The news-herald. (Plattsmouth, Neb.) 1909-1911, June 03, 1909, Image 4

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    v"VSy made from Ryal Grape
Cfm. Absolutely
ir.g to take issue with Senator AKIricb, reasonable; it may unavoidably furr.L-h
the most potential leadtT of Conpress the opposition jiarty with political cap
in the framing t!ieT;iriir bill. it-il; but o::e thirtf m crrtnirt, it vi!l be
Tne President i.J r.ot disposed to (ii- judtred by it- wor!:, and in aur: ing
rvot legislation. He has a scrupulous rt'sp'r;bil.ty for the re.ulf then? is ro
rejranl for the lines that separate the rea-on why it should be s verved a hairs
Legislative and Executive departments, breadth by the criticism or resentrr er.t
Hut when Mr. AlJich presumes to of the democratic party, which has ::ot
speak for his party, and to lead ar.dact been commissioned to revise the tariff,
for his party, the President has a per- when it is remembered that the last
feet right a duty, in fact-that may ; time this same democratic partj was 1 jaf)t.n
be observed without the danger of de- j cammisiioned to do this work, it gave i Ilussia
partment encroachment. ! us the abominable Wilson-Gorman tar-1 Pain
When Mr. Aldrich declares that the iff bill, closed factories, and laboring
Chicago platform does i:ot promote ! men without employment.
downward revision; when he tacitly I
besides in the marine 1
was i,.w7,
corps.
As regards their armi-".
evidence of ;rqarj !:;t.-'s i
to lie noted.
the Fame
;r war are
Fish Bile Hungrily
('lUn? Ap
Pene War pr .itr.ate
footing fuot:r number
The News-Herald
PLATTSMOUTH. NEBRASKA.
FatTd t th- poitolticc at riutt'moutli. Can
Coaaty. Ntbrk. an aecuiul-ruua mail matter.
OFFICIAL rAPKit OK CASS COUNTY
A. L. TIDU Editor.
R. 0. WATTEKS Manager
RATES OF SUBSCRIPTION
Om Year In Advance H.M
PU Month! "'-
tELEriOff
riattsmouth No. 85 Nebraska No. 85
says that men elected by the party are j pjlCS R6tll
not necessarily uounu uy piaiiorms,.iir.
Taft is given a cue.
The President is the leader of the
party that elected him. If it comes to
a disputed interpretation of a platform,
the President is the logical arbiter.
And in the matter of the tariff plank,
Peace Promoters
More than a hundred years have
passed since Washington, in a speech
When it thunders the thief becomes
honeHt.
What you do for an ungrateful man
la thrown away.
It co.st.s the devil
catch a lazy man.
little trouble to
Wokk is always weariness when its
goal iB only wage3.
Bkakim; your cross does not relieve
you from paying your taxes.
Troubles are expert swimmers.
Don't try to drown them in the flowing
bowl.
The pessimist is the man who always
goes straight for the chair with a pin
on it.
Morality because it pBys to be moral
is tsiniply the immorality of civilized
ttelfishness.
Parents who are bringing up daugh
ters to be princesses are building up
lots of trouble fcr the poor devils who
are bo unfortunate as to marry one of
these.
There is a mistaken idea that cul
ture means to paint a little, to sing a
little, to dance a little, and to quote
passages from late popular books. As
a matter of fact culture means noth
ing of the kind. Culture means mas
tery over self; politeness, charity, fair
ness, good temper, good conduct. Cul
ture is not a thing to make a display
of; it is something to use so modestly
that people do not discover all at once
that you have it.
industrial depression during l'.xiH. The
decline was .r.!( per cent on raw com
modities of 5 per cent on manufactured
commodities. Comparing the averages
for UK is with those of lftiti prices of
raw commodities show an advance of
41.4 per cent, and of manufactured
commodities an advance of ln.: per
cent.
TllK catalpa in twenty-five years will
grow forty-five feet high, twenty-four
inches thick; will cut 25, MM I board feet
of lumber from an acre of ll'7 trees;
worth ftlO a thousand feet (estimated
value in twenty-five yenrs,) $1,500. Or
will cut 1,700 ties, worth $1,700.
The eucalytus in only ten years will
grow 100 feet high, twelve inches thick;
will cut 100,000 board feet of lumber
from an acre of 500 trees, worth $2,500
at $25 a thousand (low value,) or $0,000
at $'"0 a thousand.
in twenty-five years the eucalyptus
would, on the same estimate, produce
Slo.O't'i worth of lumber, as against
$1,500 produced by the catalpa.-Los
Angeles Express.
Mayor Guyer of Kansas City, Kr.s ,
gives the following reasons for his sup
port of Commission government:
1. It concentrates executive author
ity.
2. It fixes, absolutely and directly,
oflicial responsibility.
It eliminates as far as possible in
tense partisan politics.
4. It provides for direct nomination
and gives an open field for all aspirants
5. It provides for preferential voting
by which no man can be elected unless
he receives a majority of all the votes,
('. It provides for the initative refer
endum in the adoption of franchises.
7. It secures the recall of an oflicial
who is untrue to his trust.
8. It provides for the merit system
in all departments.
. It lessens the opportunity for
graft.
f r tViii Ifiiuiu rf 'rinirr.i j itifdi Ilia '
. , .... i , , i Great I.ntai.'i
President Taft is in particularly author- j , , erre(.tua! ,,.. of re. . frar.ee
..ii i . ii .1. .! . i utissia
serving peace; and sun me mcium !
Pea-'e societies, national i
itive and responsible - position.
It was his views of downward revis
ion that secured him the
nomination.
holds good
and univer:
erations.have come into existence;peace
Nati"
Franc.' '.;.:!.',' 2,51'i.oro 3,72-1;
Great Uritian l:!2,5oO 7.U 1,1 14 !
Gvrn.any i;17."hi :!(2'.0,()'J 4,524 !
Italy 24.82:1 S.XO-M 1,723
...220,(iiK) S'M.omo c,-'4 j
, l,2'i'M! 4.0'i 1,0! Ml 5.IHX)
. lli',4:22 5-m.u-iO 4i I
United States V!,2'J l-'
Tlv.tl flirt nof'tn" r.f ia ,1-rM.t.t o w rt.i I
.v !f,llu.., vyi LIIV KU'l C.I IlUk
contemplating any reduction in their
war prepartions is shown by the follow
ing table of amounts voted fur new con-
i btruction and armaments. It wiil W
seen that there is little change in the i
' case of Fiance, Great Britain, Russia,
and Japan; the remaining three count
; ries exhibit large augmentations of their
sea forces:
Country I;i07-lt0.
$4o,l::2,i-U0
2o.C-;2.47'J
14,2:51.40
Germmy iil.42o.125
when you use
r 1
Presidential a!K1 universal in me scope oi ir.e.r op-
If ,i"iki lil t'imi.a nf flj.ii'n-
congresses nave convened, uenueniiiu,
ward revision that governed the fram- an(1 adjourned ;poets in prophetic vision
ing of the tariff plank. And if it comes have seen a time when 'the war-drum
to that, it should be his views of down
ward revision that should govern the
party in making a new tariff law.
The President is the leader of his
part and he has said that he would veto
any Tariff bill which was not in accord
with the republican national platform.
Many insignificant democratic papers
are having huge performances on be
half of the consumer as they say.
throbbed no longer, and the battle-flags
were furled;" but the regrettable fact
remains that armies are being increas
ed, battleships are being multiplied,
guns are being made more formidable,
anil even prizes are offered the invent
ion of new engines of destruction on
the earth and in the air. In a word,
Japan lo.l'JoOO
$i::.:wi,oio
2-),57S,!C)0
1. '5,518,004
41,s,:J2.1!'0
i),:!:!1.79o
:9:4,75
1V':!:i,5!I0
Magnetic Fish Bait
There's no such thing is a dull day
wh.-n you go fishing if y,u are sup
plied with this truly wonderful dis
covery. If the f.sh are there you'll
get them, for they si::.;dy can't re
sist it. It beats anything you have
ever imagined. It is moderate in
price-25 cents ptr box-ami a
box will la-t a ling time. P.esides
this bait, of which we are the sole
manufacturers, we handle
Fishermen's Complete
Outfits
50c. SI, 2.CO, 3.C0,
Send today for a box
Prohibition
Does Prohibit.
4.00. 5.00
and for out-
Free booklet, "Facts About Fish
ing," and illustrated -nta!or of
fishing tackle outfits. Address
Magnetic Fish Bait Co.
bepr. B. Republic, Missouri.
There was a suit tried before Judge
P. S. i'arnes last Friday in which Giu.
" Peters represi nted by Att irney Wellen-
Toi'L'KA, Kr.n., May 2. This has - seik of Avoca sought to obtain a juiig
been tne "dryest" day Kansas has ex- men1, for $1'51. 40 against Chris Shoe
perienced in its history. Kains have , maker, who is represented by Attorney
fallen throughout the state, but there A. L. Tidd of Plattsmouth. The latter
O.N thk Fourth of July there will be
provided a band concert for the amuse
ment of the home people, who do not
or cannot go elsewhere to participate
in the greater celebrations. This is a
wise thing to do, for the reason that it
shows the business men are ever on
the lookout for the welfare of the home
tieoiile. A nice band concert will do
much to make the home folks feel that
they are! not neglected. A year ago
the city gave one of the greatest and
best celebrations ever given by any
city in the state. You can be on the
lookout next year for an even greater
and better celebration in Plattsmouth.
Average wholesale prices of 258
representative staple articles were 5.2
per cent lower in 1W8 than in 1907, and
higher than in any of the previous
tighteen years. This showing is made
in a report issued by the Bureau of
Labor of the Department of Com
merce. The decline is not large, con
sidering the far reaching effects of the
financial disturbance at the end of 11)07
and the csnsequent complaint of general
On the subject of conservation of our
resources the other day President Taft
said:
"The conservation of national resour
ces is a subject which properly will
claim from the present administration
earnest attention and appropriate legis
lation. The necessity for a compre
hensive and systematic improvement
of our waterways, the preservation of
our soil ard of our forests, the secur
ing from monopolistic private appro
priation the power in navigable streams
the retention of the undisposed coal
lands of the government from complete
alienation-all these matters are vi
tally important to the people of the
United States and to your constituency,
the business men of the country.
Without the resources which make
labor productive, American enterprise,
energy and skill would not in the past
have been able to make headway
against hard conditions. Our children
and their children will not be able to
make headway if we leave to them an
improvished country. Our land, our
waters, our forests and our minerals
are sources from which come directly
or indirectly the livelihood of all of us.
The 'conservation of our natural re
sources is a tuestion of fundamental
importance to the United States now,
to the business man today."
REVISION OF THE TARIFF.
By a plurality of 1,045,715 votes the
republican party was commissioned to
revise the Tariff on its own terms; that
such duties should be imposed as would
'equal the difference between the cost
of production at home and abroad togeth
er with a reasonable profit to American
industries." This is the principle upon
which the two houses of Congress are
proceeding that is to say, the major
ity in each and both. The people want
dispatch, provided it be consistent with
full consideration of industrial condi
tions and the necessity of raising rev
enue to make good a deficit and meet
the expense of administering the gov
erment. It will be remembered that in
1W2, there was an era ot nigli prices
and there came a cry for a revision of
the Tariff downward, and the democrat
tic party was by the votes of the peo
pie commissioned to revise it. Grover
Cleveland was elected president, and a
majority of Congress elected that year
were democrats, and they proceeded to
revise the tariff according to the demo'
cratic idea ot a downward revision.
The result of their effort was the Wi!
son-Gorman Tariff Bill. The laboring
men and the business men well retnem
ber what followed. Manufactures
were closed and laboring men were
without employment. The farmers al
so remember how such a revision of the
Tariff affected the consumer and the
farmer. The people of this country do
not want a repetition of the Wilsor.-
Gjrman Tariff.
The republican party, which is calkd
upon to legislate in an era of high
prices, abroad as well as at home, must
consider that the the county has grown
and the expenses of the government ad
ministered on economical lines has
necessarily increased. It may disap
paint some expectations more or less
the nations seem to have tacitly agreed not a drop of liquor to drink, except tiled a counter claim of .l'j.-,.. AfUr
thut their best security iigainst war is i that which the thoughtful citizen put the Judge had beard the testimony he
preparation for war. into m' ce!lar I'rior t0 ' '('lo''k last ; concluded that Peters claim should not
Take ourselves f ir instance. Priori n'Knt- The fiist day under the new ab- be more than ?90.0'i and Schoomaker's
to the war with Spa n our navy was of ' 80'utQ pr-ihil.ito.i law parsed without $Ii5S.50 and by deducting the one from
such inferiority as to exclude it from ! incident in the towns and cities of the the other, $78.50 is left for which the
anv table of the principal navies of the ' sie anu me 'iru stores, wmen up to Juige says i eiers owe oiim m.u.rr
world. To-day it has attained to second j last w(!1'e P-rmitted to sell whis- : The costs were SC..45. It is a case wher
iilce j key and beer on the alidavit of the pur-' the man who had a fish worm finds it
' ii ... ' i .1.... i .1 n il it ,u l i- ..i.. . ...1 .
a case where
its
It . I . 11 I I .... I? .1. .... 1 At. I. I ..1 k I.
In 1S1 we had our in navv forty-seven cnaser, were very quiet places io-(iay, swauoweci ny a nsn a-i-i u.e wiamru i -n
screw propellers and six other steam I except for the heavy sale ot soda water too the line and an. ). course it they
vessels- twenty-four ironclads, includ-! an(l other h lrinks thier i'oun- concluded to carry the case to the nis
nr ,,nit..r! two torned.i boats and ! tains. So far as is known, there was no trH court the fish may play the Jonah
twenty-five tugs. Of this total only j violation of th? law in Top. to-day.
fifty-seven were in efficient service.
act. Weeping Water Republican.
The number of guns was 1U '.' We had
altogether, 'J5:- officers -md wvn in the
navy, besides 1577 in the marine corps.
In November, 1!I'J7, we h ul 2!4 vessels,
not including twenty-nine under con
struction and twelve unfit for service.
Mrs. Will Pirie, of Denver, Colo., ,
after visiting her parent?. Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Shopp i:i the city for some- j
time, left TiHsd iv for.her home accom
panitd by her brother, Will Shopp. j
' Prescripti'in work n specialty at J
STRAYED Brown horse, bob-tailed,
white around no-e. il-ts halter on.
Last seer, going south. Phone in
formation to Pet.j iia:ien, N'o ?.:51.,
The total number of officers and men Gering's &. Co.
Pure soda at Geii.;g i C.
11-2
S w : - 1 ... '" -rims-mmm&s
um'mWz If
v V i SS5 1 Hl tA -iv v a;sc"1
f SI m T I wn m 6 - l hK r t
The fact that President Tftft has
Bought and obtained expeit taritT infor
mation on his own account does not
m -an necessarily that he is going to
undeituke to "c urce" Congress.
It may mean, however, that he isgo-
Quaker Oats Griddle Cakes
Try them today!
The family that hasn't eaten Quaker
Oats griddle cakes has a delightful sur
prise coming to it. Besides the delic
ious flavor, there is the pleasure of
knowing you can eat all you want, and
the more you cat the better for you.
The best of all foods for anyone
wanting more strength and vigon
Hundreds of thousands of packages
of Quaker Oats are consumed in Ger
many annually and almost all of it is
eaten in the form of Quaker Oats
griddle cakes. In the New York
cereal restaurant of the Quaker Oats
Company these griddle cakes are very
popular '
Here's the best recipe for making
them :
2 cupt Quaker Oati (uncooked): Hi cup
flour: I teaspoonful salt - I tcaipoontultoda
dii.iohe in two tableapootiluli hot water
I teat poonlul baking powder (mil In flour). IH
emu tour milk or buttermilk: 2 emit bratea
lightly; I tableipoonful tugar: I or 2 table
tpoonlult melted butur (according to richneis
ol milk).
Proceii: Soak (Junker Oats over night in
milk. In the morning mix and nil flour, aoda.
sugar and aalt add this to (Junker Oatt
mixture and quantity ol mcltrd bulliT; add
rggi beaten lightly bent thoroughly and cook
a griddle cakci llivf make your mouth
water lor more.
Ex-President Roosevelt in his own White Steamer.
President Taft owns a White Steamer.
John D. Rockefeller owns 3 White Steamers.
Thomas W. Lawson "Boston" owns 2 White Steamers.
Hon. Matthew Gering has ordered a White Steamer.
THE WHITE STE
Our car is the only practical steam automobile manufactured. Many have been at
tempted, but with the exception of one or two, their manufacture has been suspended. On
the other hand, we have grown with such rapid strides that we now occupy thepreatest fac
tory of its kind in the world. The whole secret lies in the fact that WE ONLY have th
practical STEAM SYSTEM. WE HAVE NO BOILER. We use a generator. It is in it
self a safety valve and cannot blow up or explode. Out of nearly 8000 WHITE STEAM
CARS in use there has never been an explosion or other similar accident. It is utterly
impossible.
We desire to impress upon you the fact that we can prove to your satisfaction the
following:
The White Sttamer is the lowest priced car on the market, considering actual horse
lower. It is cheapest to maintain and keep up, simplest and easiest to learn, control,
landle and repair. Its power is the most flexible, more than even an eight-cylinder gaso
line car. It has longer life, greatest power, greatest speed and greatest everything that
counts, and least of everything that militates against an automobile.
Now if what we say is true, you want to know it. IT IS TRUE. We can prove
every claim to the entire satisfaction of the most skeptical.
DRUMMOND, Agent.
FACTORY AND OFFICE 18TH AND HARNEY STREET
Automobile Salesroom 2024 Farnam Street, Omaha, Nebr.
mm ii inn L n i ll i W CT Wf JIMIUBM
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