Active Political Parties in Village Elections

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Active Political Parties in Village Elections YEAR ACTIVE POLITICAL PARTIES IN VILLAGE ELECTIONS 1894 1895 1896 1897 Workingman’s Party People’s Party 1898 Workingman’s Party Citizen’s Party 1899 Workingman’s Party Citizen’s Party 1900 Workingman’s Party Citizen’s Party 1901 Workingman’s Party Citizen’s Party 1902 Citizen’s Party Reform Party Independent Party 1903 Citizen’s Party Independent Party 1904 Citizen’s Party No Opposition 1905 Citizen’s Party Union Party 1906 Citizen’s Party Union Party 1907 Citizen’s Party Union Party 1908 Citizen’s Party Union Party 1909 Citizen’s Party Union Party 1910 Citizen’s Party No Opposition 1911 Citizen’s Party People’s Party 1912 Citizen’s Party People’s Party 1913 Citizen’s Party No Opposition 1914 Citizen’s Party People’s Party 1915 Citizen’s Party People’s Party 1916 Citizen’s Party Independent Party American Party 1917 Citizen’s Party American Party 1918 Citizen’s Party American Party 1919 Citizen’s Party American Party 1920 Citizen’s Party American Party 1921 Citizen’s Party American Party 1922 Citizen’s Party American Party 1923 Citizen’s Party American Party 1924 Citizen’s Party American Party Independent Party 1925 Citizen’s Party American party 1926 Citizen’s party American Party 1927 Citizen’s Party No Opposition 1928 Citizen’s Party American Party 1929 Citizen’s Party American Party 1930 Citizen’s Party American Party 1931 Citizen’s Party American Party 1932 Citizen’s Party American Party 1933 Citizen’s Party American Party 1934 Citizen’s Party American Party 1935 Citizen’s Party American Party 1936 Citizen’s Party Old Citizen’s 1937 Independent Party Original Citizen’s People’s Party 1938 Independent Party Citizen’s Party Progressive Party 1939 Independent Party Progressive / Citizens YEAR ACTIVE POLITICAL PARTIES IN VILLAGE ELECTIONS 1940 Independent Party People’s Party Lawyer’s Party 1941 Independent Party Industrial Party 1942 Independent Party Industrial Party 1943 Independent Party Industrial Party 1944 Independent Party No Opposition 1945 Independent Party No Opposition 1946 Independent Party No Opposition 1947 Independent Party Progressive Party 1948 Independent Party Progressive Party 1949 Independent Party Progressive Party Laborite Party 1950 Independent Party Progressive Party Community Party 1951 Independent Party Progressive Party 1952 Independent Party Progressive / Liberty 1953 Independent / Protective Progressive / Liberty 1954 Independent Party Good Government 1955 Independent / Best Good Government Citizen’s Party Government Party 1956 Independent Party Good Government 1957 Independent Party Good Government 1959 Independent Party Good Government 1961 Independent Party Good Government Wide Horizons 1963 Independent Party Good Government 1965 Independent Party Good Government Community Action Party 1967 Independent Party/ Good Government/ Community Action Depew Citizens Party League 1968 Independent Party Good Government Progressive Party 1969 Independent/ Progressive Good Government/ Community Action Depew Action League Depew Citizens Comm. League 1971 Independent-Progressive Good Government Depew Action Party 1972 Independent-Progressive Good Government Concerned Citizens 1973 Independent-Progressive Good Government 1974 Independent-Progressive Good Government 1975 Independent-Progressive Good Government 1977 Independent-Progressive Good Government 1979 Independent-Progressive Good Government 1981 Independent-Progressive Good Government 1983 Independent-Progressive Good Government Depew Action Party 1985 Independent-Progressive Good Government 1987 Independent-Progressive Good Government Peoples Watch Party 1988 Independent-Progressive No Opposition 1989 Independent-Progressive Peoples Watch Party 1991 Independent-Progressive Peoples Watch Party 1993 Independent-Progressive Peoples Party 1994 Independent-Progressive Depew Action Party YEAR ACTIVE POLITICAL PARTIES IN VILLAGE ELECTIONS 1995 Independent-Progressive Depew Action Party 1997 Progressive Party Depew Action Party 1999 Progressive Party Depew Action Party 2001 Progressive Party Depew Action Party 2003 Progressive Party Depew Action Party 2005 Progressive Party Depew Action Party 2007 Peoples Voice of Depew Depew Action Party 2009 Peoples Voice of Depew Depew Action Party Independent Candidate 2011 Peoples Voice of Depew Depew Preservation Party Independent Candidate 2013 Renew Depew Party Depew Preservation Party 2015 Renew Depew Party Depew Preservation Party .
Recommended publications
  • Supreme Court of the United States
    No. 17-1200 ================================================================ In The Supreme Court of the United States --------------------------------- --------------------------------- INDEPENDENT PARTY, ET AL., Petitioners, v. ALEX PADILLA, CALIFORNIA SECRETARY OF STATE, Respondent. --------------------------------- --------------------------------- On Petition For Writ Of Certiorari To The United States Court Of Appeals For The Ninth Circuit --------------------------------- --------------------------------- BRIEF OF CITIZENS IN CHARGE AS AMICUS CURIAE IN SUPPORT OF PETITIONERS --------------------------------- --------------------------------- PAUL A. ROSSI Counsel of Record 316 Hill Street Mountville, PA 17554 (717) 961-8978 [email protected] Counsel for Amicus Curiae ================================================================ COCKLE LEGAL BRIEFS (800) 225-6964 WWW.COCKLELEGALBRIEFS.COM i QUESTION PRESENTED Whether the party names INDEPENDENT PARTY and AMERICAN INDEPENDENT PARTY are so sim- ilar to each other that voters will be misled if both of them appeared on the same California ballot. ii TABLE OF CONTENTS Page QUESTION PRESENTED................................... i TABLE OF CONTENTS ...................................... ii TABLE OF AUTHORITIES ................................. ii STATEMENT OF INTEREST ............................. 1 INTRODUCTION AND SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT ..................................................... 2 ARGUMENT ........................................................ 3 CONCLUSION ....................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Republican Women and the Gendered Politics of Partisanship
    Melanie Susan Gustafson. Women and the Republican Party, 1854-1924. Urbana and Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 2001. ix + 288 pp. $34.95, cloth, ISBN 978-0-252-02688-1. Reviewed by Linda Van Ingen Published on H-Women (June, 2002) Republican Women and the Gendered Politics tions of party politics. In other words, disfran‐ of Partisanship, 1854-1924 chised women were both partisan and nonparti‐ Melanie Gustafson successfully confronts the san players who sought access to the male-domi‐ historical complexity of American women's parti‐ nated institutions of political parties without los‐ sanship in Women and the Republican Party, ing their influence as women uncorrupted by 1854-1924. Her work deepens and enriches the such politics. The resulting portrait of women's field of women's political history in the late nine‐ political history, then, is more complex than pre‐ teenth and early twentieth centuries by bringing viously realized. This book demonstrates how together two seemingly disparate trends in wom‐ much of women's political history is about the en's politics. On the one hand, historians have gendered politics of partisanship. long focused on women's nonpartisan identities in Gustafson develops her analyses with a focus their altruistic reform and suffrage movements. on the Republican Party at the national level. Politics in these studies has been defined broadly From its founding in 1854, through the Progres‐ to include the wide range of women's public activ‐ sive Party challenge in the early twentieth centu‐ ities and the formation of a women's political cul‐ ry, to the height of its success in the 1920s, the Re‐ ture.[1] On the other hand, historians have more publican Party provides a chronological history recently studied women's partisan loyalties and that holds Gustafson's study of women's varied their roles in institutional politics.
    [Show full text]
  • OFFICIAL 2020 PRESIDENTIAL GENERAL ELECTION RESULTS General Election Date: 11/03/2020 OFFICIAL 2016 PRESIDENTIAL GENERAL ELECTION RESULTS
    OFFICIAL 2020 PRESIDENTIAL GENERAL ELECTION RESULTS General Election Date: 11/03/2020 OFFICIAL 2016 PRESIDENTIAL GENERAL ELECTION RESULTS General Election Date: 11/08/2016 Source: State Elections Offices* SOURCE: State Elections Offices* STATE ELECTORAL ELECTORAL VOTES CAST FOR ELECTORAL VOTES CAST FOR VOTES JOSEPH R. BIDEN (D) DONALD J. TRUMP (R) AL 9 9 AK 3 3 AZ 11 11 AR 6 6 CA 55 55 CO 9 9 CT 7 7 DE 3 3 DC 3 3 FL 29 29 GA 16 16 HI 4 4 ID 4 4 IL 20 20 IN 11 11 IA 6 6 KS 6 6 KY 8 8 LA 8 8 ME 4 3 1 MD 10 10 MA 11 11 MI 16 16 MN 10 10 MS 6 6 MO 10 10 MT 3 3 NE 5 1 4 NV 6 6 NH 4 4 NJ 14 14 NM 5 5 NY 29 29 NC 15 15 ND 3 3 OH 18 18 OK 7 7 OR 7 7 PA 20 20 RI 4 4 SC 9 9 SD 3 3 TN 11 11 TX 38 38 UT 6 6 VT 3 3 VA 13 13 WA 12 12 WV 5 5 WI 10 10 WY 3 3 Total: 538 306 232 Total Electoral Votes Needed to Win = 270 - Page 1 of 12 - OFFICIAL 2020 PRESIDENTIAL GENERAL ELECTION RESULTS General Election Date: 11/03/2020 SOURCE: State Elections Offices* STATE BIDEN BLANKENSHIP BODDIE CARROLL CHARLES AL 849,624 AK 153,778 1,127 AZ 1,672,143 13 AR 423,932 2,108 1,713 CA 11,110,250 2,605 559 CO 1,804,352 5,061 2,515 2,011 CT 1,080,831 219 11 DE 296,268 1 87 8 DC 317,323 FL 5,297,045 3,902 854 GA 2,473,633 61 8 701 65 HI 366,130 931 ID 287,021 1,886 163 IL 3,471,915 18 9,548 75 IN 1,242,416 895 IA 759,061 1,707 KS 570,323 KY 772,474 7 408 43 LA 856,034 860 1,125 2,497 ME 435,072 MD 1,985,023 4 795 30 MA 2,382,202 MI 2,804,040 7,235 963 MN 1,717,077 75 1,037 112 MS 539,398 1,279 1,161 MO 1,253,014 3,919 664 MT 244,786 23 NE 374,583 NV 703,486 3,138 NH 424,937
    [Show full text]
  • The Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party Schism of 1948
    DR. MiTAU is professor of political .science and cochairman of his department in Macalester College at St. Paul. He is actively interested in state politics, and he is thus especially well qualified to write about Minnesota's recent political history. The Democratic-Farmer-Labor PARTY SCHISM of 1948 G. THEODORE MITAU BEHIND the lively events of the Demo­ Thus the fervor for social justice and cratic-Farmer-Labor party schism of 1948 a economic opportunity has long had organ­ long and complex background of political izational expression in Minnesota, even protest can be traced. As one writer has put though success in national elections has it, Minnesota "through most of its history been rare and erratic. Along with other has shown symptoms of political schizo­ Midwestern states, Minnesota witnessed the phrenia. On the one hand, it was the staid well-known patterns of protest, genuinely dowager, as reliably Republican as its down- active, rich in condemnation of the rail­ East Yankee sisters; on the other, it had skit­ roads, monopolies, and Wall Street, and tish moments during which it produced a proud of the righteous blasts from such brood of third parties or helped raise the "tribunes of the people" as Ignatius Don­ radical offspring of its neighbors."^ Espe­ nelly, A. C. Townley, Magnus Johnson, and cially in periods of economic depression, Floyd B. Olson. The quest for success at the voices of agrarian and urban protest, often polls, which would translate platform and discordant and intense, have risen from the program into actual pubhc policy, caused mining pits of the Mesabi Range, from the leaders of the Populist movement to experi­ slaughterhouses and railroad shops of the ment with various types of political tactics.
    [Show full text]
  • Free Soil Movement in Illinois
    A HISTORY OF THE FREE SOIL MOVEMENT IN ILLINOIS, TOGETHER WITH A REVIEW OE THE KINDRED POLITICAL A N T I-M E R Y MOVEMENTS CULMINATING IN THE EORMATION OE THE REPUBLICAN PARTY, . by . AUREKA BELLE KILER. THE FOR THE DEGREE OF A. B„ COLLEGE OF LFl'ERATURE AND ARTS. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS. 1896. PRESS OF THE GAZETTE CHAMPAIGN U, A HISTORY OP THE PREE-SOIL MOVEMENT IN ILLINOIS. TOGETHER WITH A REVIEW OP THE KINDRED POLITICAL ANTI-SLAVERY MOVEMENTS CULMINATING IN THE FORMATION OP THE REPUBLICAN PARTY Table of Contents. Cause of the organization of the Free-Soil party. Names of leaders. Nomination of Taylor by the Whigs. Purposes of the new party. Convention held at Buffalo in 1848. Principles of this party. Martin Van Buren nominated for President. Number of Free-Soil votes cast. Convention of 1852, at Pittsburgh. John P. Hale nominated for President. Votes cast in State and Nation. Decrease in number of votes cast. This the last Free-Soil convention held. Political and Conscientious Free-Soilers. Illinois. No slave State, still there were slaves. Extinct by 1850. Administration of Governor Coles. Elements in the population of the State. Influence of the foreigners. Attitude toward Abolitionists. Judge Cunningham’s experience. Votes cast for Birney, Abolition candidate for President, in 1840 and ’44. Counties in the 4th Congressional District. Abolition votes cast in the 4th district in ’43, *44, '46, •48, for Congressmen. Presidential votes cast in 1848 in this district. Votes were cast for Van Buren and not the principle. Largest anti-Slavery vote ever cast in Illinois.
    [Show full text]
  • Political Parties
    Political Parties Political Parties by Susan LaBella Do you know what a political party is? It has nothing to do with birthdays. A political party is a group of people who have similar ideas about what the government should do. They work together to elect people of their party into government office. The United States has two big political parties. One is the Democratic Party. The other is the Republican Party. Many other, smaller parties also exist. Political parties in the United States nominate, or choose, the people they want to elect. Once those people are chosen, party members work to win votes for their candidates. Party members want their candidates to be the ones making laws and the ones carrying out those laws. The Democratic Party is the United States' oldest political party. It began nearly two hundred years ago. Democrats who became president include Bill Clinton and Barack Obama. ReadWorks.org · © 2014 ReadWorks®, Inc. All rights reserved. Political Parties The Republican Party began in the 1850s. It was nicknamed the "Grand Old Party," or GOP. Republican presidents have included Donald Trump, George W. Bush, and his father, George H.W. Bush. Many Americans are members of a political party. No one has to be a member of any party to vote in an election, however. In the end, the voters decide which candidates get elected. ReadWorks.org · © 2014 ReadWorks®, Inc. All rights reserved. Political Parties - Comprehension Questions Name: ___________________________________ Date: _______________ 1. What is a political party? A. a group of people who work together to celebrate politics B.
    [Show full text]
  • The Farmer-Labor Party Convention: Chicago — July 11-14, 1920
    Buck: The 1920 Farmer-Labor Party Convention [July 11-14, 1920] 1 The Farmer-Labor Party Convention: Chicago — July 11-14, 1920. by Robert M. Buck Published as “Principles are Discussed First” in The New Majority [Chicago], v. 4, no. 3 (July 17, 1920), pp. 1-2, and “Platform Worth Fighting For” in The New Majority [Chicago], v. 4, no. 4 (July 24, 1920), pp. 1-2. Unsigned account attributed to editor Robert Buck. The 2nd National Convention of the Labor Party Forty-Eighters Offer Parley. of the United States convened in Street Car Men’s Hall, Chicago, July 11 [1920], for the purpose of adopting A resolution from the Committee of Forty-Eight a platform and nominating candidates for President which was read by C.F. France of Washington, asked and Vice President of the United States. the Labor Party convention provide for a subcommit- The general routine of the convention each day tee selected from the platform committee to confer is herewith recorded: with a similar committee of the Committee of Forty- Eight, that these two committees meet with a firm de- Sunday’s Session [July 11, 1920]. termination to attain a platform of fundamentals upon which both conventions could unite, a method for The convention was called to order at 11:15 am concerted political action, and common candidates. by Max Hayes, temporary chairman. Mr. Hayes rapped Considerable discussion was aroused over the to order with a hammer, while someone was looking Committee on Conferences which had been appointed for a gavel. “This tool,” said Mr. Hayes, “is emblem- by the National Executive Committee to meet with atical of what we are going to do to the old parties this committees of other groups, including the Single-Tax- year.” He called attention to the delegates of the treach- ers and the Forty-Eighters.
    [Show full text]
  • The Dixiecrat Movement of 1948: a Study in Political Conflict
    W&M ScholarWorks Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects 1972 The Dixiecrat Movement of 1948: A Study in Political Conflict Michael Terrence Lavin College of William & Mary - Arts & Sciences Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd Part of the Political Science Commons, and the United States History Commons Recommended Citation Lavin, Michael Terrence, "The Dixiecrat Movement of 1948: A Study in Political Conflict" (1972). Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects. Paper 1539624778. https://dx.doi.org/doi:10.21220/s2-e3mx-tj71 This Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the Theses, Dissertations, & Master Projects at W&M ScholarWorks. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations, Theses, and Masters Projects by an authorized administrator of W&M ScholarWorks. For more information, please contact [email protected]. THE DIXIECRAT MOVEMENT OF 1948 A STUDY IN POLITICAL CONFLICT A Thesis Presented to The Faculty of the Department of Government The College of William and Mary in Virginia In Partial Fulfillment Of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts by Michael Terrence Lavin 1972 APPROVAL SHEET This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Author Approved, May, 1972 Warner Moss 0 - Roger Sjnith V S t Jac^Edwards ii TABLE OP CONTENTS Page ACKNOWLEDGMENTS .......................... iv / LIST OF T A B L E S ..................................... v LIST OP FIGURES ............. Vii ABSTRACT .......... ' . viii INTRODUCTION . ..... 2 CHAPTER I. THE CHARACTERISTICS OP THE BLACK BELT REGIONS OF THE AMERICAN SOUTH ..... 9 CHAPTER II. THE CHARACTERISTICS OP THE DIXIECRAT MOVEMENT OP 19^8 ..........
    [Show full text]
  • The Crusades Against the Masons, Catholics, and Mormons: Separate Waves of a Common Current
    BYU Studies Quarterly Volume 3 Issue 2 Article 5 4-1-1961 The Crusades Against the Masons, Catholics, and Mormons: Separate Waves of a Common Current Mark W. Cannon Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/byusq Recommended Citation Cannon, Mark W. (1961) "The Crusades Against the Masons, Catholics, and Mormons: Separate Waves of a Common Current," BYU Studies Quarterly: Vol. 3 : Iss. 2 , Article 5. Available at: https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/byusq/vol3/iss2/5 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Journals at BYU ScholarsArchive. It has been accepted for inclusion in BYU Studies Quarterly by an authorized editor of BYU ScholarsArchive. For more information, please contact [email protected], [email protected]. Cannon: The Crusades Against the Masons, Catholics, and Mormons: Separate the crusades against the masons catholics and Morcormonsmormonsmons separate waiveswaves of a common current MARK W CANNON the tradition upsetting election of senator john F kennedy as the first catholic president of the united states provides a remarkable contrast to the crusade against catholics a century ago the theme of this article is that the anti catholic move- ment which reached its zenith in the 1850 s was not unique it reveals common features with the antimasonicanti masonic crusade which flourished in the early 18501830 s and with the anti mormon movement of the 1870 s and 1880 s A comparison of these movements suggests the existence of a subsurface current of american thought which
    [Show full text]
  • The Politics of Slavery and Secession in Antebellum Florida, 1845-1861
    University of Central Florida STARS Electronic Theses and Dissertations, 2004-2019 2012 The Politics Of Slavery And Secession In Antebellum Florida, 1845-1861 Michael Paul McConville University of Central Florida Part of the History Commons Find similar works at: https://stars.library.ucf.edu/etd University of Central Florida Libraries http://library.ucf.edu This Doctoral Dissertation (Open Access) is brought to you for free and open access by STARS. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Theses and Dissertations, 2004-2019 by an authorized administrator of STARS. For more information, please contact [email protected]. STARS Citation McConville, Michael Paul, "The Politics Of Slavery And Secession In Antebellum Florida, 1845-1861" (2012). Electronic Theses and Dissertations, 2004-2019. 2222. https://stars.library.ucf.edu/etd/2222 THE POLITICS OF SLAVERY AND SECESSION IN ANTEBELLUM FLORIDA, 1845-1861 by MICHAEL PAUL MCCONVILLE B.A. University of Central Florida, 2008 A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in the Department of History in the College of Arts and Humanities at the University of Central Florida Orlando, FL Summer Term 2012 ABSTRACT The political history of antebellum Florida has long been overlooked in southern historiography. Florida was a state for just sixteen years before secession set it apart from the rest of the Union, but Florida’s road to secession was as unique as any of its southern counterparts. From the territorial days in the early nineteenth century, Florida’s political culture centered on the development and protection of slavery throughout the state.
    [Show full text]
  • William Jennings Bryan, Billy Sunday, and the Prohibition Party Ticket of 1920
    William Jennings Bryan, Billy Sunday, and the Prohibition Party Ticket of 1920 (Article begins on page 2 below.) This article is copyrighted by History Nebraska (formerly the Nebraska State Historical Society). You may download it for your personal use. For permission to re-use materials, or for photo ordering information, see: https://history.nebraska.gov/publications/re-use-nshs-materials Learn more about Nebraska History (and search articles) here: https://history.nebraska.gov/publications/nebraska-history-magazine History Nebraska members receive four issues of Nebraska History annually: https://history.nebraska.gov/get-involved/membership Full Citation: Patricia C Gaster, “William Jennings Bryan, Billy Sunday, and the Prohibition Party Ticket of 1920,” Nebraska History 95 (2014): 144-161 Article Summary: Although Prohibition was the law of the land by 1920, many prohibitionists feared that the next presidential administration might not enforce the law vigorously, and they tried to persuade three-time Democratic nominee William Jennings Bryan and revivalist Billy Sunday to accept nominations at the party’s national convention in Lincoln. Cataloging Information: Names: William Jennings Bryan, Billy Sunday, Virgil G Hinshaw, H W Hardy, John B Finch, Charles E Bentley, W G Calderwood, Charles Bryan, Lucy Page Gaston, James Cox, Marie Brehm, Aaron S Watkins, D Leigh Colvin, Eugene V Debs, Charles Hiram Randall Nebraska Place Names: Lincoln Keywords: William Jennings Bryan, Billy Sunday, Prohibition Party, Eighteenth Amendment, National
    [Show full text]
  • American Prohibition Year Book for 1910
    UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA LIBRARY KtS THIS VOLUME m ^,„^ REVIEWED FOR mmwwa Or-:-- B^ pHESERVftTION DATEt |2^|i|i( " American Prohibition Year Book For 1910 Two hundred and fifty pages of the Latest Data, Tables, Diagrams, Fact and Argu- ment, Condensed for Ready Reference. ILLUSTRATED Editors CHARLES R. JONES ^^-• ^-A) ALONZO E. WILSOI^ V FRED^^Lpk^UIRES_.,.. cents P^I^^r i^nts ; Pai)ei;;\ per dozen, Cloth, 50 ; ^ ^ Vv" $2.^W^ostpaid) ' fN ^t-' Published by S. \ THE NATIONAL PROHfBKTigN PRESS 92LaSalle-Street, qiJc^slU. \ ^ \ ' » - \^:^v^ Copyright, 1910, by the National Prohibition Press, 4 General Neal Bow. Patriot, prophet, warrior, statesman, reformer; author of the Maine Law, 1851, the first state-wide prohibition statute; Prohibition candidate for Presi- dent .in 1880; born, March 20, 1804; died, October 4, 1897. " Every branch of legitimate trade has a direct pecuniary interest in the absolute suppression of the liquor traffic. Every man engaged, directly or in- directly, in the liquor trade, whether he knows it and means it or not, is an enemy to society in all its interests, and inflicts a mischief upon every in- ' dividual in it. The trade ' is an infinite evil to the country and an infinite misery to the people." 2 — — ! After Forty Years. [Written in honor of the fortieth anniversary of the National Prohi- bition movement celebrated in Chicago Sept. 24.^1909.] The faith that keeps on fighting is the one That keeps on living—yes, and growing great! The hope that sees the work yet to be done, The patience that can bid the soul to wait These three—faith, hope and patience—they have made The record of the years that swiftly sped.
    [Show full text]