The Plattsmouth journal. (Plattsmouth, Nebraska) 1901-current, October 26, 1908, Image 2

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    The Plattsmouth Journal
A I : ; :a OUTH. N FA I H ASK A
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l.oO Per Y-iar in Advance.
DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
For I'rcsiileiit
wluLiAM J. DRY AN.
For Vi-e I'resid'-nt
JOH.l AT. KERfi.
For i ivernor
a. c. siiai.u:.ki:k;;k;
For Li-'udTiant Governor
I-:. (. C ARRF.TT.
For Secretary of State
A. T. (JATKWOOI).
l-'or A ulitor
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JOHX A. ViAt.CIUK.
For State Senator -
WILLIAM B. UANNINd.
For Float Keprestative Otoe and Cass
Counties -M.
A. BATHS.
For Kepreentat:ves
JOHN P. SATTLKB.
O. W. LAUGH LIN.
For County Attorney
WILLIAM C. RAMSEY.
For Counry Cominissioner
CAM. M. SEYBEIiT.
3
WHERE DO YOU STAN D?
i Among other propositions be-
fore the public and worthy of
' consideration, are:
1. Th guarantee of bank de-
posits. "
' 2. The election of United
States senators by direct vot
of the people, and
3. An Income tax levied on
large incomes to help pay the
expenses of the general gov-
ernment t
Those propositions commend
themselves to three-fourths of
- the voters of Nebraska. Bryan
stands pledged to everyone of
them. Taft and his party are
against them. Where do you
stand. ik
Vote for V. B. Banning for Senator.
He's the proper man.
I'oi.lakd will vote for Joe Cannon for
Speaker if he get another apportunity.
Keep this fact before the votes.
Koosevelt evidently broke his big
stick in slamming it against the im
penetrable doctrines of W. J. Bryan.
In the ranks of which army are you
going to be found on November 3
those of organized greed or those over
which floats the standard of the peo
ple's rights?
It is said that ten men own as much
wealth as all the rest of the population
combined in this country. And those
ten are all for Taft. Do you dare deny
it? Of course not.
Vote for W. B. Banning for State
Senator, if you would have a represeta
tive in the State Senate who will prop
erly look after the best interests of his
constituents in Cass county.
Remember that J. A. McGuireis free
from salary grabbing and is opposed to
Joe Cannon's way of running congress.
He is able and honest; just the man to
send to congress from the best district
in the state.
Roosevelt made a mistake when he
1
told Bryan that he was afraid his elec-
tion might cause a panic. Bryan hit
him between the eyes when he replied
and told Teddy to devote his personal
attention to his own panic now wrapped
about every portion of the country. I
IiKMKMUKit that a vote forC. M. Sey -
l.ert is a vote for tiie right man f r
count v commissioner.
:.. i a ;!; tne x-'oi.i oi . . i-. i. - .n -
,1 ,f W. II. ll;.n-
'. ni;i? with tli.it "f ( ;i Ian !o Te! i, ami
'ou will simiii arrive at the conclusion
j that Mr. W.uining is tic proper person
j to represent the people of Cass county
! in the Nebraska Slate Senate.
1 ' il.i.Alc, hy his siit-nce on the mat
ter is for Joe Cannon for Speaker. He
has always bee l closely identified with
the Gag Rule Speaker, and will rot
tell the people whether he is for r
against him. Vote for .J. A. McGuire
who you know will not vote for Can
non. Yuri: for John 1'. Saltier and (). VV.
I.a ighlin for representatives. There is
n danger of Cass county being misrep
resented ill the hou.-e of the Nebras
ka legislature if these gent lemen are
..!. -ted. Voti for these yentii'inen and
oi- sure yo i g.-t ill.- right in-n to i pre-
:i v; ir interests.
I
tli
:t)g a spevh at F'nioii tins week
I'o'iard was asked if i
I 'am -i'l for u-.d ei". :
woui
vote for
declined to an
swer s or .". ). ev.iuinj :!i'-";uestion by
sayin.j: he would attend to thai matter
when the proper time arrived for action.
Cannon will pet Bollard's support. No
question about that.
Tmk republican machine has never
been so badly out of shape as at the
present time. It wont track; it blows
o f steam just at the steepest grade;
snorts at a standpatter in the west and
scares at a progressive in the east;
kicks the main plank out of the plat
form, mistaking it for something Bryan
has said; puts boys at the throttle, and
blows the whistle all the time.
The Journal owes an apology to its
patrons for being delayed so much this
week, but it was impossible for u to
help the matter in the least. Fvei ne
who has ever had anything to do with a
gasoline engine knows that when on
least expect it or want it to it actn;. "
And that has beer the matter with the
Journal our engine has been contrary
all week and refused to do duty only
when it felt like it.
Among the campaign jokes going
around now is one peddled by the man
who offers to bet 10 to 1 that if Bryan
is elected the banks will be closed four
months after his inauguration. Too
true or too false all depending upon
whether the man running the Lank
cares to do business on July 4. Figure
it out and you will find that just four
months after Mr. Bryan shall have
been inaugurated the legal holiday in
commemoration of the declaration of
independence will be upon us, and the
banks, following a custom which even
republican prosperity has failed to shat
ter, will be closed.
There is another very important
matter connected with the choice of
president and one the omnion people
are more vitally interested in than al
most anyother; that is the U. S. Su
preme court. Hughes in one of his
speeches in the East warned the trusts
that, more than likely, there would be
4 vacancies to be filled on the supreme
court bench by the next president, and
said how important it is to you that
Taft shall fill the vacancies. Vhey are
always keeping watch as to who shall
be selected for judges. Yes, that is
their citadel, to which they fly for help
when an outraged people get after
them. We say to you that it is of the
utmost importance that Bryan shall fill
those vacancies when they occur; then
you will get justice when you have a
suit against a trust corporation.
M. A. Bates, candidate for Float Rep
resentative, is considerably handicapped
in the campaign at the present time
by the serious illness of his son, R. A.,
who is manager of the Journal. He was
taken ill last Saturday from ulceration
of the bowels, and has been confined to
his bed ever since, and brobably will be
for several days yet. His illness necessi
tates the remaining at home of the
Colonel to look after the business of the
the office during the confinement of his
son. Mr. Bates expected to visit sever
al sections of Ctoe and Cass counties
this week, and we hope his friends will
fully understand the situation in which
he is placed. If hi3 son is so that he
can attend' to the business of the office
next week, the Colonel hopes to see as
many of his friends as possible before
the election.
! Al.l. members .f cor.gie, frm the
state of Nebraska have iate: pui.r.ciy
tliat they will not support Gag
Rule Cannon for Speaker, except our
, i,,,!:,,,. .',-. st M. Pollard.
who, as signified by his silence on the j
(question, expects .to su port Cannon if
he has an opportunity
Vote for J. A.
Maguire, the democratic candidate, and
you will sure have a representative who
will not vote for Czar Cannon.
Don't forget that when you buy $1
worth of sugar you pet 11 cents worth
of sugar and the other DC cents tariff
tax goes into the pocket of the sugar
trust; that when you buy an all wool
suit G') per cent of the cost represents
the tariff tax; that you pet a $." Stet
son hat for $2 were it not for the !0
per sent tariff tax on it. Tariff tax on
everytherg you buy doubles the cost of
it. If you want the robbing' process to
j k-jep u p. vot e f or Ta ft ; if you
: (, , ;-.:.np;)i 1, vote for Bryan,
j " -
want it
! Tl-.n fn-- Hf:i
The Ccv;s IVill Go Cry.
i
n now the advocates of Taft and the
I trusts are going to
have all the cows
quit ivini mwk in case Bryan sha
be !
elected, says the Columbus Telegrtm. j
A trust manufacturer of cream separ- 1
ators in Indiana lias discharged his work-
men, closed his factory, and declares j
that it will not open again if Bryan shall i
win the election. They told Mr. Bryan
1 .... 4 z. 1. 1 . T , K ..... . . , 1 I, I
auuuiR wiieii lie w en l iu 1 nuiaim, dim iic
had all kinds of fun with the trust man
ufacturer. He said he had heard that
the republican party made the sun shine,
made the rain fall, made the corn grow
and the wheat to ripen, but this was the
first time he had heard that the repub
lican party had the power to make the
cows get fresh and give more milk un
der a republican than under a democratic
president.
It is indeed strange that a great po-
licical party will resort to such silly
argument, and stranger still that so
many men of ordinary sense will accept
sich arguments. There was a time
when the republican party stood tor
certain well-defined principles, and had
for leaders men who sought to have ap-
pi ed in affairs of government j rlnciples
which meant something for the welfare
of the people. But that d;iy is past.
Today the republican party draws all
its inspiration and all its money from
the great trust organizations, which in
return for the money they give demand
legislation to enable them to rob the
publlC'
As an advocate of the election of Mr.
Bryan, no effort shall be made by this
paper to prove that he has anything
to do with making the sun shine or the
rain descend. We shall ..ot claim for
" i
fifty bushels per acre on the poorest
farm in Nebraska, and far be it from !
us to claim that in Bryan lies the ability .
to make the cows get fresh every time
he issues a prosperity proclamation
We shall leave all that business to Al
mighty God and the cows. We advocate
the election of Mr. Bryan on other
grounds. We want him elected because
we believe he will carry to the high
office of president a love for and devo
tion to principles of government which
will work the welfare of the American
people.
Republican Defeat.
Colonel Mortimer, the editorial writer
and war correspondent for Collier's
Weekly, says he sees nothing but defeat
for the republican party on November
3. He says:
"The country has never been confront
ed with a more peculiar political situa
tion than that presented by this cam
paign. This year, instead of being in
democratic ranks, the split is entirely
republican. Take New York state, for
instance; there the republicans are torn
asunder, while the democrats are a unit.
Chanler's election to the governorship
cannot be preveuted. You must remem
ber that when the Empire state gave
Hughes, a republican, a big majority for
governor, this man Chanler, a dyed-m-the-wool
democrat, was elected lieuten
ant governor by a majority of 7,000.
With Chanler heading the democratic
ticket this year, especially in the face
of the legislation of the anti-kind that
has characterized the Hughes adminis
tration, the extent of Chanler's victory
can hardly be estimated. To take an
other state, look at Ohio. I believe the
landslide in favor of the democrats in
the Buckeye state will be fully 50,000.
The fight made by Roosevelt, Taft and
their men against Foraker in his home
C. P. HALE, President
I'R( )M
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Lawson Sheldon Monument Erected by Us in the Neliawka Cemetery.
We manufacture our wen k ti.'u a.i kmkI Mamljni granite, whicli we
chase direct from the
chinery anil automatic tools. Sec one of our salesman, or call at our plant
before niacins an order for memorial work. Voti will receive prompt and cour
teous treatment whether you place a large or small order with us or not.
WHY NOT TRADE AT HUME? 6LENW00D GRANITE WOflKS, GLEKWODP, IA.
j gtate has punctured republican peace.
amj tne effect js bound to be disastrous
j tQ the repu5licans. Foraker's prestige
! in 0hk) is undiminished, and it is ce- tain :
that hia following will vit f..i- ISrHnin j
j preference to Taft when th- choice has !
to be made But Indiana. Illinois and '.
jQwa an? on the vertre. arrl the indica-'
ti((ns Hre that they wij, t; p!e ove- into
riemcratic ranks ! reen can't
be;it t;teven?on jn Hiinois. ;v Steven- :
SOI,.s vjct0ry means thesta'e for Bryan. ;
. The republic-ans in Indian .re in a tur
moi, and runnirig hither and thither ;
- ... Govern-. r Hanlv has'
disrupted the ranks, nd nothing can
Ptem the tide toward democracy.
.Another issue in this campaign, the
importance of which is not being prop-
' i ctimaiPfl i Snraker Top Cannon
eriy estimated, is opertKer .ioe cannon,
, He is g(Ang to cost the republicans as
! many yotes as anything they have or
, haven,t done The people are tired of
his methods of disregarding every le-
gitimate demand, ana ne surrea up a
hornet's nest when he spoke of Mr.
Bryan's wealth. When the Nebraskan
came hack and agd the speaker for
an explanation of his (Cannon's) finan-
cial status, 'Uncle Joe' kept quiet, be-
cause it would have been impossible for
him to answer without doing himself
greater injury. Mr. Cannon has been
a national legislator for thifty-two
years at a salary of $5,000 a year. Had
he been as economical as a woodpecker
during all that time the most he could
have saved would have been $160,000.
Yet today his personal wealth runs up
to $6,000,000. 'Where did you get it,
Mr. Cannon?' is a querry that will
down the congressional czar for good.
In Nebraska, I hear from good author
ity, Joe Cannon owns 7,000 acres of
choice land. Think of what a keen and
shrewd man he must be to build up the
wealth he possesses on a salary of
$5,000.
Eastern republican papers have be
gun to speculate who will constitute
Bryan's cabinet. That is an admission
that his chances are good. They are
growing better daily and only one week
till election. The money is in evidence
now, but it is thought by well informed j
men that money cannot buy Taf t's elec-'
tion this time. j
W. C. Ramsey, as everybody knows,
is a young man who deserves success.
He was born in Plattsmouth, and never i
was a candidate for office, while his op
ponent has been a candidate so often
that the people are getting tired of see- !
ing his name on a ticket every time they ,
go to the polls to vote. Billy Ramsey'
J
is well qualified for the office of county ,
attorney, and the people know it, and
that is the reason they propose to elect
'
him on the 3rd day of November.
W.
Iraiifs
THi: MAXriWCTrRKK T
A I':-:ii.I.M-:.N'T MI-MORI-U. is
it m
sTS fAi a w3e
"'.li,Mw'jiei.jii''i'uViTii.'t 'M i j
ifTJII i p WW I I , - ,.. ( , 4
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quarries, in ttie nuih, m cirload
High tariff on lumber has denude!
our forests and now the farmers who
voted for this tax are compelled to pay
the fiddler in the high price of all kinds
of building- material. We never get
anything better than what we vote
for.
Thky fooled the labor vote in j re-
iou elections, now they are trying to
fool the farmers. Don't I e a sucker
and iet men whose only object is to eat
pie, fool you with a fake storv about
prices. They will go up and down, as
they always have.
' MANy republican3 wiH vote f(,r w. B.
Banninff for Senator because thev know ;
hjs worth jn aMility and his honesty ard ;
jntegrity as a citizen among citizens, j
. ? . . . . . , ...
-pvery farmer who has had dealings with
Mr Banninff knows that he wiU better!
represent the interests of the people of
Cags CQUnty - the State Senate than ,
hjs opponent, who ' has been weighed i
jn the balance and found wanting."
j
j Whex a republican begins to talk
( about the high price of corn to boost his
party, the democrat begins to talk about
; the low price of hogs to tear down the
argument. Mother Nature is responsi
ble for the high price of corn. She
didn't make the season favorable to the
growth of corn. Are we to understand
that when we sell our fat hogs at from
five to six cents, fattened on seventy
cent corn, send them to Omaha, where
they are killed and then sent back to us
in the shape of cured meats at from 18
to 25 cents per pound, we are sharing
the same prosperity as the meat com
bine? Have you thought about this,
Mr. Firmer?
You don't drive a nail that is not
tariff taxed. The window glass in your
windows, the teacups you drink from,
the water pitcher, the iron in your
stove, the griddle you bake your cakes
on, the knife and fork with which you
cut the beef you eat, the shroud in
which you bury your dead, the tomb
stone at the head of the grave, the
matches you burn, the needle with
which you stitch on a button and the
button itself are all tariff taxed. The
blanket if it be wool, pays a hundred
per cent. No human being escapes the
tariff tax. The tariff tax per capita in
this c untry has risen from $1.50 a
; hundred years ago to $12.50 tc- day.
Don't you think it is time to take a
I few dornicks from the top of the
tariff wall and give the consumers an
opportunity to see over?
Dr. Hess' Slock Food
. ..c , . , ...
scientific compound for horses and cattle,
f3SS' SfOCk FOOtl
. . .
guaranteed to give results.
F. G. Fircke Jfc Co., Druggists.
R. BRUCL", Secretary
1,1 FW
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I'M r.i:
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pur-ma-
lots, lining
lower
GETTING A START!
It is the first few hundred
the first few thousand in the
l ank, that is the real struggle.
The lives of the average men
well fixed in life, contain a
history of struggle and saving
to obtain his first few thou
sand. Make a strong resolu
tion that you will place some
portion of your income in the
Bank of Cass County. Every
dollar added makes it easier Jto
deposit the next one.
BANK OF CASS COUNTY,
PLATTSMOUTH, NEBRASKA
WHEN THE KETTLE SINGS
it's a sign of coal satisfaction. Want
to hear the music In your kitchen?
Easy order coal from this ortlce and
yard. The output of the Trenton
mine the fuel we handle has no su
oprior anywhere, its equal In few
places
J. V. EGENBERGER,
'PHdNF Plattsmouth No. 22.
PLATTSMOUTH, - - . NEBRASKA.
Best Time foSoo
the Southwest
Every first and third Tues
day of each month, low-priced
homeseeker's excursions are
run over the lines of the : : :
Missouri Pacific
Iron Mountain
into the rich and resourceful
farming regions of the Sout h
west. It is a splendid chance
for the Northern and Eas
tern farmer, r.fter his wheat
is gathered, to combine a
pleasure and propecting trip.
Write for rates and literature to
HUGH NORTON. Axent.
M. P. Ry., Plattsmouth. Nob.
Farm For Sale!
Three hundred and twenty (320 acres,
one and one-half miles from Murray.
Good improvements. $;15,00 per acre.
Inquire of John H. Spavgler,
Murray, Neb.
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