The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, October 31, 1912, Image 7

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SflALLEfiBERGE
i
lil HIE HIE
WAS ELECTED GOVERNOR ON
STRONG PROGRESSIVE
PLATFORM.
iM OFFICE ONLY TWO YEARS
ut During that Time Signed BIIU
Carrying Out Every Pledge
In Mia Party's
Platform.
OoTernor Shallenbsrger was eUeUd
upon the strongest progressI UU
form ever offered to the people of
Nebraska. It promised to reform the
tax laws and pay the floating debt
which had always hung over the state
treasury. His administration was la
office only two years, but that was
i
ASHTON C. SHALLENBERGER
Democratic Candidate for United
Statea Senator.
long enough for him to sign bills car
rylng out every pledge made In his
party's platform, and these promises
are all living laws today.
The Guaranty of Deposits law has
a great fund collected and ready to
protect depositors, should a bank fail.
The fund will grow in strength as the
years go on.
The people are going to choose their
own United States Senator, because
Shallenberger signed the bill that
gives them the privilege.
The state was out of debt when
Shallenberger went out of office, and
the state institutions were carried on
at a vastly less expense to the tax
payers than the cost of the sume In
stitutions since he went out of office.
No governor in the history of the
country ever surpassed the splendid
record of great progressive laws se
cured in a single term than was made
by Governor A. C. Shallenberger dur
ing the two years the people trusted
him.
Shallenberger now asks Nebraska
to trust him to fight for her interests
for a term in the Senate of the United
States.
He made good as Governor. He
will make good still more strongly
us Senator, as he will have Governor
Wilson and a democratic congress to
help him.
Contrast the splendid record of
things actually accomplished during
the two short years of the Shallen
berger administration with the tea
barren years of Norrls' services In
Congress, and it is easy to understand
why Shallenberger is carrying every
thing before him In the present cam
paign. The people of Nebraska want
a man who gets results, and they
know that Shallenberger understands
their needs and knows how to do
what he starts out to perform for
them.
The farmers and laboring men, and
the business men, generally, know
that with Shallenberger in the Sen
ate, they will bo represented by a man
who will look effectively and faith
fully after every Interest of the state.
The Country Needs Wilson and
Wilson Needs Shallenberger In the
Senate to help him.
Nebraska needs Shallenberger In
the Senate.
Shallenberger's opponent talks
about reforms In Nebraska, but voted
lor Joe Cannon and the Pnyne-Aldrich
biH every time he had the opportunity
In Congress.
Shuilenberger put more reform laws
ihrough during his administration,
more laws vital to good government
and the interest of the people, than
were ever enacted during any other
period of the state's history. The
Hank Guaranty law; the Corporation
Tax law; the Physical Valuation of
railroads; Antl-trunt Discrimination
law; the Daylight Saloon law; Tax
laws were reformed; Taxes reduced,
and the state gotten out of debt for
the first time in its history.
Shallenberger made good as a Gov
ernor for two years, dive him six
years in the Senate with Wilson as
President and he will make good for
Nebraska and the nation in pushing
the great reform measures for which
both Wilson and Shallenberger stand.
Shallenberger Is a fighter. He knows
what the people need and he knows
how to fight for it and has been fight
ing for every progressive democratic
reform for twenty years.
Paper Nap kins" aTth Is" office.
1 4
f
I
;Ui.
Photo copyright by Harris &. Ewlii
Vice President of U.
S, Passes Away.
END NOT UNEXPECTED,
In Comatose Slate fcr Several
Hours Prior to Death.
LOSING GROUND MANY MONTHS
Examination by Doctors Shews
Presence of Uremic Poison.
Utlca, N. Y., Oct. 31. After a long
illness Vice President James School
craft Sherman died In his home in
this city last night at 9:42 o'clock of
uraemlc poison, caused by Iiright's
Jisease.
He had been sinking since early
morning and it was realized that death
was a question only of a few hours.
There was a slight relief shortly
ifter 7 o'clock, caused by an apparent
Improvement in the condition of tho
kidneys, but it did not prove real or
lasting and at best gave only tempo
rary hope.
At 9 o'clock tho patient's tempera
ture rose to 10G. From that time on
his condition rapidly passed from bad
to worse until the end. Mr. Sherman
wns unconscious when the end came
and hud been in that condition for
hours.
All the niwnbers of the immediate
family were witnesses to the final
cene.
Life of Sherman.
The twenty-seventh vice president
the United States and the only one
renominated, was christened James
School. 'raft Sherman. Dut, In nearly
a quarter of n century of public life
"Jim" Sherman lie was to his Inti
mates, and probably half the nation re
ferred to aim as "Sunny Jim," a
sobriquet earned by n never-falllns,
all-yw-r-roimd sunny disposition.
Slirrnnn belonged to the school of
itoruMlranlam iiownilnyn popularly
railed r g' !nr n ml lie fought Ills polit
ical battles wllhnit compromise, or
flinching. Tlie events he helped to
shape are so coinpa.;itie!y recent that
history ernnot nss.kMi Inin to his proper
pla' P ul,tii J n!.-o r cords the work
of his contemporaries.
To til - ' e,;i:'. ( i se!li;!tiVPS 0
the Flltieth . (iti:.i '; - ),(. i nn;e In the
winter of l;:S7. J im i list hi thirty-fee-ond
birthday, v, !;h ti e ! i r ;y and op
tlmlKiii of vonth, iiiid college bred
from the leilN -,f llnviltrin. Il !,)
been oleet- il m:yor of I tiea two yei
before. Like many others who came
to lead In the national legislature, he
brought with lilm an education in law.
He was well born and well bred. His
father, Richard V. Shrrmnn, was an
editor and public figure In New York
state.
Close to the Leaders.
Two sessions of congress foun'l
SHERMAN .
OTIOA HONE
V.V 1
T 41
1
Sherman defeated and out of office,
but not for long. Harry W. Rentley
of Bonneville, Oneida county, beat
him by less than 1,000 votes In the
race for the Fifty-second congress. In
th interim Sherman went back to
Uticn, built up his law practice and rc
turned to th? Fifty-third congress with
a signal victory. He remained In the
house without defeat until the Six
tleth confess, when he was nominat
ed and elected vice president on the
ticket with Mr. Taft.
His first years in the house brought
him into close association with lead
era and In such an environment hf
worked to a high place in the councils
and finally was numbered one of the
big five !n the house.
Cannonr Dnlzell, Payne, Sherman
and Tnwney were the great quintet
during the comparatively recent years
In which congress was Republican
Each of them invariably wore a red
carnation for a boutonnlere and when
Sherman went to preside over the sen
ate and occupy the coveted morble
room In the other wing of the capltol
he too!; the custom with him, and al
ways appeared nt every session of the
I tipper house with a flower In the but
! ronhole of his coat.
Statutes Show His Work.
Any review of Sherman's life would
not be complete without a reference
to his work in the house. Briefly
there Is orded no time when he
moved galleries to applause by a da
bate from the floor or changed any
votes by eloquence. Rut the statutes
hear marks of his work In committee
and caucus, and the results of his la
bors on the rules committee, the In
tterstate commerce commission and
other branches of the machinery ol
the houHe, where the real legislating
la done, while speeches prevail on the
floor.
In New York politics Sherman was
a leading figure. He waa always actlv
In state conventions and a figure at all
national gatherings of the party.
Sherman went to preside over the
senate just about the tlmo when wTiat
Is known as senatorial dignity was be
ginning to feel Its first break. In the
chair Sherman was dignity Itself, fair
in his rulings, his colleagues said;
quiet, firm, sure and seldom reversed
on appeal.
But dignity so far as the tradition:
frock cent and silk hat were con
corned generally was absent. He re
garded his time presiding over the
senate us a day's business, to bo at
tended to as If he were sitting in his
bank in Uticn. or at the directors' table
of one of the many enterprl..j8 In
which he had found a fortune and laid
the foundations of another for his
sons, lie usually appeared in a busi
ness suit. On n hot day he came In
flannels and on a very hot day n palm
leaf fan displaced the gavel and per
haps n glass of lemonade topped off
Ine book of rules.
Fell In With Hit Ideas.
Other senators, reluctant perhaps
to transgress staid custom, fell In
with hli Ideas, and nowadays on a
blistering Washington summer duy
the senate looks lilu; quite a business
house.
Tho Illness which proved fatal wns
little known In Washington until tho
last few months. Sherman was not
present during the closing days of the
last session nnd tho senate without a
president pro tern, by the death ol
Frye, was unable to agree upon a suc
cessor got along by temporary agree
ments, placing wmio senator In the
chnlr for two weeks at n time.
Sherman l!l bn genuinely missed In
the capltol. It was nn occurrence ol
nn ordinary day with congress In ses
nlon to meet Sherman walking down
Pennsylvania avenue, often alone, rosy
cheeked and cheerful, returning thr
salutations of scores who knew him
by slht ns "Funny Jim' nnd greeted
him with "Hood morning, Mr. Pnsl
dent." The pnssen.by who recognized
Hm wi.i greeted ns heartily as the
senator yl:o r.it'Mit he next.
Vice President Sherman was bcrr
In Utlca. Oct. 21. 1S33. He was mar
riod in to Crrrie Rrihcock at Fast
Orange, '. J They have three sons
Shcrril!. Richard U. and Thomas M.
Ml livlns and In business in Utlca
Tno vie president was nn Klk, a trus
tee of Hamilton collece, a member ol
the Hutch Reformed church, a member
f manv clubs and a business man oi
wide interests.
TO NAME SUCCESSOR
TOJESHERMAN
liil!es Calls Natrona! Committee
tor Faceting In Chicago.
New York, Oct. 31. Chairman Hllles
of tho Republican national committee
ciiis morning announced that he hut
called a meeting of the national com
mittoc for Nov. 12 in Chicago to sclecl
a succi'sror to the late James S. Slier
man as the Republican candidate foi
vice president.
Mr. Hilles made the following state
ment:
The national convention which met
in Chicago In Juno delegates to th
national committee power to fill va
enndes on the national ticket. Th
death of Mr. Sherman, candidate ol
the Republican party for vice presl
dent nt the coming election, makes II
incumbent upon tho national commit
teo to nominate n candidate In hit
place. The nomination, however, can
not possibly be made prior to the elec
tlen next Tuesday.
"Such a nomination can properly b
mode only after due and oonsiderablt
notice to all the members of the com
mittee. Such notice cannot be givei
In less than elx days. It Is therefon
manifestly Impossible to hold such i
meeting prior to the election. Mean
time, no dlfflenlty or inconvenlenc
arises to the voters at the election
next Tuesday, because the votes to bt
cast are for electors and not for can
(lidates for either president or vic
president and the death of Mr. Sher
man therefore does not affect the vol
Idity of the election of the electors.'
Therefore, there will be no defect
In the ballots to he cast for the Repub
Ilcan candidates for presidential elect
rrs, even though they appear, as li
some states, under the names, "Taft
and Shonnan."
T. R, GREETED BY
IMMENSE THRONG
Demonstration of Forty-Two Min
utes as Roosevelt Appears.
COLONEL TALKS IN NEW YORK
Speaks One Hour and Twenty Minutes
and Is Apparently None the Worst
for Exertion Listened to With
Close Attention.
New York, Oct. 31. Showing nc
physical evidence of the shock of bit
attempted assassination in Milwaukee
Oct. 14, Colonel Theodore Roosevelt
faced for an hour and twenty minutes
a Progressive political rally whicn
gave many thousands of his follow
New Yorkers a chance to accord him
an uproarious welcome.
For forty-two minutes after hia en
trance into crowded Madison Square
Garden, Colonel Roosevelt stood at
the edge of the high-perched speakers
platfoim, unable to make hlnisell
heard above the din of cheers, songs
and band music. His gestures to the
crowd for sllonco served only to In
tensify the noises, and when, aftei
twenty minutes of cheering, Colone.
Roosevelt made a determined effort
to begin his speech, the Immense audi
ence was swung off into another po
riod of cheering by the beginning ol
ho chant "We want Teddy," "We
want Teddy."
The attention nnd silence that greet
cd the address by Colonel Roosevelt
was as marked as tho demonstratior
that preceded it. At the first attempts
to interrupt with applause, the presl
deiitlal candidate motioned Imperative
ly with his left hand for silence.
Governor Hiram Johnson, Progres
sive candidate for vice president, nnc
Oscar S. Straus, candidate for govern
or of New York, preceded Colono
Roosevelt.
Colonel Roosevelt, adhered to the
text of bis prepared speech, without
changing scarcely a word throughout
His voice wan full and strong, peno
trntlng to the extreme corners of the
amphitheater. Ills right hand, hecnust
of the wound In his right side, waf
scarcely inovod In gesture, althougt
he tapped with It emphatically severa
times upon the rolling. He gesturec
Rigorously with his left arm through
out bis speech.
Wins Suit for Two Millions.
Colorado Springs, Oct, 31 Two mil
lien dollars' worth of tho capital stock
of the Grand I'nlon Mining compnti)
of New Yoik and Mexico will be
awarded to Dr. J. G. Ilolllngsworth o.
Kansas City In his suit ngalnst Ed
wnrd Tufts, whom Hollingswortb
claimed hu grub-staked several yean
ago, If the recommendations of Ref
tree O. E. Collins, made to the dlstricl
court here, are carried out.
MANLEY.
.K-.:-::.tt.x-tt !
Mr. Kssick went to lMaltMiimilh 1
Sal unlay. I
Miss Anna Raulli was in town
'ednesilay.
Dr. tireen was in Mauley one
ilay last weck.
Hilly Ash and family visited in
town Sunday.
(tie Murphy drove In Yeiim'
Water Monday.
Clyde Jenkins spent Wednesday
in Hie country.
Mr. Maylleld and wife allend"d
the Lnu wedding.
Leonard ScliulTer went to
Omaha yesterdav.
Tom Akerson was Iradins in
Mauley Wednesday.
Misses Lena and Lucy tonne
were in town this week.
Jake Miller and family drove to
Weeping Water Saturday.
h'd Fleischinan drove to Weep
ing Water Tuesday morning.
Tom Keckler and wife autoed to
Murdock Wedncsday afternoon.
Miss Clara Jenkins visited in
Weeping Water Tuesday evening.
Pete Pitman lias gone out in the
couiilry to shuck corn for Mrs.
Krhart.
Mrs. Iliggins and Miss Ford
called on Mrs. Charles (lerlack
Tuesday.
John Fleischinan, mother and
sister autoed to Weeping Water
Monday.
Mr. Capi'on's sister and children
are visiting at the Caproti homo
tin's w;e.k.
The Misses Ford departed for
their home in Chicago Wednesday
morning.
Mrs. John Tight' and daughter,
Agnes, went to Omaha Tuesday
forenoon.
The Ladies' Kensington chili
meets with Mrs. Aaron Jenkins
Halloween.
planning on a Christmas enter
tainment. Everybody that is in
terested come.
Dr. Fordycc and wife attended
the wedding of his hrother at
Lincoln Wednesday.
Everett Fisher of Weeping Wa
ter visited with the Heckard cliil
dien Saturday evening.
Mr-. Charles Oerlan and little
daughter, Vera, wore Omaha pas
sengers Saturday morning.
Will (ierlack and family of
Ilaveloek spent Sunday wilh his
brother, Charley, and family.
Mrs. F.d Fleisehman drove to
Weeping Water Monday to meet
her stepfather, F. E. Register of
Carroll county Missouri.
Mrs. (leorge Schad'er, jr., spent
a few days I he past w eek in
Plallsmoul h visiting her sister.
Ed Kelly, Will ilau and Jim
Carper attended a democratic
speaking at Plaltsmoulh Tuesday
evxning.
Miss Daisy Jewell went l.i.
Weeping Water one night last
week, returning the next morning
to her school dut ies.
Alex Miller and family and Fred
Fleischinan and family went to
Louisville Sunday and attended
the preiu liing service.
There will lie a business meet
ing held at the I'nion church of
Mauley next Wednesday evei.ing,
November (5, for the purpns.'. of
Then; was the usual song
practice held at the (ieorge Scliaf
fer, sr., home Tuesday evening.
There was a good crowd present.
Si,nd:i school Sunday mori'ing
at III o'clock and preaching at
11 o'clock by llev. Lambert.
Prayer meeling at 1 p. m. All
invited.
There will be an enlerlaiiinieiil
in the I'uion church Thursday
evening, November 7, by Miss
Ethel Hell Preston. Admission 15
and 25 cents. Everybody cordial
ly invited.
Local News
Miss Edilh Martin departed
this morning for Omaha, where
she looked after business matters
for the day.
Chris Parkening departed this
afternoon on No. 23 for Uenning
lon, Neb., whert. he will visit his
sister for as liort time.
C. E, Wesrolt returned this
morning from Chicago, where he
had been for several days looking
afler business matters.
Mrs. Jay Madsen departed for
Omaha last evening, where she
was called by the illness of her
sister-in-law. Mr. Madsen accom
panied her In Hie metropolis, re
turning on the midnight M. P.
I 7s
V ,
V" r:
V i il
JULIUS PITZ v
The above gentleman is a
candidate for county com
missioner, and he solicits the
support of the voters of Cass
county, because he feels him
self well qualified for the po
sition. He promises the
voters that if elected on the
5th day of November, he will
use his utmost endeavers to
please the people in the per
formance of his duty. He has
lived in Cass county from
boyhood up, and has never
wronged and person out of a
dollar. If elected he will do
his duty at all times and un
der all circumstances, look
ing well to the interests of
the tax-payers of the county.
A vote for Julius Pitz is a
vote for the right man for the
right place.
It. R Windham was a business
visitor in I he metropolis today,
returning I his afternoon.
Robert Mau.y of Denver arrived
yesterday for a short visit with
his parents, Mike Mauzy and wife.
Miss Leona Itrady was a pas
senger this morning for Omaha
where she will visit for the day.
Mrs. H. (lien Kawls was a visit
or in the metropolis today, being
a passenger on No. 15 this morn
ing. Hubert Mapes of Omaha came
down this morning on No. 0 and
will enjoy a little hunting trip in
this localitv.
The St. Luke's (luild held a very
interesting meeling yesterday af
ternoon nt the home of Mrs. T.
II. Livingston.
Andrew Campbell and Joseph
Campbell of near Rock Hluffs was
in the city yeslerady looking af
ter some business mailers.
Charles Jclinek returned this
morning from Omaha, where he
had been for several days visiting
with relatives and friends.
Mrs. C. L. Merger relumed to
day on No. 2i from Omaha, where
she had been visiting Mrs. Malt
Spader and family for a short
lime.
C. C. Wingale and wife of Ham
burg, Iowa, who have been here
for several days visiting wilh
Asbury Jacks and family, return
ed to their home last evening on
No. .'.
W. C. Hamilton relumed this
morning from Red Oak, 'Iowa,
where he had I n isiling rela
tives for a few days, and will look
afler business mailers here for
a few davs.
Lee Coiner and wife and
mother, Mrs. J. M. Coiner, were
assengers this morning for Oma
ha, called there by the death of
(iranl Coiner.
Misses Tempie Lawrence and
(iladys Lawrence, who have been
slaying at the liom. of (i. W.
Iloinan and family for a few days,
departed this morning for Iheir
home at Corning, Iowa.
Mrs. Paul Webling, nil. Sniil.li
St., Peoria, III., had kidney and
bladder ' trouble, wilh terrible
backache and pain across the
hips. Just imagine her condition.
She further says: "I was also
very nervous, had headaches and
dizzy spells, and was fast gelling
worse when I took Foley Kidney
Pills, and now all my troubles are
cured. Foley Kidney Pills have
done so much for me I shall al
ways recommend I hem." For sale
by F. C. Fricke A Co.