. , Supplement to' i ' _ FALLS CITY TRIBU E. ' , Friday , Sctembcr 16 , 1904. FALLS CITY. . . EBRASKA. r . , ' D OF THE DEMOGRACY ) s Professions and Promises Compared with Its Performances , J RITABLE CALAMITY PARTY , Preaches thc Gospel of Discontent aDd Wastes Time in Obstructing Wise aDd Beneficent Republican . Policies Congressman : J. Adam Bede tell ot meeting a typical member of the part .of pr.51llises and calamity ! howlers. The Democrat had just come out of :1 saloon when he told Bede be had been buying tOme lining for his underclothes. In reply tQ Belle's query ns to how he was I getting ; ; on , tIle unfortunate ilescillie ot Je tcrson answered ; "That hte horse went dead and hIs mule W , lIt Il1l11e , And be lost six cows In n poker game ! : Then a hurricane : came , on n SUlllmpr's clay , And blew the house where lie lived , away ; And un earthqualoe came when that was gomte. i ' , And swallowed the land that the house stood on , Then the tax collector soon came ! 'round And charged ; . . him Ull with the hole In the " groulld Bede said that his friend thought that was carrying : the single tax too far. But If you coulll analyze his case and those ot all chronic complainers and kickers you woulll find that , out of a hundred 'or them , It least nndy-eight ; ought to go out and kick tbem5cl\'e5. Short on Performanc 'emocrat do not know the meaning / of the word "performance , " when ! applied - plied to doing lllrthing for thc general - eral I good ! , tIle advancement of the human I - man race , or the betterment oC man- kintl..s a party it has been trying / to write it for more than a full round , century , nnd"et : it has not succeeded in .forming ' the first letter. ' 1'0 tlo anything I constructive or oJ : permanent benefit Seems utter ! ) ' beyond its moral and psychic conception , or physical capacity to perform. Its norlllal attitude is i with . its face to the past ( and its back to the futu e. It newer seeS an opportunity- : - til the issue has been permanently set- tlell by the Republican party and public sentiment. Then it will stand up , with unblushing and inconceivable effrontery : , and say : "I dill it. " . . . , It the question of 10C0Q1 1l , with ft , depended upon the two limbs of prom- ise and performance , it would limp through its course a loathsome deCormit The promise leg would reach several times around the earth and then to the moon , while the performance member could not be found , intact , with a pow- erful magnifying glass. It has been n helpless victim of promisephobia for n hundred and one years , and t is not , single symptom of relief ir ! tgbt. The Jiscase is conceded by the bet' author- ] tics to be fatal , but a slow death car" 1ies its own peculiar form of retributive ) unisbment. Fonnt1cd on a 7tllstakc Jefferson , its father , while a man of , 1 deep learning and consummate diplo ! t lIlacy , hinted Washington , and early op- ( ,051d the cardinal principles ot the Fed- f lral : Go\'ernment. lie organized the Democcutic > party to aid him in this opposition - position Washington and Hamilton wanted a strong protective government Jefferson wanted a weak "Go.ernment that would govern the least. " Founded on the idea of resentment , resistance , negation - gation , subversion and an academic and false conception or personal privilege , the party has quite naturally been "forninst" nil sane measures directed toward the healthy progress ot the country - try and the real advancement of its peo- ple Being a party of opposition and bstruction its policy has been to preach calamity and foster discontent ; to prom- ise everything and actually do nothing. Party Odium Under j"Dckllon. H Jefferson was the founder of De- mocrncy Jackson is its patron "aint. Af- ter the Jeffersonian period , 1801-2 : ; , came m the Jncksoninn , iS ° ; i-40. : ; The signifi- cance ot the- Jackson era or Democracy lies in the fact that he was able to build a machine from the rabble or the less . educated classes , that enabled him act unlly to assert his Claims in conflict with the Constitution and against the idea or Republiemism. He assumed a position - tion between Congress and the people , as it were ; as a patriarchal ruler of the re- public. 'Tho ' curse or Jackson's administration - ministration : was that it weakened respect - spect for Il.w. The first clear symptom : of the decline of a healthy political spirit was the election and re-election of J'ck- lion to the Presidency. His administration - tion paved a broad way for the demor- nlizing transformation or the American people. Under Jackson , politics were vulgarized and American society was deprived - prit'el of its rightful influence over gov- em anent. Partisans , Not atriob. The twenty years from the defeat or Can Buren in StO to the defeat of Douglas in 18GO brought additional dis- . . ester and odium upon Democratic :111. nistr\tion. The strength of the party . has always rested in the Solid South , ; and the uneducated riffraff of our great cities. During the years mentioned the Southern Democrnc llursued a policy or territorial expansion , notou't , oC patriotic or broad motives , but for the sole pur- pose of increasing the number or slave States , and thus preserve the sectional balance in the Senate. These years are memorable in history for the struggle ; for territorial acquisition , the struggle ; over the Wilmot Proviso , the Compro- mise of sO ; : ; , the repeal of the Missouri : Compromise , for the Ion , ; agonyin Kan- sas , for the sensational Dred Scott decision - cision , and for the reconstruction of the party on strictly sectional lines. Rapid : \Iornl1Jccay. During all these . ' ' - weighty : bistor-m3k- ing years , the Democratic party : was the : willing accomplice of the Southern , . , JI' lIave-bolder in his efrom > to perpetunttt : hp institution of human slavery and to xtellll slave labor at the expense of free \oor. The sacrifice or principle .eces- l iated by this relationship led to rapid leeay. The party ceased to produce great leaders. Men of conscience ( and : ournJe ; , like Thomas H. Benton , left ,1. The significance of this period is the : lIustration it gives ; of the disastrous re- sults of a betrayal of principles , to the morals , honor and usefulness of a party. rue people have not trusted the Demo- : ratic party since , except during the two grief ; nightmares or the Cleveland ad- ministrations. Party' kamcfnl Record. Founded on the wrong side of moral and political ethics , it spent the first sixty years of iti existence along the lines of a.ggrandizement and narrow partisan le islatill. ( While proCessing in its platform to be the friend or the masses , it perlii3tenly enacted laws which bound them to penury : and dis- tress. While publicly advocating a broad , Intelligent citizenship , it voted against individual freedom. While beat- ing the tom-toms for prosperity : to the people , it voted against cheap postage , the Homestead law , tnd the Resumption If iJfccie Pi 'ment. Claiming to be in favor or a higher standard of living for the Tforkin man , it enacted free-trnde measures which sent him into indefinite , enforced idleness , and reduced him and his family to the level of the pauper labor of Europe Professing the utmost patriotism , it gave all possible aid to the robellion. Some Comparisons. Contrasted with the grand old Repub- liean party : the one abolished slavery , the other upheld it to the last ; the one put down the rebellion , the other sup- ported the rebellion ; the one preserved the National faith and credit , and paid the National debt the other ' ' , tried every scheme and expedient to sN.lltify the republic - public and avoid the debt ; the one pre- served the standard of value unchanged , tlll other sought to tamper with it and destroy it. Gets Worse Instead of Bettcr. rhe profession and promises of the Democratic party , during ; the past forty- three years , and the absence of nil ller- fermance arc as notorious ns eYer. They : show the lack of ideas , or purpose , but abound in hypocritical dogmas and flatulent pretenses. It has "I'eyersel } its ( ' lf on almost every important Xa- tional measure and brought : upon itself the ridil'llle of riht-tl1illldll peOl'll' ' Apropos of this deplorable condition ill the party , " )11' . Doole.\ proposed the following ; want ad. . a little while before the St. Louis convention : ' \YA\TED-A good , active , energetic Dhnm'crat , sthroug h' lung :11I' limb ; must lie In favor h' OUl(1 ) money , hut hot too sound : lU' anti-lnmpeervailst [ ' , hut f"r I holdln' onto what we'vc got ; In lhhny of thrusts . . hut a friend ! h' organized capital : II sympathizer [ wIth th' crushed fin' down- throhlell , peollle , hut not be army- means hostile to vested Inthrel'ts : must advocate sthrIke8. go\'cr'mlut lie injunction , free silver - vcr , sound mOlll'Y. greenbacks , n single ! tax a tarns t"r rIvlnoo , th' coustltootlon to follow th' slag ns far ns It' can nu' uo farther : cIvil service rayform h' thO hinds ; III ghee , an' all th' r'n'tlt all' Ioryous principles , h' our gr'rl'lt an' ioryous , ; lIlrt : ' . or amiy l"-reat amt ' Iuryous parts thcrcu lIe must lie akelly at home In Wall street \11' th' stock yards ! , In th' parlors : h'11' rrlch an' th' kitchens h' th' poor , " Clevelnndillm and Jell1ocracy. During Cle\'eland's administration : our National debt increased a half million dollars a day in the face of the IlnrtJ."s : promise or better times. Each day we lost half a million dollars in foreign trade. During that administration the value of farm products decreased more than fire hundred million dollars. Dis- trust and panic paralyzed the great industrial - dustrial system , of the country. Banks closed their doors ; business houses assigned - signed ; the balance of trade was against us ; capital withdrew from the fields of leitimate enterprise into secret places ; labor was forced into unwilling idleness ; we bad deserted mills , smokeless factories - ries , silent machinery. 'Ye had : tramps and beggars , industrial armies , starving women and children. Two million n1lle- bodied men were Legging for work- the opportunity to earn bread for their starving families Unworthy of Exlstenca This happened during the administration - tion ot the Democratic part which dur- ing fifty years has added nothing to progress , nothing to the cause or liberty , nothing / to freedom , nothing to the glory of our common country. This is the part that , no matter what it promises , always goes into partnership with calam- it , } ' . It feeds on disaster and fattens on despair. The only time it has had con- trol of this country during this gener- ation , it shut the doors of industry and clothed labor in r:1gs. It fought under the dishonored banner of free silver , it opposed keeping our flag / l11 the Orient , I and advocated that it be lowered in I retreat md trailed in the dust of dis- , honor. Such is a part of the record of the party of calamity , professions and promises-tbe oft-defen , discouraged disorganized , disgraced : , divided , decrepit oM Democratic , party. It stands today without an issue , without a principle , without a policy ; ' " " without a platform , without a leader and without ! mope. In closing we quote S. E. Kisc , of the Nebraska Independent , who puts these words in Br 'an's mOlith as regards Parker and his part : "Bryan's Po..iUo "Friends "nd countrymen , Ict's trust hlm- Though he's not n man to trust- Let's ehllta\'or ! to elect him. Thoub ; : his cause Is far tram just ; I have put away all rancor As I promised them I would , I nm for the I'plendld ! ' ticket , Though It Isn't any good "r et us gird ourselves for hattl - nut I hope we cannot \\'In- Let us pray to be successful , Though success would be u sin ; I Let us gave the people's hammer Unto him to nobly hear , Dut It's dangerous to do It , For he Isn't on time square. "Let us wave our hats for Parker , The poor tool of foxy DaTe : Let us rest our hopes upon him. Though ! he's Iammou's cringing ! slave ! Let us raise ! him up to power , Help to end him whooping through , But rememlJer-here I warn . . YOIl- You'll lie sorry It you d. . "In the orderly administration of affairs of the Government It III neccs- Bury that each of the three departments . Incnh should repose trust nod confi- dencc in thc acts of the others performed within their proper sphere of action. 'Ve must proceed upon the assumption that the executive department - mcnt , within its constitutional prero satlves , ill actuated by proper 1U0ti'Ves , and that it is as regardful of the good ; : name of the country ns either the lelill1Dtive or the judicial depart- mcnt8-From Senator Fol1rbanl.s'l : speech Clt Panma , February , IgM I . " ae - - , . . JUDGE PARKER. , ; . . . " ,1. " ' - - ' .r- " , . , > t. 4 v'et' J . . : a ; a - J a . " . After His Telegram. , , , - 4.r' . . . . t . . , . - ' , . ' - > ti ' , f ' 'f . , " 4 ; " " teJ , J' . " > . . , . - . . , ' , , " ' I' . . . . ! . - f : : . I . ' ' ' ' ' 'of. -it. . ; , ! tr ! " , " . , . . " ' ' , . . rv 'h,1- . , : . 3).jjlali' ) YTi'Mr iA2 l . IJ' r . , . \ ' , -lp . . ' , r ) ; < : . " . . . . , , j " . ' , . , . , , " , " ! ' . . , - ' . . . ' , " , : : j t"i. " ' it1i. . : : ' , " ' U ! ; . , . i .r ; ; , . ; , f ; j" . , . , ti. ; ( , 1 r' ! , t , , . , ' . , , " " ' , I " ' Vr 'a ' I y tit . . " r a . . . 'l , : ; -After His Speech. , , . . , ' " 1 , 'g : , , , " , , , II .el. ' - . ; " < , - : , ' . . . . ' tor 41. . ' . - . . " , " d' 1 : . . . , . . \ :4 : \ ! " i , j 1 , J I u , ' ' / f 4 . , r yz ( , ! \ ' l I t r k A ' rr y' ' \ l I 't \ ' ' ' } f . : I .I M , ' 4 11.7/Ii1wr ; , / , f i , r l . ' t .4L' i I , l i ( t - - -t Y r . - . 3 rb 1 ' , rl ' i , 111 i I n r 1' ' t m r " r- . _ " - , - - . 'e1f"-- e r ! - ' ( Copyright ; , 1004 Reproduced hy perm fission or the Chicago Chronicle and the New York Evening InII. ) EDUCATION IN POLITICS Parker Ta1k. of lt : : , hut Relles on the 8trenltth of TammDn Judge Parker says this : 11ene\'e1' a great question of public importance has arisen , it has been presented . 8entell and cbampioned through the press and on the rostrunm hy the educated thinkers ! of the country who , for the tunic being , are the real lender , and trader whose banners the organization ! leaders hasten to mar hal their forces lest their power shall he o\'erthrown. 'hut Judge Parker has . said above is true and right and scusible. : : But what , after the expression of such nn opinion , is Judge Parker's course ? It is i very true that the educated thinkers of the commtry should conduct the affairs - fairs or the countJ. , . But what is Judge ) Parker doing ? Upon what and whoa does Judge ! Parker rely for carrying the State of New York ; one of the ,8tltes , the influence of whose electoral cotes is great in the results of the Presidential campain. ! He relies upon nil un - American - iem combination known as Tammany Unll. It is absolutely impossible that the man could hope to carry : his own State without the aid of this , most cor- rupt orgmizntion , , ' in the greatest city : ' oC the country-an organization that has simply become nn enormous fester upon the State in which it exists. But it has been accepted in all exigencies , by the Democratic party , which. to the credit of that party , is a : little above Tammany. How ridiculous , under the circumstances - stances , is the attitude ot the more or less qualified jurist who lives in Eso- pus ! Think of a man who even talks of the influence of the educated man in politics and who at the same time must depend entirely for his success , in the State of New York , upon a couglomera ! - tion of the most uneducated find"icious elements ever gathered together ! in the making of a political pool in a great city. It is hard to say it , hut \lr. Parker - er cnnnot even afford to be respectable in his c."lIlanations. He cannot afford to talk about educated people or about educated influence back of him , or about nil that is good and broad and culti- \'ntetJ back of him because , without Tammany hack of him in his own State he bas not the shadow of a hope , and Tammany is the worst force there is pelWcally-n discredit to the country. I This isthe nub of the thing. This is I I . the statement oC the thing. If this respectable - srJeetnhle jurist ! up in Esopmts pretends to say that the educated human beings in this. country can , under any circumstances - stances : : , be with him , whJ' , necessarily , he must cut himself awayfromm 'nll1- nuumy. But politically be cannot afford to cut himself away ; from ' :11111Qln--- and there you : are ! One altuost ympa- : : thizes with the lllilhlle-a ' cd gentleman It : E-Iopus. : IN THE DAYS OF OLD ESOPUS ( A Song of 1001. In the days ct old 1-:80PU5 Are you 011 ? In' the days of flirt I : sopns . Are you \In ? In the days of old Esopus Hill tried very had to rope lit , Arc : rOll Oil , are you Oil , are you on ? Hill said , "Boys , I'll leave the town when we arrive. It to win the race for my man you'll but strive. nut he never did get there. And we really didn't clre- Are you cn , are you Oil , are you 6I11 ? , In the days ot old Esopus . Are you on ? In the days or , old ESOIIU8. Are you on ? In the days at old Esopus What a foolish way to dope us , . ' Are you on , are you 011 , lIre you on 1 Parker Is thc Hope of Trnsts. ( New York Tribune. ) James J. Hill's selection or Judge Parker ns his candidate is si nificant. He is angry ! with President Roosevelt simply : md solely for interfering with his lawless schemes to monopolize the railway : : traffic ot : the Xorthwe..t. He turns to Democracy and Judge Parker because he sees in them license to work his sovereign and imperious will in the domain ot business without restraint on the part of the government. And \Ir. J. J. Hill is an ble , experienced , hard headed man , who knows what he is about. lIe is not in the habit of buying gold bricks. During the last Democratic adminis- tration the government borrowed hundreds - dreds ot millions oC dollars during a time or profound peace , to pay current ex- penses. During the McKinley administration - tration it prosecuted a foreign war to a successful conclusion without borrow- ing a cent , and since the war closed nIl of the War taxes hate been .removed. WHO WE 1 , SHAUWE , HIRE An Untried Ian , or One Who Has Made a Good Record. The good results of the affairs of a nation depend nlmo"t absolutely upon I its relations with other nation ! There is , under the present condition ot thought and affairs , an adwnncenment in the worlll-n community or nations. The one among those nations which exhibits the greatest honest and tact and com- mon sense , is the nation which will be to the fore. Under the administration of the party that is now controlling the affairs ot the Lnitell States has occurred such extraordinary traoroinarr diplomatic success as has perhaps never been excelled by any na- tion at any time. This success has accrued - crued because or the tact and sense ot the present President of the United States , assisted by his Secretary at State. The record bas been something extraordinary , and aU the civilized worlll has recognized it. Tact and sense are just ns much a requisite in the conduct ot the affairs ot a nation n'3 they arc in the affairs of a corporation 01' nn individnal. 'Ye reward those who exhibit tact and sense . by continuing them in place , for our own benefit. The conclusion : need hardly be expresetl. , ; Any American citizen ot intelligence will know whom to vote for this fall. Cannot Be Trusted. ( Albany ( X. Y. ) Journn1. ) The people of this country have learn- ed by sad experience that no matter who is the individual to lead the Democratic party in the national conflict , they cannot trust the Democratic party when in power to do the right thing at the right time. "Dnrin the seven years that have just passed there is no duty , domestic Or foreign ; ; , which we have shirk ; no necessary ! task which we have feared to undertake , or which ve have not performed with rensonahlc : efficlcmcy. : We have never pleaded impotence. \Vc have never SOq > :1 h.t refuge in criticism ciem and comptnintinstcnd of action. \\"e face thc future wit our past and our present alllnarantor5 oronr prorJ- i.ell , and we are content to stand or to fall hy the record which we have made Bud arc making.-President Ro-sevelt. . . . UNSAFE ! UNSAFE ! UNSAFE ! t Democratic Charge Against President Roosevelt that Is. Without Foundation , SAFEST , > , . MAN IN COUNTRY ; , , . , Three Years in the White House and at No Time Has Anything Been Done that Did Not Tend Toward Pence : with AU the Yo rid. . ' When the hitter personal attacks 0:1 Theodore Roosevelt arc analyzedand wbe. a Democratic ngitttor is i asked to define his opposition to the President , the inevitable reply : is that "Roosevelt is . nn unsafe 111all. " Xow is he ? 'hat makes an unsafe man ? , When is a man safe and when is he dangerous - ous ? How are we to judge a mnl1- by what he has done or by what sonic " one says he mar : de ? Are we justified in calling a man unsafe who has all his lire heen l'minentlne ? Is hot a man entitled to the reputation he makes for himself ? For three years Throdore Roosevelt has had absolute ; ! power , as President or : the United State : : , find yet during that three year : : , although called to the great ollice suddenly as the result ot a horrible . rihle murder , he has never loot his bead. lIe has never done a dangerous thing he has nt no time involved the country in ditllcnlties , either nt home or abroad. Faire Pr llictiOrl3. , Immediately following ; the murder or WilliamI Kinle : ; predictions : were freely ' made in the Democratic press that : I'resident Roosevelt would involve the country in war lIas he done so ? It was also : freely predicted that he would break with the Republican ma- jority : in the House mill the Senate , and that he wotmld } insist 4In baring : his own w " av , ( lisregmrdicg : . : the advice of the time-honored leaders oC the party. has he done so ? Does not every one know . on the con- trary , that the 'endHion of peace be- , twel'n the United States and the rest of time world were never more securely Hwhored : than to-day ? This' has : not been beeatt < e the President has not had nn opportunity : to go to war. lucre have been halt n doyen such opportuui- ties at the very least since : : ' he became President , when ; , if he had been the unsafe - safe man be was alleged ; to be , he might easily have involved us in war with one or more of the great powers of Europe. lIe has met every diplomatic emergency with rough and rl vly diplomacy and extraordinary : . traordinary tact , , ich have won for tile lnitcd States the' respect oC the civilized - ized world. Record in I > ip10mac : ; , Look over the record - of the State Department - partment nndeL-Tlmeoslore P.oosevelr-fve------ - the last three years , amI see how much has been accomplished to upheld the dig / city : and the honor of the United States , without at ants time causing ; thc slightest - pst apprehension 9t Jorcign war. It was during the present " dmninistration that Ii special commission : was appointed to adjust . just tIle disputed boundary between 1.1aS- 1m and tile Dominion of Cmlda. Some of the Canadian people ] and , papers talked rather savnlel There was every opportunity - portunit for a misstep on We part of the ' United States. A little too touch bluster , a little too pronounced brag , failure in tad Ilt the proper moment , a substitution timillit . for bra " . ' " . oC timidity bravery : , 01. of rashness for conservatism by Theo- dore Roosevelt would have fanned the feeling in Canada into'a dangerous ; flame. The Alaska boundary was an inheritance from the McKinley : admin- i-tratiQn , but it was safely settled un- der ose-\'eIt , settled : : to the credit or the United States , settled without : the loss of an inch of American territory and settled , too , without the destruction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ' of the > friendly fecliu I bMwcen Gc ea t - - - - . . . - . . , . . " - _ . . . . " , , " ' . . . . . . . . . . . " " . . . . . . . Britain and the United States. When Germany , and Enlandwcre ; : at the throats of time little republic of Venezuela , nn unsafe President might easily : have involved us in war with those two countries , and a timid President i- dent might easily have brought ; upon the flag tile 'ltame ot the rest of the world. Russia and Japan have been at war. The sentiment oC the people in this country has been largely in favor or Japan. Yet John Hay : , the wise and dis- creet Secretary of State appoint by McKinleyand : unhesitatingly retained : bS Roosevelt , bas so successfully direet- I , ed the course oC American diplomacy that the United States to-day is as much the friend ot Russia as it is of the little fighting-eock , Tnpm. The United States in fact , bs dictated : the diplomatic con- duct ot hostilities between Russia : and Japan. This country has' dominated the situation , and yet nt no time bas there been the sligthest danger tbat we might become embroiled with any foreign na- tion. Safe E'VcryDay in the Year. These are the actual results ot three years 'of the foreign policy : oC Theodore ! Roosevelt , the man who , when lie en- tered the White house ns the result of a murderous bullet , was by his political adversaries - 'nmaries pictured to the other nations' the world as a braggart and a swash- buckler. He itas been safe , always safe , every day and every hour , since be has been President of tile United States. He has never lowered the American flag to anybody , be bas never been forced to apologize and be has conducted every episode oC our foreign ; policy : , with the advice of John Hay , in such n. way as to preserve tIle honor of the American Republic , and to gain ! the respect of the sovereigns oC the world. There is not a king , nor an emperor , nor a p" sident ; i . nor a potentate from Pekin to Timhncto who docs not know today tlttt Theo- dore Roosevelt is ot the best American : type honest . frank , courageous , sensi- 'ble , and always safe for those who treat him fairlY' Men : of the Roosevelt type : are unSafe only to the dishonest , to the disturber of the peace . of nations , to the grafters ; nt home and he grabbers abroad : , to , the ml.:1 puators ! of markets and the wreckers - ers of natioI15. To the honest men " . tD . the people of the home and the fireside , to the good king and to the good subject the Roosevelt type is the safest . thing. in . . 2U this world ' - . " .