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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 26, 1916)
Magazine Section of Tlie Daily Mail-Tribune, M.edford, Oregon, Saturday, Augiist 2(1, 191C. KEEP THIS HANDBOOK OF DEMOCRACY yiEMCANISM AND ormer Governor Glynn's Famous St Louis Oration Senator James's Address as Permanent Chairman Judge Wescott's Speech Nomi nating President Wilson Democratic Platform of 1 916 Bryan's Stand on Party's Record Secretary Lane's Exposition of the President s Mexican Policy. Wife ' t : - I'uch Urol. J Photo copyright (y W6odrow Wilson Vice President Thomas RMarshall GLYNN SOUNDS CAMPAIGN KEYNOTE Notable Address of Former Gentlemen of the Convention: The Democratic party. In this convention assembled, meets to perform a duty, not to itslf. but to the nation. Proud of the part it has played In the nation s past, the party of Jefferson and of Jackson is gath ered here to dedicate its .If anew to the preservation of a free.( a united, a sov ereign republic. We are proud of the battles we have fousht in the past under the emblem of a ereat political parly, but there is a truth that we desire to blazon above all that we may say or do In this convention We have entered this hall as Democrats; we shall deliberate and act here as Am ericans We who gather In this hall, stand for the Americanism of the Fathers who laid Governor Martin H. Glynn, of New York, as Temporary Chairman of the Democratic National Convention, St. Louis, June 14th, 1916 the foundations of this nation 1.0 strong in, I rieen that no storm has evei rocked them, no upheaval ever moved then,. We stand for the Americanism which under the magic spell of citizenship and the mystic influence of the btars and stripes converts men of every country into men of one country, and that country our country: men of every flag into men of one Hag, and that Has our flag. OIK IDICAI.S AND Ol'll ASIMRATIONS. When a hundred years look back upon this gathering of today, when we who now guard the ark of American covenant have become nothing but a memory and a name, the principles for whioh we declare in this convention, the issues for which we fitht in thm campaien will live in the Uvea of generations of Americans yet unburn If In the great crisis that now confronts the nation, the American people falter. If they fotgei th.H they ate guaidiaiis "I the most sacred trust that a pie evr helil, their apo.-oasy will be visili .1 upon the descendants of their children's children Out of the finning tire of revolution, out of a struggle in which they risked their lives, their foitunes end their sacred honor, the Fathers of the ItfpnMic brought a nition which t-h'-y dedicated to liberty and to human progress. For the nation to consecrated, true men in every generation have labored and strug gled. nufTered and died, that it might flour ish and endure. We who stand today on the fertile soil of America, who live under the smiling skies of a free and fruitful land, must prove worthy of the trust that Ameiieun sacrl- I, as imp.i.-.'d on every American. For the America of today and for the m..rini of 1 now. for the civilisation of Mie present and for the civiliaal ion of Hie future, we must hold to Ho- course that I1.11 made our nitloe gre.u. we mud steer l.y lie- stnrs tint gild.. I our ship of statu through the vici.isilo l.-s of 1 century. For myself 1 hive confidence enough in my country, faith enough In my coun trymen tO I, -I. ,-VO thll the people of A III - eri.-a will rc,e to th-ir respoii-ibililics with a single mind and a single voice. Iiisick inlutg tin- divisions 'h it m ilie one man a Tory and another a Whig, one man 1 K. -publican and another a liemocrat. Am ericins will east sld tie- liesel of party lab-Is and the mummery of parly emblems. From the treat pulsing heart of the na-