WILSON'S VIEWS GIVEN TO NATION inaugural Address of the New President. DEFINES PEOPLE'S DUTY. First Obligation of Law la to Keep So cisty Sound by Sanitary and Pure Food Statutes and Meaiurea Deter mining Conditions of Labor Taak Not Merely One of Politics. Washington. March 4.-The lnnuijurnl address of President Woodrow Wilson Is as follows: There has been a change of govern ment. It began two rears ago, when the house of representatives became Democratic by a decisive majority. It bas now been completed. The senate about to assemble will nlso be Demo cratic. The offices of president and Tlce president have been put into the bands of Democrats. What does the change mean? That is the question that Is uppermost in our minds today. That Is the question I am going to try to answer, in order. If I may, to inter pret the occasion. It means much more than the mere success of a party. The success of a party means little except when the nation Is using that party for a large and definite purpose. No one can mis take the purpose for which the nation now seeks to use the Democratic party. It seeks to use it to interpret a change In Its own plans and point of view. S-'ome old things with which we had grown familiar and which had begun to creep Into the very habit of our thought and of our lives have altered their aspect as we have latterly looked critically upon them with fresh, awak ened eyes; have dropped their disguises and shown themselves alien and sin ister. Some new things as we look frankly upon them, willing to compre hend their real character, have come to assume the aspect of things long lie lieved in nnd familiar, stuff of our own convictions. We have been refreshed by a new Insight Into our own life. Our Model Government. We see that In many things life ia very great. It is incomparably great in its material aspects, in its body of wealtb. In the diversity and sweep of Its energy, in the industries which have been conceived and built up by the renins of individual men nnd the lim itless enterprise f groups of men. It Is great nlso. very great, in its moral force. Nowhere else in the world have noble men and women exhibited in more striking forms the beauty and tbe energy of sympathy and helpful ness and counsel iu their efforts to rec tify wrong, alleviate suffering nnd set tbe weak lu the way of strength and hope. We have built up, moreover, a great system of government which baa stood through a long age as in many respects a model for those who .! to set liberty upon foundations that will endure against fortuitous change, against storm and accident Our life contains every great thing and contains it in rich abuudance. But the evil has come with the good, and much tine gold has been corroded. With riches has come Inexcusable waste We have squandered a great part of what we might have used and have not stped to conserve tbe ex ceeding bounty of nature without which our genius for enterprise would have been worthless and impotent, ttcornlng to be careful, shamefully prodigal as well as admirably efficient We have been proud of our industrial achievements, but we have not hith erto stopped thoughtfully enough to count the human cost, the cost of lives snuffed out. of energies overtaxed and broken, the fearful physical and spir itual cost to the men and women and children upon whom the dead weight nnd burden of it all has fallen pltlla ly the years through. The groans and agony of It all had not yet reached our ears, the solemn, moving under tone of our life, coining up out of the mines and factories and out of every borne where the struggle had Its Inti mate and familiar -cat. With the great government went many deep Bf cret things which we too long delayed to look into and semtiniw with can did, fearless eyes The (reel govern ment we loved has too often lieen made use of for private and selfish purposes, and those who used It had forgotten the people. Duty ot Americans Outlined. At last a visiou has Oeeli vouchsafed ns or our life as a whole. We see the tid with the ood. the debased ami decadent with the sound and vital. With this vision we approach new af fairs Our duty is to cleanse, to re consider, to restore, to coiTect the evil without impairing the good, to puriry and liunia :i;.e every process of our common life without weakening or aentlmeinnlir.iug It. There bus been MUiiethiim crude and ii'-artles and un feeling in our hiiste to succeed t04 te great Our thought has been. "Let ev ery man look out for himself: let ev ery tt Of rati n II look out for itself." while we retired ulaiit machinery w hich made it impossible that any but those who stood at the levers of control ahrilM have a ctnuiee to look out for lhemelves. We had not forgotten our moiais We renietnlHMed well enough that we had et up a S)lic which was meant to wrve the humblest as well as the uiom paajfffM. with an eye single to the standards of Justice and fair piay. and remeinteied It with pride But we were very heedless and la' a hurry to lie great. We have come now to the sober sec ond thought. The scales of ucedless M have fallen from our eyes. We have made up our minds to square er ery process of our national life again with the standards we so proudly set up at the lieglnnlng nnd have always carried at our hearts. Our work Is a work of restoration. Things to Be Accomplished. We have Itemized with some degree of particularity the things that ought to be altered, and here are some of the chief Items: A tariff which cuts us off from our proper part in the commerce of the world, violates the Jnst princi ples of taxation and makes the govern ment a facile Instrument in the bands of private interests; a banking and cur rency system based upon the necessity of tbe government to sell Its bonds fifty years ago and perfectly adapted to con centrating cash and restricting credits; an Industrial system which, take it on all its side financial as well as ad ministrative, holds capital In leading strings, restricts the liberties nnd lim its the opportunities of labor and ex ploits without renewing or conserving the natural resources of the country; a body of agricultural activities never yet given the efficiency of great busi ness undertakings or served as it should be through the Instrumentality of science taken directly to the farm or afforded the facilities of credit licst suited to its practical needs: water courses undeveloped, waste pBIWs mi reclaimed, forests uutemled. lust .U nppearlng without plan Of project of renewal, unregarded waste henps at every mine We have studied as per haps no otbCf nation Icis the most ot feetive means of production, but we have not studied cost or m-uutitiiv ns we should either as organ titer of in dustry. as statesmen of as Individuals Society's Duty to Itself. Nor have we studied and pert'ecied the means by w hich government may be put at the service of liuiii-nity In safeguarding the health of the tuition, the health of its men and its women and its children, as well as their rights in the struggle for existence. This Is no sentimental duty. The linn basis of government is Justice, not pity. These are matters of Justice. There can be no equality or opportunity, the first essential of justice In the body politic, if men and women and children be not shielded In their lives, their very vitality, from tbe consequences of great industrial and social processes which they cannot alter, control or singly cop with. Society must see to it that it does not Itself crush or weaken or damage its own constituent parts. Tbe first duty of law Is to keep sound the society it serves. Sanitary laws, put food laws and laws determining con ditions of labor which individuals are powerless to determine for themselves are Intimate parts of the very busi ness of justice and legal efficiency. These are some of the things we ought to do and not leave the others undone, the old fashioned, never to be ueglected. fundamental safeguarding of property and of individual right This is the high enterprise of the new day: To lift everything that concerns our life as a nation to tbe light that shines from the hearth fire of every man's conscience and vision of 1he right It is Inconceivable we should do this as partisans: It is inconceivable we should do it in ignorance of the facts as they are or In blind hnste. We shall restore. Dot destroy. We shall deal with our economic system ns It Is and as It may be modified, not as it might be If we had a clean sheet of paper to write upon, and step by step we shall make it what it should be in the spirit of those who question their own wisdom and seek counsel and knowledge, not shallow self satisfac tion or the excitement of excursions whither they cannot tell. Justice, and only justice, shall always be our motto. Taak Not Merely One of Politics. And yet It will be no cool process of mere science. The uation bas been deeply stirred stirred by a solemn pas sion, stirred by the Knowledge of wrong, of ideals lost, of government too often deliiiiiclied and made an in strument of evil. The feellugs with which we face this new age of right and oixo lunity sweep across our heartstrings like some air out of God's ow n presence, w here justice and mercy are reconciled ami the judge anil the brother are one. We know our task to be no mere task of politics, but a task which shall senrcli us through and through, whether we be able to under stand our time and the need of our I peXiple, w hether we be indeed their spokesmen and Interpreters, whether we have the pure heart to comprehend I and the rectified will to choose our 1 high course of action. This is not a day of triumph: It Is 1 a day of dedication Here muster not j the forces of party, but the forces of j humanity. Men's hearts wait upon us: I men's lives hang in the balance: men's hopes call upon us to say what we j will do Who shall live up to the great trust? Who dares fail to try? I sum mon all pQBaal men. all patriotic, all forward looking men. to my side Cod helping inc. I will not fail them if they will but counsel and sustain me. Mr. Spanish War Veteran Spnde, Nebr., Feb. 2B. 1011. l.loyd 0. Thomas, Alliance, Nebr. Dear Sir: I am glad to know that there are Spanish War Veterans In Alliance, but I could not find any while 1 was up there myself, and I made some inquiries concerning the whereabouts of their lodge and time of meetings. I am a Spanish War Veteran, from April 4, '99 myself aid ntn Interested In any and every thing that they do. I also see by your pa per that they had a regular old-time reunion. 1 beg to differ with Jack Renrdon In rejrard to good coffee. The Spanish black drip has got the Ci'nese coffee makers beat all hoi lov. 1 am n member of Seth IJul 'oik Camp No. 1, Lend. So. Dak. Invito correspondence. H. S. WRIGHT. Spade, Nebr, Ranch for Sale I offer, for quick sale, my nmch of 600 acres one-half mile from Glen, on the Northwestern railroad, and eleven miles from Crawford. The place Is well improved. Large frame house and big barn for twelve horse. Big cattle sheds, blacksmith shop, etc. 600 acres in pasture; 100 acres In farm land. Lots of big timber. All fenced and cross-fenced. White river runs through the ranch. Sale carries share in phone line. Reason for selling, I have no one to care for ranch. Will sell at low price o easy terms. Address G. W. EMERY, 418 Sweetwater Ave., Alliance. Look to Your IMambing. You know w lint liRpiiens in a house in ' which the plumbing is in poor condition ! everybody in the house is liable to contract I typhoid or some other fever The digestive I organs perforin tiie aame functions in the human nocly aa the plumbing does for the house, and they should be kept in first class 'condition all the time. If you have any trouble with your digestion take Chamber ' Iain's Tablets and you are certain to get quick relief. For sale by all dealers. Advertisement NOTICE To Mary Catherine Kearlng. and Meade F. Fearing her husband, Margaret M Rnoney and Michael Rooney her huahand, Darius Good win, Mary (I. Fenton, and William F. Fenton her husband. Jesse Ly d.v and Mamie Lydy his wife, Fran Lydy nnd Resale Lydy his wife. Leonard Goodwin. William Good win, William R. Armlngton and Jane Armlngton his wife, whose true Christian name Is unknown, non-resident defendants: You and each of you are hereby notified that on the fith day of Feb ruary 1913 the undersigned Arniilda M. Caven. ns plaintiff, filed her pe tition in the District Court In and for Box Butte rinitii; , Nebraska, against you nnd each of you. Im pleaded with John H. Langford. Nor man K. Langford, Lucille M. New- omb. James A Langford and Mniv l angford his wife, and William C, Cavln, as defendants, the object and prayer of which petition Is to par tition the south half of the northeast quarter and the south half of the t.orthwest quarter of section twelve lit) In township twenty five (25), north, range fifty-three, (IS), west of the Sixth Principal Meridian in Sioux county, Nebraska, and lots six (6) nnd seven (7) nnd the east half of the southwest quarter of section six (6) In township twenty-five (25), north, range fifty two (62) west, of the Sixth Principal Meridian In Box Butte county, Ne braska, and that by a decree of the Court the Interests of the respective parties, as helrs-at law of John Lang ford, deceased, and of Mary K. Lang ford, deceased, be established and net forth In severalty If the name can be done without manifest injury, and that partition of said land nnd premises be made, and that from the share and Interest of the de fendant James A. Langford there be deducted and divided amongst the others entitled thereto the moneys due from him for rents of the said real estate amounting to $H!0 and fOT permanent improvements, viz: fences, removed by him to the vnlue of $100 and for such othet proceed Ings as nre authorized by law In that behalf. You are further notified that you are required to file your answer to said petition In the office of the lerk of snld Court on or before the th day of April. lOlil. or said pe tltlon will be taken as confessed by ou and each of you. AKMILDA M. f'AVBN, Plaintiff. By J. E. I'OKTKK, Her Attorney, 197-1 l-4t Veils Uhoes Look Over His Line Hanan, Edwin Burr, E. P. Reed, and Sherwood Ladles line Is the finest line shown west of Chicago by any retail dealer. Look Them Over Sheriff's Sale By virtue of an order of sale di rected to me from the Clerk of the District Court of Box Butte county. Nebraska, on a decree rendered in said court on the 1 7th day of Decem ber, A. D. 1912. in favor of R. M. ' Hampton, as plaintiff, and against I Walfrld Johnson and Clara Johnson, as defendant, for the sum of one , hundred forty-five dollars and sixty five cents, with intercut at 10 pet cent and accruing costs, and direct ing that the premise therein de scribed, to-wlt: Lot number seven teen 1 7 r In block number twenty (20) in the first addition to the town of Alliance, Box Butte county, Ne braska, be appraised, advertised and sold :is upon execution, to satisfy said sum of one hundred forty-five iind sixty-five one-hundredths dollars, and accruing costs, 1 have caused the following described land to be ap praised, to-wlt: Lot number seven teen (171 In block number twenty (20) In the first addition to the town of Alliance, l!ox Butte county. Nebraska. And will offer the same to the highest bidder, for cah in hand, on the 24th day of March. A. D. 1913, In front of the west front door of the court house in Alliance in said county, at the hour of 10 o'clock n. in. of said day, when and where due attendance will be given by the un dersigned. Dated February IS, 19LI. C. M. COX, Sheriff of said county. 202-1 l-tf The Drama of London's Fog. There In a whole world of drama bound up In the chronicles of London's four This misty ami mysterious vU Itant. far older than tJoi: or Maog. which used to visit the watches of the DlflfiH when the metropolis barely lifted iiself out of the surrounding marshes, has a fund of comedy as well as trag edy fount less murders have been eommitted under Its sheltering cloak, men and women have laser waylaid, children have been torn fi uu their mothers and wives from their bus bands le, ! StiHiid tt Helps! Mrs. J. F. Daniels, of Sip, Ky., writes: "I was so sick for 3 or 4 years, I had to hire my work done, most of the time. I had given up hope. When I began to take Cardui, I knew, right away, it was helping me. Now, I am better than ever before in my life, and Cardui did it" LEGAL NOTICE Benjamin H, Crutg and Mrs. Craig, his wife, first nnd real tiunw un known, William Craig and Mrs. Craig, his wife, first and real name unknown, and Birdie Craig and her husband, John Doe, real name un known, defendants, will take notice that on the .10th day of August, 1912, llattle K. Sherwood, plaintiff, herein filed her petition in the Dletrlct court of Box Butte county, Nebraska, against said defendant, the object and prayer of which tire to quiet title in the plaintiff to the northeast quarter (NK14) of section thirty two (.12) in township twenty-seven (27), north of range forty-nine, west of sixth principal meridian in Box Butte county, Nebraska, as against the de fendants and all persons claiming through or under them and to ex clude the defendants and each of them from all right, title and inter est therein. You are required to answer petition on or before the 24th of March. 113. Dated Feb. Li, 191.1. HATTIK B. SHERWOOD, Plaintiff 200-HMt said day LEGAL NOTICE In the County Court of Box Butte County, Nebraska Notice of Hearing on Pel It ion for ;. iters of Administration. ST.VI'K OF NKHRASKA. BOX BUTTS COL NT Y. Tc all persons interested In the estate of George T. Wheeler, late of ta'c county. Deceased. You are hereby notified that on Ik 2 1 st day of February. 19 1 J, rl 1. Wheeler filed her pet : in the QOWsty Murt of Bald coun'y, for her appointment SI adminUtia trix i f the estate ot George T V.'.ei.cr late of suid county, deceas ed, snd that the MBM will be heart) at lit county court locm in the c'.:v el' ,;'iance. In laid ounty, on the List day or March, 191:!, at the hour :: ,(i o'cloc k a. m. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that notice of said hearing be given all partite interested in said estate by the publication of this notice for three successive weeks In the Alli ance Herald, a newspaper printed, published and circulating in Utfel county. Dated this 21tt day of February, I9U. (SKALl gM-12-31 BERRY, Count) Judge. E 64 Take CARDUI The Woman's Tonic Cardui has helped thous ands of weak, tired, worn out women, back to health. It has a gentle, tonic ac tion on the womanly sys tem. It goes to the cause of the trouble. It helps, it helps quickly, surely, safe ly. It has helped others. Why not you? It will. Try it. Get a bottle today! Notice of Bond Sale Notice is hereby given that the County Commissioners of Box Butte County, Nebraska, will meet at the Court House in Alliance, Box Butte County. Nebraska, on the Huh day of March, 191.1. at 10 o'clock, A. M., of said clay, for the purpose of re ceiving bids ou the $5,00ti court j house Bond Issue; .-aid bonds to be of the following denominations, vix: Sixty fie bonds of One Thousand j Dollars each, to i un for a period of I twenty years from date of issuance. bearing interest at the rate of five per rent Mr annum, interest payable semi-annually, said interest payable at the fiscal agency of the stale of Nebraska, lu the city of New York, state of New York. All bids to be in writing and filed with the county clerk on or before 10 o'clock a. in . on the IMh day of March, 1911, and tn OHHsmlea! JTlHl a certified check of no' less than t n per cent of the amount bid. Those not accompanied by a certified check will not be considered The County Commissioners reserve tbe right to reject any and all bids. By order of the Boa id M. 8. HARGRAVKS. Clerk. 1904-12 M Monarch No. 1 Dip 1 to 75 Cures Scabs. Chases Flies, Sure Death to Lice Certificate of Government Approval on every can THE BEST FOR Sheep, Cattle, Horses, Poultry and Hogs USE IT NOW Ganrmnteed by RoC Chemical Concern, Lincoln, Nebr. sow by I L. ACHESON We are prepared to do your Fancy Cabinet Work We operate a planing mill in connection with our large Lumber Yard and are able to turn out high grade work. Get our prices on Wood Tanks, Storm Doors or Porches, in fact, anything you wish made to order. FOREST LUMBER CO, TELEPHONE 73 Mr. Man: BefoIeYoufeiui!d or Repair, Let Earnest Rosenberger FIGURE WITH YOU ON ALL KINDS OF Carpentering and Contracting lobs taken, large or small. Jobbing a Specialty. Estimates ami Plana burnished Free. Rates Reasonable. Work (iuaranteed. HEMINGFORD, NEBRASKA Coughs Are Dangerous Ver frequently ihey lead to very serious results No cough should e - r he iK Kleeted. Just a socm ns It cj.euifc a remedy nhoulcl he -..unlit. Y heliee thitt the very best treatment obtainable for coughs of .my descriptloii in Kexall Owrry Murk Cough Syrup. We sell tt un der a positive guarantee (hat if It does not satisfy ou and relieve your c .unh your money baek Rexall Ohe-rry Hark Cough Svrup heips destroy the disease germs wiilch are common causes of coughs. It help check ioleut spasms of toe troecbial tube.-, and tends to soothe the iutlaiiied membranes and nerves, put'lug theui iu a condition of reel so that the injured tissues may have .1 chance to heal. Rexall Cherry Hark Cough Syr4p hue a thoroughly agreeable taste au-t is tcuallv good for young children or I'ldcr people. cents, 50 cuU3 and 11, Sold in tins oomntuttity only at our store The Kexull Store . Hols ten