South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 166, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 14 June 1916 — Page 3
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
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Keynote Speech of Democratic National Convention Delivered By Temporary Chairman Martin H. Glynn
sr. i.'ns. "...j-t; -); th;tt J..tie II. --With thno president sine- the "tl war has had as ruci.;! prohr;iv t solve; and v. j r -Mder.t ha displayed a srasp more uri a Kf ilf smanship nirr pn found, as I ros't WiIon, Hon. Martin H. Clvnü. f i m r governor f New Ii the democrat!; nut' i .penilia : ro n e n -, i;c that t. n here today I . i r "A n ria nirn ami p ,r(. j ,,, r,.j - r.s and prosperity are the Kij-v Dion which the d.'i.ioi! ,ti(- j . r t .-tands, and t ti .i r t of dem r;. twelU with pride thai is moi. than a prills i t party, as ir hail- th- man. 'Win lias a--rtl this A n: ! ica n i - n i . a'.-Mjred this peaf e, ai ocaled this I Ttjiart ihif-.-s anl jirn-l med th:s prosperity," he r-l i t th n election ff I'riHt Wil-on. Taking up our for v.n relations that has been called h t emphatic I r'tini neu- ly the v it PI - w ar ti.f si;fak-r df. UiV'l that "We lrae f ntfrpil this liall .is ! nn i at s ; wo .-hall Mihi rat- as Arn'-ri ans." Th policy of J:-n t ra i it . he arK'id. is as truly An-ri';in as th- American Hair. I 'or L' " 1 1 U'.h.s neutrality .a.s a theory; Amern. i mad it a f.itt. "It took Washington ami his Mici'f s.sors Mi y aiH of endless negotiation to win recognition of American neutrality. Ami this vn yai oi" strv xiclf wove the do trine of neutiality so closely info the warp and voof of o,ir national life that to t";ir it out now would unravel the ry threads of our existence." ',y t h lecords of history Mr. 'ilynn maintained that if Washington and Lincoln were riht, f'res't Wilson is liKht. The neutrality that I'res't VSIson Stands for today was advocrit'd l.y Washington. ty Hamilton, hy Jrf:'cr?on. and Ity Lincoln. CiU's I'iH'leiU-. I!y citinic precedents Mr. J titied and defended tiie c use of tlie president in the Lusitania and similar incidents. "In the face of this r(ord,".he asked: "Io republicans, realize that when they arraign the pflicy of the president of the United States today they arraign the policy of Harrison, of IMaine, of Lincoln and of ('rant? For the pleasure of 'iticizing a democratic president, are they willing to read out of tl. republican party the greatest men the republican party ever had? Are they willing to say that the republican party of today condemns what Hamilton did in revolutionary day aid what U.rant and IMaine and Harrison did but yesterday? "In his policy of peaceful negotiations today the president uf the Fnited States follows the example .et hiy by the greatest presidents' which the democratic party and the greatest presidents the republican party ever gave this nation." Mr. (Ilynn impressed on his haiis that it was the business of this invention "i epr.-senting every section of the United State, speaking It every racial strain in America, to .'end forth a message io all the world that will b-.'ve no room for doubt. "We must enable every real American to stand op and assert his Americanism. We must make the i .- ie so clear that every ballot box in the land may become a monument t the loyalty of American manhood. ' I he lt-zens or this country must stand behind the president 1 because his policies a r- right. They wilt stand behind him because his poli;es are the policies which have brought the nation a century prosperous and honor ed p-a e. They will stand behind him h. -cause they want these policies continued, that prosperity prolonged, that peace a. si red." Und Industrial Tvrannv. He pointed out that the promise t. ade four xe.irs ago thai a demolatie administration would liberate the nation from the chains of industrial tvrannv has been eartied out. He eulogized the federal re-erve a ;tnd declared that the ' s holars". desman, whose rod lias struck the Milden rock of America's lesourecs. t. et free the wealth impr.oiied for half a century, is a Moses who Xis led America's industries from the wilderness if doubt and despair to the Promised Land of Prosperity Xind Hope." The laws restraining b:g business from stithng competition, tlie trades j ommission act, the movement to fott p par.sion of American trade, the elos union of economical, commercial and tinancial interests hea a!l ArviV W2-
6
t n the (''lit'.! States are shown I
t 1. -jisiation of the u ;d'-?t bene- 1 t,t. Tii" I'n.ifiwiM,,! taritf. Mr. Clynn i . hara( t ti d a- the faiitt ;-nd the est of fi II t pres'nt we h iv na ted. Cndr administration the 1'nited
tats has enjoel a wonderful era,ainly washes his hands of innocent f uood .'jimvS and uood times. ; t.p.od while t'ne earth qaukes and the Th" American's i-h als and his as- heavens are larkend and thousand. i . ....
puafions served as the oasis for the leaker's openiriir di-iossion. 'We w in. stand today on the fer-i l 1.t bl s'u! of America, who live under ' sMiilin-r kie of a free and fruitial land, must proe worthy of the trust thu Aioeriean sacrifice ha.1 ; i.m iI on every American." " I retra i din ir the divisions imthat 1 n.ake one man a tory ami another a ' 'liirT. one tn.. ii a republican and an-; ( ttji-r 'a democrat. Americans will it a-'ale ill.- tiiisel of party labels and tin- mummery of party emblems. "From the mini pulsing h.ii't of the nation will chirp' a patiiof cimhin.iml to crush partis;-ihip and re-l-i'ke whateer is mean or Mind. "That command will be heard by the plowman in his field, an.l by the laborer at his bench. It will reach the merchant in Ids otrice, ami the
lawyer at his d-sk. We would beiillon placed patriotism above parfalse to ourselves, and recreant to tisanship. they placed partisanship those who send us here if we per-j J-bove patriotism. How then do they mittetl any thought of partisan j dare to speak for the great body of profit, any consideration of political American citizens who form the :d vantage to obscure our vision of ! rank and tile of the republican the tremendous issues now before ; I arty ? Io these leaders believe the people of the United States. We j that their republicanism is a better must cast aside all that is seltish. we rt publicanisni than Hamilton's, their tonst hold (piirvclo'v worthy of a nu- Americanism a purer Americanism tion's confidence by offering only the : than that of Washington? best of our intelligence, the flower of "If Washington was right, if Jef-
i.ur patriotism toward the solution j ( 1 what all men perceive to be a c'isis in the nation's affairs." j i'l-ai-CN !Va Policy. j In asking for an endorsement of
(Ilwni'the president's peace policy.
Mr. Uivun said: "For two years the world hrs been r.l.re; the civilization that we know has been torn hy the mightiest struggle in its history. Sparks from Furope's conflagration have blazed in oiir own skies, echoes of her strife have sounded at our very doors. Th.M fire still burns, that struggle still continues, but thus far the Fnited States has held the' flame at l.A.v; thus far it has saved its peo- j pie from participation in the conflict, j "Wh.it the people of the Fnited i States must determine through their suffrage, is whether the course the country lias pursued through this crucial period is to be continued: whether the principles that hae been asserted as our national policy soall be endorsed or withdrawn. "This is the paramount issue. No le -ser issue must cloud it. no unrelated' problems must confuse It." In declaring that the policy of neutrality is as American as the American llag, Mr. (Jlynu asserted that: "The first president of the United States was the first man to prot ounce neutrality a rule of international conduct. "In April. 17'.:. Washington de flated the doctrine; ami within uj month John Jay. chief justice of the I supreme court of the United State, in an epoch-making decision from the bench whose realization would I ensure ui universal and perpetual J peace, wro te the principle into the law d" this land. The Declaration of Independence had foretold it by de-j daring 'tlie rest of mankind ene- j i.iies in war, in peate friends;' the constitution recognized it: but the lirst president of the Fnited States ; by proclamation, the first chief justa e by interpretation gave it vitality i ::nd power. I Manib With Patriot. "The president of the Fnited, .Mates stands today where stood the i men who made America and who j saved America. He stands where j .lohn Kin land her Adams -tood. when he told George that America was the he loved and that peace was ;Vamleur ami her welfare. He stands where Gen. Grant stood when he said there never was a war that could not have been settled better! some other way. and he has shown' his willingness to try the ways of peace before he seeks the paths of war. He stands where George Wash- I ington stood when he prayed that I this country would never unsheath the sword except in self defense so long as justice and our essential rights could be preserved without it. "For vain glory or for selfish pur-
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Mom! an.l iron, !.ut the president of the I'liiteJ States has acted on the 1 elief thai the leader of a nation xlin plunVrs Iiis people into an un-,if(f.-arv war. like Pontius lilat i:vf uji the yhosl. Speakini: of the opposition to the ' r resident's peace policy, the speaker ' continued: "I!y opposing what we tanvt for . to'Iay, the republican party opposes what Hamilton stood for a century ;.'o. The founcler of the republican p.:rty and the founder of the demorratic party, placing th ir country happiness above eery other consid f ration. forgot partisanship and made American neutrality a national c reed. We who follow Jefferson stand w here .Jefferson stood, but we look in vain for a sitrn from the jTfrrnt i leaders of the republican party to jshow that they follow where Hamilton led. Where Hamilton counseled I moderation they denounce it. "Where Hamilton thought only of country !they think only of self. Where Hamferson was risht. if Hamilton was' right, if Lincoln waright, then the president of the United States is right today; if the republican leaders are right, then Lincoln was wrong rnd Jefferson was wrnnir and TIamil- I ! ton was wrong, and Washington was wrong." Tlie justification of our policy of neutrality is expressed by Mr. (ilynn in these words: Neutrality Ivep IVa. "P.efore this declaration every war was a world-war; since this declaration nearly every war has been a local war. Before this declaration war was a whirlpool, ever-increasing in area and in its whirl dragging town the nations of the earth: since this declaration war lias become a J M .1 Ol LI Uli INC li(.IUIl llO.il IIa 1 1 U 11 1 Ifmhark only from self-will, from ' self-interest, or the necessity of geoI graphical position, of tinancial obli- ! nation or political alliance, j "Neutrality is the policy which ha kept us at peace while Lurope has been driving th? nails of var through j the hands and feet of a crucified hu- ; inanity. ; "The? praises of this policy are :iot ; written in the ruins of American homes, not in the wreck of American industries, not in the mourning of American families: they are found in the myriad evidences of prosperity and plenty that makes this a contented land. From every whirling spindle in America, from every factory wheel that turns, from every growing thing that breathes its praver of plentv to the skies, from very quiet school, from every crowded mart, from every peaceful borne goes tip a song of praise, a paean of thanksgiving to hymn a nation's tribute, to the statesmanship that has brought these things to 1 ass" The issue raised by democracy's opponents of the vigor with which cur neutrality has been enforced is oealt with by the records of history: "When Grant was president, during the war between Spain and the Spanish West Indies, a Spanish gunboat seized the vessel 'Virginus.' flyirg the American tlag; and a Spanish commandant in cold blood shot the captain of the 'Virginus.' ;6 of the crew and D of the passengers. "Put we didn't go to war. Grant settled our troubles by negotiation ; j 'st as the president of the Fnited Mates is trying to do today. . j "When Harrison was president ! ti e people of Chili conceived a violent dislike to the United States for our insistence upon neutrality during the Chilean revolution. When this fetling was at its height, one junior officer from the United States i warship Haltimore was killed out right in the streets of Valparaiso ; und 10 of our sailors wounded, of ! v hom one afterwards died, j Negotiation .nl.s lYmible. j "Uut we didn't gx) to war. Harrifon settled our troubles by negotia- , t:on. just as the president of the j Fnited States is trying to do today, i "When Lincoln was president this country's rights were violated on every side. Kngland. Russia. I'rance ( end Spain were guilty of such . t'agrant violations that Seo'y of j State Seward advanced a. plan to go ; to war with all of them at one and j the same time. I ."Hut we didn't go to war. Lincoln settled our troubles by negotiation I just as the president is trying to do ' todaj . "When Fierce was president the ; Fritish minister in this country and i three of his counsel violated our ( reutr.ihty during the Urirnean war. We gae these representatives of ! (lre.it Hritain their passports and .'nt them home. ! "Hut we didn't go to war. Here settled our troubles by negotiation just as the president of the United States is trying to do today. v neu van tiuren w.is president a detachment of Canadian militia. during the internal troubles in Canada, boarded the U. S. ship Carolina in the American waters of Niagara rner, killed an American member of I the crew, tire'.' the ship and sent her adrift over Niagara falls. "Hut we didn't go to war. Van Ibir'Mi settled our troubles by nego- ; tiution, just as the president of the Fnited States is tring to do todav. "When Jefferson was president ( Fngl.ind seized hundreds of our i shipd and Napoleon hundred more.
"When Adams was j. resident I'rance jireyed upon our commerce. Slie extended her seizure, search and ( otij;H ations to the ery waters of the United States themselves until she hail idled up in our state department charts of over ;00 violations of neutrulii 's law. "Hut we didn't i;o to war. Adams settled our trouhks hy negotiation
just as th president of tlie United States is trying to do today. "When Washinuton and 'neutrality' :irst was president dec lared, war convulsed Lurope our ship- dared , not to put out to -ea. commerce wr.s paralyzed and business depressed. American passengers and American crews were thrown into pri -mi atid deprived of legal rights. "Hut we didn't 1:0 tovvar. Washington settled our troubles hy negotiation just as the president of the United States is trying to do today." In conclusion this issue, Mr. Glynn asks: "Do the critic of the present administration believe that Lincoln should have risked national disaster by using the sword rather than the pen in pressing the Alaoania claims? Are they willing to brand Grant as a coward because he kept us at peace with Spain?" What Odins Think. In answer to those who say that I'res't Wilson's policy does not satisfy anyone Mr. (Ilynn replies: ' lie means that it does not satisfy those who would map out a new and untried eourve for this nation to pursue, but they forget it docs satisfy those who believe the United States should live up to the principles it 1 j has professed for- a century and more. "Chief Justice White of the United States supreme court says this policy has given America the mr(ur.-i, WI)lvlll.ltJl IV10I. 1 1 1 past generation. Maximilian Harden, Iermans noted editor, says 'that never once has this republic violated its neutrality. and Gilbert K. Chesterto.i, the famous English journalist, says, 'it is the duty of the president of the United States to protect the interests of the people of the. United States.' that 'he can't, dip his country into hell just to show the work? he has a keen sense.' of being an individual saviour.' " "This polio." Mr. Glynn continues, "may not satisfy those who revel in destruction and find pleasure in despair. It may not satisfy the lire-eater or the swashbuckler. Put it does satisfy those who worship at the altar of the God of Peace. It does satisfy the mothers of the land at whose hearth and fireside no jingoistic war has placed an empty chair. It does satisfy the daughters of this land from whom bluster and brag has sent no loving brother to the dissolution of the grave. It does satisfy the fathers of this land and the sons of this land who will right for our flag, and die for our tlag when Reason piime tlie rille, when Honor draws the sword, when Justice breathes a blessing on the standards they uphold. "Fighting for every degree of injury," he maintained, "would mean perpetual war and this is the policy of our opponents, deny it how they will. It would Kvfl "s a war abroad each time the fighting cock of the European weather vane shifted with tho breeze. It would make America the cockpit of the world. We would be so busn settling other people's quarrels that we would have no time to attend to our own business." In his treatment of the issue or preparedness Mr. Glynn asserts that the genius of thi.- country is for peace. Goniu Tor Peace. "We hae built our greatness on the resources of nature and the peaceful toil of our people. The ring of the anvil not the tatti of the saber, the song of of the the 10,'iiM r, not the abrief clatter of the o.bjier. the buttle not the cra k J of the rifle have won us the place we occupy in the councils of the world. "lake the old .Mohawk chief who loved peace, we would like to throw the tomahawk of war so high in the sky that no man's hand could ever pull it down. Hut when some other tribe among the races of men sends us a bundle of arrows wrapped in the skin of a rattle-snake, we want, like old fiov. Hradford of Massachusetts, to be in a position to send that rattle-snake skin back stuffed with powder and with ball. "We have been carried too close to the rocks of war durinjr the past two years to believe that those rocks do not exist. And looking into the future we can perceive that if our sovereignity is not challenged, if our peace is not assailed it will only be because the world knows that we are strong enough to defend our selves from every foe. "For these ru-ons this administration has done more for oar- army and our navy than any administration in our history. "More than this, it has mobilized the resources of the nation to meet tn need" of war. It has placed the wealth of the country back of the strength of the country, the toiler back of the soldier and the sailor. "And to our opponents we .-ay you can't create an army, can't create a navy in the course of a dav; to the in w i if our n.iy is rot strong enough, nur :iriny not big enough the republican party is eighty percent to hlarn for the republican party has been in control of this nation eighty percent c.f the time during the p,tt years. "The democratic party .".ihnatcs and seeks preparedness, but it is preparedness for defens.. r. ' preparedness for aggres.-i'.n. "It is tiie preparedness which builds the nation's ho;:se opon a ro k, so it will not fail when the
rains desrnd and the floods come and the winds blow.
"A regard for national s irety as' vell as a pride of personal lienor t will therefore brine: the American people to the support of their president. Whether their blood is drawn from the banks of the Fihine; or where the river Shannon hows, whether they hail from Alpine valleys fir th" meadows of th- I'rynees. whether their descent be (Jerman or French or Lnulish, Austrian fir Italian. Ku.-sian or Ireek, the men who haVf, Worn an ath of fealtv to th ideals of America will Le true." "They may love the lands of their I fathers much, but they love the. land of their children more. They ( sod from whence they sprung, but they stand rea4y to die for the soil that they have hallo wed with theirj homes." j Itevieus Domestic Policy. j In his review of our domestic policy the temporary chairman pointed that the promise made by democracy four yea is ago had been faithfully kept. "Today the prosperity which the nation enjoys bears witness that democracy has kept the faith. Today the gates of opportunity are pen; the host:; of special privilege .stand disarmed. Today the force. of government are encouraging, not blocking the full expression of the nation's progress. Today the business man. the artisan and farmer find themselves freo to enjoy the fruits of their labors, unhampered by the minister power of special privlege or the selfish oppression of 'invisible government.' " of tlie federal reserve act Mr. Glynn had this to say: "J:i the panic of l'.H7. under the old sstem. New York could not lend a country bank ICiO.OOO with which to meet factory payrolls; in l'.Uä under the new system, inaugurated by this democratic administration. NewYork loaned Lurope $500,O0o.ij0O even though the tinancial centers; of the world were disrupted by the world war. and there wer-? still left in New York the largest bank deposits in its history. "If this democratic administration ha' performed no other public ser1 vice than the enactment of tb f.,i eral reserve act. it would deserve the unstinted approval of a grateful nation. Thanks to democracy and to democrat y's great leader, the business man who is struggling to establish himself may now woik out his destiny without living- in terror of! panics and hard times. The toiler. j in the factory may ply his tasks in security. Knowing- that hi.s employer's' business is safe from assault. The farmer who must borrow to move his crops may do so without spending in nightmans of foreclosure and disaster." "'The Underwood tariff.' declared the speaker, "enacted by this administration has banished frree.l from tlie pates of our ports and written justice into our tariff schedules. "Of all the tariffs we ever ena ted this is the fairest and the best. "Until the foreign war reduced importation. no new taritf was ever more satisfactory. The highest proiei,,ve 1 a rni ever written woul probably have given us no more revenue during this Luropeau war and a higher tariff on raw material would have hampered our manufactures; a higher tariff on the necessities of life would have placed a woeful burden on the poor man m the conditions which the war abroad h; s brought about. ' Hy the Underwood law this administration has taken the tari; . ut of politics; by the new tariff commission it proposes to take poiiri cut of the tariff." Discuses Pro.M-rit..v. In the discussion of prospeiity Mr. Glynn made particular reference to our industrial condition. "Today prosperity shines from 1 blazing furnaces and glowing fences. ,r echoes from busy docks and from thronged emporiums of trade. Its message of plenty fills tlie land v it h the chant of the spindb? and f loom, lifting the mortgage from the poor man's home and promiing his children a future that seemed im possible before. j "During' the past four ars this; country hus experienced a steadv! and continuous improvement in business. Wealth has increased 21 percent, the value of manufactured products ::. percent, capital 4.1 percent, wages r4 percent and exports " 7 percent. The flood-tide oi our prosperity has risen to such an unprecedented height that tlie only limit to trade is our ability to make and transport the commodities demanded at home and abroad. ur fields and our factories cry aloud for men and unemployment has ceased to be a problem. Wages have advanced, building operations have resumed, real estate has recovered its vorth. "There is not an idle car on our railroads or m idle sh:: at our docks. For the first time in .V story Xmerica's greatest port !u-s become the r. -Id's greatest port. ' Ta purchasing power of our! peopie is greater man that or any other people on tlie glob-. Never was tin-re ;is much money in our vaults as today. The aggregate re-vouic-s of our national l.ani;s arc' thrt-1 hurnirf.l million more than tho a e'-Tf tat- rcniirc of t'v- l ank of Knirl.iinl. th Lank of I'-uk.. ih iiank of Kuyia. tho Ucichl-ank of o'l.-rmuny, th' t.ank of r,v NY'ner-lar.il-!. the Swiss National tank and the Lank of Japan. We :ne four hurnlr-il and one millions of mon-y more than f tn.l a year i.nl a half ;iro ami our sroM .sjppK- ex?e-ls l.y many hundreds of million? the .:..ld s'lpj.ly of any othf-r nation on u;!i. "This avalanrh of mo?;y pouil itiio ur pnk-ts hy th1 rist of the tvorhl as ;t trihuti to our national ri-'iurcts and our fidelity lu j-eace-
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Priccs for Grey NonSkicls SUg i Ca inj j lube 5ix5o 15A01 2.95 4531 22.00 425 5.55 5 x 371 37.50 ö.yu Why Pay More for any othcrtirc USE FOR ful indU5try i not the measure of our prospprry. It is only the symbol. Compared with our trad- at homo this foreign trade is mero pittance. o ir domestic .-ommrc today is larger than the foreign commerce of all the nations of tho world combined. One Argument of Ifs. 'AjrairiFt this actual condition ojr opponents raise an arcumnt of ifs." With prater truth wo can al-o enter th roalm of conjctur and declare that if another candidate had l.ppn elected four yours ago. thUnited States would he at war today. A ton of 'ifs' do not wviejh as mti- h ns a sinsrlo far-t. Our opponents forget that 'if the tüht of the s'-airulls off th roast of th West Indies had not directed his cours'. Columbus would not havriiovored America whn ho did. I tut tho 'ku11.s were tlu-ro "ifs." cannot banish them and Columbus found our land." . Chairman (Ilynn oiicluded with praiso for I'res't Wilson, who. he said, has moaur-d up to the best traditions of a icreat o, "H1 has ii-'on wis with a wiydorn thai, is !e'id in th.- tradition,? f
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his country, with a wisdom that ha beon disciplined l.y trainir.tr and broadened by instruction. "He has been firm wtth th" f.rn -nesn that proceeds from d- p onvictiorr. with the irrnne.- that .s grounded in a duty well detined. 'He has been patient uit'.i the p.,tieme which beli-.es and trusts that truth crushed to earth will ri-: a?ain. v.ith the patiem e that car. endure and wait, watch and pray, for the certain vindication -f jusiic-. humanity and i l'ht. ' He has oeeu patriotic with a patriotism that has ner wavered, a juitriotism that is as pure and strong as the faith that moved the fatherwhen they made our o'intry fre "And win n the h:tory of the' lays coms to b written, and tlichildren of tomorrow re.nl their nation's story, when time shall l.adispelled all misconception and thyears shall hao rendered their impartial verdict one name will shine In golden spl'-ndor upon th" piu that i-- bl.n-kerod with t!i la!- of Ilurojie's n ar, in- nam- ill represent the triwnph of Ani'-riian priuils tiV' i th- IioMji of darkness ai.d of dutiu
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Iiet Clothing and Hhow for Men. Women nr.6. ChPj ren at Lok frt Price cii.lv homt; di it. STORKS, l:'S and 817 S. Cliapln St "I,..? !, ill:" will t!.o renne of j,r s:d!i w!:m has ii ,i ' . pro .1 that h i a l '...- in uli' A me r . c .i n - i :-i . an Arr.erir a v.. !." the name ..f -;at -- lets kej t l.i-5 o .I,1 TV tr -e h in a time that trd min - name of th" ,-t.id-r.t and ir,.' r.i lb I r man u ! i . to it- j . i so'l the . tl. ioiar who has if American iump...r,.d fr '-ed.i -1 W ': ivej- p;. found it opi'i :;.a in- of th- pat rut planted bis niirtn-'. ldt,he-: peak io hicfi t a -;u d ; the ram t t.e t - t t ' i of ; i"cri u- t and v. ill carry V to tile name of Woo.iiovv h ho Iii- r r ' -t'.air oa th ! ; ma nil y h ti.it i a : r . d -i 'c i v on e i ;rt o? Wi; -o1 1--iJ'-iit and
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