SUS," TJtfti .iL.iiaaasisgawIIEiFiEilS S''JS'f'1 "'' KiWV MliU 9WrmitlMthQmmtM ! i I I UAnRfflD ejf-r sskjbtt .-r r t- - Pubtlitied I3Tery Thursday by Th KeraM Publishing Company. F, A. I'ikhnon. I'ri . Uwra P, Thomas, Hoc. John V. Thomas. Mgr. JOHN V. THOMAS Kdllor J, B. KNIEST Associate Editor Entered at tho postofllce at Alliance, Nebraska, (or transmission through the malU, ai second-cUss mntler, Subscription, li.jo per year in advance. THURSDAY, AI'IUL 8, 1009. Mm APRIL. Jo K!6NltutlwHmniinnMr 819IZ02IZ2Z324 8"9"1 I1J4IS1617 2829130 Lot's nil got together ami statu! for Alliance up Will tlio editors of papora hi neigh boring towiiR that have been slaudoriug Alliance kindly take It back? Says tho Gordon Journal; Tally ono for Governor Shallenberger. Ho placed his veto on tho Gates bill which pro vlded for permission of saloons at Fort Crook. Lnat week The Herald said It looked like tho water wagon would again bo tho band wagon In Alliance, but wo can't sometimes most always tell. Tho beer wagon is tho hand wagon. Wo firmly believe, that tho series of articles which Tho Herald bega.n pub Hulling last week on experimental farm lug in Dox llutto county will ha worth much more to any farmer in this coun ty who rends it than tho price of the paper for a year- Tho. vote of Alliance compared with & venr ago indicates an Increase in population ot Ruoug 350, one ot ttio Crawford papers has been publishing the absurd statement that this city do creased 1,000 since tho saloons were voted out a year ago. Hut a discrep ancy of 1,250 isn't much for a member of the-Annnnias club. Northwestern Nebraska does not claim to bo a groat corn country yet, although wo are coming to it. Accord ing to tho Oshkosh Herald, the Oshkosb Lumber company recently shipped a car load of corn out of Deuel county to an eastern market. This speaks well (or this part ot the state when the large amount of corn that is used in home consumption is taken into consideration, AN EPOCH MAKER Every citizen of northwestern Ne braska, whether$farmer or business man, should keep posted ott tho agri cultural development of this country. We know of no better way to do this than to follow closely the work being done this, year iti Box Uutte county under supervision pf Prof. E, V. Hunt, The editor of The Herald will, during the spring and summer, furnish an occasional write-up of this work to the Twentieth Century Farmer; other papers will also probably make soma tueution of it; but the most completo description will be found each week in The Herald's department, "Agricultur al Experimentation in Bos Butte County-" It you have neighbors who are uot now subscribers to this paper, you will confer a favor upon them by call tag their attention to this matter so that they can subscribe and get the benefit of these articles- We uro printing some extra copies, so that a limited number of uew subscriptions can begin with this number. It is a truism that wise men some' thatw change their opinions, but fools uevttr. It is no reflection on a man's judgment if he changes his opinion ou the question of licensing saloons. There are arguments on both sides, but of course those, on one side or the other predominate, lu towns and cities where the no-saloou policy has been given a tair trial it has. so far as we kuow, pwvtu nulversally satisfactory. U is not unoommuu for men who have been strongly in favor of higu license policy to ohango their opinion and favor the iiQ-atoou polloy when ouce it is giveu . u thorough trial in their own tovvu or oittf. There are good, level-headed business men in Alliance who have lion estly believed that, to license a few saloouj here would be better than to try tQ prohibit tha sale of liquors. The city election Tuesday marks an epoch, not only in the history of Alliance but also, because of her commanding position and the influence that naturally goes out from here, it marks as well the beginning of a better condition for northwest Nebraska. Although the city goes wet, a campaign has been inaugurated that we predict will not 'end till licensed saloons will be an institution .of the past here. For some years past it has been apparent to the student of history and current events that the doom of the licensed saloon in America is sealed. Slowly but surely the temper ance sentiment of the country has been gaining force, and whether we desire it or not, the time is not far distant when it will predominate in a majority of the states, and eventually in the nation as a whole. The state or tho city that wishes to be truly up-to-date will be found 'in the van in this movement. V They call it a "prohibition wave,." but strictly speaking it is not. There are thousands upon thous ands of people who do not call themselves prohibition ists, who do not believe in absolutely prohibiting the use Of intoxicating liquors as a beverage, they believe in leaving to the individual conscience the question as to what each shall eat or drink, in short they do not favor "sumptuary legislation" in the abstract; .but they are tired of saloon domination. Fostered by a licence system that has created a liquor monopoly which is the most powerful in politics and the most arrogant of any trust in our land today, the allied liquor interests are not content to attend to their own business and the matters that directly affect it, but would if they could, and do where they can, dictate in matters of legislation and public policy that ought to be left to the people or their untrammeled representatives; "The State" is the name of the official publication of the Nebraska brewery interests. In a recent issue it published the following editorial: Nebraska mint get away from all populist ic and pa ternalistic droams like tha initiative and referendum and tho Sink bed-sheet hill. When tho republicans "wrepted control of state government from the populists, they put a stop to all such vagaries which had during populist su premacy marked Nebraska as a fool's paradise. Upon tha sdveut of a rojuventcd domocracy inado radical by tha in fusion of pqpulistic serum, we sco tho state made odious in tho minds of eastern men whoso opinions arc worth much to Nebraska financially and commercially. If our demo cratic legislature shall continue to mako tho state the butt 1 of ridicule tho country over, the best minds' of the nation i will wipe Nebraska off the map until our people show signs of returning sanity. Tell us, please, what right the brewers' official organ has of interfering in these matters ? The in itiative and referendum are designed to give the people who are the. sovereigns in a republican form of govern ment the right to pass upon matters that affect and con cern them: but the beneficiaries of the license system fear to trust to the people as a whole. They can more easily accomplish their designs by dealing with a few than with the many. The principal champion of the bill for the initiative and referendum was no less a per sonage than William Jennings Bryan, whose personal influence in Nebraska is acknowledged by opponents as well as by supporters to be incomparably greater than any other man; and yet that bill was defeated by a democratic legislature. Why ? Don't blame the democratic party; it would no doubt have been more overwhelmingly defeated had the political complexion of the legislature been republican. Mr. Bryan while personally an abstainer from the use of intoxicating liquors, has always been liberal in his views on the subject of personal liberty, so liberal in fact that he failed to receive the votes of thousands of ultra temperance advocates that would otherwise have been given to him. He has publicly as well as privately expressed, himself as in favor of the Slocum high license law of Nebraska; but the influence of his example tends to lessen the consumption of alcoholic beverages, especially the poisonous kind sold under the license system; the lineaments of his coutenance sug gests temperance. Conservative advocates of personal liberty are pleased with his attitude and are willing to grant him and others the privilege which they ask for themselves, and that is the right of individual, personal choice in matters pertaining to private life; but the liquor trust, not content with the profits that come from u moderate demand for their goods, would crush if pos sible not only those who would put them out of busi ness by legnl process, but also those whose personal example if universally followed would leave them with out customers. The writer has always been an admirer, of Mr. Bryan. Although he voted the democratic ticket for the first time last fall, he had previously, as a populist, voted for the Bryan presidential electors. In our home at Omaha last fall were five children, from nine to seventeen years of age, all boys and all enthusiastic "Bryanites." The Bryan sentiment in that city was so overwhelming that they supposed it was so elsewhere and of course naturally were confident of his election to the presidency. Appearance seemed to indicate that three or four votes would be cast for him to each one vote oasc against him. Even Jmcn of mature years and judgment beliovcd ho would receive u majority in Douglas county of two to one. He did receive a majority there, but what a paltry mnjority It tvns compared with the sen timent there wan for htm during the campaign. In Now York City ho re ceived ovations never accorded any other tnnn In tho nation's metrop olis. The multitudes of that great city believed in htm, admired htm, wanted to Hce htm made president of the United fcitatcs, If the money and tho influence of tho liquor Interests had Wept out of tho fight, ho would have swept Greater New York with a majority that would have given him the state. Much has been Said and written as to what caused tho defeat of Bryan, with tho tldo of popular sentiment 80 over whelmingly In his favor. After all the causes have been enumerated aud summed up, it remains an evident fact that tho deciding factor was the li censed liquor oligarchy, Hut'wnlt. Tomorrow Is another day. There'll bo a reckoning by and by. Richard L. Metcalfe, tho celebrated editorial writer, formerly of the Oma ha World-Herald but for some time past on the stall of Tho Commoner, a conservative of conservatives on the liquor question, who has never been ac cused of being a "prohibitionist" or "temperance crank", has 11 correct esti mate of tho situation. In tho article from his pen which we are publishing in this Ibsuo of Tho Herald under tho heading, "Tho Future of Democracy", he says: "I know, too, that right hero in Nebraska there are enough demo crats who are in favor of doing away with tho liquor tratllcto make It n dif ficult matter to have tho democratic party espouse the wrong Mdo of this question. One bugle blast would call these democrats to arms for tho pret tiest battle that has taken .place in tunny u day." All right, Mr. Metcalfe, tho bugle blast has been sounded. Now let tho merry war go on. The Future of Democracy of them being avowed opponents of the one example set by these men when they It was tho Herald editor's good for tune to attend the state convention of Democratic editors, held at Lincoln, March inth. Richard L. Metcalfe, the well-known writer who gained a wide reputation as managing editor of the Omaha World-Herald but who is now a part of the editorial force of Mr Bryan's paper, The Commoner, read a paper on the subject, "igio and 1912". In this paper he handles a question that has come to the front and which must be given consideration, and in handling this question he does so in such an unbiased and unprejudiced manner and With a knowledge of the subject so accurate and thorough that it is indeed refreshing to read it, espe cially in these times when there are those on both sides of the question who try to settle it with clamor instead of reason. Following is the paper read by Mr. Metcalfe at the convention: One would be better able to discuss fu ture campaigns if the liquor question were out of the way. In my view it is idle to discuss American politics without giving some consideration to the part the liquor question may play. In the first place the public is treated to a great deal of bun combe from both sides of that question. A great noise has been made concerning the help either of the two great political parties is alleged to have received, in Ne braska and elsewhere, from the liquor ele ment. It has been charged that at last election the democratic ticket in Nebraska bad the support of that element. But we remember that it has also been charged that two years ago the republican ticket was elected by the help of the liquor deal ers. A great noise has been made because two democrats, who were conspicuously affiliated with the temperance forces, gave their support to the democratic ticket in the last campaign white at the same time that ticket was looked upon with favor by the liquor element. On this point it is "six of one and half a dozen of the other". I have noticed that the leaders of the tem perance forces in Nebraska have had the habit of looking upon candidates for state I offices through the spectacles of the partic ular political party to which they happened to belong. It may y. that they have learned from actual experience that neither ot the l a great parties has a right to a monopoly on the label of "temperance" and that neither has a right to a monopoly on the label of ''whiskey". Men who ap peared to be greatly wrought up because two democratic temperance leaders sap- ported the democratic ticket daring the last campaign, never seemed disturbed by the fact that in 1000. in 1004 and in 1906, vrhen the republican state ticket had the support of the Kqnor interests ef this state. some of the most distinguished republican temperance leaders were found working for the-same ticket that was being support ed by the honor forces. And it is likewise true that when, in 1907, both of the oppos ing candidates en the state ticket Jadge ! Reese and Mr. Leaws were stalwart 1 Temperance men, the mest ceaspicueus officers of the aati-saloee leagee visited various places in Nebraska ad charged Mr. Loomts witk being the candidate of the Uquor element. The face was that in that campaign there was absolutely no choice, between the two candidates, both liquor traffic. I do not say these things for the idle purpose of critising any one but in order that in the examination of this subject as it may affect us in future campaigns, we may have a clear under standing of the situation in the beginning. In my opinion the temperance leaders in Nebraska would aid their cause materially ittheydidnot require more at the hands of democrats than they do of republicans. Charges concerning past campaigns will be found of little avail because an honest statement of the situation would show that it is a case of the pot calling the kettle black. It is true that in Nebraska as else where the democratic party has often been called the whiskey party, But in Nebras ka, as in other states, it is no more entitled to that label than the republican party, for it has often been the case that while the democratic party was called the whiskey party the republican party was getting the whiskey votes. And it has been the rule that among the officers of the anti-saloon league in all the state campaigns, whatever the attitude of the liquor element might be, democratic temperance leaders sup ported democratic candidates and republi can leaders supported republican candi dates. I think some of the conspicuous repre sentatives of the antl-saloau league in f Nebraska would contribute to their own peace of mind and to the cause they repre sent if they did not seem to make it a point to attack every one who happens not to agree wirh thorn. It has been my ob servation that great causes suffer rather than advance when their advocates build a reputation for heated personal attacks upon their fellows who may not see things exactly as they do. We have the right to expect from the advocates of temperance dignified argument and manly appeal rath er than the diatribe that belongs (if indeed it has any place at all) to the speech of those who have a bad cause. The imnortance of this question, at this time or in future campaigns, is not and will not be due to the charees or the counter charges of democratic or of repub lican temperance leaders. The figure it will play in our politics will not depend upon the heated exclamation of the radical who finds nothing but the saint in the man who agrees with him and nothing but the sinner in the man who differs with him. The figure this question wil play in our politics does not depend upon the diatribe of men who are republicans or democrats first and consistent temperance leaders later, and who, being utterly inconsistent themselves, demand, in heated language, that other men purge themselves of incon sistency. The figure this question will play in our politic does not entirely de pend upon its emotional or its moral qual ity. I call your attention to the fact that so long as the slavery question seemed a purely emotional question (as it was al ways a moral question) Garrison was dragged through the streets of Boston with a rope around his neck and the abolition ists were derided, even in the north, as "long haired men and short haired women". It was when the question assumed the pro portions of an economic qnestion that men. who had not been stirred by emotion or actuated by the pnrely moral element, re cognized it as a qnestion that mnst be dis posed of and, as history records, it was settled .and settled right as all questions will, in the end. be settled. Men who imagine that the liquor ques tion as it presents itself to the American people is a mere recurrence of the emotion al or the moral qnestion which made Maine a prohibition state with varying and perhaps unsatisfactory results, fail to make careful investigation of the present day situation. Sobriety is demanded in all commercial circles. Railroad man agers forbid the nse of intoxicants by train men and other employes to whom the lives of passengers are entrusted and the railroad men themselves are learning, as individuals, that they are better off without the nse of intoxicating liquors. It is a dangerous experiment for the com mercial traveller to invite his patron for a drink; and the commercial traveler, as an individual, is learning that the thoroughly sober man gets the best out of life. There is not, today, the drinking at political gatherings, or at state legislatures, or in congress, that there once was- Asfndi vidnals, men, regardless of political preju dice, are learning that sobriety is the best policy. It is dawning upon business men that the saloon is not a necessary adjunct of commerce and that the brewery and distillerr are not essential to the business interests ot the country. Taxpayers are learning that it is not good business policy to license, for a comparatively small sum, the operation of a great criminal cost pro- ducing system like the liquor dispensary and at the same time tax themselves heav ily ta par the bill. Fathers are learning, just as mothers knew when "they felt, for the first time, their first bora's breath" ! that the saloon as an institution is 'an ene my to the borne, and in this light the liquor question is rapidly pressing itself apon the attention of the American people. I have no sympathy with the attacks made a poo individaaU who happen to be esgaged is the liqsor besiness. I know aatesg them many good men, kind fathers, faithfet hsshaads and trne friends. Some I ike best Mssperaace lectures that have ever been given have bedn administered by bar leaders te reckless patrons. And it is the fact, also, that sobriety is demand ed aaweg bar tesders. I think you will Had amefig this class of men that temper ance in the nse of drink is the rule of the asajerity while total abstinence is the t practice of a considerable and an ever in creasing number. I believe in following rpfnssR to take their own medicine. I think the man who spends the day behind a bar listening to the prattle of erased drink men is entitled to the sympathy rather than the condemnation of his fellows. And I think, also, that when we are tempted to engage in personal attacks upon the individual we ought to remember that we and our fathers and grandfathers are responsible for the business in which these men are engaged and aim our shafts at the system rather than at the men ourselves and our ances tors among them who are responsible for that system. I would not undertake to say just what the result of this contest would be, say in Nebraska. I think I can see clearly enough that the contest Is coming. I do not kriow either what the position of the two great political parties will be on that ' question. I decline to take it for granted that the. action of any member of a legisla ture states my party's position on tljat question. I decline to take it for granted that the vote of republican legislators in favor of a bill which they new was doomed to defeat, proves their party's position on that question even any more than it proves the real position of all the members who voted for the measure. I want to read in the platform of my own party, as in the platform of the republican party, the position of each organization upon this question. I know that in Nebraska the republican party has, as often if not often er than the democratic party, had the support of the organized liquor element. I know that it was the organized liquor element, controlling four democratic votes, that gave a republican senator to Ken tucky. I know that in all the pivotal states in the union, during the last campaign, the influence of the organized liquor element was thrown to the republican national ticket even though in some states its influ ence was given to the democratic state ticket. I know that the growth of the temperance sentiment in the democratic party has been one of the remarkable facts of recent history. When you talk about making a temper ance party out of the republican party I cannot see how you can overcome the grip which the great special' interests of the country have upon that party and it has been my observation that, as a rule, special interests fight shoulder to shoulder. , It may be that in a few states of the north and the west you may line up the democratic party as a liquor party, but I cannot see how you are going to transform the democratic party of the nation into a whiskey party until you can overcome the great temperance wave now spreading throughout the southern states. Men who smile at the suggestion that the democratic party may become the leader of the tem perance sentiment should remember that when all the southern states go dry it will be but a logical result that temperance delegations will be knocking at the door of the democratic national convention. And who will say tbat.when we have a "Solid South" on this great question the demo cratic party will have passed under the control of the breweries and the distilleries. I know, too, that right here in Nebraska there are enongh democrats who are in favor of doing away with the liquor traffic to make it a difficult matter to have the democratic party espouse the wrong side of this question. One bugle blast would call these democrats to arms for the pret tiest baitte that has taken place in many a day. Make no mistake about the growth of this sentiment among the rank and file of democrats everywhere. They may not be well represented in the legislature but they will be heard from at the primaries and at the polls and their right to the title of "democrat" cannot be questioned. From early boyhood I have been "a hewer of wood and a drawer of water" for the democratic party. Long ago I learned that, theoretically, it stands for the best in society. As one who loves it for its splen did principles I want it to become practi cally, as well as theoretically, of service to mankind. I have four boys whom I hope will become faithful defenders of demo cratic doctrine. These are four democra tic reasons why I want the democratic party to be true to itself when the great battle shall begin. These are four busi ness reasons why I want my party to lead along the lines of truth even though it mean, temporarily, defeat. I hope that in this somewhat frank dis cussion of the great question that is com ing before us, I have not given offense to any one who may differ with me. I hope I have not left a scar upon any heart. But, as a democrat speaking to democrats, I will say that if it be the decree of fate that my party free itself from the system that is responsible for the blood of mad-, dened men, for the sobs of grief-stricken women, for the tears that have stained the pallid cheeks of little children, then as one democrat I say and in all teverance God speed the day of democratic deliver aece and God bless the the New Declara tion of Independence! BREAD We are sure you will like our Bread for its wholesomeuess. Nutritious and made from the purest materials sci entifically put together and baked to a turn. NO HE'S makes anything to order. We please others, we will please you. J X t'v' M j & ' -S ,'t "-' I -t