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Show o F The economic safety of the republic depends upon the joint financial stability of all our governments. That stability of the nation is to be attained not alone by the financial stability of the federal government. It lies equally in the financial .integrity of every state, county and municipal government. PRESIDENT HOOVER. D E C E C H The great safeguards of order and precedent, of respect for public office, of obedience to duly constituted authority, ought not to be weakened. In an emergency like the present the responsible elements of our party should offer a solid front in their support of the President. That is the course I purpose to pursue. CALVIN COOLIDGE. Never have the principles of Republicanism been more in demand than they are at the present time. The administration has handled, and is hamdling, the situation brought about by the world wide depression in a most commendable manner. SENATOR REED SMOOT I look at the problem before this government as one * * * of restoring confidence by letting the people know that the credit structure can be built around a solid pillar of unassailable credit of the United States government. And you cannot have an unimpaired and unassailable credit if we follow a policy of borrowing instead of raising funds to meet our obligations. OGDEN L. MILLS, Secy, of Treasury In the seventy years of its existence, the Republican party has frequently been called upon to face a crisis and each time it has arisen to the occasion to the satisfaction of the American people. PATRICK J. HURLEY, Secy, of War R A E R Republican Party stands for Sane - Sound - Economical Government No sir, boys, the\ old Alma ain't what she used to was. HOMECOMING DAY Homecoming Day is one of the most uneventful days on the Utah campus. Unemployed Fuller Brush Men and and ex-studes return to the Alma Squaw and renew old acquaintances with the faculty, as if they ever had an old acquaintance. On Homecoming Day, the Homecomers gather round the pump and sing "Auld Fanny Zilchlyne" with proper sound effects by one-time R. 0. T. C. toy-soldiers. Classes and organizations make silly monkeys out of themselves by staging a down-town-parade in the afternoon. People think it's the March of Unemployed; cordons of John Laws are called out to prevent the possibility of a riot, but all that usually happens is a sedate and decorous Alteration among the innocent spectators on the sidewalk. Later in the afternoon there is a gridiron spectacle, to which Mr. and Mrs. U. U. Homecomer are special guests-yeh, for two and a half bucks! Later that evening the Homecomers go to a formal dinner dance. After a sparse helpings of Swedish Health bread and chili, and three hours of futile milling on the dance pavilion, the Homecomers are damn glad to come home. Homecoming Day is therefore a ceremonious and joyous event. If you get real tight, you might be able to bear it. Won't you join us? Page Three Hundred Thirty-seven |