Judge, 1920-10-30 · page 27 of 32
Judge — October 30, 1920 — page 27: what you’re looking at
A restored page from Judge, 1920-10-30. Page through the whole issue in the reader above.
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Ss t al _Let’s be done with | October 30, 1920 Harding and Coolidge Two Earnest Americans soon to be President and Vice-President and what they represent Harding and Coolidge, your next President and Vice-President, stand for these things: s+ ee ee Absolute control of the United States by the United States. No foreign dictation. No foreign control ex- pressed or implied. Americans can govern their country without Eu- rope’s assistance. t ** © # # © Administrative economy and efficiency—an end to the scandalous squandering of national resources, reckless taxation and reckless spending. ' se ee et Protection and encouragement for American work- ers and business men. Prosperity restored and permanent. se ee ee Respect for American traditions and for American Independence, which are the foundations of this government. On the fourth of July, in future as in the past, one flag will be seen. One is enough. Independence means independence, now as in 1776. eee ee * This country will remain American. Its next Presi- dent will remain in our own country. American affairs will be discussed by American public ser- vants in the City of Washington, not in some foreign capitol. We decided long ago that we objected to foreign government of our people. If four million Americans could take care of them- selves and their own affairs one hundred and forty years ago, one hundred million Americans—25 times as many—can do the same now. es *¢ ee ee Harding and Coolidge will prove all this te the whole of Europe, Asia and Africa, when you send them to Washington. Republican National Committee wiggle and wobble