The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, December 31, 1908, Image 7

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ALLIANCE, NEBRASKA
1908
This novv institution, under the direction of the Sisters of St. Fiancis, is
located at Alliance, a very healthy and pleasant resort of the west. Parents
and guardians will find it a homelike institution, where every faculty is offered
-to educate effectively the heart and mind of young girls, to impart true refine
ment together with practical knowledge, which will enable them to fill their
future positions in life creditably.
The course ot study adopted by the institution is systematic and thorough,
embracing Primary, Intermediate, Preparatory and Academic Departments.
The Academic Department embraces , Christian Doctrine, Church History
Arithmetic, Algebra, Advanced English Grammar, Bookkeeping, Geometry.
Latin, Rhetoric, Civics, General History, Botany.
ART COURSE,
A special course of Instrumental Music and Painting may be pursued.
In this, as well as in all the other departments, the leading principle of the
institution is thoroughness, hence pupils are trained and led to correct knowl
edge and appreciation of these branches.
As no young lady is ntteJ for the practical duties of life without a thorough
acquaintance with the use of the needle. This branch, in all its details, from
the plainest to the most ornamental aud fancy needlework, receives particular
attention. '
TERMS PER SESSION.
Board, Tuition, Bed, Washing, Plain Sewing and Fancy Work. . . ..,...S8o oo
Children under twelve years -.., 75 00
ELECTIVE STUDIES.
Music Piano r er session of five months S15 00
Organ .' 15 00
Violin, Guitar, Mandolin 14 00
Painting In Oil, per month 3 00
In Water Colors ...., ..... 3 00
Each pupihnust provide her own Guitar, Violin or Mandolin. Use of piano
or Organ, per session. $2.50.
REGULATION OF WARDROBE. sf ,
3 complete changes of underclothes
6 pairs of hose ,
12 pocket handkerchiefs
4 towels 1 ' '
a black aprons
2 pairs of shoes
1 pair of rubbers
7 blanket (single bed;
1 white bed spread
1 sulall rug for alcove
I
School was opened September 14th and is now in full session. There are
accomodations for eighty boarders and the Sisters request all those who are in.
terested in education and who wish to place their children in an institution,
where they will receive solid education, to place their children in the Academy
as soon as possible. Any one wishing to have further information should write
v to or call on the Mother Superior, who will be pleased to answer all inquiries.
Accomodations will be provided for boys.
SISTERS OF ST. FRANCIS
The Machine You Will
Eventually Buy
Do you know that for Correspondence, Statement
Work for Billing- and for all other classes of work
the UNDERWOOD is the best machine? Do
you'know that the UNDERWOOD, because of
its visible writing- and various other superior fea
tures, will save you at last 20 per cent of your
time? Do you realize that time is money? Do
you know that the UNDERWOOD holds the
'speed record of the World?
The UNDERWOOD is best because of its visibil
ity, durability and absolute reliability under all
conditions.
Underwood Typewriter Co,
161 7 Farnam St.
ACADEMY!
1 toilet-set, consisting of brushes, v
combs, soap, soapdish and toothmug.
1 needlework box furnished, m
Stationery and stamps. '
6 napkins.
1 tablespoon.
1 teaspoon.
1 silver knife and fork.
1 napkin ring.
Black Uniforms, College cap.
s
Omaha, Neb.
Gold Bricks In
Chicago's Air.
Ins a Farmer a Near Cujcr of a Zeppelin
Boat Foreign Yokel Purchases a Park
Lion An Old Fashioned Love
Story Spunky Teacher.
Piom Our ClilciiKo Correspondent.
'g!lT HY tin conildcnco
rvm man d the ru-
ml Reuben hnve
itl been III conjunc-
null iiiuii; &iv-
qiiently lu Chica
go lutui In any
other city Is a cu
rious fuel that
ought to be taken
up by sonic club
or society that Is
hungry for a top
ic. Ooid brick
data is uuccrtaln,
but research
would probably
show that the
Ili3t trick In that
Hue was pulled
olt somewhere In
this vicinity.
With all of hla
propensity for
butting in on tho
three shell game or nny other chance
layout, you would uevcr expect tho
"farmer' to bite at an airship bait.
Yet that has come to pass. The farm
er blew in from Iowa. When nnybody
conies to Chicago he "blows In.'' IIo
uever arrives. The farmer in question
was here to soo the llvo stock show.
Somewhere near the Masonic temple,
which is the Flattron of tho town, the
Iowa farmer met n stranger lu the
usual way. The strnuger had a new
fangled airship that would make Zep
pelin or the Wright brothers get out
of the air. It was all done, ready to
ascend but for- one thing namely,
$1,000. The man who produced first
and on the spot would get the first rake
off on dividend duy. The Iowa mau
was so fearful thnt he would be head
ed off thut he unbuttoned his wallet on
the street and was actunlly counting
out the good equivalent when u detec
tive, Hushed the game, nabbed the air
ship architect and made him walk to
tho police station. The Iowa farmer
followed, and tho fascinating spell was
so llngeriug that the fanner was re
luctant to prosecute. When he turned
tho toes ol Ills brogans In the direction
of his home he was neither wiser nor
sadder. lie would have put up his roll
In a minute for an airless brick If he
had been tempted.
The "farmer" Is not always an
American product. By the way, the
word ought to be revised. Tho aver
age farmer of thH country Is not easily
hoodooed. Fsually he will, get the bet
of any game that Is unllmbered. The
yokel from over the sea Is always easy.
Only ttui days ago one of this brand
direct from Alsace-Lorraine put In
here. In his mcauderliiTs he saw a
bronze Hon on the lake front, one of
the ornamental figures of that part of
town. The accommodating stranger
was at hand, ns usual, and before any
warning could be turned In the yokel
had bought the Hon aud the pedestal,
paying therefor $00. IIo never knew
the bait was loaded until lie returned
to the spot on the following day with
a two horse wagon and a block and
tackle to remove his purchase.
There was no lire alarm box on
Mount Ararat when the ark anchored
alter the storm. If there had been,
ahem or one of his brothers would
rilK YOKEL JIOUCJHT '1UE LION.
jtrobnbly have dropped a letter into
tho receptacle. Somebody did It first
ii.niewhere. And the thing has been
epeated in all lands where the box Is
known until It was thought Uiat tho
guffaw following the rustic break had
penetrated every home in America.
Nevertheless a good old man and his
wife drove in a few days ago from
Rvaustou, that classic suburb where
the very ntiuosphefe is academic, and
the old mau tied his team to a lamp
post, after which lie walked to the
nearest fire alarm box nnd "mailed"
hla letter. Before he could put on his
mlt he and his motherly better half
caw tho fire engine dash round the;
corner. The old people were taken to
the police station, but tho magistrate
released them, remarking that as long
m the city left Its fire boxes exposed
tlieso mistakes would happen.
One man In this city has helped 800,
D00 men and women to marry. lie Is
the Hceu.se clerk of the municipality.
His name Is Morris Salmonsou. He
has Just completed his twenty-slxtu
year of service, fc'our hundred thou
and marriage licences have been sign
ed by him since bin commission was
Issued. Many citizens who are now
classified ns "old settlers" went the
matrimonial way on the paper signed
by Saliuonson. And now ho is making
out licenses for the second generation.
Tho day on which he finished hts
twenty-Flxth nunlvcrsary it was, sug
Rested by a wag of the town that as
ninny clerks who have attended to the
banding ouf of divorce decrees get to
gether and tenrtor Rnlmonson a ban
quet Tho old license ofllclnl refused
to Kit down ut such a feast, on tho
ground, ns he said, that few ot those
who had been wd on hla paper had
ever been nountatrd by nny court but
death. Tub banner year lu his busi
ness was 1007. In the yeur 1D0S there
was a noticeable decrcaso In the num
ber of licenses, owing to tho panic.
In this age, when the practical gets
the best front seats and the Hcntl
mental has to take to tho gallery or
cool Its heels on the sidewalk, It la
delicious to hear a real old time love
storj. Well, here It Is; Ten years
ago, after the bolls In old Cologuo
had quit ringing for the close of day,
a German girl emtio out on the stago
of a music hall njid played her violin
to a critical au
dience. One of
those who
heard her was a
Chicago bay who
was visiting that
old country with
his people. The
youth returned
home, and in the
course of things
h c established
himself In busi
ness. Two years
ago tho girl came
here to sec this
part ot the great
couutry. There
was a mustcalc
one evening in a
little hall, and
tho German girl
played as those
who know her the onnitAN omr
say she only can. Ono of the listeners
was tho Chicago boy who had heard
her In old Cologne. After the concert
he reuewed the acquaintance and eh
bleu you know the rest. They are on
their treacle-moon Journey now in the
far west, aud. ns she la Btill fond ot
her vlollu nnd ns her husband is very
proud ot her musical accomplishments,
she Is giving concerts as they travel.
If you are in n town where Mrs. John
(.'. A. Prick Is announced to appear,
that la the name of the German girl
who played one night In otd Cologne 1
and won a Chicago boy's heart
Almost any type of woman can raise
a breeze, but when a schoolteacher
one who is a principal, if you please,
and who la an acknowledged beauty
and who dresses In a way that mccta
with the approval of those of her sex
who believe lu stunning apparel -stands
before an assemblage of women
who advocate suffrage and tells them
that there arc degrees in tho saloon
business and that war on respectablo
saloons Is poor tnctlcs for women tho
atmosphere becomes agitated, aud it
does not die down
like a summer
zopliyr. Mies
Grace Reed, head
of an exclusive
high school in a
faHhlounblenclglt
borhood In Chtca
go, l.s the woman
v ho precipitated
ihcagltatiou. She
told her hearers
that she did not
favor funnticlsin
and had no pa-il-nce
with hys
terical appeals to
prejudice, wheth
er In favor of or
against the sa
loon. Her audl
ence hissed her,
nnd she retired,
After tho atorm
wns over In tho
mm
kiss onAcr. nun. room where it
was brewed her hearers got together
nnd resolved that Miss Reed had to bo
treated In the mi me. way as the Chi
nese on tho Pacific coast. They went
In a body to the president of the board
of education, by resolution, nnd de
manded that Mlas Reed bo dismissed.
The president said he guessed not ne
even went so fur as to say thnt Miss
Reed was right and that she knew
what she was talking about. The mau
or woman who would undertake to
forecast the next move would com
mand big pay from a political cam
paign committee. Miss Reed was still
at her post at lust accounts.
Now Is the winter of the Chicago
debutante, and all the modish gowns
aro swallowed up by gorgeous bou
quets. To drag out u decadent expres
sion, older than the sly.es our grand
mothers wore, bouquets' nre all the
rage. AVas there ever a time when a
girl 'wouldn't forego n bonbon for a
nosegny? But this year or at this par
ticular time of the year there Is a dis
tinct trend to the bouquet. The girl
who can carry the most original bunch
AS LAltdH AS TUE 1'UIISE OP FATHEll Witt,
FUUIT. I
Is "it." At the coming out of one do-1
butanto the fair one had just such a '
nosegay ns her great-grandmother
might have carried. According to tho i
fashion writer, the bouquet was a ,
small posy of pink roses with tho laco
pnper frill of colonial times. Tho news
traveled, aud now thero is a crush at
the florists' places to have posy bou
quets like grandma's made up. They
can be made us large as the purse of
father will permit. You go to a reception
now, and when you leavo tho question
askoil la not "What did she wear?" but
"What sort of bouquet did she have la
her band?" BEVERLY BRUX.
Ir . t 1 m-tm,
Tie Head of
Taft's Cabinet
PMandcr Chaso Knox, Who WIN Succeed
Root as Secretary of State.
Ills Homo and Family,
IN the choice of iMillander Chase
Knox ns the head of his cabinet
President Elect Wllllnui II. TntL
has conferred an honor upon one
of his rivals for the llcpuhltcuu presi
dential uomluatloii. It is understood
that Judge Taft Is especially desirous
of surrounding himself with men who
aro recognized to be of signal ability
In their several fields so that his ad
ministration may lmvo the counsel
of men who Individually and collec
tively can be of the greatest possible
assistance to him In the satisfac
tory solution of the problems to be
met. The offico of secretary of state
has enmo to be regarded as one of
high honor, second only in many re
spects to that of tho presidency. It
bus been held often by men of presi
dential size, among them Sherman,
Blaine, Hay, Olney, Hoot and Seward,
Lincoln's, secretary of foreign affairs,
not to mention Thomas Jefferson, who
occupied the post under Washington.
Judge Taft gave unusual thought to
the selection of an Incumbent of the
post of secretary of state not only be
cause ho wanted In it a gocd forclgu
affairs secretary, but also becauso he
desired that tho head of his cabinet
should be a man capable of advising
him on matters outside of that depart
ment calling for serious consideration.
As attorney general in tho cabinets
of President McICIuley and President
Roosevelt, Mr. Knox became famous ns
a public man several years njro. As
the occupant of that position he Initi
ated some of President Roosevelt's
r- - v?.
SENATOR 1'HIIMNDKIl OltABE KNOX.
most noteworthy suits against tho
trusts. He began his cabinet career
under Presldeut McKInley shortly be
fore the latter was assassinated, hav
ing been appointed to fill the place of
John William Griggs of Sew Jersey,
leslgued. With thenccesslon of Presi
dent Roosevelt to the Whlto House
he wus chosen to continue lu the cabi
net. Ho reslgued the attorney general
ship '.Tunc 30, 1001, to accept hU
Pennsylvania scuulorship appointmout,
which was tendered by Governor Pcn
nypackcr. He took his scat lu tho
seunte Dec. 0, 1004, and Is ut present
serving a term which expires In 1011.
Senator Knox was born at Browus
vllle, Pa., May (1, 1S53. IIo graduated
from Mount Union college, Ohio, in
1872 and subsequently took the degree
of LL. D. nt the University ot Penn
sylvania In 1005 aud at Yalo In 1007.
Ills career at tho bur began lu 1375.
He became asslstunt United States dis
trict attorney for the western district
of Pennsylvnnln lu 187U aud held the
post for a year. He then entered the
practice of law.
Senator Knox acquired a fortune
through hla law practice, ne owns a
beautiful home In Washington nnd has
a flue summer place at Valley Forge,
Pa, On his farm there he breeds trot
ting horses and geta a grent deal of
pleasure out of speeding them himself
over his half mile track. He Is also an
automobile enthusiast aud owns sev
eral large and powerful curs. There is
nn especial bond of sympathy between
hlin and Mr, Taft In their mutual foud
uess for golf.
The wife of the future secretary of
state l.s a daughter of one of the pio
neer Iron manufacturers of Pittsburg,
Andrew G. Smith. She Is n very nc-
MltS. KNOX AMU A VIEW OF THIS KNOX
CQUKT1IT 1IOV1K AT VAI.1ET FOKGE.
couipllshed woman und has retained in
un unusual degree her youthtulness
aud comeliness. Three sons nnd a
daughter have been born to the dis
tinguished couple, and there Is now n
little .grandson in ths household.
Money Laid
Out On Groceries
In our store is always well spent You get
your full money's worth, besides the satis
faction that you are consuming only pure
goods. Even all- the Canned goods that
are so much consumed during the aumnwr
season aro bought by us from the most
reputable packing houses, with their guar
antee that wo can warrant the purity of
each article to our customers. Our Pickles,
Soup, Sardines and Emits are the best
manufactured today.
JAMES GRAHAM
Seven room
flodern House
$3,200.
A fine seven-roorn, modern
house located in the best resi
dence district in Alliance, on
Laramie avenue. This house
has a good hot-air furnace,
electric lighted throughout
bath 'room, lavatory, etc. A
good steel range connected
with the hot-water system,
goes with the house. Dumb
waiter to basement, good elec
tric lighted barn, laundry, etc.
This will not last get in now
and see it.
Nebraska
Land Co.
J. C. McCorkle, Mgr.
Lloyd C. Thomas, Sec'y.
Phone 281-Alliancce Natl. Sank Bffc.
Try My Flour
and you won't have any more
worry about your bread.
My brands of Ai and Cow are
not excelled anywhere in this
country, and ladles who have
used tliem are my best advertisers-Phone
No. 71 Res. Pfaanc No. 95
J. ROWAN
7HE FLOUR AND FEES MAM
G. G. Gaosoy ' T, J Threlkelo
THE GADSBY STORE
Funeral Directors
and Embalmers.
FUNERAL SUPPLIES
OFFICE PHONE 4o3
RESIDENCE PHONES 207 and 5to
LOWJRICES!
Ladies, Look. at these
Prices on Flat Work
Sheets, 4 cents.
Pillowcases, 3 cents.
Tea towels, 1 cent.
Napkins, 1 cent.
Counter Panes, plain, 10 cV,ts.
Roller towels, 2 cents.
Bath towels, 2 rents.
Crash towels, 2 cents.
Table cloths, small, 5 cents
Table cloths, large, 10 cents
Give us your work, we'U please you.
Alliance Steam Laundry.
J, N. Sturgeon
S. G. Young
Sturgeon & Young
DRAY LINE
(Successors to G. W. Zobel)
Office Phone 139.
Residence Phone 142.
Wanted A good, reliable man to
sell tea and coffee at once. Grand
Union Tea Co., Omaha, Nebr.