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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68119 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68119)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Address of President Roosevelt at
-Keokuk, Iowa, October 1, 1907, by Theodore Roosevelt
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Address of President Roosevelt at Keokuk, Iowa, October 1, 1907
-
-Author: Theodore Roosevelt
-
-Release Date: May 18, 2022 [eBook #68119]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Donald Cummings and the Online Distributed Proofreading
- Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from
- images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ADDRESS OF PRESIDENT
-ROOSEVELT AT KEOKUK, IOWA, OCTOBER 1, 1907 ***
-
-
-
-
-
- ADDRESS OF PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT AT
- KEOKUK, IOWA [Illustration] OCTOBER 1, 1907
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
- WASHINGTON
- GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
- 1907
-
-
-
-
-MEN AND WOMEN OF IOWA:
-
-I am glad indeed to see you and to speak to you in this thriving city
-of your great and prosperous State. I believe with all my heart in the
-people of Iowa, for I think that you are good, typical Americans, and
-that among you there has been developed to a very high degree that
-body of characteristics which we like to regard as distinctively
-American.
-
-During the last few years we of the United States have been forced
-to consider very seriously certain economic problems. We have
-made a beginning in the attempt to deal with the relations of the
-National Government――that is, with the relations of the people of the
-country――to the huge and wealthy corporations, controlled for the
-most part by a few very rich men, which are engaged in interstate
-business――especially the great railway corporations. You know my views
-on this matter. You know that I believe that the National Government,
-in the interests of the people, should assume much the same supervision
-and control over the management of the interstate common carriers that
-it now exercises over the national banks. You know furthermore that
-I believe that this supervision and control should be exercised in a
-spirit of rigid fairness toward the corporations, exacting justice
-from them on behalf of the people but giving them justice in return.
-
-Recently I have been reading the work of the eminent Italian scholar
-Ferrero on the history of the Roman Republic, when the life of the
-Roman state had become that of a complex and luxurious industrial
-civilization. I am happy to say that the differences between that
-civilization and our own are more striking than the resemblances;
-and there is no warrant for our being drawn into any pessimistic
-comparison between the two civilizations. But there is every reason
-why we should study carefully the past in order to draw from it lessons
-for use in the present. One of the most striking features of the years
-which saw the downfall of the Roman Republic was the fact that the
-political life of Rome became split between two camps, one containing
-the rich who wished to exploit the poor, and the other the poor who
-wished to plunder the rich. Naturally, under such circumstances, the
-public man who was for the moment successful tended to be either a
-violent reactionary or a violent demagogue. Any such condition of
-political life is as hopelessly unhealthy now as it was then. I believe
-so implicitly in the future of our people, because I believe that the
-average American citizen will no more tolerate government by a mob than
-he will tolerate government by a plutocracy; that he desires to see
-justice done to and justice exacted from rich man and poor man alike.
-We are not trying to favor any man at the expense of his fellows. We
-are trying to shape things so that as far as possible each man shall
-have a fair chance in life; so that he shall have, so far as by law
-this can be accomplished, the chance to show the stuff that there is
-in him. We have no intention of trying to work for the impossible and
-undesirable end of giving to the lazy, the thriftless, the weak, and
-the vicious, the reward that belongs to, and in the long run can only
-come to, the hard working, the thrifty, the resolute, and the honest.
-But we do wish to see that the necessary struggle in life shall be
-carried on under genuinely democratic conditions; that, so far as human
-action can safely provide it, there shall be an approximately fair
-start; that there shall be no oppression of the weak, and that no man
-shall be permitted to acquire or to use a vast fortune by methods or in
-ways that are tortuous and dishonest.
-
-Therefore we need wise laws, and we need to have them resolutely
-administered. We can get such laws and such administration only if
-the people are alive to their interests. The other day I listened to
-an admirable sermon by Bishop Johnston, of western Texas. His theme
-was that the vital element in judging any man should be his conduct,
-and neither his position nor his pretensions; and, furthermore,
-that freedom could only stay with a people which has the habit of
-self-mastery. As he said, the price of liberty is not only eternal
-vigilance, but eternal virtue; and I may add, eternal common sense.
-Each man here knows that he himself has been able to use his freedom
-to advantage only provided that he could master himself, that he could
-control his own passions and direct his own faculties. Each of you
-fathers and mothers here knows that if your sons are to do well in the
-world they must know how to master themselves. Every man must have a
-master; if he is not his own master, then somebody else will be. This
-is just as true of public life as of private life. If we can not
-master ourselves, control ourselves, then sooner or later we shall have
-to submit to outside control; for there must be control somewhere.
-
-One way of exercising such control is through the laws of the land.
-Ours is a government of liberty, but it is a government of that
-orderly liberty which comes by and through the honest enforcement of
-and obedience to the law. At intervals during the last few months the
-appeal has been made to me not to enforce the law against certain
-wrongdoers of great wealth because to do so would interfere with the
-business prosperity of the country. Under the effects of that kind of
-fright which when sufficiently acute we call panic, this appeal has
-been made to me even by men who ordinarily behave as decent citizens.
-One newspaper which has itself strongly advanced this view gave
-prominence to the statement of a certain man of great wealth to the
-effect that the so-called financial weakness “was due entirely to the
-admitted intention of President Roosevelt to punish the large moneyed
-interests which had transgressed the laws.” I do not admit that this
-has been the main cause of any business troubles we have had; but it is
-possible that it has been a contributory cause. If so, friends, as far
-as I am concerned it must be accepted as a disagreeable but unavoidable
-feature in a course of policy which as long as I am President will
-not be changed. In any great movement for righteousness, where the
-forces of evil are strongly intrenched, it is unfortunately inevitable
-that some unoffending people should suffer in company with the real
-offenders. This is not our fault. It is the fault of those to whose
-deceptive action these innocent people owe their false position. A year
-or two ago certain representatives of labor called upon me and in the
-course of a very pleasant conversation told me that they regarded me
-as “the friend of labor.” I answered that I certainly was, and that I
-would do everything in my power for the laboring man _except anything
-that was wrong_. I have the same answer to make to the business man.
-I will do everything I can do to help business conditions, except
-anything that is wrong. And it would be not merely wrong but infamous
-to fail to do all that can be done to secure the punishment of those
-wrongdoers whose deeds are peculiarly reprehensible because they are
-not committed under the stress of want. Whenever a serious effort
-is made to cut out what is evil in our political life, whether the
-effort takes the shape of warring against the gross and sordid forms
-of evil in some municipality, or whether it takes the shape of trying
-to secure the honest enforcement of the law as against very powerful
-and wealthy people, there are sure to be certain individuals who
-demand that the movement stop because it may hurt business. In each
-case the answer must be that we earnestly hope and believe that there
-will be no permanent damage to business from the movement, but that
-if righteousness conflicts with the fancied needs of business, then
-the latter must go to the wall. We can not afford to substitute any
-other test for that of guilt or innocence, of wrongdoing or welldoing,
-in judging any man. If a man does well, if he acts honestly, he has
-nothing to fear from this Administration. But so far as in me lies
-the corrupt politician, great or small, the private citizen who
-transgresses the law――be he rich or poor――shall be brought before
-the impartial justice of a court. Perhaps I am most anxious to get at
-the politician who is corrupt, because he betrays a great trust; but
-assuredly I shall not spare his brother corruptionist who shows himself
-a swindler in business life; and, according to our power, crimes of
-fraud and cunning shall be prosecuted as relentlessly as crimes of
-brutality and physical violence.
-
-We need good laws and we need above all things the hearty aid of good
-citizens in supporting and enforcing the laws. Nevertheless, men and
-women of this great State, men and women of the Middle West, never
-forget that law and the administration of law, important though they
-are, must always occupy a wholly secondary place as compared with the
-character of the average citizen himself. On this trip I shall speak
-to audiences in each of which there will be many men who fought in
-the civil war. You who wore the blue and your brothers of the South
-who wore the gray know that in war no general no matter how good, no
-organization no matter how perfect, can avail if the average man in
-the ranks has not got the fighting edge. We need the organization, the
-preparation; we need the good general; but we need most the fighting
-edge in the individual soldier. So it is in private life. We live in a
-rough, workaday world, and we are yet a long way from the millennium.
-We can not as a nation and we can not as individuals afford to
-cultivate only the gentler, softer qualities. There must be gentleness
-and tenderness――the strongest men are gentle and tender――but there must
-also be courage and strength. I have a hearty sympathy with those who
-believe in doing all that can be done for peace; but I have no sympathy
-at all with those who believe that in the world as it now is we can
-afford to see the average American citizen lose the qualities that in
-their sum make up a good fighting man. You men must be workers who
-work with all your heart and strength and mind at your several tasks
-in life; and you must also be able to fight at need. You women have
-even higher and more difficult duties; for I honor no man, not even
-the soldier who fights for righteousness, quite as much as I honor the
-good woman who does her full duty as wife and mother. But if she shirks
-her duty as wife and mother then she stands on a par with the man who
-refuses to work for himself and his family, for those dependent upon
-him, and who in time of the nation’s need refuses to fight. The man
-or woman who shirks his or her duty occupies a contemptible position.
-You here are the sons and daughters of the pioneers. I preach to you no
-life of ease. I preach to you the life of effort, the life that finds
-its highest satisfaction in doing well some work that is well worth
-doing.
-
-So much for what concerns every man and every woman in this country.
-Now, a word or two as to matters which are of peculiar interest to
-this region of our country.
-
-Since I have been President I have traveled in every State of this
-Union, but my traveling has been almost entirely on railroads, save
-now and then by wagon or on horseback. Now I have the chance to try
-traveling by river; to go down the greatest of our rivers, the Father
-of Waters. A good many years ago when I lived in the Northwest I
-traveled occasionally on the Upper Missouri and its tributaries; but
-then we went in a flatboat and did our own rowing and paddling and
-poling. Now I am to try a steamboat. I am a great believer in our
-railway system; and the fact that I am very firm in my belief as to
-the necessity of the Government exercising a proper supervision and
-control over the railroads does not in the least interfere with the
-other fact that I greatly admire the large majority of the men in all
-positions, from the top to the bottom, who build and run them. Yet,
-while of course I am anxious to see these men, and therefore the
-corporations they represent or serve, achieve the fullest measure of
-legitimate prosperity, nevertheless as this country grows I feel that
-we can not have too many highroads, and that in addition to the iron
-highroads of our railway system we should also utilize the great river
-highways which have been given us by nature. From a variety of causes
-these highways have in many parts of the country been almost abandoned.
-This is not healthy. Our people, and especially the representatives
-of the people in the National Congress, should give their most careful
-attention to this subject. We should be prepared to put the nation
-collectively back of the movement to improve them for the nation’s
-use. Our knowledge at this time is not such as to permit me to go into
-details, or to say definitely just what the nation should do; but most
-assuredly our great navigable rivers are national assets just as much
-as our great seacoast harbors. Exactly as it is for the interest of
-all the country that our great harbors should be fitted to receive in
-safety the largest vessels of the merchant fleets of the world, so
-by deepening and otherwise our rivers should be fitted to bear their
-part in the movement of our merchandise; and this is especially true
-of the Mississippi and its tributaries, which drain the immense and
-prosperous region which makes in very fact the heart of our nation;
-the basin of the Great Lakes being already united with the basin of
-the Mississippi, and both regions being identical in their products
-and interests. Waterways are peculiarly fitted for the transportation
-of the bulky commodities which come from the soil or under the soil;
-and no other part of our country is as fruitful as is this in such
-commodities.
-
-You in Iowa have many manufacturing centers, but you remain, and I
-hope you will always remain, a great agricultural State. I hope that
-the means of transporting your commodities to market will be steadily
-improved; but this will be of no use unless you keep producing the
-commodities, and in the long run this will largely depend upon your
-being able to keep on the farm a high type of citizenship. The effort
-must be to make farm life not only remunerative but attractive, so that
-the best young men and girls will feel inclined to stay on the farm and
-not to go to the city. Nothing is more important to this country than
-the perpetuation of our system of medium-sized farms worked by their
-owners. We do not want to see our farmers sink to the condition of the
-peasants of the Old World, barely able to live on their small holdings,
-nor do we want to see their places taken by wealthy men owning enormous
-estates which they work purely by tenants and hired servants.
-
-At present the ordinary farmer holds his own in the land as against
-any possible representative of the landlord class of farmer――that is,
-of the men who would own vast estates――because the ordinary farmer
-unites his capital, his labor, and his brains with the making of a
-permanent family home, and thus can afford to hold his land at a value
-at which it can not be held by the capitalist, who would have to run
-it by leasing it or by cultivating it at arm’s length with hired
-labor. In other words, the typical American farmer of to-day gets
-his remuneration in part in the shape of an independent home for his
-family, and this gives him an advantage over an absentee landlord.
-Now, from the standpoint of the nation as a whole it is preeminently
-desirable to keep as one of our chief American types the farmer, the
-farm home maker, of the medium-sized farm. This type of farm home is
-one of our strongest political and social bulwarks. Such a farm worked
-by the owner has proved by experience the best place in which to breed
-vigorous leaders alike for country and city. It is a matter of prime
-economic and civic importance to encourage this type of home-owning
-farmer.
-
-Therefore, we should strive in every way to aid in the education of
-the farmer for the farm, and should shape our school system with this
-end in view; and so vitally important is this that, in my opinion,
-the Federal Government should cooperate with the State governments
-to secure the needed change and improvement in our schools. It is
-significant that both from Minnesota and Georgia there have come
-proposals in this direction in the appearance of bills introduced
-into the National Congress. The Congressional land grant act of 1852
-accomplished much in establishing the agricultural colleges in the
-several States, and therefore in preparing to turn the system of
-educational training for the young into channels at once broader and
-more practicable――and what I am saying about agricultural training
-really applies to all industrial training. But the colleges can not
-reach the masses, and it is essential that the masses should be
-reached. Such agricultural high schools as those in Minnesota and
-Nebraska for farm boys and girls, such technical high schools as are
-to be found, for instance, in both St. Louis and Washington, have by
-their success shown that it is entirely feasible to carry in practical
-fashion the fundamentals of industrial training into the realms of
-our secondary schools. At present there is a gap between our primary
-schools in country and city and the industrial collegiate courses,
-which must be closed, and if necessary the Nation must help the State
-to close it. Too often our present schools tend to put altogether too
-great a premium upon mere literary education, and therefore to train
-away from the farm and the shop.
-
-We should reverse this process. Specific training of a practical kind
-should be given to the boys and girls who when men and women are to
-make up the backbone of this nation by working in agriculture, in
-the mechanical industries, in arts and trades; in short, who are to
-do the duty that should always come first with all of us, the duty of
-home-making and home-keeping. Too narrow a literary education is, for
-most men and women, not a real education at all; for a real education
-should fit people primarily for the industrial and home-making
-employments in which they must employ the bulk of their activities.
-Our country offers unparalleled opportunities for domestic and social
-advancement, for social and economic leadership in the world. Our
-greatest national asset is to be found in the children. They need to
-be trained to high ideals of everyday living, and to high efficiency
-in their respective vocations; we can not afford to have them trained
-otherwise, and the nation should help the States to achieve this end.
-
-Now, men of Iowa, I want to say just a word on a matter that concerns
-not the States of the Mississippi Valley itself, but the States west
-of them, the States of the Great Plains and the Rocky Mountains.
-Unfortunately, I am not able on this present trip to visit those States,
-or I should speak to their own people on the point to which I now intend
-to allude; but after all anything that affects a considerable number of
-Americans who live under one set of conditions, must be of moment to all
-other Americans, for never forget, friends, that in the long run we
-shall all go up or go down together.
-
-The States of the high plains and of the mountains have a peculiar
-claim upon me, because for a number of years I lived and worked in
-them, and I have that intimate knowledge of their people that comes
-under such conditions. In those States there is need of a modification
-of the land laws that have worked so well in the well-watered fertile
-regions to the eastward, such as those in which you here dwell.
-The one object in all our land laws should always be to favor the
-actual settler, the actual home maker, who comes to dwell on the
-land and there to bring up his children to inherit it after him. The
-Government should part with its title to the land only to the actual
-home-maker――not to the profit-maker, who does not care to make a home.
-The land should be sold outright only in quantities sufficient for
-decent homes――not in huge areas to be held for speculative purposes or
-used as ranches, where those who do the actual work are merely tenants
-or hired hands. No temporary prosperity of any class of men could in
-the slightest degree atone for failure on our part to shape the laws so
-that they may work for the permanent good of the home-maker. This is
-fundamental, gentlemen, and is simply carrying out the idea upon which
-I dwell in speaking to you of your own farms here in Iowa. Now in many
-States where the rainfall is light it is a simple absurdity to expect
-any man to live, still less to bring up a family, on one hundred and
-sixty acres. Where we are able to introduce irrigation, the homestead
-can be very much less in size――can, for instance, be forty acres; and
-there is nothing that Congress has done during the past six years more
-important than the enactment of the national irrigation law. But where
-irrigation is not applicable and the land can only be used for grazing,
-it may be that you can not run more than one steer to ten acres, and
-it is not necessary to be much of a mathematician in order to see that
-where such is the case a homestead of one hundred and sixty acres will
-not go far toward the support of a family. In consequence of this fact,
-homesteaders do not take up the lands in the tracts in question. They
-are left open for anybody to graze upon that wishes to. The result is
-that the men who use them moderately and not with a view to exhausting
-their resources are at the mercy of those who care nothing for the
-future and simply intend to skin the land in the present. For instance,
-the small sheep farmer who has a home and who wishes that home to pass
-on to his children improved in value will naturally run his flock so
-that the land will support it, not only to-day, but ten years hence;
-but a big absentee sheep owner, who has no home on the land at all,
-but simply owns huge migratory flocks of sheep, may well find it to
-his profit to drive them over the small sheep farmer’s range and eat
-it all out. He can then drive his flocks on, whereas the small man can
-not. Of course, to permit such a state of things is not only evil for
-the small man, but is destructive of the best interests of the country.
-Substantially the same conditions obtain as regards cattle. The custom
-has therefore grown up of fencing great tracts of Government land
-without warrant of law. The men who fenced this land were sometimes
-rich men, who, by fencing it, kept out actual settlers and thereby
-worked evil to the country. But in many cases, whether they were large
-men or small men, their object was not to keep out actual settlers,
-but to protect themselves and their own industry by preventing
-overgrazing of the range on the part of reckless stock owners who had
-no place in the permanent development of the country and who were
-indifferent to everything except the profits of the moment. To permit
-the continuance of this illegal fencing inevitably tended to very grave
-abuses, and the Government has therefore forced the fencers to take
-down their fences. In doing this we have not only obeyed and enforced
-the law, but we have corrected many flagrant abuses. Nevertheless, we
-have also caused hardship, which, though unavoidable, I was exceedingly
-unwilling to cause. In some way or other we must provide for the use of
-the public range under conditions which shall inure primarily to the
-benefit of the actual settlers on or near it, and which shall prevent
-its being wasted. This means that in some shape or way the fencing of
-pasture land must be permitted under restrictions which will safeguard
-the rights of the actual settlers. I desire to act as these actual
-settlers wish to have me in this matter. I wish to find out their needs
-and desires and then to try to put them into effect. But they must
-take trouble, must look ahead to their own ultimate and real good,
-must insist upon being really represented by their public men, if we
-are to have a good result. A little while ago I received a very manly
-and sensible letter from one of the prominent members of the Laramie
-County, Wyo., Cattle and Horse Growers’ Association. My correspondent
-remarked incidentally in his letter, “I am a small ranchman, and have
-to plow and pitch hay myself,” and then went on to say that the great
-majority of their people had complied with the governmental order, had
-removed their fences and sold their cattle, but that they must get some
-kind of a lease law which would permit them to graze their stock under
-proper conditions or else it would be ruinous to them to continue in
-the business. The thing I have most at heart as regards this subject is
-to do whatever will be of permanent benefit to just exactly the people
-for whom this correspondent of mine spoke――the small ranchmen who have
-to plow and pitch hay themselves. All I want to do is to find out
-what will be to their real benefit, for that is certain to be to the
-benefit of the country as a whole. It may be that we can secure their
-interests best by permitting all homesteaders in the dry country to
-inclose, individually or a certain number of them together, big tracts
-of range for summer use, the tracts being proportioned to the number
-of neighboring homesteaders who wish to run their cattle upon it. It
-may be that parts of the range will only be valuable for companies that
-can lease it and put large herds on it; for the way properly to develop
-a region is to put it to those uses to which it is best adapted. The
-amount to be paid for the leasing privilege is to me a matter of
-comparative indifference. The Government does not wish to make money
-out of the range, but simply to provide for the necessary supervision
-that will prevent its being eaten out or exhausted; that is, that
-will secure it undamaged as an asset for the next generation, for the
-children of the present home makers. Of course we must also provide
-enough to pay the proper share of the county taxes. I am not wedded to
-any one plan, and I am willing to combine several plans if necessary.
-But the present system is wrong, and I hope to see, in all the States
-of the Great Plains and the Rockies, the men like my correspondent of
-the Laramie County Cattle and Horse Growers’ Association, the small
-ranchmen “who plow and pitch hay themselves,” seriously take up this
-matter and make their representatives in Congress understand that there
-must be some solution, and that this solution shall be one which will
-secure the greatest permanent well-being to the actual settlers, the
-actual home makers. I promise with all the strength I have to cooperate
-toward this end.
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Notes:
-
- ――Text in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
-
- ――Punctuation and spelling inaccuracies were silently corrected.
-
- ――Archaic and variable spelling has been preserved.
-
- ――Variations in hyphenation and compound words have been preserved.
-
-*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ADDRESS OF PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT
-AT KEOKUK, IOWA, OCTOBER 1, 1907 ***
-
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- by Theodore Roosevelt—A Project Gutenberg eBook
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Address of President Roosevelt at Keokuk, Iowa, October 1, 1907, by Theodore Roosevelt</p>
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
-at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Address of President Roosevelt at Keokuk, Iowa, October 1, 1907</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Theodore Roosevelt</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: May 18, 2022 [eBook #68119]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Donald Cummings and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ADDRESS OF PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT AT KEOKUK, IOWA, OCTOBER 1, 1907 ***</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="cover">
- <img src="images/cover.jpg" alt="cover" title="cover" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h1 class="nobreak"><small>ADDRESS OF PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT AT<br />
-KEOKUK, IOWA</small>
- <img class="illowe2" src="images/deco_01sm.jpg"
- alt="small title decoration" title="small title decoration" />
- <small>OCTOBER 1, 1907</small></h1>
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-</div>
-
-<p class="noic">WASHINGTON<br />
-GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE<br />
-1907</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[3]</span></p>
-
-<p class="p4 noi"><span class="smcap">Men and Women of Iowa</span>:</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>I am glad indeed to see you and to
-speak to you in this thriving city of your
-great and prosperous State. I believe
-with all my heart in the people of Iowa, for
-I think that you are good, typical Americans,
-and that among you there has been
-developed to a very high degree that body<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[4]</span>
-of characteristics which we like to regard
-as distinctively American.</p>
-
-<p>During the last few years we of the
-United States have been forced to consider
-very seriously certain economic problems.
-We have made a beginning in the attempt
-to deal with the relations of the National
-Government—that is, with the relations of
-the people of the country—to the huge and
-wealthy corporations, controlled for the
-most part by a few very rich men, which
-are engaged in interstate business—especially<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[5]</span>
-the great railway corporations.
-You know my views on this matter. You
-know that I believe that the National Government,
-in the interests of the people,
-should assume much the same supervision
-and control over the management of the
-interstate common carriers that it now
-exercises over the national banks. You
-know furthermore that I believe that this
-supervision and control should be exercised
-in a spirit of rigid fairness toward
-the corporations, exacting justice from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[6]</span>
-them on behalf of the people but giving
-them justice in return.</p>
-
-<p>Recently I have been reading the work
-of the eminent Italian scholar Ferrero on
-the history of the Roman Republic, when
-the life of the Roman state had become
-that of a complex and luxurious industrial
-civilization. I am happy to say that the
-differences between that civilization and
-our own are more striking than the resemblances;
-and there is no warrant for our
-being drawn into any pessimistic comparison<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[7]</span>
-between the two civilizations. But
-there is every reason why we should study
-carefully the past in order to draw from it
-lessons for use in the present. One of the
-most striking features of the years which
-saw the downfall of the Roman Republic
-was the fact that the political life of Rome
-became split between two camps, one containing
-the rich who wished to exploit the
-poor, and the other the poor who wished
-to plunder the rich. Naturally, under
-such circumstances, the public man who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[8]</span>
-was for the moment successful tended to
-be either a violent reactionary or a violent
-demagogue. Any such condition of political
-life is as hopelessly unhealthy now as it
-was then. I believe so implicitly in the
-future of our people, because I believe
-that the average American citizen will no
-more tolerate government by a mob than
-he will tolerate government by a plutocracy;
-that he desires to see justice done
-to and justice exacted from rich man and
-poor man alike. We are not trying to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[9]</span>
-favor any man at the expense of his fellows.
-We are trying to shape things so that as
-far as possible each man shall have a fair
-chance in life; so that he shall have, so
-far as by law this can be accomplished, the
-chance to show the stuff that there is in
-him. We have no intention of trying to
-work for the impossible and undesirable
-end of giving to the lazy, the thriftless,
-the weak, and the vicious, the reward that
-belongs to, and in the long run can only
-come to, the hard working, the thrifty, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[10]</span>
-resolute, and the honest. But we do wish
-to see that the necessary struggle in life
-shall be carried on under genuinely democratic
-conditions; that, so far as human
-action can safely provide it, there shall be
-an approximately fair start; that there
-shall be no oppression of the weak, and
-that no man shall be permitted to acquire
-or to use a vast fortune by methods or in
-ways that are tortuous and dishonest.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore we need wise laws, and we
-need to have them resolutely administered.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[11]</span>
-We can get such laws and such administration
-only if the people are alive to their
-interests. The other day I listened to an
-admirable sermon by Bishop Johnston, of
-western Texas. His theme was that the
-vital element in judging any man should
-be his conduct, and neither his position
-nor his pretensions; and, furthermore, that
-freedom could only stay with a people
-which has the habit of self-mastery. As he
-said, the price of liberty is not only eternal
-vigilance, but eternal virtue; and I may add,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[12]</span>
-eternal common sense. Each man here
-knows that he himself has been able to use
-his freedom to advantage only provided
-that he could master himself, that he could
-control his own passions and direct his
-own faculties. Each of you fathers and
-mothers here knows that if your sons are to
-do well in the world they must know how
-to master themselves. Every man must
-have a master; if he is not his own master,
-then somebody else will be. This is just
-as true of public life as of private life. If<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[13]</span>
-we can not master ourselves, control ourselves,
-then sooner or later we shall have
-to submit to outside control; for there
-must be control somewhere.</p>
-
-<p>One way of exercising such control is
-through the laws of the land. Ours is a
-government of liberty, but it is a government
-of that orderly liberty which comes by
-and through the honest enforcement of and
-obedience to the law. At intervals during
-the last few months the appeal has been
-made to me not to enforce the law against<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[14]</span>
-certain wrongdoers of great wealth because
-to do so would interfere with the
-business prosperity of the country. Under
-the effects of that kind of fright which when
-sufficiently acute we call panic, this appeal
-has been made to me even by men who
-ordinarily behave as decent citizens. One
-newspaper which has itself strongly advanced
-this view gave prominence to the
-statement of a certain man of great wealth
-to the effect that the so-called financial
-weakness “was due entirely to the admitted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[15]</span>
-intention of President Roosevelt to
-punish the large moneyed interests which
-had transgressed the laws.” I do not
-admit that this has been the main cause of
-any business troubles we have had; but it
-is possible that it has been a contributory
-cause. If so, friends, as far as I am concerned
-it must be accepted as a disagreeable
-but unavoidable feature in a course of
-policy which as long as I am President
-will not be changed. In any great movement
-for righteousness, where the forces of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[16]</span>
-evil are strongly intrenched, it is unfortunately
-inevitable that some unoffending
-people should suffer in company with the
-real offenders. This is not our fault.
-It is the fault of those to whose deceptive
-action these innocent people owe their false
-position. A year or two ago certain representatives
-of labor called upon me and in the
-course of a very pleasant conversation told
-me that they regarded me as “the friend
-of labor.” I answered that I certainly
-was, and that I would do everything in my<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[17]</span>
-power for the laboring man <em>except anything
-that was wrong</em>. I have the same
-answer to make to the business man. I
-will do everything I can do to help
-business conditions, except anything that
-is wrong. And it would be not merely
-wrong but infamous to fail to do all that can
-be done to secure the punishment of those
-wrongdoers whose deeds are peculiarly
-reprehensible because they are not committed
-under the stress of want. Whenever
-a serious effort is made to cut out<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[18]</span>
-what is evil in our political life, whether
-the effort takes the shape of warring
-against the gross and sordid forms of evil
-in some municipality, or whether it takes
-the shape of trying to secure the honest
-enforcement of the law as against very
-powerful and wealthy people, there are
-sure to be certain individuals who demand
-that the movement stop because it may
-hurt business. In each case the answer
-must be that we earnestly hope and believe
-that there will be no permanent damage to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[19]</span>
-business from the movement, but that if
-righteousness conflicts with the fancied
-needs of business, then the latter must
-go to the wall. We can not afford to substitute
-any other test for that of guilt or
-innocence, of wrongdoing or welldoing,
-in judging any man. If a man does well,
-if he acts honestly, he has nothing to fear
-from this Administration. But so far as in
-me lies the corrupt politician, great or
-small, the private citizen who transgresses
-the law—be he rich or poor—shall be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[20]</span>
-brought before the impartial justice of a
-court. Perhaps I am most anxious to get
-at the politician who is corrupt, because he
-betrays a great trust; but assuredly I shall
-not spare his brother corruptionist who
-shows himself a swindler in business life;
-and, according to our power, crimes of
-fraud and cunning shall be prosecuted as
-relentlessly as crimes of brutality and
-physical violence.</p>
-
-<p>We need good laws and we need
-above all things the hearty aid of good<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[21]</span>
-citizens in supporting and enforcing the
-laws. Nevertheless, men and women of
-this great State, men and women of the
-Middle West, never forget that law and the
-administration of law, important though
-they are, must always occupy a wholly
-secondary place as compared with the character
-of the average citizen himself. On
-this trip I shall speak to audiences in each
-of which there will be many men who
-fought in the civil war. You who wore
-the blue and your brothers of the South<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[22]</span>
-who wore the gray know that in war no
-general no matter how good, no organization
-no matter how perfect, can avail if the
-average man in the ranks has not got the
-fighting edge. We need the organization,
-the preparation; we need the good general;
-but we need most the fighting edge in the
-individual soldier. So it is in private life.
-We live in a rough, workaday world, and
-we are yet a long way from the millennium.
-We can not as a nation and we can
-not as individuals afford to cultivate only<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[23]</span>
-the gentler, softer qualities. There must be
-gentleness and tenderness—the strongest
-men are gentle and tender—but there
-must also be courage and strength. I
-have a hearty sympathy with those who
-believe in doing all that can be done for
-peace; but I have no sympathy at all with
-those who believe that in the world as it
-now is we can afford to see the average
-American citizen lose the qualities that in
-their sum make up a good fighting man.
-You men must be workers who work with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[24]</span>
-all your heart and strength and mind at
-your several tasks in life; and you must
-also be able to fight at need. You women
-have even higher and more difficult duties;
-for I honor no man, not even the soldier
-who fights for righteousness, quite as much
-as I honor the good woman who does her
-full duty as wife and mother. But if she
-shirks her duty as wife and mother then
-she stands on a par with the man who
-refuses to work for himself and his family,
-for those dependent upon him, and who in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[25]</span>
-time of the nation’s need refuses to fight.
-The man or woman who shirks his or her
-duty occupies a contemptible position.
-You here are the sons and daughters of
-the pioneers. I preach to you no life of
-ease. I preach to you the life of effort, the
-life that finds its highest satisfaction in
-doing well some work that is well worth
-doing.</p>
-
-<p>So much for what concerns every man
-and every woman in this country. Now,
-a word or two as to matters which are of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[26]</span>
-peculiar interest to this region of our
-country.</p>
-
-<p>Since I have been President I have
-traveled in every State of this Union, but
-my traveling has been almost entirely on
-railroads, save now and then by wagon or
-on horseback. Now I have the chance
-to try traveling by river; to go down the
-greatest of our rivers, the Father of
-Waters. A good many years ago when I
-lived in the Northwest I traveled occasionally
-on the Upper Missouri and its tributaries;<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[27]</span>
-but then we went in a flatboat and
-did our own rowing and paddling and poling.
-Now I am to try a steamboat. I am a
-great believer in our railway system; and
-the fact that I am very firm in my belief
-as to the necessity of the Government
-exercising a proper supervision and control
-over the railroads does not in the least interfere
-with the other fact that I greatly admire
-the large majority of the men in all positions,
-from the top to the bottom, who build
-and run them. Yet, while of course I am<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[28]</span>
-anxious to see these men, and therefore
-the corporations they represent or serve,
-achieve the fullest measure of legitimate
-prosperity, nevertheless as this country
-grows I feel that we can not have too
-many highroads, and that in addition to
-the iron highroads of our railway system
-we should also utilize the great river highways
-which have been given us by nature.
-From a variety of causes these highways
-have in many parts of the country been
-almost abandoned. This is not healthy.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[29]</span>
-Our people, and especially the representatives
-of the people in the National Congress,
-should give their most careful
-attention to this subject. We should be
-prepared to put the nation collectively back
-of the movement to improve them for the
-nation’s use. Our knowledge at this time
-is not such as to permit me to go into
-details, or to say definitely just what the
-nation should do; but most assuredly our
-great navigable rivers are national assets
-just as much as our great seacoast harbors.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[30]</span>
-Exactly as it is for the interest of all the
-country that our great harbors should be
-fitted to receive in safety the largest vessels
-of the merchant fleets of the world, so
-by deepening and otherwise our rivers
-should be fitted to bear their part in the
-movement of our merchandise; and this is
-especially true of the Mississippi and its
-tributaries, which drain the immense and
-prosperous region which makes in very fact
-the heart of our nation; the basin of the
-Great Lakes being already united with the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[31]</span>
-basin of the Mississippi, and both regions
-being identical in their products and interests.
-Waterways are peculiarly fitted
-for the transportation of the bulky commodities
-which come from the soil or
-under the soil; and no other part of our
-country is as fruitful as is this in such
-commodities.</p>
-
-<p>You in Iowa have many manufacturing
-centers, but you remain, and I hope you
-will always remain, a great agricultural
-State. I hope that the means of transporting<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[32]</span>
-your commodities to market will be
-steadily improved; but this will be of no
-use unless you keep producing the commodities,
-and in the long run this will largely
-depend upon your being able to keep on
-the farm a high type of citizenship. The
-effort must be to make farm life not only
-remunerative but attractive, so that the best
-young men and girls will feel inclined to
-stay on the farm and not to go to the city.
-Nothing is more important to this country
-than the perpetuation of our system of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[33]</span>
-medium-sized farms worked by their
-owners. We do not want to see our
-farmers sink to the condition of the peasants
-of the Old World, barely able to live on their
-small holdings, nor do we want to see their
-places taken by wealthy men owning
-enormous estates which they work purely
-by tenants and hired servants.</p>
-
-<p>At present the ordinary farmer holds
-his own in the land as against any possible
-representative of the landlord class of
-farmer—that is, of the men who would<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[34]</span>
-own vast estates—because the ordinary
-farmer unites his capital, his labor, and his
-brains with the making of a permanent
-family home, and thus can afford to hold
-his land at a value at which it can not be
-held by the capitalist, who would have to
-run it by leasing it or by cultivating it at
-arm’s length with hired labor. In other
-words, the typical American farmer of to-day
-gets his remuneration in part in the
-shape of an independent home for his
-family, and this gives him an advantage<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[35]</span>
-over an absentee landlord. Now, from
-the standpoint of the nation as a whole it
-is preeminently desirable to keep as one
-of our chief American types the farmer, the
-farm home maker, of the medium-sized
-farm. This type of farm home is one of
-our strongest political and social bulwarks.
-Such a farm worked by the owner has
-proved by experience the best place in
-which to breed vigorous leaders alike
-for country and city. It is a matter
-of prime economic and civic importance<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[36]</span>
-to encourage this type of home-owning
-farmer.</p>
-
-<p>Therefore, we should strive in every
-way to aid in the education of the farmer
-for the farm, and should shape our school
-system with this end in view; and so
-vitally important is this that, in my opinion,
-the Federal Government should cooperate
-with the State governments to
-secure the needed change and improvement
-in our schools. It is significant that
-both from Minnesota and Georgia there<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[37]</span>
-have come proposals in this direction in
-the appearance of bills introduced into the
-National Congress. The Congressional
-land grant act of 1852 accomplished much
-in establishing the agricultural colleges in
-the several States, and therefore in preparing
-to turn the system of educational
-training for the young into channels at
-once broader and more practicable—and
-what I am saying about agricultural training
-really applies to all industrial training.
-But the colleges can not reach the masses,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[38]</span>
-and it is essential that the masses should
-be reached. Such agricultural high
-schools as those in Minnesota and Nebraska
-for farm boys and girls, such technical
-high schools as are to be found, for
-instance, in both St. Louis and Washington,
-have by their success shown that it is
-entirely feasible to carry in practical fashion
-the fundamentals of industrial training
-into the realms of our secondary schools.
-At present there is a gap between our
-primary schools in country and city and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[39]</span>
-the industrial collegiate courses, which
-must be closed, and if necessary the
-Nation must help the State to close it.
-Too often our present schools tend to put
-altogether too great a premium upon mere
-literary education, and therefore to train
-away from the farm and the shop.</p>
-
-<p>We should reverse this process. Specific
-training of a practical kind should be
-given to the boys and girls who when
-men and women are to make up the backbone
-of this nation by working in agriculture,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[40]</span>
-in the mechanical industries, in arts
-and trades; in short, who are to do the duty
-that should always come first with all of
-us, the duty of home-making and home-keeping.
-Too narrow a literary education
-is, for most men and women, not a real
-education at all; for a real education
-should fit people primarily for the industrial
-and home-making employments in
-which they must employ the bulk of their
-activities. Our country offers unparalleled
-opportunities for domestic and social<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[41]</span>
-advancement, for social and economic
-leadership in the world. Our greatest
-national asset is to be found in the children.
-They need to be trained to high
-ideals of everyday living, and to high
-efficiency in their respective vocations; we
-can not afford to have them trained otherwise,
-and the nation should help the
-States to achieve this end.</p>
-
-<p>Now, men of Iowa, I want to say just
-a word on a matter that concerns not the
-States of the Mississippi Valley itself, but<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[42]</span>
-the States west of them, the States of the
-Great Plains and the Rocky Mountains.
-Unfortunately, I am not able on this present
-trip to visit those States, or I should speak
-to their own people on the point to which
-I now intend to allude; but after all anything
-that affects a considerable number of
-Americans who live under one set of conditions,
-must be of moment to all other
-Americans, for never forget, friends, that
-in the long run we shall all go up or go
-down together.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[43]</span></p>
-
-<p>The States of the high plains and of
-the mountains have a peculiar claim upon
-me, because for a number of years I lived
-and worked in them, and I have that intimate
-knowledge of their people that comes
-under such conditions. In those States
-there is need of a modification of the land
-laws that have worked so well in the well-watered
-fertile regions to the eastward,
-such as those in which you here dwell.
-The one object in all our land laws should
-always be to favor the actual settler, the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[44]</span>
-actual home maker, who comes to dwell on
-the land and there to bring up his children
-to inherit it after him. The Government
-should part with its title to the land only
-to the actual home-maker—not to the
-profit-maker, who does not care to make
-a home. The land should be sold outright
-only in quantities sufficient for decent
-homes—not in huge areas to be held for
-speculative purposes or used as ranches,
-where those who do the actual work are
-merely tenants or hired hands. No temporary<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[45]</span>
-prosperity of any class of men could
-in the slightest degree atone for failure on
-our part to shape the laws so that they may
-work for the permanent good of the home-maker.
-This is fundamental, gentlemen,
-and is simply carrying out the idea upon
-which I dwell in speaking to you of your
-own farms here in Iowa. Now in many
-States where the rainfall is light it is a
-simple absurdity to expect any man to
-live, still less to bring up a family, on one
-hundred and sixty acres. Where we are<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[46]</span>
-able to introduce irrigation, the homestead
-can be very much less in size—can, for
-instance, be forty acres; and there is nothing
-that Congress has done during the
-past six years more important than the
-enactment of the national irrigation law.
-But where irrigation is not applicable and
-the land can only be used for grazing, it
-may be that you can not run more than
-one steer to ten acres, and it is not necessary
-to be much of a mathematician in
-order to see that where such is the case a<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[47]</span>
-homestead of one hundred and sixty acres
-will not go far toward the support of a
-family. In consequence of this fact, homesteaders
-do not take up the lands in the
-tracts in question. They are left open for
-anybody to graze upon that wishes to. The
-result is that the men who use them moderately
-and not with a view to exhausting their
-resources are at the mercy of those who
-care nothing for the future and simply
-intend to skin the land in the present.
-For instance, the small sheep farmer who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[48]</span>
-has a home and who wishes that home to
-pass on to his children improved in value
-will naturally run his flock so that the
-land will support it, not only to-day,
-but ten years hence; but a big absentee
-sheep owner, who has no home on the
-land at all, but simply owns huge migratory
-flocks of sheep, may well find it to
-his profit to drive them over the small
-sheep farmer’s range and eat it all out.
-He can then drive his flocks on, whereas
-the small man can not. Of course, to permit<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[49]</span>
-such a state of things is not only evil
-for the small man, but is destructive of
-the best interests of the country. Substantially
-the same conditions obtain as
-regards cattle. The custom has therefore
-grown up of fencing great tracts of Government
-land without warrant of law.
-The men who fenced this land were
-sometimes rich men, who, by fencing it,
-kept out actual settlers and thereby
-worked evil to the country. But in many
-cases, whether they were large men or<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[50]</span>
-small men, their object was not to keep
-out actual settlers, but to protect themselves
-and their own industry by preventing
-overgrazing of the range on the part
-of reckless stock owners who had no
-place in the permanent development of
-the country and who were indifferent to
-everything except the profits of the moment.
-To permit the continuance of this
-illegal fencing inevitably tended to very
-grave abuses, and the Government has
-therefore forced the fencers to take down<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[51]</span>
-their fences. In doing this we have not
-only obeyed and enforced the law, but we
-have corrected many flagrant abuses.
-Nevertheless, we have also caused hardship,
-which, though unavoidable, I was
-exceedingly unwilling to cause. In some
-way or other we must provide for the
-use of the public range under conditions
-which shall inure primarily to the benefit
-of the actual settlers on or near it, and
-which shall prevent its being wasted.
-This means that in some shape or way<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[52]</span>
-the fencing of pasture land must be
-permitted under restrictions which will
-safeguard the rights of the actual settlers.
-I desire to act as these actual settlers wish
-to have me in this matter. I wish to find
-out their needs and desires and then to try
-to put them into effect. But they must take
-trouble, must look ahead to their own ultimate
-and real good, must insist upon being
-really represented by their public men, if
-we are to have a good result. A little
-while ago I received a very manly and sensible<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[53]</span>
-letter from one of the prominent members
-of the Laramie County, Wyo., Cattle
-and Horse Growers’ Association. My correspondent
-remarked incidentally in his
-letter, “I am a small ranchman, and have
-to plow and pitch hay myself,” and then
-went on to say that the great majority of
-their people had complied with the governmental
-order, had removed their fences
-and sold their cattle, but that they must
-get some kind of a lease law which
-would permit them to graze their stock<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[54]</span>
-under proper conditions or else it would
-be ruinous to them to continue in
-the business. The thing I have most at
-heart as regards this subject is to do whatever
-will be of permanent benefit to just
-exactly the people for whom this correspondent
-of mine spoke—the small ranchmen
-who have to plow and pitch hay themselves.
-All I want to do is to find out what
-will be to their real benefit, for that is certain
-to be to the benefit of the country as a
-whole. It may be that we can secure their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[55]</span>
-interests best by permitting all homesteaders
-in the dry country to inclose, individually or
-a certain number of them together, big tracts
-of range for summer use, the tracts being
-proportioned to the number of neighboring
-homesteaders who wish to run their
-cattle upon it. It may be that parts of the
-range will only be valuable for companies
-that can lease it and put large herds on it;
-for the way properly to develop a region
-is to put it to those uses to which it is best
-adapted. The amount to be paid for the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[56]</span>
-leasing privilege is to me a matter of comparative
-indifference. The Government
-does not wish to make money out of the
-range, but simply to provide for the necessary
-supervision that will prevent its being
-eaten out or exhausted; that is, that will
-secure it undamaged as an asset for the
-next generation, for the children of the
-present home makers. Of course we must
-also provide enough to pay the proper
-share of the county taxes. I am not
-wedded to any one plan, and I am<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[57]</span>
-willing to combine several plans if
-necessary. But the present system is
-wrong, and I hope to see, in all the
-States of the Great Plains and the
-Rockies, the men like my correspondent
-of the Laramie County Cattle and Horse
-Growers’ Association, the small ranchmen
-“who plow and pitch hay themselves,”
-seriously take up this matter and make
-their representatives in Congress understand
-that there must be some solution, and
-that this solution shall be one which will<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[58]</span>
-secure the greatest permanent well-being
-to the actual settlers, the actual home
-makers. I promise with all the strength
-I have to cooperate toward this end.</p>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" >
- <img class="p2 illowe3" src="images/deco_03end.jpg"
- alt="end decoration" title="end decoration" />
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<div class="tnote">
-<p class="noi tntitle">Transcriber’s Notes:</p>
-
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