THE FALLS CITY TRIBUNE Consolidations—Falls City Tribune, Humboldt Enterprise, Rulo Record, Crocker's Educational Journal and Dawson Outlook. Entered as second-class matter at Falls City. Nebraska, post office, Janu ary 12, l'*04, under the Act of Congress on March 3,1879. Published every Friday at Falls City Nebraska, by The Tribune Publishing Company W, H. WYLER, Editor and Manager. One year. —.-.fl.nO Six ir Hltha . • Three moot ha ■ ™ TELEPHONE 226. REPUBLICAN TICKET. For United States Senator, KLMEK .1 BURKETT. For Congressman, First District, WILLIAM HAYWARD. For Governor, CHESTER II ALDRICH. For Lieutenant Governor, M. R. HOPEWELL. For Secretary of State, ADDISON WAIT. For Auditor Public Accounts, SILAS R. BARTON. For State Treasurer, WALTER A. GEORGE. For Supt Public Instruction, JAMES W. CRABTREE. For Attorney General. GRANT G. MARTIN. For. Com. Public Lands and Buildingsi EDWARD B. COWLES. For State Railway Commissioner, HENRY T. CLARKE, .lit. For State Senator, First District, W. T. JOHNSON. For Representatives, First District. DON 0R1DLEY, CASS JONES, M. J. SCIIAIHLE. For County Attorney. ROSCOE ANDERSON For Supervisor, Third District N. C. CAMPBELL. * ♦ * A man lias not done his whole duty when he lias east hla ballot. It is equally important that he vote right • * * Every had man in Nebraska will vote to elect Dahlman, that is why every good man should vote to defeat, him. * * * Vote early. Don’t put it off until late and then, miss altogether be-! Cause it happens to rain or you are too busy. * * * To vote right, challenges the besti that is in a man. It calls for familiarity with men and issues, and Intelligent discrimination. * * • What is worth doing, Is worth do ing right. When you vote see to it that you vote to uphold your man hood and your claim to horse-sense! and sound judgment. » • * Vote, Vote for your home and the things tlint, make for the peace and prosperity of join home. Vote for your community and its progress. And vote for tiio greater Nebraska. • * • There is no such tiling as throwing your vote away. Whether your vote is for the winning or losing side, it counts as your personal protest against the wrong, or ns your voice in favor of the right. • * • “I declare and defy any man lo dis prove the assertion, that county op tion is undemocratic. Is there any county option democrat in this crowd? I just wisli you would stand up. 1 would like a photograph of you to hang up in my office. I want to see just how narrow you are bet wee the eyes. Oh. you county optionists, you will think you have been up against a buzz-saw when you get thru with Jimmie Dahlman. I promise you that I will come out of my city, the great metropolitan city of Omaha, with 15,000 majority. And if you people do as you should we will cel ebrate that night, and we won’t go home until after midnight either. We will all go on a tear and celebrate. What do you think of that?”—James Dahlman. • • • Flooded With Literature. Richardson County in the last few weeks has been flooded with litera ture intended to make votes for Dahl man One thing is a surprise to us, and that Is the brewers and distill lug interests have singled out espec ially tile German votes. Are the German people so easily influenced to cast their vote for a man like Dahlmati, who Is a lawless mortal, who boasts of his tin restrain ted law lessness? The German has been better thought of by his friends than to be very largely stampeded to this : erowd. The above named powers in poli tics. who have sworn vcngance to | Governor Shallenbergor because he | signed the Daylight law, are now up I in arms and want to disgrace the fair name of the state of Nebraska Wo trust that our county will speak | , in no uncertain tone whether they be I German or otherwise when the time to vote comes. ♦ * * What it Does Not Do. County Option does not close n i saloon; it gives the people a chance to do so. County option is not an arbitrary measure; il presents to the people two systems for controlling the liquor traffic and lets them choose the one • hey prefer. County option is not prohibition. It slnipty submits to the people of the county the question of county prohib ition. If a majority of the people in the county are in favor of no saloons they ought to have a chance to say so. If a majority of the people In the county are in favor of saloons the same law will give them a ehanoe to say so. County option does not interfere with personal liberty. On the other hand the man who is against county option is a foe to personal liberty on the tax question. The people of a county pay the tax that pays the salary of the county officials, whoso chi( f business is to look after the mischief caused by saloons. The man who is opposed to county op tion Is opposed to letting the tax payers have a voice on the one ques tion that most concerns their taxes.— Nebraska Issue. W. J. BRYAN’S STAND. Mr. Bryan's stand at the last dem ocratic convention could not be other than he did take in the matter of county option. Mr. Bryan’s slogan "lot (lie people rule,” (hat had been Ills watchword through a number of years would have been meaningless. County option is nothing more or less than this. Every farmer is to have a vote whether a county shall have saloons or no!. If the people are for the wets, so will it be, but how ever if the sentiment is for the dry, so will it be. Let the people rule, j especially the farmers. Certainly l the farmers ought to be for it, as it increases bis powers to have or not | to have saloons. We think it is the i most fair proposition that could lie offered. It is indeed the much treas ured principal of all true democracy df the majority rule. * * * Standing of the Candidates. The following candidates have agreed to support the Miller-Curtis bill, which is designed to prevent in ter-state commerce laws from nulli ifying state laws on the liquor ques tion : For United States senator—Elmer J. Burkett. For Congressman, First District— William Hayward. For Governor—Chester A. Aldrich. For lieutenant governor—M. p. Hopewell. For state senator—W. T. Johnson For Suite Representatives— Cass Jones, Don Gridley, M. J. Sehaible. * • » JOHNSON vs. MOREHEAD. Kvery voter in Richardson county owes it to Pawnee county to vote for \V. T. Johnson, candidate for suite senator from this district. This is not so much a question of what these men stand for as of courtesy and fair-play. Richardson county can not afford to lie little and njean in this matter. It. is Pawnee county's turn and we should be as fair with them as they were two years ago when it was our turn. \V. T. John son is everything that any voter can desire of a congressional candidate. There is absolutely no call for a can didate from Richardson county. Let every fair-minded voter see to it that we play fair with Pawnee in this matter. J.W. CRABTREE. The candidacy of I'rof. J. \V. Crab tree for the office of State Superin tendent of Public Instructions is one that commends itself In the highest degree to the rank and file of both school men and school patrons inter ested in tile progress of the schools of our state. Among the teachers of the state there is perhaps no other man so well known, During the seven year tiiat Mr. Crabtree was Inspector of the schools for the University of Nebraska, he had the opportunity of coming into the closest touch, not only with the faculty of the state university and all the many high schools in the state, but also with tin* faculties of all the other colleges and normal schools. Tills splendid opportunity for discov ering th' conditions and needs of all the various public educational insti tutions of the state, Mr. Crabtree made wise use of, it seeming ever to he his purpose not only to know per sonally the men and women who wer carrying on the work of the schools, but to seek ways to help them to in crease their efficiency and to make their schools stronger. There are many teachers and superintendents in all parts of the state who feel that much of their success lias been due to Itis kindly interest and wise coun sel at critical times in their careers. Mr. Crabtree is a man of strong personality, a personality that in -; spires the best efforts of those who j work tinder his direction. He has, a broad way of looking at things, a keen perception and sympathetic understanding of the difficulties tin th r which teachers and superintend ents are working. Mr. Crabtree is to a large extent find in the very best sense of the .void self-made,-his parents having! I been pioneer Cass county farmers,and his common school education having , been obtained by alternately working , on his father’s farm and attending , country school until he entered the state normal of which Institution he is i graduate. While carrying on his work at the state normal, he spent some time ^ touching country schools to help puy , ihc expenses of his education. At other times he chopped wood and did i chores for the professors, and during summer worked as a farm hand. This is the way of getting an education that develops the best quality of man-! hood, develops men, ready and cap able for service to the world. The excellence of Mr. Crabtree’s; work as country teacher attracted the attention of the school hoard of Ashland, who offered him a position in the Ashland high school. After, one year in that position he was ad- j vaneed to the superintendency where his work was so successful that, that period is looked back upon in Ash land as an epoch In its school his tory. From Ashland he went to the state university as instructor in matlie-1 mattes, then Into the principalship of the Beatrice high school, from which position, however, he was soon re called by the university and made in structor of the high schools. After! an experience of seven years in that j position he was elected to the presi-j dency of the State Normal school at j Peru, a position which he held for six years and would still hold had he not been too big and broad a man to let petty, narrow partizanship dictate to him in his management of the insti tution under his charge. Mr. Crabtree, While a republican in; politics, believes and has testified to' that belief by the sacrifice of a posi- j tion, that the educational institu tions of our state, both great and ' small should be run not in the inter est of narrow partizanship, at the dic tates of ward politicians, but in the interests solely of the educational well-fare of the youth of this great state. COMMON SENSE POLITICS. “The misapplication of sound principle is n. temporary evil, but the application of an unsound prin cipal is a permanent wrong.” Please read the foregoing quota tion a second time and get its full meaning and then we will tell you wh said it. Have you read it again? All right, it was said by the great progressive, Senator Cummings of Iowa, last week ] in an appeal for a republican congress When you come to apply the philos j ophy of the above statement to the , j t ongresslonal situation it should | 1 appeal to every republican in the! j nation. Mr. Maguire publishes a platform which contains, among other tilings, a statement that he voted against' I the tariff bill. This is done to lure j republicans who think tlie tariff bill wrong in application to support him. The reason why republicans oppose tlie present tariff is that it is, in some measure a misapplication of tlie principal of a protective^ tariff, while tlie reason Maguire voted against the bill is that he js opposed to the protective theory. Abraham Lincoln made the first re publican tariff speech when he said. I I know but little of the philosophy of the tariff; 1 do know however that if i buy a suit of clothes in England, that England will have the moneysand America will have the clothes, while if I buy the clothes in America we will have the clothes and the money too.” This plain, common sense view of tlie protective theory has been en acted into law liy tlie republican party and the result has been that this na tion lias been builded into an empire, stronger, weealthier and mightier that any other nation in the world. We have had experiences with the other theory. Maguire’s theory, and tlie result was poverty, commercial stagnation, distress and national dis aster. In those days corn sold in Falls City for 13 cents a bushel, fat cattle at $3.50, hogs from $3.00 to $4.00. wheat at 4o cents, and such prices continued until William McKinley wa elected and the republican idea of a protective tariff was again enacted into law. Congressman Maguire vot-! ed against the tariff bill because be is unalterably opposed to the protec tive idea. He believes in the demo cratic tariff for revenue, which has been repeatedly demonstrated as un sound. Republicans should remember that while Maguire voted against the tariff because it was protective in its nature lie will, if elected, vote for any tariff which is not protective. Such a tariff lias always meant disaster to the farmers of tlx* middle west and always will. Will Hayward is in favor of the protective idea and will support a measure that properly applies it. Maguire is opposed to the protect ive idea and will vote against any measure that applies it properly or otherwise. The personal welfare of every voter in Richardson county is concerned in the congressional elec tion, and every voter who wants corn and wheat and hogs and cattle kept at their present level should vote for Hayward. DON’T FORGET. Governor Shallenberger in bis re cent address referred to the tremen dious power our state laws intrust to the governor. It excels that of the crowned kings of England or Ger many. The provision our law makes in regard to the power of pardon, is if things be normal, a wise and neces sary provision; however if the gover nor should happen to be an abnormal man, as for instance Governor Patter son of Tennessee, who pardoned the cold blooded murderer of Senator Carmack, one can see to what it may lead. Can be seen that the lan guage of Shallenberger is a timely warning to the people of Nebraska. The history of Mayor Dahlman has been just along this line. He will draw his greatest support from the criminal class. "Don’t Forget,” Dahl man will not forget his fjjends. We just call our readers attention to a letter of Dahlman to his "friend” Ma brav, the outlaw of this state. * * • P. S. Heacock is improving gradu ally. He is able to be about the house and if the weather continues good he will soon be about again. Mr. and Mrs. Silas P. Gist were down from Salem last Saturday the j guests of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Green-, wald. Mrs. Mary Kaiser of Omaha is visiting her sister, Mrs. Peter Kais- ^ er, this week having arrived Satur day. I For making quickly and per= fectly, delicious hot biscuits, hot breads, cake and pastry there is no substitute for Baking powder MADE FROM GRAPES Fifty Years the Standard Fall Announcement of iTdTillaiTs Pharmacy The Star “ ■p ^QBBQBSS3HBSES33S99B&BS!l We take pleasure in inviting you to our store to trade. ■ We carry the largest line of Fresh Drugs in the county. No accommodation is too great for us. * We want your patronage and are willing to do our part. • We are young in years but as old as anv of them in experience. Will save you money on every thing, and our aim is to give every one something better than the average. Look for Our Mammoth Holiday Display. \ ours for 1 )rugs, McMILLAN’S PHARMACY “The Rexall Store” Opp. Post Office Falls City, Nebraska WILLIAM HAYWARD William Hayward, born, reared and educated in the First Congressional district of Nebraska, aspirees to rep resent “home folks" in congress. Every year of his naturla life has been spent in battling for republican principles along progressive lines. He is not a politician nor an office seeker, he is only a fine, ambitious Nebraska young man who wants all things to be right, and desires an op portunity to help make and keep them right. He has held but one elective of fice, that of county judge, to which he was elected in a democratic count by over 1,000 majority. In the recent primary election he carried his county by a vote of 1,204 to 102. Thy seeem to think pretty well of him at home, don't they? Mr. Hayward stands today as one of the most promising young men in the middle west, of clean personal life, admirable habits and unusual mental gifts, the people of this dis trict are to be congratulated upon having a candidate so splendidly equipped. On Friday and Saturday evening, Nov. 11 and 12, there will be a tre mendous display of curios and other material from China which have been gathered by the Drs. Tucker during their eight years residence in that country, and on their 1,000 miles jour ney on horse back There are six large boxes of these goods which will be arranged for exhibition and a nom inal sum of ten cents admission will be charged all aduts, and on Satur day afternoon all school children will be admitted from two until five o’clock at five cents each. This will be an educational feature seldom pos sible to the people of any community in our country to attend. A. -J. Pence of the Pence-Little Co was married in Madison, Nebraska on October 28 and on Sunday arrived in this city with Itis wife. They will make Falls City their home. Mrs. Bettie Schoenht it and Mrs. •Jim Moss returned last Friday form a three weeks \ isit with relatives in Kansas. Charles Leitzke sold his proper)/ on North Morton street and moved on rimrsday into the Win. Droringtot) house on West 15th St. George Pointner and wife were home of her father. Thomas Brinegar Milton Zoeller was up from Pres ton Saturday. Fall Footwear FOR EVERYONE H. M. Jenne Shoe Store