The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, October 29, 1908, Image 3

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Are You Buying Your
Groceries Right?
If you want anything in fancy or staple
Groceries,
Fresh Fruits,
Vegetables
remember that we have the largest stock in the cit
and our prices are always right
Yours for fair dealing
A. D, RODGERS
:
r
NOTICE
Owing to the fact that our
nearly one-third in the last
ask.patrpns to give ustheir orders as -early as pos
sible. Phones 13 ia and O lb.
Palace Meat Market
S. H DESCH, Prop.
-
NELSON FLETCHER
FIRE INSURANCE A GEN CY
H HEPWeCWT THE PLL.OWINO.IUWCE .COMf AIEB. ., ,
Hartford Klro Insurance Oomoanv.
North American of Philadelphia.
Ptwenlx of Blooklra. New York.
Ouellnental of NewXca-k City.
Niagara Fire Insurajioe Company.
Cotaaectlcutt fire
Commercial Union Assurance Co.. London
Gertnanla Fire Ins. Co
fcr.aAe.or Omaha
Palace Livery Bain.
O- O. SMITH, Prop.
(Successor to S. U. Detch)
one kj oCK west of Jo0d turnouts, strict attentkn to our business,
the xewzdikden and courteous treatment to aU bas won foe as the
building. 'Phone excellent patronage we enjoy. Trv us.
ktal. Bt I II 1 1 1 if m II It MM
HiBIICTHK5Evij5w
For
TOP SALES, GOOD FILLS
and
PROMPT REMITTANCES
SHIP TO
TAGG BROS.
Livestock Commission Company
107-109 Exchange Building
South Omaha, Neb.,
patronage has increased
30 days, we would kindly J
Liverpool. London and Globe Ins. Co.
German American Ins. Co., New York.
New Hampshire
Columbia Fire Insurance Company.
Philadelphia Underwriter;.
Phoenix Ins. Co.. Hartford. Conn
FireoaDSiKund InsuranceCo.
Itocuosl-eriGeraan Ins. Co.
Office L'o-Stalrs.Hetcher Block.
Wallace's
Transfer Line
Household goods
moved promptly
and transfer work
solicited. Phone 1
Frank Wallace, PropY.
Boards
of ail descriptions
for any part of a
house or barn.
Dierks Lumber SCoal Co.
Phone 22
D. Waters, Mgr.
A. C. SHALLEKBERGER
CANDIDATE FOR GOVERNOR
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Stands for guaranteed bank de
posits, wMch will provide absolute
security ftr the people's money. Alse
a more equitable systm of taxation.
A Panic Howler Called
One -big city banker lias been called
good and hard for giving expression lo
the calamity cry that desperate rcpub
licau campaign managers have resorted
to during the past few weeks. Presi
dent George E. Roberts of the Com
mercial National Bank of Chicago,
recently expressed the opinion that
Bryau'-s election would be harmful to
business interests. Air. Roberts has
received a flaying at .the hands of J. iP.
O'Malley, president of People's Sav
ings Baak of Iowa, for his stand in this
matter. In a letter to officers of the
Commercial National ilUtnk, Mr. O'Mal
Jey said:
"I .notice by theiuublic press that
your .president, Mr. Roberts, witk
-some other business .men, have beea
.giving .out interviews un regard to the
coming -election. Now, personally, I
entertain a high opinion of Mr. Rob
erts .as. a business man and more es
.pticially ibecause he was a former rest
dontof.our state, and further I do ndt
.want to .interfere with auy man's right
of free -speech and concede to every
citiaenitheiright to express his choice
between Mr. Bryan and Mr. Taft. But
I do -seriously object to this 'Paniclraitiiug- funds by popularrtubscription'
Talk' ,pnt n.p by our so-called busiuess
men .as .being unpatriotic, .unwise and
unbuoiness-like, and any .man or party
using. those. campaigu methods are un
safe men to do business with because
we give .them .credit for knowing better,
and they. canuot be honest tinitryiug to
deceive die .innocent voter in ctliis re
spect.
WftU .PAID THE IIU
New YorJc, October 9. The fact
2Lat Andrew Carnegie has contmktited
$Q,ooo to tiie campaign fund .of the
republican national .committee was xn
noufficed today by State Chairman
Woodruff. Associated Press Dtspatok.
Twenty thousand dollars that is but
a little dab
Andrew Carnegie liasfven Mr. Tat.
Just the profit of an hour of his tariff
graft.
Twenty thousand families go hungiy
for a day
To help the 'Laird o' Skibo" work
his will;
But amidst our toil and sweating there's
no danger we're forgetting
That those who died at Homestead
paid the bill.
Twenty thousand dollars there's a
ted-brown, dirty stain
On the money that can never be
erased.
'Tie the blood of honest toilers shed by
greedy trust despoilers
Who at vantage points their Pinker
tons had placed.
Just the profits of oppression wrought
by those who had possession
Of the power held by kings to save
or kill;
But the third day of November let the
toilers well remember
That those who died at Homestead
paid the bill.
The martyred dead at
green the grass
Homestead
above their
graves
Green the memory of how the mar
tyrs died.
And again we see the battle; hear
the
rifles' crashing rattle,
See the blood of workers flow
crimson tide.
111
Aye, upon that contribution is
the
stain of destitution
Hungry children, hopeless widows
wan and ill '
Woe and want the worker pinching
gold the tariff baron clinching
And those who died at Homestead
paid the bill.
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Judge W. H. Wfistover,
Another Republican
Gets His Eyes Opened
W. J. Johnson, a prominent stock
man of Wright precinct, and who has
been known as one of the rankest re
publicans in the county, .was in Alliance
Saturday. Mr. Johnson surprised his
republican friends by declaring that
himself and three sons would vote for
Bryan. He says a system that can
reduce the value of property one half
in the short time of three, months is
wrong and 'lie cannot conscientiously
vote for a party which as responsible
for such a ooudition. A leading re
publican of Alliance did his best to
persuade Mr. Johnson aaot to desert
the g.o.p. but his efforts were without
avail.
Great Work of a
Nebraska Newspaper
The Ouia&a World-Herald shows its'
Itrtlnl anaiMila-ina rtrl I ma tlnnA nHnrti 1
uouai il,h-.c iuu , uuue K-"-
work for the natioual campaign by
ttfrom the coaimon people. The Jio.ooo
(mark is uowpasscd, this amount hav
ting been contributed in eums of fifty
cents up andrforwarded to .the World
Herald from about 400 towns, mostly
hx Nebraska. Omaha heads the list
utitu a subscription of $1137.00 and
Alliane comes eecond with Sijo.oo.
dnsolkiatiRl.Shiw Nextfuesday
Tbe republican .campaign managers
have iPesorted to the "undignified"
methods -of bill board advertU&sg of
their pet candidate, Win. TafL All
that's cool and holy is attributed to
their idol who reprraents the trusts
and combinations, whole the leader of
the masses. Win. J. Bcyan, is slurred
and misrepresented. ttut every ooe
who stops to review these comparisons
can readily ree.d between tiie lines and
thai speaks of Taft's labor injunction
acts.
The other day, George L. Sheldon,
republican candidate for re-election as
governor of Nebraska, spoke in Adams,
Nebr. While walking down the street
he saw a beautiful parrot in a cage.
"What a magnificent bird," exclaim
ed the governor. "I never saw .such a
beauty. Hello Polly."
"Hello," replied Polly.
"Polly want a cracker?" inquiied the
governor.
"Hurrah for Bryan l" shrieked the
parrot. ,
Now the last days of Governor Shel
don's campaign are made miserable for
him by joking friends and political op
ponents who greet him with the query:
"Polly want a cracker?"
The high protective tariff fostered
by the republican party has finally
proven its downfall. In the past twelve
years the number of combinations and
rtrust8 that have multiplied, and to
which the people have had to pay
tribute, has brought about a reaction
ary sentiment in favor of casting off
the unjust burden. The managers of
the g.o.p. have become aware of this
fact, and today refute their former
actions by advising a "change in the
tariff." Under McKinley and Roose
velt more than two hundred trusts
were created to further scourge the
people. The laboring man, the mer
chant, in fact every consumer of man
ufactured goods on which there is a
duty, have been compelled to pay tub
Candidate for Congress.
utc to mammon. It took several years
for the people to resent this high-tariff
imposition but on next Tuesday thous
ands of voters all over the union will
go to the polls and oppose further
tyranny in this respect with their bal
lot. Judge Westover's Position
Uclicviug that the voters of the Sixth
Corgressional District have a right to know
where their candidate stands on the issues
involved in this election, and believing
that candidates before election should state
publicly and unequivocally what they are
in favor of, and what they will undertake
to do if elected, 1 hereby pledge myself as
follows:
i. I will support any and all measures
which will bring about the election of
United States senators by direct vote of
the people.
1, I will supports law making it com
pulsory upon all political parties to publish
a complete statement of campaign contri
butions before election.
3. I will favor a law providing that in
all cases -of indirect contempt of court, tho
I party so accused shall be tned by a jury,
the same as anv other rtersoa accused of
mni
a. .
4. i will lavor a reduction ol the pres-
ent tariff loan eitteat that foreien comrje
tttion will oorapcl American manufacture
ers to sell their products to American coo--sumers
as cheaply as they sell them to
consumers in any foreign country; and that
.all .agricultural machinery, fencing, bulid
iing materia), and aU household utensils be
placed on the free list.
5. I will favor as amendment of the
so called Railroad Rate Bill, oow in force,
which will provide that pending an appeal
to ah e federal court, the order of the inter
state commerce commission, whether
ra&laiog a new rate, or which is made for
the -purpose of preventing an dieting dis
criroLtation, shall be and remain in force
pending the appeal ia the federal courts.
6. I ehall favor an amendment to the
federal constitution providing for an in
heritance and income tax.
7. 1 shall favor an amendment to the
present .bonestead law, now in force and
applicable to this district, which wilt give
the homesteader the same rights' of com
mutation, and making final proof, as are
enjoyed in other localities by homesteaders
under the genera) homestead law of the
country.
8. I shall favor a law under which de
posits in all national banks will be guaran
teed, ai proposed in the Denver platform,
9. I shall devote all of my time, energy
and what ability 1 possess, to attending to
the business of the people of this district,
and to guarding their rights individually
and collectively.
10, I shall favor an amendment of the
rules of the house of representatives, which
will deprive Speaker Cannon, or any other
speaker of the house, of the power to
throttle legislature which is demunded by
the people.
If the above and foregoing propositions
meet with your approval, I respectfully
and earnestly solicit your support at the
coming general election,
W. H, WEST0VER.
Geo. M. Adams' Statement
Crawford, Nebr., Oct. 15, 1908,
To all Voters of the Fourteenth Sena
torial District of Nebraska:
Having been nominated by the Dem
ocratic and People's Independent Par
ties for the honorable position of State
Senator for the Fourteenth district of
Nebraska, and believing that the voters
of this district should know before
election where their candidate stands
upon the most important issues involv
ed in this campaign, I submit the fol
lowing for your consideration;
1. 1 am in favor of a law that will
guarantee bank deposits, for the ab
solute security of the people's money,
to prevent panics and promote prosper
ity, and available to national as well as
state banks of this state wishing to
take advantage of the same.
2. I am in favor of the election of;
precinct or township assessors by tho
direct vota of the people in the pro
cincts or townships in which they live.
3. 1 am against what I term the un
just action of the state board in arbi
trarily raising the valuation as returned
by the local and county assessors.
4. 1 believe in a state cxpoiimental
farm and that it should bo located in
the northwestern part of the state, as
mentioned in the Democratic platform.
5. 1 favqr a wide open primary elec
tion, where every voter will have an
opportunity of voting a secret ballot
and for whom he choscs.
C. From a national standpoint, I am
in favor of every plank in the Demo
cratic platfoun that was adopted by
the Democratic party at its last na
tional convention held in Denver, Col.,
in July, 1908.
Having served in the last legislature
aB tho representative from the Fifty
third district, which is accredited with
being the most progressive legislature
that has assembled in Nebraska for
the last fourteen years, I believe that I
am in a better position to know what
the people of my part of the state want
and expect from their member if elected
to the office. Respectfully,
G110. M. Adams.
HOLSTEN
Headquarters for
School
Supplies
TABLETS
NOTE BOOKS
COMPOSITION BOOKS
NOTE PAPER
PENCILS
PENS, INKS
CHALK CRAYONS
COLORED CRAYONS
ERASERS and
PAINTS
RULERS GIVEH AWAY AT
HOLSTEINTS
Post Cards
Of the NEW DEPOT
ST. AGNES' ACADEMY
NEW HIGH SCHOOL
aa
Wm. James,
Exclusive
Dealer in
COAL &
... WOOD
'Phone
No. 5.
Alliance,
Nebraska.
UMAl. NOTICi:.
Tho Btute of Nebraska, In the County
Box llutte County, t Court
Id mutter of thecatnte of Kdwunl James fUrry
To the creditors of said eitute?
ou ore hereby notlth'd. tlutt I nlll l ut
tho county courtroom lu Alliance, llox Hntte
county, Nebruoka, 011 tho anu duy of April,
IDCm. to rucolvo unil examine till claims
iiKlnt said uatate, with u view to their ad
justment and allowance. Tim time limited for
llie presentation of claims against said estate
Is tilx month from tho 19th day of October.
A. I). 1008. aud tbe tlroo limit for payment of
debt Is one year from the llth day of October,
Wituens my liana aud tbe eul of wMdCoauty
( nurt this th day of October. lOOA
IHKAI.J
fp Oct 15-5w
I . A It k n v
County Judge.
okii:k rou iieahing
Stale of Nebraska I
Uox llutte county f '"
At a County Court, held at the County
Court Itoom In aald county on tbe r.nh day of
October, IPO
Present L. A. Berry, County J udee.
In the matter of the estate of Morris KelloKK,
deceased.
On reading the petition of Kdlth 8. Kellir
filed herein, prayliiK that administration of
wild estate be granted to A. S. Heed us admin
istrator. Ordered, That a!d petition will be heard 011
the Oth day or November, 1908, at 10 o'clock
a.m. That all persons interested In tatd es
tate may appear at county court on said date,
uu suow muse u any uivro ue wuy sum pen
the Alliance Herald. a weeklv newsnanor.
is
, ,, M 19
published in said county for three sacccsalvo
weeks prior to Mild bearing. U A. Hehrt,
(BKALl COUBtjJUdtJO.
f p Oct. &-3w.