-7--T fn, ilT"' : iv. PAGE FOUR. THE DAILY JOURNAL. 8ALEM, OREGON, THURSDAY, APniL 3p, 1903. '. .iHA GUARD WHO CAN SHOOT Bill Hayden Makes Six Bullseyes at the Pen Now He His a Full-Fledged Employe at the Penitentiary-Record in Second ' Oregon Regiment Salem; I'uttltiB six bullets Into Uio bullsoyo of a target secured for Wil liam llayden n position as wall guard nt tho stato penitentiary. "Dill" Ilay don' as lio Is commonly known, Is a I'ollc county farmer, and a eon of tho pioneer lawyer and legislator, "Old Den" llayden. "Dill" recently leased his hop yard, and, having nothing olso to do, sought a position at tho peni tentiary. Ho consulted two prominent politicians In Salem, and asked Utom to uso their Influence with tho admin istration In his behalf. Ho was ad vised that merit would count for mora than Influcnco, and It waa sug gested to him that ho ask tho super intendent of tho prison to glvo him a twt on marksmanship. Haydon occoptcd the advlrn, and wont out la tho prison. "Dill" has "roughed It" a good deal In his time, and Ih perhaps not as prepoeossliig In his appearance as ho might lie. Tho superintendent, nevertheless, thought tho raqumit a reasonable one, and turned Haydon over to Warden Me Phoraon. Tho target waa placed In position loo yards away, and Haydon was kIvoii a prison rlllo. with which ho was not familiar. Scarcely taking aim Huyden pumped three btHloU In to the bullsoyc. ThlnkliiK that his rocoid was merely a "rim- of luck," (ho warden changed (lie tniget. when llnydun repeated the accomplishment. "Yon may report for duty tomorrow morning." wns tho only comment tho superintendent inndo after the war den had'madii li Ih raKirt. Hnyden has handled a rllle ever slnco he was a small boy. shooting siuIitIh and birds gave him the skill ho could not have gained In any other way. Hu HI bo remembered by sov oral liundrud mumborH of tho Second Ortmon as "Hull Homing Dill" during tho campaign In the Philippines, whom lie served as a member of that regiment Whin Tnirjr and Merrill were sur rounded In Die woods near Gurvnts a year uio. llayden and H.vernl others wer lUtuimlnsd to plunge Into tho wood and bring out tho desperadoes, or dlo In tho uttHinpt. Sheriff Durbln would nut let tliuin go. niul In disgust lliiydoii shouldered his rlllo and wnlked lo Snlem. Ho went buck on his farm, and paid no nioro attention to Tracy and Merrill. Hnyden has been assigned to duty as a night guard on tho wall. It may bo presumed that having eoon an ex hibition of tho guard's skill with tho rlllo, and knowing something of his "stylo." Warden Mel'licrmm will not try to repent his rent of going over tho wall nt night to tost tho vlglbinco of tho guards. fcaslbta method of Bringing about cheap water transportation, and "which proposition tho railroad company has already offered. to anslst tho govern ment In bringing to a successful Is sue I am very glad to see tho petitions for referendum of theso matters be ing circulated all over tho city, and have assisted In spreading the Infor mation as far as possible. I find that tho worklngmen and mlddlo classes have awakened to the situation, and are signing all of these petitions. L. Y. KEADY. Wants the Referendum on All. l'ortland. April !. (To the IWI tor) I hove noticed with a gurnt deal of Interest the able article re cently published In your columns by W. C. Cowglll. or Holier City, upon tho subjects for referendum to tho people al tho next mineral election of tho laws passed by tho last legisla ture, appropriating mouey of tho peo ple to build a portiiK railroad at The Dalloa, Imposing u pro rata capital stock tax on overy form of Ineorpor ated business In tho statu, striking particularly at thoso who are endeav oring to develop our wonderful natur al resources In minerals, and the law which takes away from tho poor man and .laborer his right of exemption un der present statutes from taxation and execution of $300 worth of his tools and household goods. I am especially struck by tho Injus tice of that law which take from us mining men 1165.000 to build that much-talked of portage road, livory business man and every engineer who baa oxnmlucd tho situation knows that It will tako at least a hair mil lion dollars to build the road and tor mina! docks, equip It for oporatlon, to aay nothing of a fund to run It from ono leglslaturo to another. As a business proposition It Is ab solutely silly. Tho question of Colum bia rtvor transportation Is one for tho national govemmeut to solve, and It baa already done bo by appropriating J 1.000.000 aud ordering Its engineers to begin work Immediately upon a ca nal and locks bctwoon Colllo and Tho Dalit, wlilch Is the only true and Ordered to Move. The city authorities havo ordered tho oncampmont of Louisiana gypsies to move on, and this forenoon the wholo ouflt, of about 10 wagons, formed a motley procession to the south, bound for San Francisco. The woro not a gaudy aggregation. The' old woro toothless, tho young ones cross-eyed and tho children ragged and unkempt. They east their provis ions In tho most primitive manner, tearing a loaf of bread with claws liko wildcats, and eating bananas with tho peel on, etc. 0 Tonsorlal Prosperity. Krnest Anderson today Installed rtvo hydraulic barber chairs In his "Model" shop, on Commorclal strecL They cost $70 apiece, and show signs of spring prosperity, nnd tho Presi dent and his cabinet can each get a pneumatic, hydraulic, aromatic shave on tho International scale whon tlioy arrive In tho city, although any cus tomer will not bo chargod any moro than the President, and will get Just as good a shave. o Ike Smith Ih out with the blackest face a white man evor had. Tho dis coloration runs down below his col lar, and ho doesn't wear the latest stylo of neekdresu, either. Ills face Is awful black. You might think he had been having a 10-round ring light with Champion Jeffreys, but his faco Is too black for that. The ace of spades ulu't In It at nil for black com pared with Ike's faco. You wouldn't have thought anything could be so black. Ob. my! but It's black fast blnck. too. And Iko thinks If The Times will tell how It happened. It will relievo him of much explanation. Ho undertook to cross a catllo guard a short distance beloy town, nnd be fell. His arms went between the cross pieces, but his head didn't. He struck bis bend nnd breast, aud received such Injuries an tendered it necessary to have a physician ufter he reached HERMANN CAMPAIGN OPENS County Committee to ' Be Called Hermann Declines Offer of Joint Debate County Chairman J. W. Culver has decided to call tho Republican county central committee together and take stops-for getting out the "Republican vote of Marion county. Ho has been awaiting the return of Congressional Committeeman K. P. McCornack from Eastern Oregon, and If he does not return In a day or two, will proceed' with the county organization, risk roach with (he hope and desire of winning high position among tho great powora -of the earth. As Is so often the, case In nature, tho law of development of a living organism showed Itself In Its actual workings to be wiser than the wisdom of tho wisest. This work of expansion was by fnr the greatest work of our people dur ing the years that Intervened between tho adoption of the Constitution and tho outbreak of the Civil War. There were othdr questions of real moment nnd Importance, nnd there wcic many which nt tho tlnio seemed such to thoso engaged In answering them; but the greatest feat of our forefath ers of those generations was the deed of the men who, with pack train or wagon train, on horseback, on foot. or by boat upon tho waters, pushed tho frontier ever westward across the continent. Freedom With Strength. NEVER DEFORE HAD THE WORLD SEEN THE KIND OF NA- TIONAL EXPANSION WHICH GAVE OUR PEOPLE ALL THAT nnnnrfn nt rllftnffortlnn nrn rmu-lnp. smaller and tho returns from different , J f f A.MfR'CANC0NT' par(s of the county Indlcato that Her mann will get the usual Republican vote, with a few exceptions, nnd some Democrats. Some precincts, whero he Is personally acquainted, will give NENT LYING WEST OF THE THIRTEEN ORIGINAL STATES; THE GREATEST LANDMARK IN WHICH WAS THE LOUI8IANA PURCHASE. Our triumph In this him almost a solid vote. . 7 v'alUB,u" "'" Democratic leaders are expecting I l,1 T "". . 'UCCe"" f Candidate Reamos In town nny day. when there Is to be a general nwak- enlng nlong Democratic lines. They hopo to carry a big vote among the young men on account of tho popular Ity of their candldnto with the young men nnd Native Sons. Speeches from both candidates are earnestly await eil by their followers. Final Answer to White. The following nnswnr was glvon to pecullnr kind of gevernment: and this success has been so completo that because of Its very completeness wo now sometimes fall to appreciate not only tho nil-Importance but the tremenduous diniculty of the problem I with which our nation was originally faced. I When our forefathers Joined to call Into being this Nation, they undertook 'a tnsk for which there was but little home. Them is n suspicion, however, (suggestion truin IiIh nppearaiico, that when he fell hu wns rnmlurod Insensible, nnd Hint, probably before he regained con sciousness, the train enmo nlong and ran over him. Corvallls Time. the second proposition of tho Demo crats for a Joint debate betweou Her mann and Reames: "Kngenu, Or.. April White, Clin I rni tin Democratic Con- j gresslonnl Committee My Dear Sir: I uin in receipt of yours of the 28th Inst., kindly offering to nccommodatu yoursejf to the convenience of Mr. Hermann for the purpose of n Joint debnto between hlmsolf aud Hon. A. 13. Kennies, aud replying will say that promises nnd plan? of Hon. Mr, Her mann already made will occupy him to the vory utmost moment from now to election day, and for this reason, as stated In my formor note on this mattor, It would be Impossible for Mr. Hermann to And time for n Joint de bate. Thanking you for your kind ntiiiltiic lli Oirrtnh In liulln. The clteeliih Ih tied In all direction, principally fnuu a thick grummet of rope hi-iiuiiiI his loin, while a hood III litl over lil head effectually blludi blm. He Is fiiHtciied mi u xtroug cot IiimNu'hiI. mid the keepers Mini their wives and fiuulllfrt reduce him to sub mlloii by hiiirvliit: blm and keeping him awake, lilt bend In made to face the village Hired, nnd for an hour lit ii time neve nil time a iliiy his keepers make protended niHlies at blm mid wne liotln, staves ami other articles lu bis fniv. He Is talked to continually, mid women's tongues are believed to Ih tin mini effective antlsoporlllcs. No created being imiiIiI resist tb" clTecM of hunger, want of xlcirp niul feminine Heoldllig. mid the poor cheetah become plleouMy, abjectly tame. "lionet nnd Mini lu liulln." yours. "Cbnlrmau mltteo." I of am vory sincerely T. K. HARRIS, the Republican Com- Tunni-I lllfttimfortM. 'Hie pmlrle dug that hud started nut In two (lie world wan lakliu: lu lb sight in u nelgblHiriiiK village. Iiibab Itiil b hi own specie'. "Well." be ihiIiI as lie bucked line til)' uui of a subterranean ilwelllm; Unit a rtilileeimke lied pre-empted. "I Mothe. have (lie imiie tunnel problem to hi I ye here that limy have In other cUlo." lillfMKO i'clbnin. I'luiriiriii "iienUfr. "TImI man." rouiHiked Hinllbers. "luuktM a liniMlrcil tipeechttrt from the pliitfiimt every ilny." "Sunn" gttmt iMiNtical lider" naked Smlther "No." icplUtl . uitlhcrx. "Stieel mr conductor. He nays. 'Mare up forward plea-!' er,v time ay one sets on IiIh car" liiit-liiuuil I'oiumerclHl Tribune The (Vxecutivo committee on the re ception of tho President hold n meet ing nt the ikjIIco court room, and dlHi cussed tho program, as far as It has been nrranged. Another. meeting will bo hold Monday afternoon. President Speaks on Expansion (Coutnud from First Pase.l real though those claims were until made good by conquest, settlement and diplomacy, they stll serve to give the Improsslon that the earliest westward movements of our peoplo encouraging preccdont. The develop mont of cIvHIstntlon from the earliest lierlod scamod to show the truth of 20 Sam l,n)I'oslHons: In tho first place, u nan always proven exceedingly uir flcult to secure both freedom nnd strength in any government; nnd In the second plnco, It had always proved well nigh Impossible for a na tion to expand without either break ing up or becoming a centralized tyranny. With tho succoss of our effort to combine n strong nnd ofilcl- cut national union, nblo to put down disorder at homo nnd. to mnlntaln our honor and Interest abroad, I havo not now to denl. This success was sig nal and nil-Important," but It was by no means unprecedented In tho samo sense that our typo of expansion wns unprecedented. Tho history of Rome and of Greece Illustrates vory woll tho two types of expansion which had taken plnco In ancient times nnd which had boon imlvorsnlly accepted ns tho only possible types up to tho period when ns n nation we ourselvos began to take possession of this con tinent. Compared to Greece. , The Grecian states performed re marknblo fonts of colonization, but each colony ns soon as created be came entirely Independent of tho mother state, and In aftor years was almost as apt to prove Its enemy as Its friend. Local self-government, lo cal Independence, was secured, but only by the absolute sacrlflco of any thing resombllng national unity. In consoquence, the Greek world, for all Its wonderful brilliancy and the extra ordinary artistic, literary, and phllo- sophlcal devolopmont which haa tal period many good- peoplo In tho mother country thought It highly Im portant that settlers should bo kept out of the Ohio Valley In the Interest of tho fur companies, so after we had becomo a Nation many good people on tho' Atlantic const felt grave ap prehension lest they might somehow bo hurt by the westward growth of the Nation. THESE GOOD PEOPLE SHOOK THEIR HEADS OVER THE FORMATION OF STATES IN THE FERTILE OHIO VALLEY WHICH NOW FORMS PART OF THE HEART OF OUR NATION; AND THEY DECLARED THAT THE DESTRUCTION OF THE REPUBLIC HAD BEEN ACCOMPLISHED WHEN THROUGH THE LOUI8I ANA PURCHASE WE ACQUIRED NEARLY HALF OF WHAT 18 NOW THAT SAME REPUBLIC'S PRES- ENT TERRITORY. Nor wns their feeling unnatural. Only the adven turous and far seeing can be expected heartily to welcome the process of expansion, for the nation that ex pands Is a nntlon which Is entering upon a great career, and with great ness thore must of necessity come perils which daunt nil save the most stout-hearted. Territories and Statets. Wo exponded by carving the wild erness Into Territories and out of theso Territories building new Btntee whon once they hnd received aa per manent settlors a sunlclont number of our ow n people. Doing a practical nation we have nevur tried to forco on nny section of our new territory an unsuitable form of government merely because It wns suitable for an- othor section unilor different condi tions. Of the territory covered by tho Louisiana Purchase n portion was given stntehood within n few years. Another portion hns -not been admit ted to statehood, although a century has olapsed although doubtloss It soon will bo In each case we showed th practical governmental genius of our rnco by devising methods suitable to meet tho nctual existing needs; not by Insisting upon the application of somo abstract shlbboltoh toall onr new po8Bosloiin alike, no matter how Incongruous this application might sometimes be. Over by fnr the major pnrt of tho torrltory, however, our people spread lu such numbers during tho course of tho nineteenth contury that wo woro nblo to build up state after state, oach with exactly tho namo completo local independence In nil matters affecting purely its own domestic Interests as In any of tho original thirteen States each owing the snme nbsoluto feal ty to tho Union of nil the States which oach of the original thirteen Stntes also owos and flniilly oach having tho same proportional right to Its share lu shaping and directing tho common policy of tho Union which Is possessed by nny other Stnto whether of the original thirteen or not. An American Idea, This procoss now seems to us part of the natural ordor of things, but It was wholly unknown until our own peoplo devised It. It boms to us n mero mattor of course, a mattor of than led. The hUtnr. ... .. comprised within tim n,. ! Purchase is an epltemeot J u.o,w oi our people. n,u limits wo u... .. nimH State aftor State until have uradualb-TJj State .mil, ' l times over surpass In vJ? .." notlq, ulntlon. and In ,,,... r ment, the original thirteen M they woro when their del.!, IX peoplo of theso States fci.. ' themselves mighty In r .l to tamo the rugged wilder luiuu uui inua nave C009u fnriul nn,l tU,. -..I... .. l ..... .... V..V ,,ittinc, mj. ana ine ncsert. hn,i .v.. iftin1 4lA A rife m . i fl ow-onmi hid Hreai llgMktj ,, tho qualities which ernW. ,' to ovorcomo tho forces o( jJl nnd linntlln nnlum rl .. kl "" uo. hand, thoy could not hav.w.' tliolr rnnnnnaf timl (k.H l tlon possessed tho quallti mastery ana seif-rcstralnt, a, of acting In combination w m . - teiiows, tno power of jWi ence 10 uio law ana of bnlldit. orderly civilization, rjouna hardihood nro lndlspenslbljrK a noenlo: but tho nooni .iu ,--- ini sesscs no ftther cftn nover rtb mo Hcnio euncr or power et ture. ureat peoples mmt addition tho government! o.l which comes only when leirU fully rccogulzo their dntlk5? another and to tho wholt imS tic, and are nblo to Join totO"-- feats of constructive iUt5,i?p wa uwuvob illltl vtivvurff I t ration. Still Need Pioneer Vlrtatfsf Tho old plonw-r daya fiwn; with their roughness and tkJ ship, their Incredible toll wijjn wild half-savngo romnnce r6.Ui niM.nl for Uio pioneer virtuw .Jnj the ame ns ever The pwnBriiJ tier conditions have anltN(l tho manliness nnd stalwart I of the frontiersmen ran ttp ever freer scope under the tt?efl fiirroundlng the complex ttkfj1 Ism of Uio present day Inttaijr region acquired for our peontJB the Presidency of Jeff' rsoo J' glon stretching from llr OiHiJgl! Canaillnn bnnlnr. frnm Ih. VaflM pi to tho Rockies, the mstrtE social progrees has been so rapf alike for weal and for wrtuii2 benr tho burdenH common to tiro civilized world. The pi'"' bofnro us nro fundamenta r sonio oast and west of the 511m In tho new stntes and Wtatirj exactly tho samo quantise quired for their successful m Wo meet here today to raio a great event, nn er marks an era In statural loes than In pioneering Itn that wo should pny cur words; but wo must In dom i lonl tmti& um "Hob '"HIm! tt!?E our words good by decila, T'lfSn overy right to tako a Juet Pftg great deeds of our forehtietjjTj wo show ourselves unworuVlja their descoudants If we BUg tho did an rxcust for our WtRRJ. plno Instead of on IncentlM t&yfi, effort to show ourselves by eeiJJ olementary Ight and Justice, that In worthy of them. In the iWnfT. worn llllln innr. Il.nn th lllllnn. ln f . """" "" ''I1HI US UOIUOr JOr mO nlrn,lv .l.lln, n.l..nl I ,l. nK' W0S 'et W"- "liable to With- . . -.. wn...,...n ...v..'...., UUIIUHHHVO, Tin- Vdnulnur nt WmIiIiih. Her I'nttM'r lint, no' bay, sundi- nu iir- ioo .Miung iu marry Airelln. llnu eld eryou7 Her Suitor Urn and twenty, sir. Her I'nther And she I rwem.v even inn givst a ilbstmHli-. Why iho wait half a iluwu ytwra? Then you'll be twenty -neven and sho'll prebsbly b Jint about the hhuio age as yon. Where Expansion Began. Rut thore could be no Illusion about the acquisition of tho vast torrltory beyond the Mississippi, stretching westward to tho Pacific, which In that day was known as lvoulslnna. This Immense region wns admittedly tho territory of a foreign iKiwer, of a Ku ropean kingdom. None of our peo ple hnd ever laid claim to a foot of It. Its acquisition could lu no sense bo treated as rounding out nny existing claims. When wo Hcuulrod it wo made evident once for nil that con hdously and of set purpose we hnd embarked on a career of expansion, that we had taken our place among the daring and hntily nations who THE OLD RELIABLE , nno Cuiicladon. 1'nele Reuben says: "Arfer nrgulu' fur forty y'nrs dut do whale cotildu't poss-llily hare swallorvU J on or and mnktn' thn'e or four eueuilca a y'ar ober It I has come to d conoluslou dat my iMllefr oue way or do oddor wouldn't affect de pait 2 cents' wuth I have simply waited a heap o' breath fur iiuthlnT-Detroit Krea Press. pOYAt lAboroni at J)rt Itlley, Kan havo uncoYoreu remains ot Indiana and numerous rellca. akikG POWDER Absolutely Pur. island a formidable foreign foe, save spasmodically, As soon as poworful, permanent empires arose on Its out skirts, tho Greek states in the neigh borhood of such empires fell undor tholr swny. National power and greatness were complotetly sacrificed to local llborty. With Rome tho exact opposite oc curred Tho Imperial city rose to ah solute liominlon over all tho peoples of lta,ly nnd thon oxpandd hor rule ovor the entire civilized world by a process which kept tho nation strong nnd united, but gave no room what ever for local liberty and solf-govorn-mont. All othor cities and countrlos worn subject to Rome. In conse quonce thls.grodt and masterful race of warriors, rulors. road-builders, and administrators stamped tholr Indell bio Impree upon all tho aftor life of our raw, and yet lot an over-contrail-xatlon ont out the vitals of tholr em pire until It became an ompty shell; mi niai wnen ine oarnnnans came they destroyed ouly what had already become worthless tothe world. New States Created. The underlying vlclousness of each typo of expansion waa plain enough and tho remedy now seems simple enlugh. Hut whon tho fathers of the Ropubllc first formulated the const!- tuUon under which wo live this reme dy waa untried and no one could fore tell how It would work. Thoy them- solves began the xperlmont almost I Immediately by adding now States to I tho original Thirteen Bxcellont peo- TftFBF IS M Simmriir i,ll ,n. lh Ea8t initial ...-.. .w. . .w wwarwj. v. eXj, alarm. tho deliberations of the national rep. rcsontntlvo bodies the representatives of a State which came Into tho Union but yesterday stand on a footing of oxact and ontlro equality with thoso of tho Commonwealths whose sons once signed tho Declaration of Inde pendence, nut this way of looking at tho matter Is purely modern, and its origin purely American. When Wash ington during his Presidency saw new States come Into tho Union on a foot ing of complete equality with tho old. ovory European nntlon which had col- onles still administered thorn as de pendencies, and overy othor mother country treated tho colonist not as a self-governing equnl but as a subjoct. THE PROCESS WHICH WE BE- GAN HA8 SINCE BEEN FOLLOW. ED BY ALL THE GREAT PEO. PLES WHO ARE CAPABLE OF BOTH EXPANSION AND OF SELF GOVERNMENT, AND NOW THE WORLD ACCEPTS IT AS THE NAT URAL PROCESS, A8 THE RULE; BUT A CENTURY AND A QUAR TER AGO IT WAS NOT MERELY EXCEPTIONAL; IT WAS UN KNOWN. This. then. Is the great historic sig nificance of the movemont of conti nental expansion In which tho Loulsl- ana Purchase was the most striking slnglo achievement. It stands out In marked relief even among the feata of a nation of pioneers, a nation whose people havo from the begin ning been picked out by a process of natural selection from among tho most enterprising Individuals of the nations of Western Europe. Pioneers Good People, The acquisition of the territory Is a credit to tho broad and far-sighted statesmanship of tho great statesmen to whom it was Immediately due, and above all to the aggressive and vm tlon of city, state, and xsatloo, tt Yj management of our home life ul'urS conduct of our buslneu ui pJjSJ relations, wo aro bound torirtQ tain high and lino qualltkt o AtSff: tor under penalty of ac-riPg&'jjeS hoart of our civilization l5 whllo the body stilt lives, Must Be Fertile In R We Justly nrldo ourtll our marvolous material and such prosperity muito; ordor to establish a fouwUW which a hlehor llfo can be &j unloss wo do In very fact j3? higher llfo thereon the g5g prosperity Itself will go for K'SSJ little. Now In 1903, la the j? .... ..Wijuys conumons, wo musi rarei"""" nnH 1intiftnr nmhtpml ' spirit shown by tho B In 1803 and In the subseauMl'jV gained, explored, conquered, l 'fo tied this vast territory nen joy now filled with thriving snd &,, states. ..ui The old daya were gr' "ei tho mou who lived In thfiffi mighty qualities; and we Pprc tho new days great by hoW Him samo qualities. Wo mul u- mu courngo and resolution, upon gi noou, louacuy, uuu i"-" Bourco; wa must wi -strong vlrilo virtues; and ' !st nn lnsa UDOn the nt snir.mnlrnlnL self-BUtf" J rr.nl fn- r.n Hphtfl Of tP&l must crir-in? nnr nhhOrfCnCe linirnlliv nnrl COrTUDtlOB, ' -.. i !-. Ufa alike. It19 uuu IU itliavv ,.. a1 . . . tknM OttU"'" Bnorc in any u u -.dli o,oii n,iinllv fail ssb I . .. ... -v.ll 1 bollevo we eureiy " - Bi theso qualities la the mf oven greater degree thaa , ikfln Im iA AnllirV DOW t . A ... nnat ' shall mako of u ' ' n freest and mosv oruw .j masterful charactor of the hardr Pioneer folk to wIioka rootlMi unnnrr nnrl mnnt .mlrhtV. natloa t expansion of tho country with groat 'these statesmen gave expression and lever 'come forth from th bxuetly as during the colon direction, whom they followed rather time.