M Mnttrni.K'vwwin.V NM\V8..inilHMAI. TOKIIjAY. AUOUST fi. 1010. Platform Reform. Lincoln .lourrml : Itofortn of the peilltleal iilntforin IR well nigh as great n need UH the political iilatfonn of re form. It IH the prime ( luiillllcatlon of a politician that ho be able to feel anil fall In with the. tenilenrleH of the tlincfl. Hut In the matter of pint forum the polltlrlnnn iinnnlmotiHly fall. The times tend to brevity. The throe decker novel haw Hhritnk to the 300 pager , thence to the novelette , thence to the Hhort story. A literary product for public consumption were letter ) unwritten than lengthy. Mag- nzlnes nre beginning to pay contribu tors In proportion to brevity , rather than length. Multmn in pnrvo IH tie- come a passion everywhere but In party platforms. There the contrary rules. You can't ilnd the pound of good meat In the Nebraska republican platform except by wading through the ton of verbiage in which It is packed. The democrats did almost as badly being better by only a "stickful. " Must It be so ? We can all remem ber cases where It was highly desir able , from a party standpoint , that the platforms be unread. Length served n specific If not holy purpose then. Hut now such Intent does not exist , T'latforms are meant to be read , but who has the time and fortitude to read them ? The Nebraska populist platform Is in one Important respect the best of all. It Is only a quarter column long. Bryan'c Bier. Chicago Evening Post : And thou , Nebraska ! The Pfieness Leader , -whom the conscienceless paragrapher al ready has made Ihe Beerless Leader , fell from his estate yesterday in the convention at Grand Island and there were only a pitiful 198 delegates to < lo him reverence. The silver speech that was wont to set conventions on n roar moved only to silence. Wliat's the matter with Nebraska ; or , If better , what's the matter with Bryan ? He has boon ceaseless In striving for ofilw ; and In striving to please. Must Lincoln needs ask Oyster Day If the strenuous life can be overdone ? Champ CIUIK and Henry T. Rainey will keep the ancient faith , but what avails It with the home state faith less ? And on such a little matter , a mere difference of town option and county option. He who stood to fight again after free silver , free trade and government ownership , to meet de feat on an Isbiio hardly worthy an exchange of shots on a skirmish line. On a license Issue the delegates took liberties with one whose demo cratic word has been law. County option ! Was there a delegate pres ent depraved and flippant enough to quote the old couplet : Ah , County Guy , the hour Is nigh , The sun has left the lea. Harmon and Gaynor and Marshall I. in the face of morning's news of cheer cannot one of you let fall a tear on Bryan's bier ? Will Bryan Heed Watterson ? Omaha Bee : That is n spectacular appeal Colonel Watterson makes to Mr. Bryan to sink his personality and let the democratic party follow lead ers who have records of victory In stead of defeats. It will be interest ing to sea what effect il has upon the deposed leader. From a democrat's standpoint It is a sane and reason able plea , for who more than Mr. Bryan has urged the force of majori ty rule ? In 1896 Mr. Bryan as the demo cratic party's nominee for the presi dency was bolted by a large number of democrats and to them he deliver ed this ultimatum : "The man who leaves the demo cratic party today must understand that If he conies back he must come back in sackcloth and ashes. Xot only that , but he must bring forth works : meet for repentance. " Mr. Bryan was a young man and n new leader to lay down such a severe . vere condition of surrender. Colonel Watterson was one of the old guard who bolted Mr. Bryan and laid him self under the painful necessity 11jf knocking his head on the floor to the Peerless Leader before he could re gain admittance to the party he had idr served before Mr. Bryan's day of ser vice. It matters no more now than it did then to republicans whether the ' erring brothers come back or not , but it will be interesting to see if Mr. Hryan heeds the Invitation of Colonel Watterson to take a back seat. ely Colonel Watterson puts it very mildly when he says that "Party lead ers , no less than military leaders , must at least once in awhile win a battle. " He doubtless In saying this makes a mental contrast between Bryan and Harmon , who Bryan is try ing to read out of the party because ' he was one of the Cleveland cabinet and was noticeably absent from the 16 to 1 army in 1896. With all the stinging rebuke his partisans and neighbors have admin istered to Mr. Bryan in Ohio and In Nebraska , It is no more severe than come excoriations he has given to older party leaders. For a man who has never made good on a single pai- amount Issue which he has saddled upon ills party lie has fared very well. i The Platform Conventions. Omaha Bee : The platform conven tions of the various political parties : held under the provisions of the Ne braska primary law have done their work according to plans and specifi cations foreshadowed by the various county conventions that selected the delegates. On the democratic side , the effort of Mr. Bryan to force a declaration in favor of county option failed Ignomln- iously. and for the- first time since : his leadership was established the democrats of his own home state have refused to follow him. What Mr. Bry an Is to do will be disclosed shortly In an ofiicinl statement from him , In ; wblch lie will decline to take the plat- I form cmlnflon nu conclusive on him , and outllma program Irrespective of partisan politics. The ilgnlflcant feature of the ie- publican gathering Is Its decisive vote of approval and confidence In Presi dent Taft and the work of congress along the line of his recommenda tions. Tills test vote of more than two to one developed In the very be ginning by the selection of a perma nent chairman , and was reinforced by the platform recitation of the benefi cent and wholesome government enJoyed - Joyed by the nation under republican rule , and is not in Uny way depreciated by the tall-end motion offered by Con gressman Norrls , after two-thirds of the delegates had left , approving his own conduct in combatting Cannonlsm in the house. The republican convention has also endorsed the demand for county op tion which had been registered In the form of instructions on nearly one-half of the delegates , and lias gone one stel further in recommending the submission of a constitutional amend ment for the initiative and referendum although this subject was not an Is sue generally In the local caucuses and conventions. The practical effect of the republlcr.n declaration on these two subjects Is to make the republican organization an auxiliary to the coun ty option league and the direct latlon league. These questions will have to be settled , however , by the oters in the respective legislative dis tricts. It is hard to take tne populist plat form-makers seriously knowing all the conditions that have left but a shad ow of that former party and that rem- mint dominated completely by Bryan. democrats In masquerade. The popu lists have announced that they will support no candidates not committed to county option. If the populists meant what they said they would this year join with the republicans , but they will not practice what they are preaching. The populist organization Is nothing but a fake maintained by the democrats to fool a few voters Into accepting the democratic ticket false' ' ly labeled. On the old Issues that Mr. Bryan has had to meet , Nebraska is as republican - publican as Iowa. Bryan , by sheer force , by compelling faith In himself as a Christian citizen and a patriot all the time , has kept it a "doubtful j state. " The first move of the new leaders Is one that substitutes expedi ency for principle. It lowers , there fore , the party standing and diminish es Its chance of winning. If the party wins upon the expedient it still has no issue and no ultimate hope of suc ceeding. If they do not believe they can do better for the party than Bryan has done , then their Intrusion is par ty disloyalty and they stand Impeach ed already. Nebraska Democrats. . , Sioux City Tribune : The much ad vertised Grand Island convention hav ing come and gone , we may now measure It with some degree of ac curacy as to what it was , what it did and what results are to be expected from it. From first to last It was a fight over the liquor question. It was on the one hand an attack and on the other hand a defense of the saloon system. Mr. Bryan's bold attitude taken many months ago against right of the brew ers to dictate the party politics , to use the party in defense of their busi ness , forced the convention Into the attitude of a jury before which the saloon system was on trial. The great jury of nearly a thousand men were to decide whether the demo cratic party in Nebraska should put itself in the attitude of defending the brewers or whether it should leave them open to the attack of whatever proportion of the people are wanting to vote them out of the towns and villages. Declaring vehemently with every breath that the liquor question was not a political Issue , the convention - tion itself , In every thing It did from start to finish , proved that there was no other issue there except the one question , the right of the farmers to vote the saloon business up or down. Every shrewd move made in the ar rangement of the unfair anti-Bryan program , every struggle against tlm unfair program , every speech and every motion pro or con was in effect either an attack or a defense of the brewers , "They can't put you In jail for that offense , " said the lawyer to the man behind the bars. "But I am in Jail , " answered the prisoner. And so it was at Grand Island. The liquor question was there overshadowing every other issue and every man of the several thousands gathered In and around the big tent knew it and felt "ie tremendous ous force of It It was not only the boldest and most powerful convention ever assembled In Nebraska , but was hard-faced and cruel In its treatment of Mr. Bryan. It had the right to vote him down , which it did. It had the right to choose its attitude either for or against county option. It was its buslnes to reject Mr. Bryan's advice and to turn from his leadership to that of Hitchcock or Baldwin or Shallenborgcr , if It wanted to. but it had not right to tolerate the bitter personal assault made by some of the speakers on Mr. Bryan. In punishing him it helped to make per ilmanent the bitterness that now splits the party and threatens Its defeat j , eBad feeling between the factions is more Irreconcilable and more perma nently fixed since the convention than before. Conventions ought to heal old wounds. But this Grand Island convention made opportunity for bit ter debate and hard words that will not bo soon forgotten. It seems as If Mr. Bryan's attack on the brewers should have been answer ed by the defense of the brewers If any defense or answer was necessary. But to answer- his attack on the brew ers , by attacking him personally and holding him up to the scorn and rldl tcule of the party and the public must cnct in his favor find make the party appear as If It wan under the contre > l of the brewery influence. There is ilenty of room for honest differences > f opinion and for fair and tolerant llscusslon on the county option queeIn Ion. But there Is nothing In Mr. BryIn III'H attitude nor In all his past history as a great party leader to Justify the tersemal assault upon him by the speakers who were cheered In their issaults at the Grand Island convenIK Ion. The new leadership of the party Is if men who have secretly chafed at Mr. Bryan's domination. Whether they believe they can do more for he party than he has done may well bo doubted. Nebraska Press Comment. South Sioux City Record : Bryan's Commoner Is issued only once a week and , therefore , cannot be expected te ) give publicity to all Mr. Bryan's parall mount Issues. Falrbury News : Since Mr. Bryan lias made his position plain on the liquor question there is no longer a crying demand from the democratic party that he should become a candiei date for senator. Humphrey Democrat : Harry Hayward - ward of Omaha , a liquor dealer , raised more money through the Bryan volunteers - unteers two years ago , than any other - er man in Nebraska , yet Mr. Bryan Bays the liquor dealers were against him. Springfield Monitor : While a great deal has been said In the papers In regard to farmers mortgaging their land to buy automobiles , investigation shows that in Nebraska , where many farmers ( have bought these machines , they had the cash to pay for them , and the instances are but rare , if any , where the mortgage plan was neces sary. Beatrice Sun : Hon. A. E. Cady of St. Paul , candidate for the republican. nomination for governor , has given i out a straight-forward statement of his position on several public ques-iv tlons. t ! He has never believed that a. i county option law was necessary to control the liquor traffic , but says ; that : , should the people through their representatives show that they want t . it , he would not veto a county option i law. ' This is a clear statement of a i fair ' position on this question. Pert liaps ' It Is not stifilclently biased and'/ one-sided to suit either side , but it's I1 good platform to stand on , even If f he ' loses. St. Paul Republican : Shanennerger and Bryan are a mile aaprt now. Be fore election they will be together. Who is going to give in ? Bryan has taken a positive stand. Shallenberger is the man who will come to Bryan's way of thinking. The reason Is that ' Shallenberger Is n policy man , pure and simple , playing for votes , and J he knows that the case Is hopeless j I without the support of Bryan. Bryan I is ' a policy man also , but in this case , he knows that he is stronger than Shnllenberger. So Bryan will have his way , and Shallenberger his nomi nation. Then the voters will lay them both in the shade. Lynch Journal- Some of the lending - , ing democrats are seeing the folly of playing politics these days. The last legislature amended the primary ' law so that it would be possible for a j | man to step In his booth at the pri mary and vote any ticket that he [ chooses , regardless of the ticket he j would vote at the election and the' ' party with which he affiliated in be-1 lief. This very law may be the means of nominating Jim Dahlman for gov- j ernor on the democratic ticket. There 1 was no reason to amend the law only to criticize the republican law and now they wish they had not made the break. Osceola Record : Democratic papers are lamenting the fact that the promi nence of the liquor issue in Nebraska ' will prevent their giving that attention j to the subject of national issues which , they would so much relish at this time. Sure thing. If Mr. Bryan were i not so deeply involved In the county | option fight at this time he would , have more time to lambast the demo-1 I I cratlc senators who betrayed their platform pledges In their votes on the I tariff bill. It is indeed too bad the democracy has a liquor fight on its hands. And , by the way , who put that fight onto them ? Let them con sult the deals made by Shallenberger two years ago and see who it was. Kearney Democrat : Eacli party has a colonel. The it-publican colonel is doing his level best to harmonize and ( J solidify his party factions. No one pretends to know Just what he Is going - ing to do , but they all fully under- stand ' that he will do nothing that will tend to injure his party. The demo cratic colonel is doing things. He is not caring much who It Injures just so he does something. He does not care If every republican candidate is elected Just so he Is doing things. Success to come twice in succession In this state is too much of n good thing. And every republican politi cian in the state claps his hands with Joyful glee. Hip , hip , hurrah , for our colonel. Hartington Herald : We are In re- celpt of various and divers communi cations from various and divers can elldates over the state setting forth their views on various and divers topics pertaining to the public weal. In no respect save one nre these com- munlcatlons alike and that is m the omission of the cash. In the Immort- al words of that great insurance mag- nnte , who has now gone to heaven or to Sing Sing we have forgotten Just which wo are not running an elee mosynary Institution exactly , and while we have no doubt these various and divers platforms have abundant mer it , wo do not see our way clear to publish them unless accompanied by the price. In our opinion , the candi date who depends for publicity upon the free advertising ho gets from the state press does not stand n very good . show of being elected. j O'Neill ' Frontier : A. E. Cndy of St. t ' : Paul has filed for the republican noin- i ' Inatlon for governor. Mr. Cady Is one of the ableft men In the state and has for ye-ars been re-cognized as a progresw slvtrepublican. ! . He is an eloquent orator and \\ll ! mnke ( "ho stump and make an active uiiiipalgn for the nomh InnIon. ) Mr. Cady has many friends In the party In this county who would be plowed to see him head the ticket th's ' fall us they are of the opinion that Ineentlel ensll } take the measure of Governor Flitilki.berger at the polls next November. I West Point Republican : A. E. Cady would make a strong candidate for governor. AH long as twenty years ago , he was regarded as a reform re publican and his work always squared with his word. As a legislator , he always 1 stood for the right and with him the question of good , clean gov- erment was ever the paramount Is sue. With lespect to the liquor ques tion , he believes that county option 'K ' not the correct solution , but would consider < It his duty to sign a bill of that kind , if passed by the legisla ture. He Is a strong , clean , able man and would honor the state In the ex ecutive1 chair. Offer Prayers for Rain. West Point , Neb. , Aug. 1. Special to * The News : Prayers were offered in ' ' the churches of Cuniing county Sun day for rain. The continued dry weather , with the Intense heat prevail ing is causing some uneasiness In the minds of the farmers , who fear danger to ( the corn crop. Ainsworth Wins Two. . Ainsworth , Neb. . Aug. 1. Special to The News : Two games of ball were . played , here Sunday afternoon : Ainsworth , 11 ; Newport , 3. Ainsworth. 11 ; Mabelo , 3. Dallas 3 , Herrick 2. Dallas , S. D. , Aug. 1. Special to . The News : A hot game of baseball was played here yesterday afternoon between Herrick and Dallas , Dallas i winning out by the narrow margin of . 3 to 2. Hoskins 62 , Norfolk 18. The Hoskins sluggers had the time of their lives Sunday afternoon v.hen j j they ! defeated a pick-up team from Norfolk by the enormous score cf C2 to 1S. The battery for Ilosklns wan ' Keimer and F. Zeiiner , Norfolk's bat- ; tery t was Mnrqunrelt and King and Winters. Dan Klug was replaced by Winters after he sustained a badly injured finger ns the result of a ball hitting him. Hogreve Hearing Next Tuesday. Wayne Democrat : A preliminary hearing in the case of State vs. Henry Hogreve | , the Altona blacksmith who is charged with murdering his wife , will J be held before County Judge Brit ton Tuesday afternoon at 2 o'clock. F. A. Berry will appear as attorney for the defense and County Attorney Davis prosecuting. Tllden Beats Newman Grove. Tilden , Neb. , Aug. 1. Tllden won a batting : Prevo out of the box in the" fourth inning. This was the rub game , Tilden taking the first game , 'score 11-12 , Newman Grove winning the second game , score 2-5. Score by innings : Tilden 20801103 * 15 Newman Grove. 1 0120000 1 5 Batteries : Newman Grove , Prevo , Nunely and McKay ; Tilden , Kingdon and Stewart. Struck out : By Prevo , 11 ; by Nunely , 3 ; by Kingdon , 5. riases \ balls : Prevo , 1 ; Nunely , 2. Home run : Ryan. Umpire , C. F. Smith. Heart Stories On Farm. Dustin , Neb. , July 29. Editor News : In the Bonesteel drawing n few years ago , a Rock county woman drew a farm near a new and thriving town. Her husband had died a few months before and left her four children and i' n ' mortgaged farm. She was in deli ! cate health. When the fifth baby came her health was entirely shattered. She got j an extension of time from the land ; office and in the meantime plan ned . to move onto the land and hold It as soon as she was able. All her ; relatives , there was a large and prosperous - porous family , called her Insane for > even thinking of going up into a wild ' ' and unsettled country , an invalid , with ' five children , to undertake the hard ' ships of pioneer living on the reser- vation. They advised her to sell her claim , pay the mortgage on her land ' move to town and educate her chil ' ' dren. She refused , though she was too weak to assist her oldest son , 12 ' ryears old , with the housework. "It will only be a few years until I'll have help in plenty , " she said. "Georgie is old enough now to plant a garden and enough corn to take core of a cow and some hogs and chickens. Jennie can manage to get the meals and wash ' the dishes. I am at least able to plan if I can't do much. I will never have this chance again for myself and mj children. All the government land will soon be taken , if I give this up it will mean to go to town and buy a washboard. Am I not as able to live on the claim as to wash ? " "Bu what if you move up there and don' live ? " they asked. "There will be a protection for my children , " she said "and what would become of them 11 we moved to town and I did not live ? ? ' In six months she was offered $1,000 for her right. She refused It saying : "If the right Is worth that much what will the deeded land be worth when it is improved and cultivated ? " Her relatives set up a howl for her to take [ the thousand dollars and go to some sanitarium and bo cured. "No , the doctors will get the money In six months , " she said , "and I and my children will be out the money tine' the land and perhaps the children a mother. " She was only able to walli Hijr about and take the crudest care of her baby and manage the children , but she. began to get a covered wagon rcadj to take her and the family to the Rosebud , Some of her relatives talk ed of restraining her on the ground that she had lost her ralnd ( through sickness and trouble. Her body was weak , but there was no sign of mental decay , e-xcept her obstinate persist ence to move emto her claim. One of her brothers , won over by her pluck and persistence , went up to the res ervation with her. and found she had drawn a great prize In the government lottery. The laud was level as a lloor , and would grow anything planted , as , the soil was of the best ( pirillty. It was within a mile of town. He put her up a tveioomed < house and a barn , fenced a patch of land and put in some corn , wheat and a garden for her. With the help of the children , she got along the first year ant ) made a good living. The second year , she was still In poor health , but hired a man to farm the place at so much per nieinth. She sent the children to school , cleared several hundred dollars lars and paid the mortgage off on her husband's estate. The next year , she was sent east to a hospital and for months her life was despaired of , but she held on. always saying. "It is eas ier for a sick woman to manage a farm than a washboard. " Today she Is In moderate health , owns a $10.000 farm on the Rosebud and has a family of children growing into useful citizens , a credit to their mother's Industry and heroism. Four years ago a German-Bohemian settler bought a roliiiqulshinent ne > ar Stuait , Holt county , for $25. He had n thousand dollars to Invest In land md Improvements and the land men old him the quarter section lay In the sandhills and was not wortli fifty cents an acre as deeded land. The soil was leceptlve and light and would no more urnlsh nutriment to corn than a trctch of land in the Sahara desert. The settler , undaunted , put up some ; oed buildings , fenced , and set out : en acres of trees which he hauled : rom the Niobrara. He turned over sixty acres of soil and planted corn. : iats. garden and several acres of p tatoes. It was a wet year and the nan made more than his living from the place the first year. The next vear every acre was under cultivation , he buildings all painted , and from the sandy soil , of the so-called desert , ? rew corn and cereals in an abund ance. The German was a practical farmer , not afraid of work , and knew what it meant to fertilize , and to let lir and sunshine into the soil. Today lie could buy out a big bunch of cheap land-venders , who would rather sit at their desks and talk "cheap land" than to take off their cuffs and plow the dollars out for themselves and their country. When a state , or a section of coun try , gets a bad reputation it gets a kick , like any proverbial sinner , from every chance observer. Speak of Kansas , and people in the east think of grasshoppers and drouth. Still Kan sas today no more represents a land of affliction and want than does Illi nois or Vermont. But flaming bad stories were told on poor Kansas In the days of her early youth. She had a famine once In her history , and she is still fighting the exaggerated stories of that early misfortune. In the same way Holt county got a bad 1 name in Its youth. It once had the 1 ill-luck to be burnt out by a se vere drouth , to be visited by a horde of grasshoppers , to be the scene of the Hill raid and the Scott hanging , and to furnish the state penitentiary at Lincoln some very prominent politi cians and officials , who paid for their offices in stripes behind iron bars. You can go into any prominent land office in Omaha and put the best pieca of Holt county land for sale , and your proposition will be handled gingerly , with some remark like the following : "Oh , Holt's the bad county ; now if the land was in Boyd nr Antelope , we might do something for you. That's where they hung Scott and that's the county where Moore , Bartley and Hag- erty lived. " Across the Niobrara river in Boyd , land wil ! easily sell on the general credit of the county for $35 to $45 per acre. Three miles south of the river in Holt , the soil of the same character , they will tell you land is only worth $5 , and $ G per acre. Go to investigating , and you will be told , that's near the place where they raided - ed the Hill brothers for cattle rustling and buried them in the sand. Up there somewhere , they mobbed de faulting Treasurer Scott. So procluc < tive old Holt , the biggest county , but one In the state , crossed and watered by streams Innumerable , flowing Into the Elkhorn and Nlcbrara , first in cat tie , milk , cream , butter and eggs ; sec- end In hay and corn ; Is made to bear the weight of ugly ins committed by a nandful of liorsethieves and defaulting politicians In the early days. Noth ing in a name ? , \ bad name can even aftect the sale eif peed land. An old man , u practical New land farmer , bought a farm eight miles south of the Boyd county line , where land was cheap. He was an invalid from chronic lumbago , but he had the science of farming well mas tered. He hired n foreman and ten men to farm and care for the stock , and sot them to work , as confident of success ns If the land had been farmed for twenty years. He paid no atten tlon to slurs about cheap land and light soil. From the first year , the farm yielded profits. It now produces ns much hay , potatoes , alfalfa , oats and corn as any piece of land in the county next to the reservation. Rosa Hudspeth. Mistake the Man. Denver Republican : Optimists In his party welcome the Bryan defeat as ending his dictation. They do not know Mr. Bryan. Too Modeit New York Herald : Chicago is pre paring to annex all the towns within 100 miles. Why this discrimination against the remainder of the state9 Proven Again , Washington Times Mr Bryan has at least demonstrated the infallibility Many Women who are Splendid Cooks drcnd having to prepare on elab orate dinner because they are not sufficiently strong to stand over an intensely hot coal range. This is especially true in summer. Every woman takes pride in the table she sets , but often it is done at tremendous deus cost to her own vitality through the weakening effect of cooking on a coal range in a hot kitchen. Cintloniry Melt ! Dttur * you get till * itovc * ee It is no longer necessary to wear that the name-plate yourself out preparing fine dinner. " t tail * "New I'cifeclloD. " Even in the heat of summer you can cook largo dinner without being worn out. Oil Cook-stove Gives no outside heat , no smell , no smoke. It will cook the biggest dinner without heating the kitchen or the cook. It is immediately lighted and immectt- ntely extinguished. It can be changed from a slow to n quick fire by turning a handle. There's no drudgery connected with it , no cool to entry , no wood to chop. You don't have to wait fifteen or twenty minutes till lla fire gets going. Apply a light and it's ready. By olmply turning the wick up or down you get n slow or nn intense heat on the bottom of the pot , pan , kettln or oven , and nowhere else. Il has a Cabinet Top with shelf for keeping plates and food hot , drop shelves for coffee , tenpot or saucepan , and even a rock for towels. It caves time , worry , health and temper. It does all a woman needs and more than she expects. Mad * with 1 , 2 , and 3 burners ; the 2 and 3-burner aix s can b bad with or without Cabinet. ETUI dealer ererjwhfre | If not at j < mm , writ * tor DttcrlpilTi ClrcnUr to the nrirtil ai ncy ot Uv * Standard Oil Company ( Incorporated ) See the Sights of " * * "Frontier Days The old-tune "Wild Wesl"is iv\i\cd Jil tin1 annual ' 'Frontier DJI.V"relrbrat . mn lie-Id at ( 'li < \vi'iiiic. Wyo. , August 24. 2. > , 2ii and 27. THO. It is a < | Ui < 'k and conit'eirtahlc trip if you travel em the- Union Pacific Dustlt'ss , perfect track electric block signals excel lent dining car meals and service. For rates e > r interesting folder , call on or address W. R. PARGETER , Commercial Agent , C. W. LANDERS , Norfolk , Neb. Agent. of the theory that you can lead a horse to water , but can't make him drink. To Redistrict Us. Omaha Bee : All the Nebraska plat forms this year promise legislative redistrlctlng based on the 1010 cen sus. There will be no dissent to this except from those sections of the state which have more representation in legislature now than belongs to them. Earned a Vacation. Sioux Falls Argus-Leader : Mr. Bry an has been the political leader of his party in Nebraska for twenty years. Well , he has earned a rest , and he Is welcome to it. Perdue a Practical Man. Nebraska Teacher : Superintendent Perdue is a man who enjoys the high est regard of the school men of the state. He has been city superinten dent , county superintendent , and in fact , lias had experience in all lines of public school teaching. He is a practical man , well qualified to do Im portant work in the state superinten dent's office. Gallant in Defeat. Aberdeen ( S. D. ) News : William Jennings Bryan has met defeat at the hands of the democrats of Nebraska , for the first time since he became n political factor in the state , away back in 1890. But the gallant manner in which he fought what he must have known from the start to be a losing battle wins him admiration for his courage , if not for his good judg ment. Bryan and Nebraska. Chicago Record-Herald : "The PassIng - Ing of Bryan" Is an old theme , so very old that It can hardly bo han dled with confidence now In spite of the new interest that has been given it by the Nebraska convention. Much depends , of course , upon the outcome of the campaign In the state. If the republicans win with- county option Bryan may claim that the democrats made a fatal error in scorning his ad vice and refusing to indorse county option. Upon the political vnluo of the local issue outsiders should bo slow to pronounce judgment. But Bryan seems to have loot much of his power as a party director in Nebraska , and there can be no doubt that this will please largo numbers of democrats In other parts of the country. For with all his personal popularity ane1 siiength ho has lost prestige through ale defeats , and there 1 Is an eager deslro to bo rid of his leadership Such being the condition the most will be made of the Nebras ka rebuke , which Is encouraging to ' the larger revolt But there may bo several chapters left of that o'.d &v.ory , "The Passing of Bryan. " And they may i be painfully exciting to divera democratic < politicians. Bryan's Predicament. Sioux C'ity Journal' The situation in Nebraska is peculiar in that the state- convention were held before the primaries at which candidates are to be nominated. Bryan's county option proposition was snowed under in the democratic convention , so far as the platform Is concerned , committing the democratic party against thai policy. But democratic candidates who favor county option remain in the primary running. There is a county option candidate for governor as well as for United States senator. More direct ly to the point , there will be legisla tive candidates In both parties who favor county option. Although the state convention is supposed to be the supreme ( court of party law , the pri mary gives Bryan a chance to appeal to the popular vote. Ho can still use his influence in favor of democratic primary candidates who favor county option , and this he Is going to do. In a way this will be bolting the plat form , but Bryan has a chance to argue that the rank and file also may bolt the platform by nominating candidates that take the Bryan view of the option Issue. The same situation with reference to county option exists In Che republi can party. The party supreme court has declared for county option , but there nre candidates already In the running who are on record as opposed to the party attitude on this issue. It is a good guess that the republican legislative candidates from the Omaha districts will be opposed to county op tion , platform to the contrary notwith standing. In this mixed and anomalous situa tion Bryan feels free to offer advice ns a moral reformer rather than a party man. He advises democrats to nominate county option democrats for the legislature. Ho advises republi cans to nominate county option repub licans for th'e legislature. In fact , he urges that nil parties shall have coun ty option candidates In each district. The opportunity for an out and out bolt on the part of Bryan will not come until Differ the nominations have ' been made'by the primaries. If a pro- option republican should be nominated against i an anti-option democrat Bry an i might advlso the election of the republican - v publican Instead of the democrat. \ That would bo the bolt direct. It is \ unlikely Bryan will make It , After the primary ho may turn ills attention to national Issues and lot the local is sue ' work out itself Or he may con- tlnuo his Indirect bolt by arguing for county option , with the platform and most of the democratic candidates committed against it.