t JLUANCE jfcRALD Published every Thursday by The Herald Publishing Company. Incorporated JOHN W. THOMAS, Editor and Mgr. Entered at the postofflce at Alli ance, Nebraska, for transmission through the maila as second-class matter. Subscription, $1 60 per year vance. In ad The circulation of this newspaper Is guaranteed to be the largest In western Nebraska. Advertising rates will be furnished on application. Sample copies free for the asking. THIS PAPER REPRESENTED FOR FOREIGN ADVERTISING BY THE GENERAL OFFICES YORK AND CHICAGC BRANCHES IN ALL THE PRINCIPAL CITIFS THURSDAY, OCTOBER ::. lit 1 2 WOODROW WILSON. Photo by Amerlrnn Press Association. THOMAS RILEY MARSHALL DEMOCRATIC TICKET Ptm National ident woodrow WILSON Vice President THOS H. MARSHALL State Gov. ,noi JOHN MORHHRAD L'.cutmuuH Governor 1 1 BUM AN D1HRS tary of State A. T. QATBWOOl ' Audiiw or Public Aooounta IIKNUY C, RICHMOND Stat. Treasurer1 GEO. B. HAUL Supt. Iubllc Inst rial ion K V. CLARK Attorney General A. M. MORUISSEY Cou.. Pub. Lands and Hldgs. WM. I! rfASTll.W! Railway Commissioner CLARENCE B. M vrmon U. Senator A. C. SHALI.ENBEKC.ER Congressional Con- essmau. Sixth District W. J. TAYLOR Legislative 8taivj Stnator LEV ItREWSTKK tuau Boprytxiev'.ntly H. P. WASMl'Ml. SR. County Cou Attorney El WEN E lit uton Will The Uphold REAL FREEMEN Wilson's Hands? Woodrovv Wilson has refused emphatically to accept contributions to his Campaign Fund from the Interests, from corrupting influences, from any questionable sources. He has given us, the Democratic National Committee, to understand that he will go into the White House with clean hands or not at all. Who Is Getting The Money of The Trusts? So Jure has been Wilson's stand, M well known his Incor ruptible purpose, that no private interests have dared to approach either our candidate or his committee. We have not been offered a penny by the trusts, and we certainly have not solicited a penny (nun them. The money of the Interests is being Spent against Wilson. No matter fur whom we need not discuss that here it is nw common gossip that the money power of the nation is being used in an attempt to defeat Woodrow Wilson. What Is a "People's Campaign?" We are addressing ourselves Id the real freemen of America, the upright, Progressive Voters of the country whn arc doing the work of the nation and not the work of trusts and losses. We realize that the salvation of every righteous cause rests with you. Often this cry of a People's Party or a People's President is raised by the very fore, s we seek to defeat and whom we must and will defeat. But look to our standard and our standard bearer and decide yourself as to which is the People's Campaign and must, therefore, be fought with the People's money. Woodrow Wilson Has Clean Hands Woodrow Wilson is the cleanest man in national politics He came of illustrious forefathers, who laid by blood and heredity the foundation of a future President through gen eration after generation of upright record. If Wilson is to be elected it must be by clean money and there is only one source of such money from the voters of the country who realize the importance of having a govern ment uninfluenced by the almighty dollar. Wilson's hands are clean. Will you uphold them? How Much Money Will You Give? How Much Can You Raise? There are big campaign expenses to be met if we are to win on Election Day in November. We must tell the voters of the country abo rt Wilson, what he is, what he has done We must show them his record. We must show them his platform. We must point out to them the features ot his platform which mean so murh to his nation. This great work will cost a lot of money. We must meet the usual heavy toll necessary to present a platform and a candidate to a hundred million. Your dollar, your in, your 110, your 20 is needed. And don't mistake we want the man who can only afford the one dollar. We need him. We need the woman Who can Woodrow Wilson Campaign Fund LOYALTY COUPON To C. R. CRANE. Vice Ch.tirman Finance Comr ulte. The Democratic National Committee, 900 Michigan Avenue. Chicago. Illinois. As a believer in the progressive ideals of government repre sented in the candidacy bf Woodrow Wilson for Pres! lent of ir United States, and to the end that he may take she uHco fr"r handed, untrammeled, and obligated to none but the people of thu country. I wish to contribute tl'rouifh ynu the sa:n of $ toward the BSSSStaSM of Gov Wilson's campaign. Name Address R . F. 1") State Endorsed bv presenting large Hitait.i and s-unar hoc 1 HMiCh In the North Platte val ley went to Lincoln n few days ago and secured a hunch Of men from an employment agency. He was re turning yesterday with the men on 43, and while down the lead son: ' distance wired another gentleman from the same ranch, who w:is tlivn In .Alliance, to meet him at the train, anil together they hustled the employ nu nt agency men from )! to the Guernsey train before any Box 1'iiitte count .t men hunters toulcl nah r hem. I INTRODUCTORY REMARKS. Go After Business in a business way the advertising way. An ad In this paper offers the maximum service at the minimum cost. It reaches the people of the town and vicinity you want to reach. Try It It Pays FHIRD TERMER'S JOKE ON LABOR Brandeis Shows Right to Organ ize Is Not Recognized. THE PLATFORM IS SILENT REPUBLICANS' EXTRAVAGANCE Government Cost More Than Doubled Under Roosevelt. only :ive one dollar. We believe in this kind of loyalty it's the kind that wins. Let everyone contribute to the Woodrow Wilson Cam paign by the first mail. Let's have as big a fund as the cor porations can supply the other parties. For the people are mightier even in money than the Combinations - when they get together. A Call To Those Who Will Club Contributions No live progressive voter can do more for Wilson's cause than to head a list with his own contribution and then to have his fellow-workers and friends swell the total with their names and money. If you work in an office or factory, mill, warehouse, on a railroad, ranch or farm, start the ball roiling. Line Hp the Wilsi.n men. Sign up as many contribution! as -you can. And mail to us. How To Contribute To The Wilson Campaign Fund Sign the Coupon in this corner and fill in the amount you give. Then attach your money to this Coupon and mail today to the address given on the Coupon. Issue all checks, money orders and address all contribu tions to C. R. Crane, Vice Chairman Finance Committee, Demdcratic National Committee, 900 Michigan Avenue, Chicago, III. Then write a letter to this paper giving your name as a contributor and stating your reasons why you believe Woodrow Wilson should be elected President of the United States. In this way you will be listed as a Wilson contri butor. A Souvenir Receipt, handsomely lithographed, well worth framing, will be sent to you. Your letter will help the fight by encouraging your friends. DEMOCRATS' GREAT RECORD Noted Lawyer Exposes the Fllmslneat of Promises Made to Worklngmen by Perkins and His Candidate, Who Stands for Private Monopoly. 33 fc .- . ,a... m From New ! "row iork W ot ui Farm Land '10 an acre When the Illustrious Grant asked a third term tbc people of New England thundered their "No." Is tills the reason Roosevelt calls New EBftaodat "ignorant, prejudiced and craven" iu his receut sjpMcal Au exchange adiuus frankly tlial k due not print all the news, aiw adds "If we did we would be with he . egels in le.ss ;han fifteen min- j irtes after the paper was puMUIu.i To p'ease the papain we mu.-t print all r M ni e thins we know anJ j leu. the rest o the gossiper Nu. we "on't print all the news, and if we ti'd. wouldn't U b splc reading. ! lut would be for on- week only. ! the next Issue would contain our1 DWUtari ad there would be a! strange face iu heaven, anil all the lawyers and dUorce courts would buve a raiting busiuesa for a few day." T!i -re i a great demand lor no u in pur- of ill w M in: . Au auiuMng Incident occurred ye-svrduy tn t .mm connection. A gentleman re al caa kt aatcau -aa ia tks Saatasssl alaas Iks Saatkrra Railway. lla,l.iOk.O. Ca. Sa. a Fla. t. .....rti.s s.aa ckarcktt, icatsh. stacas aaa iaararaa aia7. LIVE STOCK. POULTRY AND DAIRTING bua arm payi lag, and it conducted al aaaHw ecal thaa ia othrr trcboai of tha cauattr. Lasunaal pauuf i aad acaca iakk dw whole vai ' round aukr thu puaaur. ALFALFA CROWS abuadaady ia caHy all parts ol kW SouthraM. Maay acaca produce 4 to 6 too, irilin localr froat $1 4 per aaa up. Arras, fruit, truck and cotton a aaSrt taa pan as crap. Apple orchard aettlOO to S00 aa acn. aad truck aarriming $200 up. CUkUTE UNSURPASSED Em da? ia tha work ia hit Us. Tbeaa I seaaoai allow raiauuj two aad saaas caopstroa asasa seal aaoa yaai. Subacriplioa to "South- era nJS sod book Uucn Stetriof Va.. N.45 Car ,Cia ft . Ala.. Maa.. to. and Kj. seal FREE. H V. RICHARDS, L tad I Aceat. Saatkcrs Raitwaf, Raaat'lS,Waaaut...D.I THE SILO AS AFURAGt BANK Theio Is prodtueil ever iar In this COaUtT) sufficient lorasT'' to feed I HberaUy all tie IHe ftoeh ot tha laml. I -i ml kat a gooil lialam e bt -aides. The laasUfn of supplies each y ar ! Is due to the siMillitiK and wasting of ' lovage already grown, and the mean:) of preset vlng this foraKe will solve the ataak problem of the cotintty The : prlaripal waste Is now goins on with ; tlii- eora llaat. It is most not i. able !n the corn bell states, where l erhapa I 80 pasr ' nt of the stalk and Usavat of . t'lis most ralaaMa forage is wast d i nmia'.ly. Ki economic stock produc tion is de'"t mined by the proper use of lorage. tin silo furnishes a means wheiehv all farm forage ( nn be pre-cr-d tin! elaci'd In the b :?l possible condiileii for feeding What has become of cne T. Kooae It and bis full mousers? A Word to the j Borrower Ci IF you are a bor- rower of this paper, don't you 1 th nk it ia an in justice to the man who U paying for it? He maybe looking for it at this very moment. Make It a reg ular visitor to j our home. The subscription price ia an Investment that will "epay you well. 0444 "The new party pledges itself to so cial and industrial Justice and specific ally to 'work unceasingly for effective legislation looking to the prevention of occupational dlBeases, overwork, invol untary unemployment and other In jurious effects incident to modern in duatry,' but now here in that long and comprehensive platform can there be found one word approving the fundamental right ot labor to organize or even recognizing this right without which all other grants and concessions for Improve ment of the condition of the working men are futile. The platform promises social and Industrial Justice, but does not promise industrial democracy. The I justice which it offers is that which I the benevolent and wise corporation j Is prone to administer through its wel ; fare department. There Is no promise of that justice which free American worklngmen are striving to secure for themselves through organization. In deed, the industrial policy advocated by the new party would result in the denial of labor's right to organize. "The new party Rtajsdfl for the per petuation and extension of private monopoly from which the few have ever profited at the expense of the many and for the dethronement of which the people have. In the past, fought so many valiant buttles. That cursed product ot despotism, the new party, proposes to domesticate in our republic, proclaiming, 'We do not fear commercial power.' Certainly organ ized labor has had experience with the great trusts which should teach all men that commercial power may be so great that it is the part of wisdom to fear It." The above declaration was made by Louis D. Brandeis before the conven tion of the American Federation of Labor. Massachusetts state branch, at Fitchburg, Sept. 18. Of Supreme Importance. He urges a careful study of the new party platform, particularly its effect Upon labor, noting not only WHAT IT CONTAINS, but WHAT IT OMITS, adding, "When you make that exami nation you will And that there is a significant omission and that this skill fully devised platform TAKES FROM LABOR MORS THAN IT GIVES." Labor Record of Trusts. Mr. Brandeis then lays bare the la bor record of the trusts, declaring that "great trusts the steel trust, the sug ar trust, the beef trust, the tobacco trust, the smelter trust and a whole troop of lesser trusts have made the extermination of organized labor from their factories the very foundation Btone of their labor policy. The abill ; ty to defeat labor's right to combine seema to have been regarded by the trust magnates as a proper test of the efficiency of their capitalistic combiua tion." Mr. Brandeis shows that in 1899. during the Colorado smelters' strike, the American Smelting and Refining company closed its mills where the strikers had been employed and trans ferred the work to other mills, thus breaking the strike. The Vnited States Steel corporation had similar success in 1901 with the Amalgamated Asso ciation of Iron and Steel Workers. Had the association been dealing with competing employers the result would have been different. The United States Steel trust was prompt In introducing this plan. June 17, 1901, six weeks after It began Its operations, Its execu tive committee passed this vote, which was offered by Charles Steele, a part ner of George W. Perkins in the Arm of J. P. Morgan & Co.: "That we are unalterably opposed to any extension of union labor and ad vise subsidiary companies to take firm position when these questions come up and say that they are not going to rec ognize it that is. any extension of un ion In mills where they do not now exist." Union Men Not Wanted. The result was that the bulk of American union laboriug men lu the iron and steel industry were made to understand that they were not wanted at the works of the United States Steel corporation. Places once tilled by American laborers loyal to their union were given to others, and. as the Stan ley committee found. "Hordes of la borers from southern Europe poured Into the United States." Hence about M per cent, of the un skflled laborers in the iron and steel business are foreigners of these class es, the profits going to the steel corpor ation Mr. Brandeis declared that "the Immediate and continuing result of the steel trust's triumph over organ ized labor has been au extensive sys tem of espionage and repression." Startling Figures Which Show That the Cost of Our National Existence and the High Cost of Living Must Be Reduced. Under a proper downward revision :f the Republican tariff schedules the people of the United States would save 2,000,0CO,00Oeach year, or over $100 per family on manufactured goods alone. President Taft's vetoes of the wool tariff bill and the steel tariff measure passed by a Democratic house COST THE PEOPLE OK THE UNITED STATES ABOUT $650,000,000 PER ANNUM. The cost of conducting the federal government MORE THAN DOUBLED between the close of President Cleve land's second administration (Demo cratic) arid the beginning of President Roosevelt's second administration (Re publican). As the DIRECT RESULT OF HIGH REPUBLICAN TARIFF SCHED LTLSfl the people of the United States pay a tax FROM NINE TO SEVENTY-EIGHT PER CENT on food and ordinary household articles used in the home by every family, rich and poor. The total cost of running the federal government In 1860 was $53,000,000. The amount appropriated at a single session of the Sixty-first congress for the fiscal year 1911 $1,027,133,446.44 was more than double the amount $9."U.4i)ii,n.-.5.l3 appropriated for the liscal years 1897 and 1898 at both ses sions of the Fifty-fourth congress, the last congress of the second Cleveland adminlsttatlon. Only eight years elapsed between the close of the second administration of President Cleveland and the beginning of the second administration of Presi dent Roosevoit and yet the amount ap propriated during the four years of the latter $3,842,203.577.15 was more than double that appropriated in the four years Mr. Cleveland was at the helm viz, $1,871,59.857 47. For 1910, the last fiscal year provid ed for in congress under President Roosevelt, the hlghwater mark iu ap propriations $1,044,401 ,857.12 was reached. President Taft's estimate to the last session of congress for government support for the fiscal year was $1,040,- 648,026.55. In other words, governmental ex penses for the FOUR YEARS of Presi dent Cleveland's administration (Dem ocratic) were only $830,861,551.92 more than President Taft's (Republican) eB tlmate of the amount necessary to cov : er the expenses of ONE YEAR of President Taft's administration. Congressman John J. Fitzgerald of New York, a Democrat and chairman of the committee on appropriations, Iu addressing the house Aug. 2i, 1912, on the subject of appropriations said. "Thoughtful men have watched with alarm the rapid increase in the cost of government In the United States." He further said that two causes seem re sponsible for ninny present evils: "One. the UNFAIR AND UNJUST SYSTEM OF TAXATION by which an undue share of Income by those whose circumstances In life are not considered more than reasonably com fortable Is taken through our customs laws for the support of our govern ment; the other, the difficulty or lnabll Ity to readjust our system of taxation and to remove many taxes from the necessaries of life, so long as the GOV ERNMENT IS EXTRAVAGANTLY CONDUCTED, or the instrumental! ties provided for the conduct of the public service are either Inefficient or are not utilised so as to render the most effective and comprehensive re sults." Mr. Fitzgerald then called attention to the fact that the Democratic party pledged Itself if Intrusted with power to do two things REDUCE TARIFF i DUTIES AND RETRENCH PUB I.IC EXPENDITURES by eliminating 1 waste In administration and the aboll i tlon of useless. Inexcusable offices The Republicans talk about tariff revision, and yet when a Democratic house in fulfilling Democratic promisee to the people reduced the tariff, a Re publican president vetoed the measure. "By their works shall ye know them." Democrats In every state of the Union should organize and prepare for polling a record breaking vote Nov. 5. Be it remembered that no matter how certain victory seems, overconfl dence is always dangerous. Is there any reason why the Demo cratic party should go out of existence Imply because Mr Roosevelt has tak en up the Progressive measures adopt ed by the Democrats eighteen years ago? W. J. Bryan. IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE There has been no disturbance of business interests during this presiden I tlal campaign Why .' Confidence In I the integrity of the Democratic noml . ueca aud right purposes of the party. Mr Roosevelt stood aa a guarantor for Mr Taft. Mr. Bryan says, "Now, when Roosevelt has failed so utterly In his judgement of men, I ask can ha coneci judgment on hlniaaU?"