Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 2, 1916, Page 10

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N lll ...o N\ ,,;;Zwlllllhn N (Y. i "”"“"“mhlll ""“"\L‘ "' ‘“i""""" ‘”ll w "A\M\% l" “You can fool all the \ i / ) - “We are in favor of 3. , . people some of the time, W 7)) /£ an adequate revenue on ‘Il and you can fool some - (M duties from imports, so of the people all the X o "‘?\* \ levied, as to afford am- ime, but you can’t fool — ' , SN L\ ple protection to Ameri- all the people all ths i 71 & ] can industries.’ Lime.”’— Abraham Lncoin. o v ' ' ““““mm"m"“m"ll" ‘ —Abra/n;m e i - m”ifln 7 == U NCOLN——a Republlcan in Word and Deed meoln the Emancxpator the Greatest American, whose gentle yet forcefully forceful char- . acter and deeds gripped-the world and held it in intelléctual captivity, was the firsz Repub- i lican President. He was a Republican in word and deed. = Born in the South, reared in the West, chosen by the North, he was national in all ? things; sectional in nomes - syoty ET : He held: ““The nation must control whatever concerns the natlon He was a firm advocate of tariff for protection. : He stood firmly on the twelfth plank of the Republican Platform of 1860 ; the plank that demanded ‘‘Protection of American Industries.” This stand was reaffirmed in his address at Pittsburgh in February of 1861. ' e o v sl From this prmc:ple hé ‘never wavered. e Lt U s S Could his voice reach us today, we would hear it ringing as it rang in those other days of the Nation’s trial: “We shall nobly save or meanly lose, the last, best hope on earth.” Charles Evans Hughes the Republican Candidate today, says: e e o “The party I stand for is the party that stands for perity: For the ten months in which the Undecwood arii 1aw was.ia opcratios, be. the protection of the American market, for the protec- fore the European war began, the bank e °fo§’“¢i’2m&n‘i"° Sab twn of American industry, for the protection of the 1912 and 1913 under Republican legislation; A - é - 2 s AL S o merzcan workingman. Business was stagnated; mills and manu- Lfl;f“;:;g :’“X;flebh;‘:::;!wz;e :Ll:: .3:3: * » So, in a single sentence, is summarized by a keen Jud1c1al mind the triple reason for an adequate, a real wage-carners were thrown out of employ: Protective Tariff. That, and that alone, can insure to the American workman a fair price for his labor, and ;’;z;‘:'“:‘% ‘-i-',:,“’,":‘:‘,::’fn ‘;:‘E:n‘:’:‘:; with s to the American manufacturer a fair return on his invested capital. it 1 s . - & Sa . ., ;:itllllr:x‘m‘;e ::cgnf::ed Yorm. fhikes the tarift Of what avail is it to the country, or to the individual, to have the best brains of the world to plan great i aevaed o g9 m"f. g{,‘f::.‘:g",‘o Sg industries and the best brawn in the world to execute such plans, if, in the home market, the products of tection. The Republi has alwa cheap products of CHEAPER “;ch:;g ik pfim PICKL DI Tax Ay vheii united American efforts are forced into unfair and ruinous competition with the P P! and industrial workers. The record of du FOREIGN LABOR? two parties on. this question should be sufficient guide to the voter at the coming | Here is no theory, but a tried and proven fact—proven DOUBLY by REPUBLICAN PROSPERITY election. Only a proter.tzve policy can as- sure permanent prosperity to this country. and by DEMOCRATIC DISASTER. It is a fact whxch no intelligent American can afford for one moment to forget. . T e e e e e e e e e e — e e T = e “Proper Protebtion Provides PERMANEN T Prosperity” T

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