{"1": {"fulltext": "E 72-1\\n.A HZ", "height": "3907", "width": "2351", "jp2-path": "patriotismcheese00alle_0001.jp2"}, "2": {"fulltext": "LIBRARY OF CONGRESS\\n013 785 894\\nConservation RewMVces\\nLlg-Frec^ Type 1\\nPh 8.5, Buffered", "height": "3933", "width": "2471", "jp2-path": "patriotismcheese00alle_0002.jp2"}, "3": {"fulltext": "A/\\ni?\\nE 721\\n.P42\\nCopy 1\\nratriotism and Cheese.\\nSPEECH\\nOP\\n.W\\nHON. JOHN Mr ALLEN,\\nof mississippi,\\nIn the House of Eepresentatives,\\nWedaesday, June SO, 1S9S.\\nthereto\u00e2\u0080\u0094\\nMr Ip^AKfR^I woul llike to discuss this proposition to make\\nI want to say a lew wu \u00e2\u0080\u009eentleman from Ohio, General\\nr?sven^k ShifsiS before the Republican convention ot\\nS the other clay, in speaking of those who do not tram with the\\nRepu blican party in this House, said:\\n^La if you will notice the Passa^\\n^^^^hey were willing to de.na.Kl that the Pr^^^^^\\n^iS^^^ ^Jr ^trtLlZ ^i ^t^^TtSin the House, and aU but 8 of\\n?he?n!n the Se^nate, voted no upon every P^-OP^^^^^;\\nT have also noticed where the gentleman from Indiana [lur.\\nOverItreet], the secretary of the Republican Congressional\\nrTnT^Tnmee in a carefully prepared interview published in the\\nmshSn Post on the JoAi o? May among other reflections on\\nthe political organization to which I belong, said:\\nThe Democra/c leaders in congress wh^\\ncial fallacies upon the country. The people iiave nut ^iga^gi^ip for the\\nocrats in Congress claimed ^.^^^iiVufn ff-Vonductfn-^^^^ against Spain, when\\npurpose of aiding the^Adminstrat^^^\\nit came tothetestand a\\\\ote\\\\va letjuiieu, v initiative in the\\nthe resolution which a tti\u00c2\u00b0 ^^f\u00e2\u0080\u009ei^. lf^ i\u00c2\u00ae| l^^^^^^^ Cuba, an act which\\nwar and insisted PO^ ^-e^ogm^ing the^i^^^^ th^\\nevents have demonstrated would have been a^^^^^\\nnecessary provisions to raise f ^ds wth which to cairyo\\nstep, instead of manifesting tl^eir cm dial sy^^^ coinage\\na year proclaimed, they insisted inbnngmg to tneiront P ^^her\\nQUOTAS OF DEMOCRATIC STATES.\\nWhen the ^50,000,000 appropriation was auth^^^^^^^\\nDemocrats took occasion to P|edge the siipport or ^^e Pcoi intention to\\nfor the aid of the nation, -^nd/ eloquent terms^^^ respective\\nSs ^Out- Sl^h^- oLfei^^LniiariS \\\\Te^cln ^for volunteers there is\\n3521 T.. ^.4", "height": "3516", "width": "2106", "jp2-path": "patriotismcheese00alle_0003.jp2"}, "4": {"fulltext": "-^\u00e2\u0080\u00a2hardlv a State wherft Democratic Representatives so eloquently pledged\\nV their people to the cause that has furnished its quota under the call.\\nv\u00c2\u00bb Mr. Speaker, in my judgment, there was never a more unjust\\nand baseless accusation brought against any political organiza-\\n\u00e2\u0080\u00a2A tion than the charge that the Democrats and Populists m this\\nHouse had exhausted their patriotism when they voted for the first\\nS )0,UOO,000 approDriation. If ever a set of men marched up to\\nthe rack, fodder or no fodder, patronage or no patronage, cheese\\nor no cheese, and gave their unstinted support to an Administra-\\ntion opposed to them in politics, the Democrats and Populists of\\nthis House have done so in their support of the Administration in\\nthe conduct of this war.\\nWe have believed, Mr. Speaker, that when our country is en-\\ngaged in a war with Spain or any other foreign country we should\\nforget all partisanship\u00e2\u0080\u0094 forget, so far as measures necessary to\\nsuccessful conduct of the war are concerned, whether we are\\nDemocrats or Republicans, and only remember that we are Amer-\\nican citizens. [Applause.] -rrr-n-\\nAnd thus believing, we have stood here recognizing William\\nMcKinley as the President of our common country, and have\\ngiven him and his Administration everything asked for. I do not\\nbelieve that the history of this or any other country will show\\nmoney as lavishly appropriated, with as few restrictions on its\\nuse, and with as little opposition from the political opponents of\\nthe Administration that was to expend it; and we have voted\\nalmost without question for every measure asked for by the Ad-\\nministration in aid of the successful prosecution of the war.\\nIt is true, Mr. Speaker, that most of us on this side of the House\\ndid vote against the proposition to issue bonds. There was more\\nthan $100,000,000 of unnecessary surplus in the Treasury, there\\nwas a large amount of silver seigniorage lying idle in the Treasury\\nuncoined. We favored utilizing these resources of the Govern-\\nment first, and then, if more money should be needed, we favored\\nissuing greenbacks or Treasury notes to carry on the war. but it\\nwas our vote against the bond issue that, with most Republicans,\\nstamps us as unpatriotic.\\nI confess, Mr. Speaker, that in the minds of many gentlemen\\non that side of the House no man can be a patriot who does not\\nstand for and vote for every proposition to issue bonds. Some\\ngentlemen regard that as the very highest test of patriotism.\\nDewey, with his brave men, might be willing to go into what ap-\\np^red to be the very jaws of death, as he did at Manila; or Hob-\\nson and his brave crew might exhibit their willingness to go to\\nthe bottom with the Mcrrimac; but neither of them would be\\npatriots in the eyes of some people unless they favored every\\nproposition to issue bonds.\\nI do not know, Mr. Speaker, whether the proposition to issue\\ncheese will be made a test of loyalty or not, but I hesitate now\\nto raise my voice against the addition of cheese to the regu-\\nlar army ration lest I be accused of a want of patriotism. But\\nbeing an old and experienced soldier and having had much ex-\\nperience with rations and the want of them [laughter] I might\\nbe permitted to express some opinion on this subject. I want\\nto sav that my experience was with the rations issued to an\\narmy that, judged by its achievements, was as good as the world\\never saw. And when I look over the bill of fare now issued\\nas the rations to our soldiers, I can but think of what a ban-\\nqueting feast it would have been to the soldiers who made such a\\nreputation for soldierly qualities on both sides in this nation", "height": "3146", "width": "2106", "jp2-path": "patriotismcheese00alle_0004.jp2"}, "5": {"fulltext": "thirty-five years ago. Just listen to this bill of fare. This is the\\ndaily ration now rerinired by law to be furnished the soldiers:\\nTHE RATION.\\nA ration is the allowance for subsistence of one person for one day, and\\nconsistsof the meat, the bread, the vegetable, the coffee and sugar, the sea-\\nson^-, and the soap and candid components. ^Paragraph 12ol, Army Regu-\\nlation s, 1895. See also paragraph 1258, ibid:\\nArticle\\nQuantities\\nper ration.\\nMeat components.\\nFre*^h beef ._....\\nOr fresh mutton, when the cost does not\\nexceed that of beef\\nOr pork\\nOr bacon\\nOr salt beef -V i\\nOr. when meat can not be furnished, dried\\nfish-\\nOr pickled fish\\nOr fresh fish\\nD\\nBread components.\\nFlour\\nOr soft bread\\nOr hard bread\\nOr corn meal i; ,j V\\nBaking powder for troops in the field, when\\nnecessary to enable them to bake their own\\nbread\\nVegetable coynponents.\\nBeans\\nOr pease\\nOr rice\\nOr hominy.\\nPotatoes .1,\\nOr potatoes, 12J ounces, and onions, 6^\\nouncee v:\\nOr potatoes, ounces, and canned toma-\\ntoes, 44 ounces; or +J ounces of other\\nfresh vegetables not canned, when they\\ncan be obtained in the vicinity of the\\npost or transported in a wholesome con-\\ndition from a distance\\nCoffee and sugar cowipoiicnfs.\\nCoffee, green\\nOr roasted coffee\\nOr tea, green or black.\\nSugar\\nOr molasses.\\nOr cane sirup\\nSeasonina components.\\nVinegar\\nSalt\\nPepper, black\\nSoap and candle components.\\nCandles when Vliuminating oil is not fur-\\nnished by the Quartermasters Depart-\\nment)\\n10\\nQuantities per\\n100 rations.\\n125\\n125\\n75\\nij r\\n87\\n112\\n112\\n112\\n112\\n100\\n125\\n15\\n15\\n10\\n10\\n100\\n100\\n100\\n15\\n3521", "height": "3266", "width": "2179", "jp2-path": "patriotismcheese00alle_0005.jp2"}, "6": {"fulltext": "Why, Mr. Speaker, when I was a soldier, this ration cooked, as\\nwe Iniew how to cook, would have furnished a feast more tempting\\nthan any that could be set before me now by Delmonico. It is\\nadmitted the Commissary Department is opposed to adding the\\ncheese ration. My understanding is the regular soldiers are well\\nsatisfied with the present ration. If there are complaints from the\\nvolunteers who are unaccustomed to the hardships of war, I tliink\\nthey will cease when they become inured to camp life.\\nI am willing to do everything necessary for the good and com-\\nfort of our soldiers. But if you want good soldiers, you do not\\nwant to coddle them too much. You hear a great deal of talk\\nabout hard-tack and sow belly, but I have not been real\\nhungry since the war that I did not crave hard-tack and bacon.\\nWhy, Mr. Speaker, a man with a good appetite who is really\\nhungry, who can get some hard-tack or baker s bread and a piece\\nof bacon, put a stick through it, hold it over the fire and broil it,\\nand drip the grease on his bread and eat it ha\u00c2\u00a7 what is to me a\\nvery good repast, if he can get enough of it. When I get hungry,\\nas I have many a time, I think much more about broiled or fried\\nbacon and bread than I do about terrapin and champagne or lob-\\nster a la Newberger or punch a la Romaine. [Laughter and ap-\\nplause.] _\\nWhy, sir, last year I bought a few boxes of hard-tack and took\\nthem down to some of my old Confederate friends just as a re-\\nminder of old times. [Laughter.] I do not want our soldiers\\nconfined to hard-tack and bacon, but you see by this bill of fare\\nthey are not confined to it. You do not want to overdo this thing\\nand get your ration too big. Our Army is not going out just for\\nthe purpose of eating. [Laughter and applause.] They have\\nother business in hand to which they will properly attend if you\\nwill give them a reasonable amount of food and a chance to fight.\\nLook at the Regular Army, who have been furnished with the\\nrations now prescribed by law. You will not see a finer, healthier,\\nor hardier set of men anywhere. They have plenty of such things\\nas experience has demonstrated were best for them. Let the\\nGovernment see that the contractors do not swindle them in the\\nquality of the food furnished. I doubt very much if this prop-\\nosition to furnish cheese is made as much in the interest of the\\nsoldiers as it is in the interest of the people who have cheese for sale.\\nMr. Speaker, so far as I am indi\\\\ idually concerned and those\\n\u00e2\u0096\u00a0who cooperate with me in this House, we want to give to the Ad-\\nministration every possible facility for the proper conduct of this\\nwar. I do not believe there will be found on either side of this\\nHouse anyone voting to obstruct a successful prosecution of\\nthis war: it should not be a partisan war.\\nI do not believe any party would attempt, for partisan purposes,\\nto hamper or impede the Administration in the conduct of this\\nwar, and I for one enter my protest against the efforts which have\\nbeen or may hereafter be made to make political capital in favor\\nof or against any political party, especially when there is no more\\nground for it than exists up to this time.\\nMr. Speaker, I want to say to my Republican friends, let us lay\\naside our bickerings and contentions until we have licked the\\nSpaniards [applause], and then we can resume our partisan quar-\\nrels and fight it out before the American people. [Applause.]\\nIn the face of a common enemy let us put efforts for partisan ad-\\nvantage behind us. I do not intend that any of you shall display\\nany more patriotism than I or my people.\\nS531", "height": "3146", "width": "2106", "jp2-path": "patriotismcheese00alle_0006.jp2"}, "7": {"fulltext": "It will be seen that the gentleman from Indiana [Mr. Over-\\nstreet], who seems to have felt he had discharged his duty to\\nthe country when he delivered hii5 interview against the Demo-\\ncratic party, and who, I believe, has ever since been absent from\\nhis seat, took occasion to reflect on the patriotism of some of our\\nStates bv saving? they had not at that time furnished their quota\\nof troops, i think the States have been remarkably prompt m\\nsupplying the troops called for.\\nBut I want to call attention to the fact that m most of our\\nSouthern States conditions are very different from those m which\\nmost of you reside. In my own State the majority of our popula-\\ntion is colored. The call having been made in the States accord-\\nino- to population, and no call for colored troops from the State,\\nhas left our quota to ba filled from the whites. Besides, we have no\\nsurplus population. The war found our people all at work; most\\nof them are farmers: they had commenced their crops, and it is a\\nmore serious problem for a man dependent on his work to give\\nup his job or his crop than one who has nothing to do.\\nThey doubted if their services would be needed, for they did\\nnot believe that with our 75,000,000 of the greatest people on the\\nface of the earth, with our unlimited resources and unlimited\\ncredit, with our 4 per cent bonds worth $1.20 on the dollar, that a\\nnation like Spain, incomparably our inferior in numbers, in wealth,\\nin intelligence, and in all the attributes that make good soldiers,\\nwith her 4 per cent bonds worth 30 cents on the dollar, one-fourth\\nof what ours are worth\u00e2\u0080\u0094 they did not think it could be much of a\\nwar, and that it would necessarily soon be over.\\nAnd if they did not go as readily as some others, under these\\nconditions, our quotas have been filled reasonably fast, and you\\nwill find that svhen it comes to fighting, the troops from no State\\nin this Union will show more courage or do better fighting than\\nthe Mississippians. They will go where ordered, and I am willing\\nfor the patriotism of my section to be tested by the way they dis-\\ncharge their duties as soldiers rather than by whether their Rep-\\nresentative votes for or against bond issues or for or against the\\ncheese ration. [Laughter.]\\nI notice the gentleman from Ohio. General Grosvenor, when\\ncalled down by an editorial in the Washington Post about his\\nspeech, to which I have already referred, in a card in answer to\\nthat editorial threatened at some later day to furnish a catalogue\\nof the crimes or votes of the Democrats as evidencing their want\\nof patriotism in connection with the prosecution of the war. I\\nsuppose these charges will be chucked into the Record just\\nabout time of adjournment to be used for campaign purposes, and\\nI suppose those of us who vote against this proposition to furnish\\na market for the cheese makers will be held up as obstructing the\\nsuccessful prosecution of the war, and it may be that the secre-\\ntary of the Congressional Republican committee will supplement\\nhis charges against the Democratic party with this accusation.\\nBut, MiC Speaker, I am going now to make a proposition that I\\nthink is a better test of fervent patriotism than a vote for or\\nagainst bonds or a vote for or against cheese, and I make it in the\\nmost perfect goQjiMtll--- It is understood we are going to adjourn\\nin a few days. \u00c2\u00b0I am willing to head the list of a company of Con-\\ngressmen to be commanded by General Grosvenor [applause]\\nto start from here and go down to Cuba and join Teddy Roose-\\nvelt s Rough Riders right at the front. [Applause.]\\nA Member (on the Democratic side). Cheese or no cheese.\\n3524", "height": "3266", "width": "2179", "jp2-path": "patriotismcheese00alle_0007.jp2"}, "8": {"fulltext": "Mr. ALLEN. Cheese or no cheese, and I will tell you another\\nthing I will engage to do, notwithstanding there are a great many\\nmore Republicans here than Democrats. I will take my stand and\\nlet them form on me, and for every Republican on that side of the\\nHouse that you will get to march up and take his stand beside me\\nto go in that company I will furnish a Democrat from over here.\\n[Applause.] And I tell you when they see us coming, and when\\nthey see the gentleman from Ohio heading this band of gallant\\nCongressmen who helped to bring on this war, then the war will\\nsoon be over and we will not have much more use for cheese,\\n[Laughter.]\\nThat proposition is made in perfect good faith. I am ready to\\ngo, and I am ready to go from here; ami, so far as I am concerned,\\nI do not want any commissiomj I want to occupy the same high\\nand distinguished positibn ilTtlie next war that I occupied in the\\nlast one, and I want to show Old Glory that I can do just as\\ngood fighting under her as I did when I fought against her as a\\nprivate soldier. [Applause.]\\nMr. BAIRD. Do you think the Spanish could stand cheese and\\nCongressmen both?\\nMr. ALLEN. I do not know how the Spanish are on cheese. I\\nwanted to discuss this matter of patriotism. I was not much in\\nfavor of war. I was not so anxious for a fight. I was one of the\\npeople over here who thought that, with the idea of liberty that\\nhad been instilled into us from our earliest youth and of which\\nwe had talked so much and prized so highly, we bad taught the\\nCubans to aspire to it and try for it\u00e2\u0080\u0094 that in their attempts to\\nthrow off the yoke of a very bad Government and be free it was\\na shame that our Government should be spending millions m\\nhelping Spain and keeping people who w^anted to help the strug-\\ngling Cubans in their effort to obtain independence from doing so.\\n[Applause.]\\nI wanted a long time ago to acknowledge their belligerency. I\\nwanted to acknowledge their independence. I was not anxious\\nfor war, but if the war is properly conducted it may not be a bad\\nthing to put a war in which we are all together between us and\\nthe terrible war in which we were against each other. But this\\nwar has been a godsend to the Republican party. It has let you\\nout of the trouble you were in over the failure of the Dingley bill to\\nproduce sufficient revenue, and has made the people for the pres-\\nent forget many of your other shortcomings.\\nMr. Speaker, I am a member of that great committee of this\\nHouse that reports the bills that appropriates the money for the con-\\nduct of this war, and I appeal to the chairman to know if any Demo-\\ncrat on that committee has ever shown any disposition to with-\\nhold from this Administration anything that was asked for in aid\\nof the successful prosecution of this war. [Applause.] Then\\nwhen that committee has discharged its duty and its bills have\\nbeen brought into the House, I say, for the members of the Dem-\\nocratic ])arty, that if the Administration conducting this war\\nhad been their own, they could not have shown more disposition\\nto intrust that Administration with unlimited sums of money to\\nbe expended in the discretion of the Administration than we have\\ndone here.\\nI do not want to criticise anybody now. There are many\\nthings being done that do not meet my approval, and I have\\nfelt like criticising them: but, just as I said a while ago. while\\nwe are doing up Spain let us not be trying to do up each other.\\n15 M", "height": "3146", "width": "2106", "jp2-path": "patriotismcheese00alle_0008.jp2"}, "9": {"fulltext": "I do not want to make any capital ofE of anybody, but I do ap-\\npeal to this Administration, ^Tliile we are exhibiting this con-\\nfidence, while we are placing in its hands unlimited amounts\\nof inonev\u00e2\u0080\u0094 I do appeal to the Administration and appeal to the\\nCommittee on Military Affairs in charge of bills here affecting\\nthis war to see that our confidence is not abused; to see that\\nall parts of this country have a fair showing; to see that nothing\\nis done as a matter of favoritism, but that all that is done is done\\nin the interest of the whole people of our common country.\\nIf they mil do that for us, I want to say to you, my triends,\\nthat as an American citizen no man on your side of the House\\nwill applaud President McKinley and his Administration more\\nheartily than I when he conducts this war to a successlul termina-\\ntion with just as little stealing as is absolutely necessary. [Laugh-\\nter 1 We expect some, of course. We do not expect to get\\nthrough without some. What I want is, gentlemen, that it shall\\nbe done with absolutely as little as possible. I want the steal-\\ning and jobs kept out of it, if it can be done; we want to be\\nloyal supporters of the Administration that does it. \\\\\\\\e may\\ndiffer about methods of raising revenue to do it, but we will not\\ndiffer about any method when it becomes necessary, and it is\\nshown that that method is necessary to a successful prosecution\\n/-vf fills wjir\\nI have felt, Mr. Speaker, that it was not improper for some\\nDemocrat to say this much in behalf of our party. I am right\\nwith you, shoulder to shoulder, in this struggle. We may differ\\nabout whether cheese is necessary or not. That is a mere matter\\nof detail. You know in these matters of detail the greatest lati-\\ntude is permitted when you agree on the general proposition.\\nNow the question of cheese or no cheese, with that sort ot Dill\\nof fare already in existence, is a mere matter of detail, and not a\\ntest of patriotism one way or the other. If it is necessary to the\\nsoldiers, give it to them. If it is necessary to raise the price ot\\ncheese and give a good market to the cheese interests, why, let us\\npostpone taking care of the cheese makers until we take care of\\nSpain and not mix it with war measures.\\nBut I want to be understood about my proposition to make up\\nthis company of Congressmen to go to Cuba. I will tell you what\\nis the truth. The American peoi^le would spare a company ot\\nCongressmen as readily as any company that has ever gone to the\\nfront. [Great laughter.] There has been some complaint that\\nthere was too much talking and not enough disposition to hglit\\nup here. Now, I say 1 do not doubt that the people will look with\\nmuch complacency after the battle on the list of dead Congress-\\nmen, especially those who wrmt our places.\\n3 But I make that proposition in good faith, and I will .lom a com-\\n^pany of Congressmen. We will not ask any pay, we will not even\\nask cheese; we will just ask the Government to give us this ra-\\ntion, and will stand on our Congressional salaries. [Great laugh-\\nter 1 That is better than the other boys down there get. [lie-\\nnewed laughter.] We will not ask any increase\u00e2\u0080\u0094 .lust the Con-\\ngressional salary. The Government gives us this ration, and we\\nAvill go down there, and I tell you what is the fact\u00e2\u0080\u0094 Iknowit tuey\\ncan get a full coinpanv of snch men as I am, it will n^t take us\\nlong to bring this tiling to a termin:ition. [Great laughter\\nJust think about a company of such men as I am being led hy\\nthe gentleman from Ohio, charging the enemy. Why, gentlemen,\\n3534", "height": "3266", "width": "2179", "jp2-path": "patriotismcheese00alle_0009.jp2"}, "10": {"fulltext": "LIBKHKY Uh CONUKtbb\\n013 785 894\\n8\\nthe flag would soon float over Morro Castle. I want to say\\none more word about that ration. I went into the Confederate\\narmy weighing about 100 pounds. I was a sickly boy. You\\nnever would have thought I would have come to be what I am\\nif you had seen me then. [Great laughter.]\\nYou never would have expected it. When I went into the army\\nand got to eating rations from a commissary that was very poorly\\nsupplied, I fattened on it; I grew on it. With a very much in-\\nferior ration to this, I came out an able-bodied man without any\\nnecessity, even if I had been on the successful side, for a pension.\\nI want to test my patriotism by the side of some of you pa-\\ntriots, and 1 want to do it in the usual way, by fighting. I am not a\\ngreat fighter. 1 have fought some. I never went in without fear;\\nalways scared; but still I went, feeling like the fellow that ad-\\ndressed the rabbit when he was running from the battlefield, when\\nhe said that if he did not have any more reputation at stake than the\\nrabbit, he would have been going too. [Laughter.]\\nI never got over this fear. After the war, for thirty years I\\nused to be punished in my dreams by the yankees being after me.\\nI would see the bluecoats all around me and not much chance to\\nget away. But now I see people who were with me then. I see\\nButler and Wheeler and Fitzhugh Lee and Gates and Rosser and\\na great many others who were there fighting the bluecoats and\\nwho are now wearing them. [Applause.]\\n1 have not the same fear that one old Confederate expressed to\\na gentleman when writing a letter not long ago. He wrote to\\nknow if he was going to the war. The Confederate said no; he\\ndid not believe he would go. He had been thinking of it right\\nsmart, and he would not mind to go, but he did not believe he\\nwould go. He said he wouldn t mind to go, and he thought he\\ncould make it all right with the boys who were living, but the\\nthing that troubled him was that if he were to wake up at the day\\nof judgment with a blue uniform on, what the boys who were dead\\nand dfdn t know anything about this war would say. [Laugh-\\nter.] He said they would look up and see him with a blue uni-\\nform on, and they would say, Deserted, damn him. [Laughter.]\\nNow, I am not afraid of that; I am not afraid of not being able\\nto make it all right with the boys already dead; I am not afraid\\nof the blue uniform; but I tell you what I want is to stop all\\nthis business about what political party is going to fight this\\nwar. I say that all the troops you want from Mississippi you\\nare going to get, and you are going to get them just as good as\\never shot a gun. [Applause.] And you are going to get them\\nfrom every other State represented here by Democrats, Repub-\\nlicans, and Populists.\\nNow, let us make a little armistice here to-day, and let us clean\\nup Spain, and then 1 will give you all you want of Democratic and\\nRepublican politics. [Laughter and applause.]\\n3524", "height": "3146", "width": "2106", "jp2-path": "patriotismcheese00alle_0010.jp2"}, "11": {"fulltext": "LIBRARY OF CONG\\n111:111 i mil llll\\n013 785 894\\nConservation Rcsourcei\\nUb-Fnc^ Type 1", "height": "3896", "width": "2528", "jp2-path": "patriotismcheese00alle_0011.jp2"}, "12": {"fulltext": "LIBRARY OF CONGRESS\\n013 785 894\\nConservation Resources\\nLlfFrec^ Type I\\nPh S.S, Buffered", "height": "3974", "width": "2481", "jp2-path": "patriotismcheese00alle_0012.jp2"}}