THE ALLIANCE HERALD LLOYD C. THOMAS. Uualnc MatiAger JOHN V. THOMAS, Kdltor Pobll-hed evrry ThuixU) by TMI! MliKALD PUULI. SUING COMPANY Incorporated CJofd O. Thorn. President i. irl piomw, Vle Pr. John W. TliomM, HWrUry Entered at the post office at Alliance. Nebraska, for transmission through the mailt as cecond-class aiatter. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE. $1.60 TER YEAR IN ADVANCE If your copy of The Herald does not reach you regularly or aatlsfac ' tort!, yon should phone 340 or drop a card to the office. The beat of serf Is la what we are ant'.ous to glte. so don't hesitate to notify us without aelay when you miss your paper. MR. HUGHES PREDICAMENT If Charles K. Hughes, the Republican candidate for President, makes an issue of the Federal Reserve system, established by the Democratic Administration, is he going to read out of his party the 33 Republicans who voted for the measure in the House! Will lie repudiate the 16 Progressives, the one Independent, and the Republicans who voted with the 248 Democrats in establishing the sound banking and currency law which has been approved by the public and the banking world? Will he also repudiate the 7 Republicans who voted for the meas ure in the Senate! - ilr. Hughes will have a difficult time evolving any issue that will not entail a repudiation of many of the Congressional leaders of his own party. If he thinks it expedient to adopt a strong attitude on the sub marine controversy, which President Wilson settled by obtaining a full recognition of American rights under international law and bringing about the cessation of submarine warfare, he will have to repudiate the 101 Republican representatives who voted against ta iling the Mcljcmoro resolution and thus registered themselves in fa vor of a surrender of American rights. Incidentally, he will have to read out of the Republican party the twelve Republican United States senators who voted against tabling the (J ore resolution, which involv ed a similar surrender when President Wilson war forcing the recog nition of American rights. There were twelve Republicans in the Senate who voted for the administration's trade commission bill, and while there was no record vote in the House, several score Republicans voted for the trade com mission bill there. The Republican party in its platform has endorsed the tariff com mission method of handling the tariff. Before that plank was adopt ed by the Republican party, the Democratic administration had in troduced the Rainey tariff commission bill in Cnogress and it will be come a law in a few weeks. And the Chamber of Commerce of the United States, representing the business men of the nation, Republic an and Democratic and Progressive, has endorsed the Rainey bill. One hundred and twelve Republicans ami four Progressives vot ed with the Democratic majority for the good roads bill in the House. One hundred and four Republicans and three Progressives voted for the administration's rural credits bill. Republican leaders of the House and Senate repeatedly have en dorsed the president's action in keeping out of war with Mexico. If a vote were taken in the House and Senate today on remaining at peace with Mexico, the Republicans would vote for peace so long as President Wilson is able, as he has been, to preserve the honor of the nation. THE ELEPHANT S MOUSE The elephant has labored and brought forth ainou.se! l iillt in am .i vi ouiiniov null etui wi i inr iunv 'U 1 .jt LI L'llin Ul .ifi I Hughes as well as among the enemies of Mr. Wilson with the speech of acceptance delivered by the former in New York City on the even- nig oi uuiy oisi. But what were the actual feelings of those gentlemen when, in the quiet of their own solitude, with the newspaper reports of the it! .i . Kpeecn oeiore mem, no man save tiiemseivcs now Knows. Certain it is, if the speech pleased Republicans, it carried no alarm to Democrats. The latter do not regard it as a forensic masterpiece or the effort of a statesman. They consider it rather the plea'of an attorney for the prosecution, who has a bad case but a promising fee. In both parties there was much concern as to what the Republic an candiadte, who when nominated was an enigma to them, would advance as th- issues upon which to base his candidacy. Through X,0(X) words he stormed his angry way and at the close there was no enlightmcnt as to issues, beyond the one that a demo cratic administration was in power, whereas he wanted a Republican administration, with himself at the head of the government. With many words he denounced the record of Mr. Wilson and the Democratic party, yet made no statement a sto whether he would have acted differently in the president's place. He wanted peaee and he wanted war. In one hysterical epigram he called for "America first and Amer ica efficient." A distinct reiteration of the Democratic pronouncement on the subject by one who in the light of existing conditions cannot mean it. With the disloyal leash, the self-confessed perpetrators of his nomination, with a candidacy on which "Made Abroad" is irrevoca bly stamped, his cry for efficiency is not dangerous enough for a slo gan and is too pitiful even for a successful plea. 'Ml t u . . .... . i ne euicieney ne ailecls to Mesn e will he completely realized be fore the Republican candidate much further advances in his cam paign. There was absolutely no enlightenment furnished as to his course with reference to unfortunate Mexico. A kindly word for Huerta, though admitting the possibility that he was a criminal and a menace to his country, a threat at the miserable bandit, Villa, whom by im plication he dignified into a cause of war between this great country and impoverished Mexico, a sneer at the course pursued at Tampico and at Vera Cruz, and all that he had in his locker was exhausted. Of course, he would have made Belgium a pretext for sending our soldiers into Flanders to add their life's blood and bleached bones to the future fertility of European soil; or, barring that, would have let loose the dogs of desolation at the destruction of the Lusitania or he would have done something else, certainly in a different way or mood or what not from the course pursued by President Wilson. The country needs preparedness, he declared. Certainly so, and right there in his presence, in the corporeal flesh, sat a former president of the United States, his partisan and his supporter, who in near eight years had done by comparison with the Wilson record practically nothing the direction of preparation Not far away, not, however, on the scene, was another former president, who deploring his inability to be present, but looking for ward to the Hughes speech as a happy and sure "augury" of Repub lican success, who had served several years as secretary of w ar prior to a four-years incumbency of the White House, who had left a state of national unpreparedness as an unfortunate heritage to Mr Wilson And that was pretty much the speech. Destructiveness was its keynote and the absence of constructive new its burden. Not one word as to the Democratic record in domestic affairs No endorsement of the long strides taken to progressive ends lated 'ie eVen f Democratic rled?e having been vio- ..?Ir' "u1,e" had n om word t0 sav of the Democratic party's enactment to prevent frenzied finance from terrorizing the nation" that thrift anil wealth to panic makers might follow the desolation of the many. Not one word an to the law to tax wealth that poverty's burden might be lightened. Not one word about Rural Credits, which put the producers at iminoy ease when financial stringency hovers. Nothing as to appropriations and legislation in the interests of labor; in the humanizing cause of the children of the land; nothing of the extension of post routes; of the building ot good roads and the opening up on navigation. Not a word as to the establishment of a trade or tariff commis sion or the researches that have been instituted in every department of the government looking to better conditions for all mn. Only as a last thought, as a desperate effort to play sharp poli ties, did Woman Suffrage occur to him ; and the day after the speech, with something to tie his candidacy to, he rushed forward, where his party in convention had refused to go and declared himself as favor ing the submission of a Woman Suffrage amendment to the Constitu tion, i He saw that his tiradagainst the president's handling of inter national questions had fallen into ground that was fallow; he had come, after a night's sleep, to realize the weakness of "America first and America efficient" as a slogan; he saw the danger to himself of attacking any of democracy's legislation of a constructive character; he dared not comment adversely upon any of the lofty governmental ideals of the president, so, over-night, he took woman suffrage to his bosom and there it now temporarily rests until some of his advisers shall come along and separate him and it. Temporary sop to the woman voters of a number of states which he hopes thus to carry 1 What chance would he have if elected, with a Republican con gress, to enforce the submission of an amendment that his party in national convention assembled had overwhelmingly determined against! Can he by such tactics con the intelligent womanhood of the country! r Does the man or candidate who goes to' an issue, facing both ways, ever land anywhere! WANT AD DEPARTMENT WANTED NURSING WANTED by an expert enced, practical nurse. Confinement cases a specialty. Mr, rtrown, prion Red 1t 29-tf-.it! WANTED An all-around girl at Home Restauran at once. Mra. S. W. Ball. Hemlngford, Nebr. 32-tf-7410. FOR RENT Rooms In aultes for light house keeping. Over The Famous. 32-tf-7421 SNAP FOR SALE Completely equipped garage, machine and black smith shop In growing banking town. Center of best wheat section of Mon tana. Equity 13500. Address Rroad view Garage, box 279 Broadview, Montana. 35-41-7474 TaTK Ik! cieXn7ng5"per pound. Call 840. BARN FOR RENT J. W. Thomas. 408 Sweetwater Ave. 22-tf-7S32 "lost and found LOST A music roll on Alliance streets, Saturday, June 3rd. Finder return to Herald office. 27-tf-6993 LOST. The hub cap from the rear wire wheel of my Cadillac automo Mlo. Cap has' a large figure eight In be center. Reward for return to George A. Mollrlng, Alliance. 32-tf-7414. nns and auto truck with the latest appliances for moving furniture without warring or scratching of Aitnmmm TTfwln.f1a.tA VKAII tr! - will be used by us on all moving Jobs JOHN R. SNYDER. Phone 16. ' 37-tt-6S0 ' Money to loan on real estate. N unnecessary delay In getting loan. Apply to H. M. Bullock, Room 4, Red dish Block, Alliance. NOTICE The person' who took the Box Butte county atlas from oar office is known and will save trouble iby returning It at once. E. T. KIB , BLE & COMPANY. 35-41-7466 WAS- BIG CONVENTION Umh Crowd Attended Hoc Htitto Sunday School Convention Held Ijimt Week FOUND Lady's bracelet. Owner m-y have same by identifying It and paying for this ad. Phone 685. 32-t f-74 29 FOR SALE FOR SALE One Brass bed, small table, double door and single door. sali 416 Qheyenne Ave. S3-tf-7449 MISCELLANEOUS Monar to loa.ii on Mai ! f IB. RBDDI81 county land nd ranches in the sane" hills. No delay In making the loan, we Inspect our lands and furnish the money at once. J. C. McCorkle, lie Corkle Building, Alliance, Nebr. l-tf-6654 RECORD WOM THAJJIMBR Railroad Man can scure a very nee fIhoo at The Harald offloa. ft la lally tins book for trainman and ea f'f "- The prlee la reasonable. MOVE FURNITURE SAFELY W hare equipped our drajr wag Tim annual Box Butte county Sun day school convention was held ia Alliance Thursday and Friday of last week. About twenty delegates were presnnt from out of town, most of the outsiders being from Hemlng ford. Officers elected for the ensuing year were: J. N. Johnston, presi dent: Jay It. Vance, vice president; Alta Young, secretary and treasurer. The officers are all from Alliance. The next meeting is to be held at the Congregational church at Hem lngford In about a year. WHAT CATARRH IS It has been said that every third person has catarrh in some form. Science has shown that nasal catarrh often indicates a general weakness of the body; and local treatments in the form of snuffs and vapors do little, if any good. To correct catarrh you should treat Iti cause by enriching your blood with the oil-food in Scott's Emulsion which is a medicinal food and a building-tonic, free from alcohol or any harmfuldrugs. Try it. Scott at Bowne, Bloomfield. N. J. NEBRASKA rRDSPERIU LEAGUE JkGtttevidt, Nonpartaaa iMtanuutien of Tax pay tn V VICE-PNESIOENTS) I waaiar . admin SOUIrt OMAHA JOHN ALBEBIEON lacMAMT PIRHfl . CM. C. C. ALLISON E3 U3 ' tlOKOI ANTIL INVEST I. M. BAIRO J. L. SAKKa HAarmaroM J. W. (NOCK ALFRCO BRATT INVESTMENTS. IINOA CMAa. M. BROWN tAk. ESTATE IKVIIIatHT) tt. J BUBOES. SJ3 - m r j 1.3 MARRY V. BUBKkfcV W. M. BUSHMAN SToaAMS ALBERT CAMN LOUIS DIET! STOCKMAN, RIANNIf m. rAinniLO JOHN N. PRINZES RCAL BETAIS IMVIITM1MTI Da a. GicMong V. V. UOLOFN CAmtLlff, e NULL FERDINAND NAADMAKH manufacturer j. j. maniohen com t k ac tor bsd c. hunker AIIMHtf, EAT MINT FRAI)K B JOHNSON OMAHA FaiNflNS CO. C. J. K ARB ACM IMVISTMINTS HON. J. T. KCSLCr Does Prohibition . 4 t. . : 2 P. J. KKLLV KRANK B. KENNARO CAMTALlf JACOB KLEIN MAHCHANT. BEATRICE UO L ATT A l. M r LEFLANO CAPITALIST 9. W. MKeEATM COAL OPERATOR JOHN A MOHRBACHtR IN.ItfWkNII, MHORI EOFHbl F. KEBL E EBAKK A. NIMS Mill, lkU OM, J. J NOVAK . MIIBIR i. J. O'CONNOR - ATTORNIf OEOROE PAR HON. WATSON L POHOr LAND OWNER. EIAOIEON THtOOUMt REIMERS CARL HON LIE .3 t 1 ETII IOIMMI JOHN 6 NOSIIKV FUEL IIMIN J. C MOTH Hvllfoi FREMONT JOHN BCHINOLE.il STANTON W. M BCHMOLLER Josara THEODORE H S'REL I. SHUA.HT MARRT SIMAN SVNEIDS PAUL P. SKINNFR NANUFACTURIR A. F SMITH JOSaca N. A SPIEBBEROER HON E. f. STAFFORD fccaroi WIIMAM STORK INVTMENT AAHMSrON MOBLRT C EIITHLO.V CONTRACTOR SEOR1C a TYLER IMVtSrwCMTfl, NASTINOfi A J T'MLIIlO PON RJORHE THEOOORE WIOAMAN trocn buyer, Aurora C. i.if 0 ATTOR.r. RANDOLPH N W5LBACH M'?C"T. ORAAO IE. AND B H WOICOTT '" eiTL c.t, HOi. On 71'Fi.ow MtOA AiKUVlER Prohibit? Testimony oi Two Reputable Witnesses of Des Moines, Iowa The First Witness: Extract Iron, an editorial which appeared i n The Dea Moines Evening Tribune of June 6, 1910 t 'The Evening Tribune has asked a half dozen men recently who ought to t know, and they agree that liquor can ngw be bought openly at more places' than when we had saloons T1 r3 fai .BPS The Second Witness: ExtraoTfrom a new article, prominently displayed on the lint page of The Dee. Moines Capital of February 10, 1916: "Des Moines banished the saloons a year ago last Wednesday. "But Des Moines today is consuming liquor at the rate of a million dollars' worth a year mostly whiskey. ' "Des Moines is receiving two car loads of liquor a day. "This is at the rate of 750 carloads a . a year or Mteen trainloads of fifty cars ' each." Here we have the testimony of two responsible Iowa newsDaoers that Statewide PROHIBITION does not prohibit. newspapers that In Nebraska, under our Local Option, H.gh License Law, the people cf any CC ' community are granted an opportunity to say whether or not license shall be issued governing the sale of alcoholic beverages. In future articles we will present evidence proving that Nebraska, under that law, has made great progress from a moral as well as from an nomic standpoint. eco" stt n C3 fcS The Nebraska Prosperity LeaiiP OPPOSED TO STATE PROHIBITION. IN FAVOR OF LOCAL OPTION' ir,rT7P President, L. F. CROFOOT Treasurer, W. J. COAD f V UCENSE Send for our literature. Sretary, J. B. IIAYNES OMAHA, NEB. rrj - 1 - 3 iiii!;:i:!!!nnr.E!i:;::::::s;:;:!!::i;!!:!! 'Mt'MiTi,.,,,..,,.;- 'EE.E.AEE..EAEEEA...LI I