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About Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 24, 1908)
' 1 I . _ xiJl * 1 S V. fc > c .i.pJc System The system of paying by clieck was devised by ail men for any man for you. It is suited to the need of any business , either large or small. Ft makes , no difference whether we pay out § 10 or 810000 a month. A checking account will serve your needs. Pay by clieck , the method puts system in to your business and gives you a record of every transaction. VALENTINE STATE BANK VALENTINE. NEBR. r VALENTINE BARBER S H 0 P All kinds of. N > SHAMPOOS. * MASSAt : KS. * 5 AND LADIKS HAIR DRESSING Shampooing a specialty. i HOT and COLD HATIIS in connection \ 3 Forest Shepard , Prop. 1 Valentino State Hank Huilding The Loup Valley Ilerefoid Ranch. Bro\vnieeNebr , Soldier CreeVCol- Ulllluis 17th 1C005U , : i son of C'olumluis 17th , a halt brother ot the S10.000Cham pion i > , , ie. a ii < i I'riuce Hoabdel 131.- 693 at head of held. I now ha\e about 30 head of 19C7 bull cahes for sale. C.H. FAULHABEK. H. DAILEY , Dentist. Office over the grocery deparment of T. C. Hornby's store. J. W. McDANIEL , COUSTY SURVEYOR Valentine - Kefor. Ail work will be given prompt and careful attention. W. I-L Stratton Dealer in FLOUE & FEED General Merchandise VHONE 125 cor. Hall & Cath. Valentine , Nebr. Along the Kennebec Co. was here one year ago the ord and 4th ; of July and was pronounced one of the best that has been in the Opera House. There are several hundred people in town taking in the Carnival and races. Main street is crowded > with people from morning till night and the booths of the Carni val Co. fill the street from Melten- dorff's saloon to Shaw's phota gal- ery. The high dive is a ladder 70 feet high , from the top of which a man falls to earth and is caught in a spring net , just a few feet from the ground. A wire cable 400 feet long is stretched from the tower of the courthouse to the ground near the opera house upon which a girl makes the slide for life coming down with flaming torches encircling her body and apparently is suspended by her head from the cable. A balloon ascension each day beginning Wednesday nesday if not too windy. The Ferris Wheel , the Merry-Go- Kound and the numerous ont shews which Gil the street sh something to do all the time ad transform Valentine into a ci with crowded thoroughfares. The ball game and races each after- nnon give a mild appearance jrof that fedture of county fairs. The j . Ainsworth band plays for us anc direct the movements of the throngs of people toward clhe portion of the program. In the evening the young folks throw confetti and toot horns and make unearthly noise ? with the noisyest kind of instruments until the wee small hours. Some attend the dance in the Opera House anc otoers take in the different shows Big times in Valentine this week Try Kazda's barber shop. tf Mrs. Fannie Moore visited in our city a couple of days last week. i C.1J. . JorJon and family of Rose bud are in town taking in the carnival. 1 Wm Hook and Frank Meidl of Cody were transacting business in town Monday Sheriff Rosseter is enjoying a visit this we 'k from" his father , S. E. Rosseter. Dan Adamson is in from Lake on business , visiting friends and taking in the carnival. The Texas Ranger Co. will be at the Opera House Oct. 'J. Watch for further announcements. C. II. Pollard , foreman of the Chadron .Journal , and wife are in town , taking in the carnival. Tank O'Bryan shipped a car of cattle to Omaha last Sunday and Mr. O'Bryan went down with them. Ed Cohota had another hemor rhage of a vericose vein in his ank le last week which crippled him up some but he's able to be about. Frank Krampert , Henry Lausen and several others from Wood lake vicinity were transacting laud office business here Monday. Dewpy Kellogg has arrived from S. D. with two carloads of stock and stuff to stock his farm that he recently purchased near Britt. Britt.W. W. M. Camp , editor of the Railway Review , of Chicago , stopped a couple of days in the city to visit Mr. Weston , this week. Mr. Morrissey was the princi pal speaker at an enthusiastic Bryan Club meeting at Ainsworth last Saturday night. Two young ladies participated in the program with original poems and political talks. Mr. Hilberg , formerly Co. Clerk of Rock County was in the city Tuesday visiting DP ! Sherman an old time friend. Mr. Hilberg is now an abstractor at Bassett. George Hershey and Dick Mur ray were scuttling last Saturday ind George had a linger bent over jackward. Very painful and Dwelled up but getting better. Mrs. Frank Brayton and son Donald , returned last Friday from icr extended visit with her par- ; nts in California. Mrs. Bray- on's aunt , Mrs. Kirkpatrick and ! amil.v , of Ainsworth are visiting ler thi * week and attending the : arnival. The Valentine Democrat has Deen encouraged to offer a contest 'or the most popular lady in Cherry county with first , second and , hird prizes. Anyone is free to inter. Further particulars next week that will give everyone a ; air chance and a sqare deal. Miss Helene Viertel was award ed the gold watch and chain and crowned Carnival Queen last night. Upon counting the votes it was learned that a total of 127- 875 votes were cast of which Miss Viertel got over 40 000 ; Miss West and Miss Pettycrew being the nearest competitors with about 32,000 each. John F. Carr , the farmer stock man and merchant of Springview , who is the democratic candidate for representative of this Dist. is in the City meeting freinds and getting acquainted. Frank Koby of Springview came over with Mr. Carr and says that Mr. Carr is re ceiving hearty support of demo crats and republicans too in Keya- paha Co. Walter Brosius , who recently returned from Ft. Collins , Colo. , where he had gone to look up a location , has purchased 160 acres of land from John Kaxda near Atkinson and Saturday Mr. sius started over land with a four horse team to fake possesion of his new home. The farm is well 1 improved and cost Mr. Brosius ; ( § 3.200. Walter says the school 1 house is a half mile from his house and he's looking for a school-ma'am to teach school. IT. S. Weatlier Bureau Report for week Ending Sept. 1.5 , Daily mean temperature 73 : Normal Gl Highest 1)3 ) ° ; lowest r > 3 ° . Precipitation .0 of an inch. Total precipitation from March 1st ( the crop season ) to date was 14.17 inches and the average for same period for 20 years is 18.32 And It Came Under the High Protec tive Tariff and Republican Con trol In Every Branch of the Federal Govern ment. In a public address , Mr. Shaw , re cently Secretary of the Treasury u-1- der Mr. Roosevelt , saiJThe : strin gency of 1907 is generally conceded tj have been the severest the world has ever witnessed. " How consoling it is to read in the republican platform this glowing sen tence : "A Republican tariff has al ways been followed by business pros perity. " * Mr. Aldrich , In his speech on th > Aldrich Currency bill in the Senate of the United States only last winter , said : "Mr. President , f-e financial crisis from which the country has just emerged , which culminated in a serious panic in October , was the most acute and destructive In ilc immediate con sequences of any thct has occurred in the history of the country. Nothing but the heroic measures taken by the representatives of the great business and financial institutions of the coun try acting in co-operation with the Secretary of the Treasury , prevente-1 a total collapse of private credit and a disastrous destruction of all values. The country was saved by the nar rowest possible margin from an over whelming catastrophe , whose blight- Ing effect would have been felt in every household. " On Februray 11. 1908 , Mr. Shaw , in a speech he made in Michigan , said- "Over r.00,000 freight cars are standIng - Ing on the tracks , 30,000 locomotives white leaded and out of commission , one-fourth of the population of several large cities idle , and for the first time under a Republican administration , free soup houses in every industrial center ; the price of fr-rm produce nat urally and materially depreciated , furnish an object less.m which ought to produce a measure of sobermind- cdness on the part of the American people. " * o From the public press is taken the following news item coming from Pittsburg , Pa. , Feb. S. 1908 : "The cry of the unemployed daily grows more distressed in Pittsburg. There are 15,000 men idle , and the spectre of the dreaded soup houses again makes its appearance. The first soup house will be opened by the Sal- ration Army Monday morning , ar-1 unless there is a radical aiU pronnt change for the better , more places of this kind will be in demand ber-.v many da : s have elapsed. The sitra- tion is not really alarming , but it ij bad enor.gh Soup houses have been the dread of the business men rnd civic leaders , and every effort has bec'i made to avoid them. " * * * Here is the following news item from Chicago , dated Feb. 11 , IH S : "Chicago. Fob. 11. 1908. Never In the history of the 'Chicago Reliet anl Aid Society' has there been such a demand for assistance as at the pr sent - ent tinif. is the claim of Superinten dent Kingsly , who is in charge of the distribution of funds by the business men's rel'ef commutee which has irst raisr-d betwnen $2."i.OOO and $ SO.U.n for needy families. Never in the history of the society have we had GO mnny appeals bassd entirely on the lack c. ' mpcymcnt. ! " * 9 * Not long ago Mr. Dalzroll , who writes ' the tariff tax. recently as dictated by ( he men vho put up the money to pa.y the expenses of republican campii'Tir , told us : "We do not road our tariff lc.sors out of books. We read them bv tNi blazing light of open furance dorrs , amid the noise of industrial activi o ; and in the swe'it of our brows that wo coin into wealth , and God help thv man or party that would put out ther-e fires , still the music of that noise , and send the vorknen homo to a fooillon and hungry hci.behold. "It was under remil > rc : < n rule tl it this music was stilled. t > a * the frs were put out. aim thai son- ) hoi : - ? shad had to provide for the foorlloss : t.id hungry. " No longer c-in ary Republican ever I fool the people by claiming Mi it " : i republican tarlf : has ah\ays been fol lowed by business prosj rity. " - The time has come ° hour has struck for a change. Thousands of Republicans take their positions and will vote ii > v 1'ryan in November. Revision. It is an old-lime Republican cry that "the tariff will be revised by its , friends. " Representative McCall of I j 1 Massachusetts , a Republican , hit the nail on the head when in referring to j this cry he said : "If the larilf cannot I 1 be revised when two-thirds of the membership of both houses is Repub lican , when is revision to come ? " i Revision , through the Republican party , is to come whenever the bene ficiaries of a high protective tariff are willing to surrender the enormous ad vantages thy possess ; and this sur render will be made whenever human Lelfishness is destroyed. We will receive this week a carload of Better get that new bug = A complets line of building gy before the carnival , material always on hand. era Old Crow , All Leading Hermitage Brands and Hurtled Guchen- Under the , licimer j Supervision Hye of the vVhiskeys. r. s. ( j-ov. We also handle- the Budweiser Beer. r.S A r- . Ji J i IN Q. STETTER , Propr. Prices are wliat | we are talking Now . V. Our stock is Complete. | IISHOP & YOUSG. O George E. O'Brien of Bro\\nlee is in town on business. , Mrs. W. M. Put man of Long Pine , Mrs. Frank miller of Crookston and MissLueila Miller of Ainsworth are visiting this week with Mrs. E. Ol son and taking in the Carnival. Gov. Sheldon has appointed O. W. Halm delegate to the Farmer's Congress which convenes this week in Wisconsin. Mr. Halm was the , delegate last year and went to Ok lahoma. J. W. Witten the ofii&ial in charge of the opening of Tripp Co.as here last evening meeting the No taries Public and gave them their instruction in regard to the regis tration and making out affidavits j for applicants. The next big attracfion to be seen in this city is that sterling New Eng land play , "Along the Kennebec" , which will he given in all its entire ly , wealth of rural scenery , the great quarry scene with its working drills and a rail feam cnsir.e at Opera House Sept. 29 The company is one of thebcsl traveling and numbers many \\ell Known placers , including some cle'.er specialty ar- tists. The characteis are all unique in originality and then * aie several tjpes entirely new to the stage. In all , the play in its entirety will compare favorably \\ith 7hc best of Xew England plays , such as "Old Homestead" , "County Fair" ' and "Shore Acres" . The comedy duel scene m the third act is very funny and is said to surpass the celebrat ed duel scene in Joseph Jefferson's play of "The Rivals. " j of Absolute Purity IF we ued all the water in the Mis souri River we could not have our plant and our brewing utensils cleaner than they nfe made each clay. \Ve fijsli ail the floors with artesian [ \ 'atcr. We scrub and sccur each kettle - tle , tank , IL'D ar.d pipe-line after using , then \ve sterilize their with live steam. -rcry thing js kpi scrupulously chsn and cwcct * You'll enjoy drinking STORZ TRIUMPH BEER the more when you know these facts , e o BOTTLED BY Brewing I ! MjM ( THE HIGH DOLLAR FOR YOU when - r N a s s 2.- * Make dates at The Democrat Office For AS ! Kinds of Job Work Try ft # o c ? p y T e B Sf : , / l t/A 1X\ Will Suit You !