hypocritical dogmas and llatulciit pretenses. It has "rotersed" it.'lf on almost every Important Nn tlnuil measure and brought upon itself the liilicule of right-thinking people. Apropos of this deplorable condition iu the party, "Mr. Dooley" proposed tho following want ad., a little while before the St. Louis convention: ''VTANTIIlt A good, notlv. energetic IHitiniw-nit, stlirong lv lung nn" limb: must lie In f.-mir lv sound money, lint not too Hniiiil: nn' iiutl-impccryiillst, lint f'r Inililln' onto t lint we'e got; nn liilmv of llirmls, Imt a friend lv organised capital; .i N.imiuiililzcr ultli t!t" crushed nn' down ilinnMeii people. Put not lie nnny means hostile to vested Inthrests; must iidvocnte ittirll.is, uovcr'mliit he liijiim-tlnu, free sil ver, sound uiimey, greenbacks, n sllight li. n tiulff t'r ilvlmni, tit' coiietltootlnu to follow tli" ll.ig ns fur as It cun, an' no farther; dill service rnyfortii lv tli' la'uils In oillie, an' nil tli' gr-rent no' gloryous iiliieliles lv our gr-tent nn' gloryous pnrty, r itiuiy gr-rent nn gloryous purls thereof, lie must be akelly nt home lu Wnlt strert mi' tli stock ynrils, In tli' parlors lr tli' t rich .in' Hi' kitchens lv th' poor." Clerelandlani and Democracy. During Cleveland's administration our National debt increased n half million dollars a day in tho face of the party's promise of better times. Each day we lost half a million tlollnrs in foreign trade. During that administration the value of fnrm products decrensed more tli.ui tire hundred million dollars. Dis trust and panic paralyzed the great in dustrial system of the country. Hanks closed their doors; business houses as signed; the balance of trade was against us capital withdrew from tho fields of legitimate enterprise into secret places; lalior was forced into unwilling idleness; we had deserted mills, smokeless facto ries, silent machinery. Wo had tramps and beggars, industrial nrmies, starving women and children. Two million nble Iwtdied men were liogging for work the opportunity to earn bread for their starving fnmilles, l.'nworthy of ICxIatance. Tills happeiKsl during the ndmiuistra tion of the Democratic pnrty which dur ing fifty years has added nothing to progress, nothing to the cause of liixrty, nothing to freedom, nothing to the glory of our common country. This is the i:irl, that, no matter what It promises, always goes into partnership with calam ity. It feeds on disaster and fattens on despair. The only time it has had con trol of this country durine this gener ation, it shut the doors of industry mid clothed labor in rags. It fought under the dishonored banner of free silver, it opposed keeping our Hag in the Orient, ami advocated that it bo lowered In retreat ami trailed iu the dust of dis honor. Such is a part of the record of the pnrty of calamity, professions und promises the oft-defeated, discouraged, disorganized, ilisgraeil, divided, decrepit old Democratic party. It stands to-ihiy without an issue, without a principle, without a policy, without u platform, without a leader and without hope, III closing we quote S. E. Kisor, of the Nebraska Independent, who puts these woids iu P.ryan's mouth ns regards Parker and his party: "llrTBti'a Position. 'Tilt-mis niul count ryinen. let's trust him TIioiiu'Ii he's not a mini to trust -bet's I'lidciiMii- to elect I) 1 in. Though his caiiM' Is fur from Just; I Iium put nnny all riiueer As I promised them I would, I iiiii for the splendid ticket, Thougli It Isn't nny good, "I.et us lrd ourselves for buttle llut I hope i- cnmiot Mill I.et iis limy to he successful, TIioiikIi scecess wiitild be a slu; I.et lis glxe the people's banner I'lito him to nobly bear. Itnt It's ilniigeroiis to do II, I'm- he Isn't on the square. "I.ot us ivute nur lints for'l'nrker. The pour tool of fusy Dnve; ,i-l us li-r-i our hopes upon him, T!ioill.'li lu s Mummon's eilncilig slnvct I.et us ruhc him up to power. Help to srnd Mm whooping through, llut remember here I warn on You'll be sorry If ou do." "In the orderly (iduilitlatrntlou of airalm of the Government it ia necea anry that euclt of tho three depnrt incut" ahoolil repoae truat und confi dence iu Hie acta of the ntliara perl'nrnitd within tbeir proper aphere of net Ion. We inuit proceed upon the aasiltiiptlnn that tho cxecutiro depart ment, within Ita constitutional prero uuthaii is nctitutcd by proper motives, and that it ia ua rags rd fill of the ood linuio of the country ua either the logUlntlve or the Judicial depurt uieuta." From Kfunlor rnlrbauki'- fetch on I'anm, February 3, IWt, JUDGE PARKER. After His TclcRranu After His Speech. m R J jTSVlfu Allr llrXviTrfrrUL Tin HI llvQ tmfWrmmBliMpiliJiiAF VmlmWJnrJft IKIklilH A mavVIWAiakBBBVAa'Jafl I 3 r- s- r - (Copyright, Iftftl. Iteproiluced by permission of the Chlengo f'hrnulele nml the New York I'rcnlng Mull.) EDUCATION IN POLITICS. Parker Talk a of It. but Ucliee on the BtrenKth of Tain many. Judge I'ntkor enys thN: 'A "Whenever a great question of public importance tins uriscu, it hits been pre sented and championed through the press nml on the rostrum by the educated thinkers of the country, who, for the time being, are tho rent leaders, nnd under whoso banners thu organization leaders hasten to marshal their forces lest their isiwcr shall he overthrown." What Judgo Patker has said above is truo nnd right nml sensible, llut what, after the expression of such nn opinio)), is Judge Parker's courseV It Is very true that tho educated thinkers of the country should conduct tho af fairs of tho country. Hut what Is Judgo Pnrkcr doing? Ujion what nud whom does Judgo Parker rely for carrying the State of New York; one of tho States, the influence of whose electoral votes is great In tho results of the Presidential campaign. He relies upon nn iin-Aincr-lenu combiuntioii known ns Tnmmnuy Hnll. It is absolutely impossible that tho ninn could hopo to enrry his own State without tho nid of this most cor rupt organization, iu tho, greatest city of tho country an organization that has simply brenmo mi enormous fester upon the State in which It exists, ltut It has been nccopted In nil exigencies, by the Democrat it party, flhleh, to tho credit of that party, I u llttte above Tammany, How ridiculous, under tho elrcum stances, is the attitude of the nioro or less qualified jurist who lives In Eso pus! Think of u mini who even talks of the iulluenco of the educated man iu politics and who nt the same time must depend entirely for his success, in tho Suite of New York, upon n conglomera tion of tho most uneducated nud vicious elements ever gathered together iu the making of a political pool in u great city. It is hard to say It, but Mr. Park er cannot cien afford to be respccNhle in his explanations. Ho cannot ord to talk about educated peoplo or aAiut cilucnted Iulluenco back of him, or .tout nil that is good nud broad nud Nlti rated back of him because, w.'Hout Tnnuumiy back of him lu his own 'lute, ho has not the shadow of n hope nnd Tammany Is tho worst force thf-re Is polltlcnlly a discredit to the countty. This l tho nub of the thliif. This if the statement of the thing. If this re spectnblo jurist up In Esopus pretends to say that the educated human beings iu this) coilllll-v en n noil. . i- imv ,.i-ntini. stances, be with him, why, necessarily, ho must cut himself nway from Tnm mnuy. Itut .politically he onniiot ulTurd to cut himself nway from Tummnny nml there you nre! One almost sympa thizes with the middle-aged gentleman at Esopus. IN THE DAYS OF OLD ESOPUS A Hong of Itstl. Iu the days of old !optis. Are you mi? Iu the days of old Ksopus. . Are you on? Iu the days of old I'sopus Hill tried very hnril to rope us, Are you ou, nro you on, nre jiut on? IIIII snhl, "Hoys, I'll leave the town when we nrrhe, If to win the race for my man you'll but strive. Unfile never did get there, And we really didn't cure Are you on, are you on, nre you ou? Iu the days of old Ksopns, . ,, . Are you on? In the days of old Ksopns, Are you on? In the days of old I'.sopus What it foolish wuy to dupe us, Are you on, are you on, me you on? Parker Ia the Hope of Trust. (New Yoik Tribune.) Jnmes .1. Hill's selection of Judge Parker ns his cnmlldutc is signllicnnt. He is angry with President INsnevelt simply nnd solely for interfering with his lawless schemes to monopolize tho rnllwny trafllu of tho Northwest. Ho turns to Democracy and Judgo Pnrkcr because he sees Iu them llceiuo to work his sovereign und imperious will In tho domain of business without restraint on the part of tho government. And Mr. J. J. Hill is un able, experienced, hard headed inuu, who knows what bo is about. He Is not iu tho habit of buyluc cold bricks. WHOM SHALL WE HIRE? '-'hiring the Inst Democratic mlmtnls tntlon tho government borrowed huu rfivls of millions of dollars during u,':ime rl profound pence, to jmy current Ax-t-fnses. During tho MeKlnley ndminiij fatlou It prosecuted u foreign war to n successful conclusion without lsjrrow ti'g n cent, nud since the wnr closed nil of the war tnxos have been removed. An Untried Man, or Ono Who line Made n (Jood Itecord, The good results of tho nfTalrs of :i nation depend almost absolutely upon Its relations with other nations. There Is, under the present condition of thought iiid nfTalrs, an advancement iu the world a community of nations. Tho ono among those nations which exhibits the greatest honesty nud tact and com mon sense, is the nation which will be to the fore. Under the uilmlnixtratloii of the purly that Is now controlling tho nftiilrs of the United Stntes has occurred such ex trnnrdlunry diplomatic success us has perhaps never been excelled by any na tion at uuy time. This success bus ac crued because of the tuct nml sense of tho present President of the United Stntes, nssisted by his Secretary of Stale. The record has been something extraordinary, nud nil the civilized world tins recognized it, Tact nud souse nre Just us much it requisite In tho conduct of the affairs of (i nation us they nre lu the affairs of a corporation or mi Individual. We reward those who exhibit tnct nnd settie by continuing them lu place, for our own benefit. The conclusion need burdly bo expressisl. Any American citizen of intelligence will know whom to vote for this lull. Cannot lie Trotted. (Albany (N. Y.) Journal.) The peoplo of this country have learn ed by sad experience that no metier who is the Individual to lend the Democratic pnrty In tho national contllct, they cannot trust tho Democratic party when in power to do tho right thing at the rlsht time. "' y rj , "nurlni; tho aayeti yenrathftt liavw Jnat paaaed there ia no dhty, doiriestlc or foreign, which we hare atilraredl io natcasarr tuek which we JtMi.-fo feared to -ladertnke, op which waJmva i.ot pefermed with remonuuloMfflk-reboy, W" liave never , Pleaded Jhiitpterioe. Welmve never eoght reftix', lu u-UI. cir-ti nud complaint Initad of action, Wr fuce the future ri(ty our ,PJ and ou- preaent aa Knnrantora of our prom lara, oud wearecoutont to atttnd.orto fe.ll by the record which we have made und are making;.'' Preildeot Kooixalt. UNSAFE) UNSAFE! UNSAf 'fi Democratic Charge Ajji. your President Roosevelt inaVshow Without Foundtti.n.pior- in the - m SAFEST MAN IN COUN with All the Woritf. inrcc years in tne vrnuc na o , No Time Hns Anylhln Bees Doie U?st Did Not Tend Toward Peace VO" H Jit When Ihe brlter personal fatweki), Theodore Itonsovolt nti r.eW'TBre wlieu u Democratic tipitn'io nskedv detlne his opsmltlui vto tlic PrlsId'il'y the inevitable reply Is that "ltooBcvoiS. is nn unsafe inan." op Now, Is heV " What makes nn tuiMfo ninn? Whei8, is n ninn snfo nud when Is he dan get tuis? How nre we to judge n inanp. . by what he hnti done or by whnt sonu one snys ho inny do? Aro we justlfii ' ' in culling n man unsafe who has' at ' his life been eminently safe? Is not I man entitled to the reputation ha muktw. for himself? l''r thrco yours Theoilore llooscre hns hnd absolute iower, us President tlio United Stntes, nnd yet during Ike e threo yours, ultliough called to tho gra , olllce suddenly, ns the result of a li( rlble murder, he hits never lost his ho He linn never done n dangerous till; ho hns nt no time Involved tho Rounjgli lu tlltllcultJes, eltJier nt homo or nbroru" lmmedlntely following tho n)urdereW,, Wlllinm MeKlnley piedlotions - - . freely inailo in the Democratic p tlint l'rosideiit Itooscvclt would inv the country in wnr. Has ho dono so It wns nlso freely predicted to would brtk with the Hop jority in the House mud tfa that he would insist on having hferiC! way, disregarding the ndvlce of t tlme-lninortsl lemlers of the pnrty. lit he done so? t. Does not every one know, oti thq con trnry, tlutt the coinlltloiis of peace be tween the United States nnd the ,fwt of the world wore never moro soctmly, nuchnred tlian to-dny? Tills hasieot been been use the Pre.siilent has nOt'laad nn opportunity to go to war. Tfceee have been half a dor.iyi sitcJi opportqip; ties nt thu very lonst since he beMMM President, when, If he hnd beem tJ-a&IM , s.i re ninn ue was nnegesi to no, ne WfBt ? ensJIy huvo luvolvisl ns in war with eie; ' or moro of tho grout isiwers of Europe', Ho has mot every dlplomntlo cracrrMeejr with rough nml ready diplomacy uud ax- I traordinnry tnct, which huvo won for.ti" ,- s, United Stntes tin resicct ilf tho cItII ; ) ized world. J Racnrtl In Dlplouiacjr. - Took over Uie rocord of the State 1' partment under 'Jlieisloro Itooeovelt the last threo years, und see bow nt, , hns been accomplished to uplwllthe idty nnd the lionor of the United SVJ without nt nny time musing thfiM est npiirehcusiou of foreign krt lr diiring the present ndmlulstratlon Oi special commission wns appointed to just tho disputed iHiitmlary hot ween. A5S!r; kn nml tlio Dominion of Cunndn. Biittftf'Cr of the-Oaiiadlan people and oaoers tal rather suvitgely. There wns everx portuulty for a misstep on tho part tho United States. A Utile, too mi bluster, it little too pronounced br -failure iu tact at the proper inonifbt, , sulistjlutlou of timidity for bravery, of rashness for conservatism by T1U.R to m 5' 5 i i s m m : m 3 dore ltonsevelt would havo fanncC feeling in (imnda Into n dato llame. The Alaska boutjdary W inheritance from the MeKlnley X istrntlon, but it wns safely settlid der lUsisetelt, settled to the cnM( ' the United Stales, settled wltboW . loss of an inch of American it PUr. and settled, too, without tho dent ' rt of the friendly feeling between' z,5' Ilritaln and the United States. , When Uennnny und Kuglaud w the throats of the little repuhl 2.50, Venezuela, mi tmsnfo President' "ml , r.islly have luvolvisl us in war wjt thoee two countries, mid a timid Prfa dent might easily have brought upon thK flag the shaiiio of the rest of the W'Wjd, ItussJii nud Jnpau hnvo been at W'iri' The sentiment of the people in tkiP ' ....lltvtl-v lifiu liftnli Inyvulu I., tntmjxt . ia JnKiu. et John Hay, tho wise and (Ms-MS: erect Secretary of State, apiwlntod jXtjmSkt, MeKlnley and unhesitatingly rrtalolT by ltoosevelt, has so successfully dire- "2 ed tho course of American dlpIoma.V. av tlint tho United .States to-duy is an roiryr the friend or Itusslu us it is of the 1 ' Ht-htlng-tsick, Japan. The United SO. In fnct, has dictated the ilipIotnulK-3 duct of hostilities between KustuV Ufflso .Inpnn. This country has dominated tlRl hituniion, and yet nt no time has there been the sllgthcst danger that we might become embroiled with nny foreign na tion. ?i Safe Kverybay la the Yaar.-.afeflAil These are the actual results oality tLni yt-nrs of the foreign policy of Ti nLJf-" HK)scveIt, Ihe mini who. wllNJLpl5Ii,; , tercd the White House ns tho resume 'SSuV ' miirtlerous bullet, was by his i-oliUcnrV & versnrles pictured to the other nntionHV,.Wi tho world ns n braggart nnd a ewaslt ,'h. buckler. He bus been safe, nlwayaVeafirWr every dny mid every hour, sluce heha,nl)8 been President of the United States, jl-rWlso hns never lowered the American .Him OV-and nnylKtdy, he hns never been forced li n upologlre und he has conducted evor episode of our foreign pollcj-. h Uitweek ndvlce of John Huy, lu such jv way n4mit U preserve tho honor of lite AiuetieinJrlug Republic, and to gain the respect , Of ttheD to sovnrelgus.of the world. .Tlicre, Is hot ; khiir. nor un nitiiunYii- mti. .. ,-..i.i)....lor't nor a potentnte from Pekln to TilnhuctSo wht, does not kuow to-dnyithaf-Thio-dore ltoosevelt Is of tho best American type, hqiiost,. frank, courugeous. scnei, ble, und ulways snfo, for tbmie'wlio treat mm rainy. r. n mi amt fien of tue ltoosevelt type art) unsafe ) .if only to tho dlshouest, to the difrturbi.aiuS ot uto peaco or intio)is, to tho kraftera nt home nnd the Krablien abroad, to the jiiKiiIpulntorH of murkefu nnd the wreck em of tuition. To tho honest nen?to the peoile of the homo und Uie'nrcaUe, to the pood king nnd to the icool subjrcl; 1110 iiwoacreir, tyic 19 UIO safest tiUUM oil .U ....u 2 11 turn nuilUi , 1., , V t ! s f 9 0 B 0 t 0 0 t - I- rti t. II t. 1 (! iu i it t- '- a i. ti 1. n i ! ir Kl 1 itf m u I It. I'fi KJjJ B'J, if til t y 13 It ft li 5' i 61 I " VilU n'lni -' v ww! v! --.-IHi1tKTtoitfiS1M;)- jrjn,. y- 4f -. JMihairfWuj, V-i tmm