1 . . . . t . . . . - r x VV. B. Eastman , Democratic airl iS. Independent canditate for land commissioner , is the only candidate , , from the western part of the state. ! He is i a good man , vote for him. F i Bill Sheppard returned yester- day from Cody , the town where hunters most do congregate. He t says a party brought in a lynx t hide from the river south of town while he was there , that showed that the animal was as large as the j average QOt ! . M - An item is now going the round of the press to the effect , " t lia to gentleman has assured us that he has searched the congressional rec- ord and failed to find where Sena- tor Burkett voted with the "Sys- f . . tern" and against the people. " 'JII Had the old gentleman missplaced his glasses , or was he holding the Records upside down ? "Hark from the tombs a doleful sound" comes echoing o'er a murky sea , St. Bartley's ghost has now been found , is , there more solemn proff than he ? Let humble Edgar blandly smile , stuffed with the thought that he is "It" Be hold ! his witness without guile , who's word is strong as holy writ. Chorus. There is no depths we will not search , there is no code we may not break , to pull Mr. ' Hitchcock from his perch , and work our spurious moral fake. With'the Omaha Bee and State Journal are staring exconvict Bartley as campaign director against the Hon. G. M. Hitchcock. With Tom Dennison chief of the Omaha "red light domain and gambler king of the middle west cleaving unto Aldrich as his "Rock 1 . of Ages , " while the Hon. Grant G. Martin ' republican candidate for Attorney General is demand- ing that his party removo Aldrich from the ticket and put a decent man in his place. The stage set- ' ting is fast assuming the form of a fl spectaular , , extravaganza and the } old party of God and morality had best beware the ider of November. [ "THE NEBRASKA ISSUE " Wahoo , Neb. , Oct. 17.-To the Editor of the World-Herald : That such defamatory articles as \ a o pear in a sheet called the N e- \ r ska Issue , are allowed , to go through the United States ) mail is a mystery to me. The editor of the Appeal to Reason is likely to land in the penitentiary , but I have never seen one line in his paper as abusive or of such misrepresenta- tions of facts as that which ap pears . in the Nebraska Issue. Every line has upon it the stamp of Tom Dennison and is illuminat- ed by red light. You perhaps do not like to pub lish ] the above , hut it is over my signature and I am willing to stand by it. C. J. CARLSOX , In World-Herald. One will not have to seek far for the reason that they are allow- , ed to go through the mails unmo- lestecj ] , the Burket brigade makes it convenient also imperative , that unto the federal force , are good soldiers , march to orders and keep step to the music. - Notice. The Village Poard will give . timber -suitable ] for wood or posts to anyone who -will cut and remove the same from the land belonging to the Village , which will be over- flowed : ) ) y the reservoir for the new Village water works. : It will not he necessary to remove the ' small limbs too small for timber " or fuel , but only that part which . can be made of use. Parties de- siring to cut and take the timber should learn from the village cn- . iginecr where to cut in order to -cut above the water line. V , * For further particulars confer ; I with - 'W. S. BABKRB , Glim. . . . / . . ' - < As usually treated , a sprained anklo will disable a } man for three or four weeks ' , but , - by applying Chamberlain's . pniment freely as soon as the injury is receive and observing tho directions with eat h bottle , _ a'cure can be effected in frouT-fyro ' to four days. For sale by Chapfiiai ? ! ? , "the" ( arug'gjst ; : . ' . - ' - . . To the voters of Cherry County : Miss ' Cora ThackreT , candidate for county superintendent by petitior was in Valentine last Thursday , and went from here up wesi through the county. Mi s Thack- rey is a graduate of the K. S. A. , College , of Maiihatten . . , Kansaw , and was givcii the degree of Bacheloi of Science. She has been a teach- er in city and country schools for I more than a dozen : years and ] thoroughly knows all branches of school work. We say this in jus tice to her capabilities , and if she is elected county superintendent she will not prove a disappoint ment to the school population and the profession. She is an estim able lady of go' ) d character and high morals , who will keep the schools of Cherry county to the front rank acd inspire lofty am- bitions in the young Americas. She IIHS an amiable disposition and a host of friends everywhere V she is known. ohe is at home equally with the best educators or with those who make no profession of clhic ? , and treats all with the same general courtesy becoming a lady. To vote for her you must make a cross opposite her name. A V OTI'R. TO THE VOTERS OF CHERRY COUNTY 1 This letter is to make it known to you that I am a candidate by petition for the office of County Superintendent of Cherry county. Neb. , and I wish to solicit your support. I am now principal of the Cody SchoolS and as my con- tract and work keeps : me in Cody , a greater part of the time 1 find it difficult to visit all parts of the county. I have been a resident of Cherry county for the past twenty four years a graduate of the Valentine High School and of Bellevue college , where I received my Ph. B. degree. I believe that the future of our institutions depends upon the education of the rising generation , and that too much stress can not be placed better and , more - upon per- fected educational systems. I realize the conditions of our coun- ty. Its size will necessitate many long and hard drives for the Superintendent , but in order that the school system of our coanty may be hamonized into a perfect running machine as it should be , it is the duty of the County Super- intendent ! to visit every school in his county , at least once during the year , and it shall be my desire and intention if elected to thor- oughly perform this duty. In voting for me the cross must : : be placed on the ballot opposite my name , otherwise it would be of no value to me. Any support that you may give me will be greatly ! appreciated. With very best wishes I am Yours truly , FRED A. JONES. Make This Test , How to Tell if Yaur Hair is Diseased Even if you have a luxuriant head of hair you may want to know whether it is in a healthy condition or not. 98 per cent of the people i need a hair tonic. II Pull a hair out of your head ; it I the bulb at the end of the root is . white and shrunken , it proves that the hair is diseased , and requires prompt treatment if its loss would be avoided. If the bulb is pink and full the hair is healthy. We want every one whose hair requires treatment to try Eexall " E 93" Hair Tonic. We promise that it shall not cost anything if it does not give satisfactory results. It [ is designed to overcome dandruff , relieve scaly irritation , to stimulate the hair roots , tighten the hair al ready in the head , grow hair and cure baldness. It is because of what Rexall " 93" Hair Tonic has done and our sincere faith in its goodness that we want you to try it at our risk. Two sizes , 50c. and 100. SoU only at our store-The Rexall Store/ G. A. Chapman the druggist. For bowel complaints in children ali ways give Chamberlain's Colic , Cholera . and Diarrhoea Remedy and castor oil. It [ is certain to effect a cure and when reduced with water and , sweetened is pleasant to take. .physician can pre scribe a better remedy. For sale by Chapman , the druggist. . . < F . ' - . 1 f J , B. A. Tracy of the Angelo & Fleming ranch was in town Tues- j day. He had just j been down to I Woodlake where he purchased 1500 sheep and 15 bucks. The } ' are newcomers from Oklahoma and have a fine ranch near Pur- dum. The Omaha Concert Co. , under- took te heat Capt. Shaw , manager of the opera house } , Tuesday night , and also Frank Fischer , jr. , out of a share of the proceeds for the dance , and , after a little fisticen - counter in which Frank Fischer gave the big burly bluffer of the company a right to the jaw which made him look lop sided , and the trio being placed under arrest , _ they decided to dig up and also paid the costs. Harry D. Miller of Rosebud and Miss Nellie R. Brown of Jersey Shore , Pa. , were united in marriage at the home of Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Hornby in Valentine this morning , Oct. 27 , 1910 , the Rev. W. W. Wells officiating , af- tor which a wedding breakfast was served by Mrs Hornby. John Anderson and wife stood up with the bride and groom during the ceremony and will take them to llosebud in Mr. Andeivon's auto. Mrs. Anderson just returned from a visit to Jersey Shore and was accompanied home by Miss Brown. It the social customs and habits of the people of a village or city must be prescribed by a vote of the count , would not a much better average be reached , and would it not be safer for the individual , to have the state pre scribe its social customs and habits , or. still better the nation ? If such be true why did the Almighty plant the Jove of liberty so deep in the human breast ? Was Jefferson the monu mental dreamer of the ages when he held : : that a just government must rest upon ( the consent of the gov- verned ? Is our belief that we ha"e been fairly successful thus far in the - experiment of self government a mere figment of the imagination , and is it an empty boast we make when we as sert that we are developing the high est average of moral and intellectual beings of any nation , and : doing this under institutions : : that allow the larg- - est freedom to the individual under general laws that are in harmony with universally accepted rules of conduct ? . When a town goes dry under local . option the minority may grieve over the result but. the restraint put upon them is regarded as self imposed , be- cause each voter constitutes an equal part of the social unit of government , and all good citizens readily acquiesce iu and accept the result cheerfully ana obey the law. Not so , however ; when the restraint is put upon the major ity against their consent. Modern pharisees and puritans are as obtrusive and noisy as their an cient brethren , but fortunately for mankind they constitute a small ml- < ! ority of the people. , Under the present law , when a ma jority of the citizens of a city or vil lage decide that they no longer want saloons the saloon immediately dis appears , but if the saloon . is driven out of a city or village before the ma jority of the inhabitants of such arc ! ready for it the law will be held in contempt by the majority and the mi . nority will he powerless to elect offi cials to enforce it. The licensed , reg ulated saloon is infinitely better than the large number of secret dramshops I that exist through the connivance of the people generally at the violation I of a law , which many consider inva sive of their natural rights. I Prohibitionists argue that it is a criminal act to drink liquor , and that it is absurd to contend that it can be rightfully drank at all , and that its manufacture and sale is indefensible In morals. They contend that the cor- rectness of the position they take : Is acknowledged by the people of all na tions in subjecting the sale of liquors to regulation by law , that the fact that it is everywhere subject to regulation brands it as an outlaw , and that laws for its regulation is a compromise with crime. They further insist that the absolute prohibition of its manu facture .and sale is necessary to sat isfy the moral law. The relation between the sexes Is 8. subject of regulation by law every. where , but in spite of the earnest efi- . forts of the best men of all ages , the relation of the sexes continues to be the most vexing question of the age , being the prolific cause c : murder suicide and a train of crimes and ca lamities , which mankind has thus far been unable to prevent. The applica tion of the logic of the Prohibitionists to this perplexing problem would : ne cessitate that each sex live on a sep arate continent by itself and that communication between the continents be destroyed. The human race is forced to reject prohibition logic cr perish from the earth , -because the time is ' not'yet in . . . . . sight when statutes ' governing itie * re- lation of the sexes may be abolished. . . . . , - . , - y , - - - . - - - - - - - _ < . . _ _ " " _ 1 J ! > . . . . . . . . . . . . ' . . . . . . . . ' s sw.n . " _ . , < . . - . . . . . . . , . . . . , . . . . . , _ 4t , . , 0 r- . . Y . . . " . . . . . . ,1. . " - " ! { NYi.er ) sNr"Mps " F ' . ' - , ' . r / ' , ' > ' Old Crow , ' . , All Leading Hermitage . , ; : r rands , r . and - 4 * ' , llL ' Bottled- - > . . ' , .w - - - - G-uchen- Under the heimer ' ' : . : : Z Supervision : . _ Rye ; ; of the- _ _ ' Whiskeys. ' a G z ir. S. Gov. 1 We also handle the Budweiser : Beer. - THE PALACE SALOON , HENRY STETTER , Propr. I . - CHAIRMAN BYRNES' ' REPLY DEMOCRATIC STATE CHAIRMAN REPLIES TO CHAIRMAN OF G. O. DEFINES COUNTY OP- T1ON AND TAKES ISSUE ON QUESTION. I COlUMbus , Neb. , Oct. 13.-Chairmau ! ; Byrnes of the Democratic 'state eorji- I mittee today issued the followiuj ; j statement in reply to the statement is : sued by Chairman Husenetter of tho I Republican state central committee on the county option question : "Chairman Husenetter of the Repub lican state committee , in an interview I with the Omaha Dee correspondent a . I Lincoln delivers himself on county op'l tion follows as : . . . " 'County option does net put ia a saloon or take out a salcoa. On pre I senting a petition to the coanty board I with the legal number of signaurej I all the voters of any county nsay say 1 whether they want a saloon or wheth er they don't want a saloon. : "He winds up his interview by say ing , "Let all the people rule. ' "Chairman Husenetter is riglit ! : : when he says that county option does not put in a saloon , but he is wrong when he intimates that it is not the solo purpose of county option to put out saloons. . "County option is a cunningly de vised scheme or" the prohibition : lead ers : : to take irom the cil. s ana towns : of the state the option they now exer cise over the saloon question and place such cities and towns under ; - . prohibitory law in every county that . may be able tp muster a majority 0 : the combined voters of the cities , vil lages and country precincts of such county against the granting of li censes. It is a one sided affair. 1 ; works one way ; the other way : ; it doesn't work at all. When a majority in a county votes in favor of granting licenses under the proposed law l sunli vote has no other meaning than : that prohibition failed to carry in the coim ty. It does not put in a saloon aJ . , where , nor give anyone in the county authority to put in a saloon. It simi ; , y means nothing more nor nothing less than that the prohibition trick failed in the county and that the present lav/ remains undisturbed , leaving Lie citk-s and towns of the county the option . they now have to either grant or re fuse licenses. "I designate county option as a 'pro hibition trick' ' because the term 'op I tion , ' which means choice , is used when there is no choice. The term is used for the purpose of stealthily con- veying the idea to the voters that they have a choice such as is now exercised by the cities and towns of the stat-j when such is not the fact. Their . votes can count only one way , namely , on the side of prohibition , because to vote 'yes' on the license question makes no change In the law as it now exists while to vote 'no' means prohi- bition for the county. Hence , county options means prohibition whenever it means anything. : It is a prohibitr-v measure and nothing else , and it has the support of the Prohibition party , which has taken its ticket out of the field because the Republican platform embodies one idea. "Chairman Husenetter further on says : 'The taxpayers outside the towns are required to pay court e : < : - penses and assist in the maintenance of jails and penitentiaries , thereby forcing them in a position of being I taxed without representation. ' This is I | where Chairman Husenetter shows I himself to be . unfamiliar with the pro. visions of the Slocumb law as well . , as illogical. : ' . "The costs for the prosecution of crime generally resulting from any cause whatever except for violation of the Slocumb law are chargeable against the taxpayers of 'the county , but there is : a provision of the Slo I cumb law that the costs of all prosecu- tions resulting : from the sale of liquors are chargeable against the saloon- keepers and their -bondsmen. If the county attorneys do their duty the ' tax- payers of the several counties in , Ne braska will never have to pay a cent for the prosecution of crime traceable : : to the sale of liquor but the same will be collected from the saloonkeepers ! Implicated or their bondsmen.- I "J. C. BYRNES. " . . . . . . - - ' . , . ' - - - . - . " , ' . - . . - . I - > ( ' - ' ; ' - Tiro : ; c'oom ttat b caht : ta rorrat- : ! t1' r. , Republican state headquarters at Lincoln cannot be charged : up against the weather. Senator Burkett will be a wiser but a ! : sadder man when he reads the re turns of the votes cast for United States senator next month. The resolutions adopted by the Ger man alliance at Lincoln on the 5th inst. is said to reflect the sentiments of 60,000 German voters in Nebraska. : Congressman Hitchcock is the au thor of the , Ballinger investigation. ' He introduced the resolution in con gress under which the investigation was conducted. If Senator Burkett is not afnid ! that his record in congress will condemn him , why decs ho duck : and dodge , nnJ refuse to meet his rival for the sen- ate in joint .debate before the voters of the state ? Gilbert M. : Hitchcack courts ths wU- est publicity for his record as a con- gressman frcrn Nebraska-but Senator Burkett cannot be dragged into stand- ing before an audience and having his rero.rd read in his presence. Let us see , haven't we read somewhere that "They love the darkness rather than the li : ; ht because their deeds are evil ? " _ Was it really Henry T. Oxnard of the sugar trust that was Mr. Eurkett's ponstant companion in Washington during the time the su : ; ar schedule of the Payne-Aldrich tariff bill was un dcr consideration , or was it simply seme one t'lat closely resembled Mr. Oxnard ? The consumers of sugar in Nebraska would like ; : to know the facts in view of Mr. Burkett's vote on the sugar schedule. The trusts and heads of big busi nesses that mulct the people annually out cf more than a billion of dollars through privileges ; obtained through legislation can well affo-d to appro- priate , fifty millions of ' their ill gotten . gains annually to keep the people at cross-purposes _ over the liquor ques tion , so that they themselves may es cape public attention and continue their robbery. In Maine , under prohibition , the di- viding line between man and boy is when the young man will be admitted into the various dives where liquor is sold contrary to law. Upon entering the secret dram shop the young man : is surprised to find there one cr more of the principal business or profes- sional men of the city , and is aston ished to find among them some of the staunchest upholders of the prohibi tory law. Prohibition territory is the . prolific breeding ground of hypocrisy and contempt of law. Senator Burkett refused to meet AtI I torney Whedon of Lincoln , who was I his competitor for the nomination for senator in the Republican primaries , ; and now refuses to meet Gilbert M. Hitchcock , his Democratic rival for the senate. His record , however , is being overhauled by the press of the It I t state and it now looks as though his > . cunning would'not avail him to de- ceive the voters into giving him an- ' other term in the senate. : , Chairman Husenetter of the Repub ' lican state committee put out a state- ment last week giving his interpreta- j tion of county option. His statement I was followed by a statement fron I Chairman Byrncs of the Democratic I state committee analyzing the pro- posed change'in our liquor laws. Chair man Byrnes' statement is one of the most lucid and vigorous expositions of the true meaning of county option that we have seen. Chairman Kuse- Huse-I netter should be careful not to draw fire from . so keen and logical an amlyst of party platforms as Chairman Brynes J seems to be. i f It is no wonder that the Nebraska ; : I State Journal l was seized with a case I of the mully grubs when 2 , OCO repre- sentatives of the German societies of I Nebraska , marching through the I streets of Lincoln , cheered at the men- tion of the name of Dahlman. The ef- forts of the Journal to hoodwink its readers into believing that a law that only works on one side , and that the I side of prohibition , is not a prohibi- tor. . measure , does not go with intelli I gent'people - of any nationality , espe cially ! with the Germans , who are sec- ' 3nd to .none in the matter of calm and , dispassionate ! _ reasoning. ' ? ; : _ . . 1 .t _ _ _ . ® t- - -S e I REXALL COLD m I TABLETS I GIVEN AWAY ! W I I During the first ten days of November we m will give free charge | / a : 25c box of Rexall i Cold Tablets to each , * purchaser of a 25c bot 8 tIe of Rexall Cherry I Bark Cough Syrup. This offer will posi- tively be withdrawn .1 . November 10th. I . ( W AJ -raB , . g VALENTINE. NC . I . . . . . . . _ _ o1.----'i ® a..ara i t A Safe , Simple System I The system of paying by check was devised I by all menfor any man - for you. It is suited to the need of any business , either I large or small. It makes , no difference whether we pay out 310 or $10000 a month. A checking account will serve your needs. Pay by check , the ' method puts system in- to your business and gives you a record of , every transaction. VALENTINE STATE BANK . VALENTINE. NEBR. Protection to American industry , the original meaning of which was a pol icy to enable : the people of a nation to do their : own work and develop their own resources has been pervert ed into a gigantic system of plunder. Ing the masses to enrich the few. An drew Carnegie the greatest individual beneficiary of corrupt tariff legisla . tion , retired from business a dozen . years ago with an annual income of S20.r.o ? .orJ. ; Before the days of tar iff robbery in America a fortune . equaling Carnegie's annual income . lad never : been acquired in any bust. . ' . : . ' ness enterprise ! ! ' ; in any nation even ; . , . where a succession of generations fol j , lowed in a single line or busnes ! ! [ ; . In. . : heriting the fortunes of their prede : -.0-- ' cessors. f. Senator Burkett refuses to meet Gil bert M. Hitchcock upon the rostrum j and defend his record in congress Le- Foie the people His answer to the , ( criticisms ot Whedon and Hitchco"ck is , "fasifiers. " It is fortunate for the voters : that the daily doings of con- Cress is printed verbatim in the Con gressional Record thus becoming pub lic propertj. But Burkett is shifty and I slippery and believes he can dodge j answering to the people for his sup 1 port of the Aldrich tariff schedules I more successfully by calling honest men liars than in meeting them in . public debatp , with the Congressional < < Record . : . &a . arbiter . . . . - \ of . - . disputed . . . . . . fact * . I / J r