I. M. RICE .Editor and Proprietor. MARK ZAKK Foreman. Entered at the postoflice at Valentine , Cherry county , Nebr. . as Second Class Matter. TERMS : Cherry Co. Subscriptions : | | } -2 17 " - J * ( fcl.oO when.not paid in advance. JSL ° ? Pcrvoarin advance ; paper dis Foreign Subscriptions ( continued at expiration it not renewed ir' ( * ' " 'r inrl1 P5U'1' ' issue' h-v contract 12k- AU ei using KatesTranj.ipllt ( .llv ! L 0c per ijcll. , ocals 10ua , ine Foreign rates for stereotyped advertising , 3 months or longer 10 cent per inch , net. Local notices , obituaries , lodge resolutions and socials for revenue 5 cents per line each insertion. THURSDAY , MAliCII 19 , 190S. The Peoples caucus Monday night was called to order by G < * > . Hornby.r. . D. Armstrong was elected chairman , and \V. A. ljer , tycrew secretary. Kev. Connell. Josh Ilitt and John Yeast were appointed a committee on rc-.o- . lutions and declared against sa loons and opposed to our present town board and in favor of the initiative and referendum , Geo. Tracewell , Charley Anderson and Joe Yeast were nomiiiakd for village trustees and they each in turn indorsed the resolutions and their determination to carry thijm out if elected. Rev. Connell \\as called upon to tell about Gordon's experience , and he tried to shrm that Gordon business men \\crc better satisfied than when they had a saloon. He did show that Gordon busi ness men were more prosperous now than five years ago ; that there was more money deposited in banks now , which is also the r > ; e with every town in Xebraski and Kansas at the present time. But Valentine cannot be com pared with a town like Gordon. That Gordon didn't miss her one saloon in closing it in 190-3 , cither in the city treasury or the school treasury , is not much of a wonder. Gambling was run wide open then and Gordon was the worst hole along the line. It took radical measures to straighten out Gordon. Gordon had very little , if any , transient trade and the support of her one saloon took the vast surplus now accumulated in their banks , they would have us believe , and also the prosperity from every business nnn in town. Valentine is the county seat. The U. S. land oiUco' is located here. People come from every where and stop a day or a week in Valentine. The Rosebud Agency i on tin- north of us and much of its trade comes here. Valentine i.s the shipping point for numerous country stores sur rounding and for the vast cattle industry of the reservation and the surrounding territory. Our business men and Valentine people , consequently , do not sup port our saloons , but it is the transient trade that pays into our city and school treasuries § -iJ > 00 a year and none are the worst- for it that we know of the past year. Our saloons are not ! aw-breakinj > now , and during the past year have not caused the city or our county one dollar of expense. Valentine cannot be cnmpircd with a town like Gordon. There aie many differences.Ve have a water system to re-build and a dam to construct : a reservoir to build our water tank i.s decaying We need greater water pressure , and plans are laid for this work that can best be carried out by men of experience in calculation and who have already bi'jiun the - work. Our piesent , town board has been kicked in the pa-t , but they hav < ' settled down to work and are doing something regard less of the kickers who show b\ their kicking thai they are noi satisfied with \\oiking board. Prices are what we are talking Now i iI I Our stock is complete. I I i P BISHOP & YOUKC , L l ay Up. All subscription accounts due ! the VALINTIXE DEMOCRAT must be p iid up at once. Some people may be inconvenienced by the new luling of the po.stollice de partment but the small accounts that are due us should be paid and ( they are easier paid now than later. Your accounts will be placed with a collector if not paid promptly. Those who are not paid up will be cut oil' after next week. We are sorry to do this and hope you will pay up at once.Vhy riot at tend to this at once. You want the paper and we want to send it to.\ou but there are some who may forget , others who wait for -omething to happen and a few j m-iy probably never get but one more copy of the VALENTINE DEMOCRAT. \Ve dislike to separate from you but if we must , wo wish you well. For . \ ears we have travelled together , if our collector should be severe in collecting our ac counts for us , let it not reflect upon our past friend iip. ' We want only what is due us and i you defer payment it may caust some estrangement but we feel friendly now to all. We have tried to tell you the news at Val entine and in Cherry county. We might have published a better paper if everybody had paid promptly but we are not finding fault with you. You may hav < had troubles and misfortunes. If vou have we sympathize with you If the world has went well with you we want to rejoice with yoi. . if you will let us. But the im portant topic now is to get settlei up so that we can send the paper as in the past. A dollar a year in advance i easier to pay tlvin several dollars at the rate of $1.50. If you don't like to pay every year , send tw < or three dollars to pay in advance Some prefer to do this and it i- less trouble for you and us. The dollar rate is lower than.mo . > i papers charge , ma'ny of tlem charging § 2 00 per year arid most home papers charge more than one dollar a year. We have no choice in this mat ter but to comply with postal regulations. We would do mosi in.\ thing to suit your convenience if ue could but if you are as will ing as we , there will be no hesita tion. If youvhappen our wa.\ come in and see us. We're al ways glad to meet old friends It is nece-sary to pay up in ad vance for your paper now and we mu'-t insist upon payment or -et'tle in some way. Those \\ho have not responded to our state ments , sent out in January should now pay up and remember that we are not to blame for tlip new ruling of the postofliee depart ment. If . \ our piper is not settled for we must stop sending it to you. I. M. Rice Nature has instilled in man an ppefite for a stimulent. Sii ce die beginning of time imn l > as used some kind of a stimulating ! ie\crago. Today we use cofl'ie , 'ea , beer and ardent spirits. From 'very reasonable standpoint then- is no denying the fact that pun baer is tl e most desirable of all It is fie only beverage that has l'oo < value and contains such a small amount of alcohol as to make it helpful instead of dangerous to the human system. Thinking pen pie are beginning to advocate ra > re liberal laws governing the sale of beer as being the only solution o the temperance question. Good beer ( Storz l > lue Ribbon Beer ) is a better stimulating beverage thai ie-i or coil'ee. ls ! moderate us - will assist instead of hindering you > n building up a robust constitu tion. 10 1 Judge Walcott returned from Omaha APPEALS TO PEOPLE NEBRASKA DEMOCRATS ADOPT STRONG PLATFORM. PRINCIPLES OF THE PARTY Return to Government of , by , and for the People Is the Keynote of Dec laration All Democrats Will Indorse. The platform adopted by the Ne braska Democrats assembled in state convention at Omaha , March 5 , 1908 , is as follows : We , the representatives of the De mocracy of Nebraska , in delegate coi- vention assembled , reaffirm our faith in , and pledge our loyalty to , the principles of our party. \Ye rejoice at the increasing signs of an awakening in the United State ? . The various investigations have traced graft and political corruption to the representatives of predatory wealth and laid bare the nuscrupulous meth ods by which they have debauched elections and preyed upon a defense less public through the subservient of ficials whom they have raised to place and power. The conscience of the nation is now aroused and will , if honestly appealed to , free the government from the grip of those who have made it a business asset of the favor-seeking corpora tions ; it must become again "a gov ernment of the people , by the people and for the people ; " and be adminis tered in all its departments according to the Jeffersonian maxim , "equal rights to all and special privileges to none. " none.Ve \Ve heartily approve of the laws pro hibiting the pass and the rebate , and insist upon further legislation , stat"1 and national , making it unlawful for any corporation to contribute to cam paign funds and providing for publica tion , before the election , of all indi vidual contributions above a reason able minimum. Believing , with Jefferson , in "the support of the state governments in all their rights as the most compe tent administrations for our domestic concerns and the surest bulwark against anti-republican tendencies ; " and in "the preservation of the general government in its whole constitutional vigor , as the sheet anchor of our peace at home and safety abroad , " we are opposed to the centralization implied in trie suggestions , now frequently made , that the powers of the general government should be extended by judicial construction. We insist upon the recognition of the distinction between the natural man and the artificial person , called a corporation , and we favpr the enact ment of such laus as may be neces sary to compel foreign corporations to submit their legal disputes to the courts of the states in which they do 1 business , and thus place themselves upon the same footing as domestic cor porations. We favor the election of United States senators by direct vote of the people , and regard this reform as the gateway to all other national reforms A private monopoly is indefensible and intolerable. We , therefore , favor the vigorous enforcement of the crim inal law against trusts and trust mag nates , and demand the enactment of such additional legislation as may Ix- necessary to make it impossible for a private monopoly to exist in the United States. We welcome the belated promise oT tariff reform , now offered by a part of the Republican party , as a tardy recognition of the righteousness of the Democratic position on this question but the people can not safely entrust the execution of this important work to a party which is so obligated to the highly protected interests that it postpones relief until * after the elec tion. tion.We We favor an immediate revision of the tariff by the reduction of import duties. Articles entering into compe tition with articles controlled by trusts should be placed' upon the free list ; material reductions should be made in the tariff upon the necessaries of life , and reductions should be made in such other schedules as may be neces sary to restore the tariff to a revenue basis. We favor an income tax as part ol our revenue system , and we urge the submission ot a constitutional amend ment specifically authorizing congress to levy and collect a tax upon individ ual and corporate incomes , to the end that wealth may bear its proportion ate share of the burdens of the federal government. We favor a national in heritance tax to reach the "swollen fortunes" already in existence , but we believe that it is better to per manently prevent "swollen fortunes' by abolishing the privileges and favor itism upon which they are based. We assert the right of congress to exercise complete control over inter state commerce , and we assert the right of each state to exercise just as complete control over commerce with in its borders. We demand such an enlargement of the powers of national and state railway commissions as may be necessary to give full protection to persons and places from discrimina tion and extortion. We believe that both the nation and the various states , should , first , ascertain the * present value of the railroads , measured ! > ; the cost .of reproduction ; second , pro hibit the issue of any more wateret stock or fictitious capitalization ; third , prohibit the railroads from engaging in any business which brings them into competition with their shippers : and fourth , reduce transportation rutos unti-l t-frey rfeaob a point wlwrv they will vield only a ic aonnble re turn on the present value of the roads such reasonable return being de fined as a return sufficient to keep the stock of the roads at par when such roads are honestly capitalized. The injury done by issues of wa tered stock is more clearly seen and better understood since the shrinkagp in the market value of such stock has precipitated a widespread panic and brought enormous loss to the coun try. ' The present financial stringency furnishes additional progf that the Re publican leaders -are either unwilling or incompetent to protect the inter ests of the general public. We favor the postal savings bank and , in addition thereto , insist upon the passage of laws , state and nation al , for the better regulation of banks and for the protection of bank de posits. The government demands se curity when it deposits public money in a bank , and we believe that the se curity of the individual depositor who intrusts his earnings to a bank should be as perfect as the government's se curity. We oppose both the Aldrich bil and the Fowler bill , and believe that insofar as the needs of commerce re quire an emergency currency , such currency should be issued and con trolled by the federal government , and that it should be loaned upon adequate security and at a rate of interest which will compel its retirement when the emergency is passed. We demand , further , that favoritism in the deposit of treasury funds shal be abolished and that surplus rev enues shall be deposited atx competi tive rates upon sufficient security and fairly distributed throughout the coun try. try.We We favor the eight hour day. We believe in the conciliation of capital and labor and favor every le gitimate means for the adjustment of disputes between corporate employ ers and their employes , to the end that justice may be done to those who toil and society may be relieved fron : the embarrassment occasioned by pro longed strikes and lockouts. We favor such a modification of the law relating to injunctions as will first , prevent the issuing of the writ in industrial disputes except after no tice to defendants and full hearing ; second , permit trial before a judge other than the one who issued the writ , and , third , allow a jury to be summoned in all cases where the al leged contempt is committed outside the presence of the court. We favor an emploj'cr's liability law , applicable to both nrivate and public employers. We favor full protection , by both national and state governments with in their respective spheres , of all for eigners residing in the United States under treaty , but we are opposed to the admission of Asiatic emigrant who can not be amalgamated with our population , or whose presence among us would raise a race issue and in- volve us in diplomatic controversies with oriental powers , and we demand a stricter enforcement of the immi gration laws against any immigrant who advocates assassination as a means of reforming our government. We welcome Oklahoma to the sister hood of states and heartily congratu late her upon the auspicious beginning of a great career. We favor separate statehood for Arizona and New Mexico and demand for the people of Porto Rico the full enjoyment of the rights and privi leges of a territorial form of govern ment. We sympathize with the efforts put forth for the reclamation of the arid lands of , the west and urge the larg est possible use of irrigation in" the development of the country. We also favor the reclamation of swamp lands upon the same principle. We favor the preservation of the forests still remaining , and the re planting of the denuded districts in all our mountain ranges , as well as the forestation of the western plains. We believe that the Panama canal will prove of great value to our coun try and favor its speedy completion. We urge liberal appropriations for the improvement and development of the interior waterways , believing that such expenditures will return a large dividend in lessened cost of transpor tation. We , favor a generous psnsion policy , both as a matter of justice to the sur viving veterans and their dependents and because it relieves the country of the necessity of maintaining a large standing army. We condemn the experiment in im- perialljm as an inexcusable blunder which has involved us in an enor mous expense , brought us weakness instead of strength , and laid our na tion open to the charge of abandoning the fundamental doctrine of self-gov- prnment. We favor an immediate dec- laation of the nation's purpose to recognize the independence of the Philippine islands as soon as a stable government can be established , such independence to be guaranteed by ns as we guarantee the independence of Cuba , until the neutralization of the islands can be secured by treaty with other powers. In recognizing the in dependence of the Philippines our gov ernment should retain such land as may be necessary for coaling stations and naval bases. Desiring the prevention of war , wherever possible , we believe that our nation should announce its determina tion not to use our navy for the col lection of private debts , and itsT will ingness to enter into agreements with other nations , providing for the inves tigation by an impartial international tribunal , bbiorc any declaration of war or commencement of hostilities , i of every dispute which defies diplo- e aumann & Bachelor MEAT MARKET Fresh Salt and Cured Meats , Fish , Oysters , . Vegetables , Pickles , Lard. We buy poultry , 'biitter and eorffs and all kinds of live stock. Call or Phone 88. BAUMANN & BACHELOR , Valentine = Nebraska T Lump / i D U per ton 7 on Nut I i L U per ton At last a Wvoming coal has been f < , jud which in all respects , for domestic u.--e , equals Hock Springs district coal and excels it in some. Rock Springshas for years been unbeatable , hut hundred * cf'custom ers in the western part of the state now put HUDSON ahead of it on account of purity , cleanliness and lasting qualities. For cooking and heating stoves HUDSON cannot be excelled. r e ER i , Dealer in Hardware , Furniture and Coal. S I2 S S 2 SS : S2S ' ? s The only genuine and absolutely I reliable substitute for tea and coffee is * i the new food beverage gives life , health , vigor , joy , comfort and beauty , aiicl is highly recommended for nerve endurance , and building up the constitu- tion. It is a pleasant beverage and contain ? great nutritive and invigorating qualities. Has the refreshing - freshing properties of fine tea , the nourishment of the best cocoas , a tonic and recuperative force possessed - sessed by neither , and can be used in all cases v. where tea and coffee are prohibited. i. Eggo's Fruit Halt is a great health reviver. A laxative and thirst quencher. Effervescent and so delicious to drink that a child likes it. Has all the properties of a Sedlitz Powder and more , and is recommended in all cases of indigestion , consti pation and headache. Removes impurities from the blood and can be used freely without causing injury Manufactured by $ * L f'ff ' fl ! A\ Av > 'ft33F" * % V % X = - " - - a OMAHA , U. S. A. The above preparations may be had from all Grocery and Drug Stores. 2Z2 2iVS2f3 ore Liouor Center V \\iblic \ \ opinion is unerring , public confidence sel dom misplaced. The true worth of every business concern to the community in which it operates is fixed by its clientele , the value-giving1 power of ev ery commercial institution may be determined by the amount of patronage it receives. The people have unmistakably proclaimed their confidence in lock Exchange , and its methods , by bestowing upon it a far greater patronage than that accorded any other place in \ralentiue. Where the major portion of the fair , the impartial , discriminating public buys its Liquor and Beer , must be a good place for You , the in dividual , to trade. Visit The Stock you need anything in our line. . F. A. MELTENDORFF Paxson liornback has resigned ds position with the Great North- rn and is home. The South Dakota Band was much appreciated by a crowded house Tuesday night ,