unday Bee PART III. HALF-TONE SECTION PACES 1 TO 4. Largest Clreatatto THE OMAHA DEC Best IT. West VOL. XXXVIII NO. 17. OMAUA, SUNDAY MOKXINO, OCTOHKI! 11. 1!0S. S1XC1LK COPY FIVE CENTS. TAFT'S TOUR OF NEBRASKA A SUCCESSION OF TRIUMPHS Some Incidents of the Two Days' of Active Campaigning in Nebraska by the Republican Candidate for President' and a View of the Impression He Created Among the Citiezns he Omaha WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT, republican nominee for presU dent of the United State, haa traversed Nebraska from north to south and from east to west, and has been sent on his way rejoicing. ' He was proclaimed throughout the state as "Our Next President," and the splendid welcome given him In every town and city through which he traveled was In keeping with the recep tion due the chief executive of a great nation. Mr. Tart came to Nebraska not as a stranger to the people, though few here knew him personally. They knew him as the Judge on the bench, whose decisions are among the most able and learned of any ever written; they knew him as the man who, probably more than any other man, established a stable government In the Philippines; they knew him as ths man who, when the little Cuban republlo was crumbling, went to the front' and upon whose broad shoulders was placed the responsibility of establishing order and re storing peace; they knew him as rJne man who straightened out af fairs oa the Panama canal and left the people there at work; they knew him as the man who. In times of direst needs, went to Japan and established cordial relations with a nation with which war seemed assured; they knew him officially as secretary of wsr, but In reality "secretary of peace; they knew him as the chief adviser and right-hand-man of President Theodore Roosevelt. ' Xebraskans expected to see in the republican candidate for presi-. at a statesman; they expected to hear from him words of a states man. They were not disappointed. In addition they found In Mr. I alt a most genial person, pleasant and interesting in conversation; :. nan with a natural dignity, broad-minded, whose heart beats in unison with the hearts of the people; a man who realises the grave i ponslbilltles which rest upon the shoulders of. the chief executive, i f the nation; a man who believes there Is no "royal road to virtue." Who said: "Reforms can only be accomplished by hard-working, constant at - titicn; progress, little by little, step by step, because we are dealing " 1th tho fallibilities, of human nature and we cannot overcome them by h single decreo, for there is no royal road to virtue, and It Is only i ttalned by constant application, self-control and self-restraint." Tho presidential candidate was Just as well pleased with Ne braska as Nebraska was with him. The special train furnished Mr. Taft by the republican national mmrrlttee was made up of Mr. Taft's private car, three Pullman oraches, a diner and a baggage car. This train made its first stop in Nebraska at Emerson, coming from Sioux City, where Mr. Taft f i J k ULJ W M JO" r ft X yX 7 ; 1' 'sfVvic xnx JUDGE TAFT SHAKING HANDS IN NEBRASKA. FpoUe the night of September 29. ' Through eastern newspapers Mr. Tatt had boon assured that Nebraska was for Its home candidate and tl.at bis reception in this state would be not only tinctured with Mryutiisra, but actually frosty. The little town of Emerson set Ne braska right with Mr. Taft at the start. From the train it seemed the entire population had come down to the station to pay respect to t he republican candidate. It was an expectant crowd, too, that gath ered around the rear end of the Taft car. Here Mr. Taft gave the advice which be hoped to impress upon every one in the state: "When yoa go to VoU, use your good, hard, common, everyday sense." The warmta or tbo reception given Mr. Taft at this little station In an instant wiped out the thoughts of what eastern papers had been saying abont Nebraska and put him in the best of humor. Then came the Journey through the finest agricultural country tn the world, mad oa such a day as Nebraskans are used to, but which outsiders so seldom encounter. The air was Just crisp enough to be bracing, and the sun was Just bright enough and Just warm enough to contribute to Ideal conditions. Whether the farming country through which the presidential candidate traveled had been pat in shape for the occasion or whether the farms were simply dressed la their everyday Nebraska olothes only the frequent visitor and the resident know, but not a weed oould be seen from the train, even the railroad right-of-way had been cat and burned; not a fence was down, not a barn out of repair; every horse and every head of cattle, and Mr. Taft could see thousands from his car window, looked freshly curried and groomed. "Beautiful." "splendid." "magnificent," "prosperous," were some of the expressions of the presidential candidate as his train swept 7 I :.XXU v ft V V K . wsr .. A . - r a - i P7 p. X- 'x'x? 1 .., ir-'.s, ' - LA-LJ--r '-: i JUDGE TAFT AND GOVERNOR SHELDON ON THE STEPS OF THE GOVERNOR'S MANSION AT LINCOLN. Over the prairies. When tho presidential candidate was Informed that only a very few years ago the country through which he was traveling could, have been bought for almost a song, iu some instances for less than f 5 an acre, his surprise was expressed in superlatives. It was through such a country Mr. Taft traveled for two days In Ne braska. And every mile he traveled warmed the heart of the candi date to this magnificent state and at every town lie stopped tho hearts of the people warmed to the candidate. Members of the Taft party, including a number of eastern news paper men, were equally as profuse In their praise of the Nebraska farmer. These men had come out of the east, some for the first time, where panics create hard times, and their surprise at the pros perous condition of the Nebraska farmer was no Iobb genuine, though expressed In "yellow Journal" language. The fact that hundreds of farmers came to town in their automobiles' to see the republican candidate farmers from the "Great American Desert" was so un usual that eaoh called the attention of the other to the sight. These men had heard of the prosperity of Nebraska farmers, but not one of them realised to what extent this state had been blessed during the last twelve years of republican administration of governmental affairs. The Journey of Mr. Taft through Nebraska, proved to the candidate what the people of Nebraska already knew that the farmers are for the republican ticket. Here Is Just one of many Illustrations that shows this. Mr. Taft was speaking at Falls City. He had rounded out a para graph by asking the people if they desired to return to conditions as they were at the close of the last democratic administration: "Do you want to return to those conditions, when " "Ten-cent corn, 2 H -cent hogs, 3-cent cattle " interrupted some one in the crowd, and It was taken up by a Score or more. In many Instances when Mr. Taft had started a sentence referring to those conditions he did not get to finish It. There were always soma In the crowd who had passed through those trying days and who had felt the clutches of the money lender; whose corn had been taken away for 10 cents and their other products In proportion. They could tell Mr. Taft more about those hard times than he knew, and the In formation was volunteered when the speaker got on that thread of talk. The volume of "Nos" which answered the Taft query was sufficiently emphatlo to show where the Nebraska farmer places his dependence and has his confidence. While Mr. Taft spoke to many democrats in the numerous thou sands of people who were lined up at the varloua stations there was many of these the pupils were lined up on the prairie and each waved an American flag as the train sped on Its way. Every school house noted by the presidential candidate flew the stars and tttrlpes, which he loves so well. This was true in the country. In the towns where stops were made school teachers had dismissed their pupils and In a body they had marched to the station, where they had been provldod with a position of advantage so that ail might have the opportunity of seeing and hearing the man about whom even the youngest of them had heard as being one of the nation's important personages. The presence of so many little folks Impressed the presidential candidate and he frequently had a pleasant word or two to say especially to them. Upon their shoulders there shortly will fall the burdens of government and the action of the school boards and teachers in bringing them In personal contact with affairs of govern ment had the approval, often expressed, of the candidate. Some of the older members of the Taft party, and those who had passed their manhood away from the eountry town, were, reminded of days gone by and the passing of time by the Taft and Sherman caps worn by hundreds of little Nebraskaps. It had been years since many on the train had seen the old and always popular campaign cap, with its band across the front showing the party affiliation of the little wearer. The Taft special passed a number of threshing outfits at work In the fields and In every Instance the threshing engine tooted a glad hand to the next president and the crew in return received shouts and waves from the train. Where the little folks bad their good time when the Taft train struck a town was In grabbing for Taft and Sherman buttons, which were handed out by the hundreds. In some of the crowds there undoubtedly were future politicians of a very prevalent type. - A little fellow was asked whether he was for Bryan or TafC "I'm for Bryan," he answered. "These buttons are for Taft boys," answered the Joker. ', "Mister, no I ain't for Bryan. I Just Bald that. I'm for Taft" He got the buttons, all right. ' In the baggage car was kept the literature which was distributed along the route. At every station bundles of reading matter were dumped out and In every Instance the men and women were eager to get a portion of it, and not one bit of it became waste paper to blow around the stations. A feature of the crowds which greeted Mr. Taft was the close attention paid to his speeches. The candidate's throat was in a very one stop made, where, apparently, the crowd was unanimously re publican. This was Burchard. The town was not on the schedule as a stopping place, but an urgent telegram from some one there asking that Mr. Taft at least appear on the platform and let the peo ple see him, brought forth a stop and a short speech. There were several hundred people lined up at the station and every man, woman and child in the crowd wore a blue ribbon, printed upon which were tho words, "Taft and Sherman." "You will carry that town unanimously," .remarked a newspaper man to Mr. Taft as the train pulled out. "It certainly looks like it is a republican community," answered the well pleased candidate. In one town Mr. Taft, after discussing the democratic promises, said: v "Are you going to turn over your affairs to an agency on promises?" "No, no," chorused the crowd. "Not since we have heard you." "You wouldn't do It anyhow," replied the candidate. "Whether I come here or not, you wouldn't do It." "You are right," yelled back an enthusiast. Until the' visit of Mr. Taft there had been very little talk about politics out in the country. This apparent apathy was taken by the republicans to mean that the farmers were satisfied with their S6 cattle and their 80-cent corn and wheat, and therefore were not both ering about politics. The democrats said it meant a landslide. Varied were the opinions expressed in advance about the reception which Mr. Taft would receive. Some held that inasmuch as Ne bruskaus were familiar with one presidential candidate and were used to having him drop in on them any time to tell them of the calamities ahead if republican principles were carried out, Mr. Taft would create very little interest and would be received by small crowds everywhere. Under these conditions no man on the Taft train was prepared for the Intense intercut shown by the people along the route of the special train through the state. It Is no exaggeration to say that no president or candidate for a high office ever received a more cordial welcome. And it Is also within the truth to say that no man ever made a better impression on Nebraska people by a single appearance than did Mr. Taft. " Many features of the Interest shown could be elaborated upon tn a story of that trip through Nebraska. The tralp passed scores of school buildings which were in view of the Taft car. ' In front of .A ! i ' GOVERNOR SHELDON READT TO INTRODUCE JUDOB TAFT. , bad condition and it meant physical pain to him to talk. He was hoarse and he oould not be heard except by those who were able to get close to the front ranks of the crowd. Notwithstanding that, those in the rear kept perfectly quiet In the hope that they could hear. As the train pulled Into a station a mighty cheer arose, then each person in the crowd began to motion his neighbor to keep quiet. As the speaker progressed he was encouraged by nods of approval from the people. As the train left he was given another parting cheer. His most frequent interruptions were of this order: "You are right;" "That's right," "We are for you," "We don't want any change.'' At Nebraska City, previous to the arrival of the Taft train,, the crowds had been requested to keep quiet so that no time of the &paaKer would be taken up. Everyone wanted him to use evry minute of the time the train remained. Notwithstanding this pre caution. It is a wager that Nebrasa City was as hoarse as Taft after the train left. Except for his night meetings at Lincoln and Omaha, Mr. Taft left hU car only in a very few Instances. At Beatrice the people of the city bad eitrted a gaily decorated platform opposite the station vnd from thlt. Mr. Taft addressed several thousand people. , At Wymore the plutlorm had been erected fully a block from the sta tion. The retldents roped off a road to the stand and between the roper Mr. Taft and his party walked to the platform, cheered' by thousandx. The only other place the train was abandoned was at Nebraska City. Here Mr. Taft reached a platform which had been built at the end of the station Just as Grant Martin, deputy attorney goneraL ceased to speak. Or, to be more correct, Mr. Martin ceased (Continued on Page Two.) Ai 4Vjr -vsVv lV;fe; C.Y? 1 a ; AT THE DEPOT At NEBRASKA CITT. " ? ' ! ,i " ' " 1 1 .': n " :;W $$:P .,er-A t :vXf- S - fi VI; ,A -rr Jr. - J- 'y - r r -fV , - FALLS CITT WAS OUT IN FOR CIS. WAHOO OAVD HIM A CROWD,