Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 319, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 January 1920 — PRESENTS PARTY PRINCIPLES [ARTICLE]
PRESENTS PARTY PRINCIPLES
I {SECOND SESSION OF CITIZEN I SCHOOL LARGELY AT- ; TENDED. The second session of the Citizen School, which b being conducted under the auspices of the . local branch of the Women’s Franchise League, was held at the court •house Tuesday evening and a large evening, Hon. A. M. Hall, of Indianapolis. - . V r The of Hall was indeed a most 'fortunate one and 'Warren T. McCray of Kentland to to be thanked for Mr. Hall’s appear,‘ance here. i' Mr. Hall is a man of splendid ■scholarship and ba graduate of *Butler College, Indiana University and also has a degree from Yale. <He was formerly an instructor in our state university. He has a tnational reputation as a statesman and orator. { • His address here was on the sub- ’ — e Hion of the government and’ said that the main differences between »the two parties were their attitudes as to a strong centralized governbient, tariff, power of the supreme court, internal improvements and • the national bank. I He said the Republican party was born out of the issue of slavery; 1 but that it was made up of those ! favoring the points t mentioned above. I He said that political parties were - necessary in this country and that •they were born upon a honest difference upon vital principles. Th. .ddrej. wo intently interesting, full of sound instruction and, while delivered from a strictly party J?ew, Bread andliberaL - Wednesday evening Superintendent C. Iti Dean of the city echoes, will give an address on the subject, ‘ Other Political Parties.”
