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Page 26 text:
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i 1 i 1 W , L i- 1 f 'geftif ff' K 1 , --if :wi -vfskf , f.- f f,'..,'gp - , .- MQ. 4-U5 : .:,JCLff 1 M333 Grim? v -- ,L 1 - - - QQ .1.,- f. 'wwf-xv-'JE'i1f'f - ,. XR' 'if 5 In s il :fu '-WSF' ,.:' J B f L 1. , ? ff Fvfessi' .- ,hwy 'i2+52w -ff' , 'Lf 2' ,gp Q '82-5 9i1Q'Qff??'fil? A?2A'f:+ fir X! mf 4 '4i4'l-if ' fi 3'i'fv'FFf?a: 1 A ' .,i:w2,- V . , ,FM nf K. :niggas .. fr. 'f 1,1 f rggsig g,sJi'V23f'..-'M . , REM F 411,553 , Cii? V'v .90 A A :-gm' - Q, vf. v-ww- Qfwhw f :ww vbefpf. -. 2 :2M'w,1,' ffq:,gffw?f1 w?5w,g+T-1- 'QA 4 'fir 1 f ww -wma' .1 F -:V-,N x !1'. ,.f,. - sy..
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Page 25 text:
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1 ww. 1. .- N i' .1 ' i -xi. . . 5 . -- -affftf Na ,Q I ,146 - w A N , l ' ' ' 'ffl-i H 1' . , '-- - ' ff , .:.: -M... x . ,,. Lg 'K . LY , ' Mi' . . Q. , K N -os., it its l if X ' L, ' Qsg,i,.1 i W. ' ,. ' . 'r f t, sf f s, vga- . X. ,Q ? , is RATI ON srmr no. 34 RATION 1 l?Usi4f 'g,1j kk,' ssl' Y , nl , , wi ne' ? I if if . M Jaw, C r ri, in , 'f w 1 If e Ji' f, 1 1 at Y 3? l 2, v L,Nj',e , lx! 7 K F Q' ,, E c , X I Q a d in . fi NX ,, 4 , Q TL' . , 1, ' - Transportation was setting the pattern American way of life. The country mobile society with electric trolleys, biles, farm machinery, and bicycles, Along with the accessibility of travel new era of nationalism. to unite and the nation pulled flourished once again. A carefree ied war memories in the new telephones, light bulbs, stock market ticker tape graphs and a wealth of inventions from tile minds of its young inventors. Baseball be-f came the national sport and law, iwhilerurriors were whispered in the Roosevelt snr-er no. 38 RATION swim no. 42 L RATION STAMP N0- 46 The steel industry geared up for the revival :administration of another impending war. The 'nations leaders scoffedg until December 7, 1941 H Pearl Harbor! in the Act of 1964 in any Black Thursday, October 24, 1929, saw the American stock market crash to the lowest levelf Y in history. Panic set in as the unemployment, level skyrocketed, The country was in its worst, ' economic crisis. Slowly, but surely, the wounds of the crash, the dust bowl, and poverty healed. i li of their systems Audio-visual outer space Amen he first on the surface of was first to build a sky- study. s into' further t Arnericanyis still learning and growing after a rnere,2,QQ5yea'r infancy. The original determina- tion ofaour forefathers was told again in the wordssijffljieil Armstrong as he made the first ' steponftiiefmoon . . . a small step for man, but a giaritsstispi for irnarikindf'
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Page 27 text:
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Louisxana Purchase CABIN 30. 180 Q 's f' , ,- 800 iff 00 NWO 1 i 0495 1' N 19, nummul U I 5 H Ist Transcontinental Railroad C18693 Wlullugllln' dx . A N219 W 'XX was Gold Discovered un COIoma,CaIn10mlaflan. 12. 8473 Z ? The Alamo, San Antonio Texas V Uexas Independence day March 2, 18365 Hill, num .! Ongmal 13 Colonies THE CHANGING Ano HAWAII 150th slaiej Admitted tothe union in 1959 y Ownership of land had been just a dream to most of the colonists from feudal England. With the great expanse of cheap land opening up in the West, the dream became reality. The Louisiana Purchase of 1803 opened the first sizable frontier in the Midwest, but the nation was not ready for it yet. It took a growing market in the East, where land was getting high-priced and scarce, and develop- ment of good transportation, to really start the frontier movement. f The Gold Rush caused hordes of settlers to take various routes to the Pacific Coast and its yellow riches. The railroads brought farmers and ranchers, along with the miners, who decided to stop all along the routes and build their homes. Railroads were instrumental in the quick civilization of the West, bringing people in num- bers so large that the resentful Indians were finally pushed back into unwanted and infertile areas. America became a haven for immigrants from every na- tion as freedom beckoned them to the teeming cities of the East, the plains, and the rich west coast farmlands. Sick of the Civil 'Nat and with their own lands divided up and lost, many Southerners set out to begin again in the virgin territories. Westering soon became the national tradition as North and South moved together toward a new life. Americanism was advanced socially, by the hard-working, bare-fisted types who settled the frontiers.
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