The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, January 12, 1911, Image 3

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    Deafness Cannot Be Cured
by Inral tpplinttMwut. as thrj- cannot rrarh Ibf SS
fmm nortun of thr nr. I hrr He only uir . tc
fun' dralne-aa. and that l hv . i n 1 1 1 1 , i nineties
Ifc-ufnpw la rauard by in UiAnmiil rendition l thr
niuroui llnm ol thr t intarhlan TuhT. Worn th.
tub la Inflamed you havr a rutnMmit anund ur Im
prrtort hearlnc, n1 when tt In entirely eleeard. Heat
arm I the Mult, nd e in lew thr Inflammation ran b
taken out and thla tube rratontl to lu nornwJ rendi
tion, hearlnc will he deatroyed lotrrrr. nine rf
out ot ten are rainil hy catarrh, whirh la neethin
nut an Inflamed conelltleen ot the tmirooa itirtac.
Wn w! flvr One Hundred Iiollari lof any raar- ol
lrfnraa craem-d by raUrrhl that cannot to cured
by Mall 'a Catarrh Cur. Send for rlrrulara. tree
F. J. ORKNEY IX).. Toledo. O.
Hold by Drimiata. 7 V.
Jake Hall a Kamlly rtlla for ronatlpatlon.
Repair Work
Sewing Machines and
Organs.
Have secured the services of n prac
tical mechanic and can guarantee all
work done by him. Don't trust your
work to travelling repair men. This
man will be here permaneutlv. Re
pairs and parts furnished for all ma
chines. Phone 139. Geo. D. Darling.
In Front of the Checkered Front Stable
you can nearly always see a rig getting
ready to start out. We will send one any
distance, for any purpose, at any time.
We answer all calls promptly
and will be glad to serve you in any way
in which a rig is required.
H. P. COURSEY. Prop
I'HOXIi V2
Important Notice to
Meat Consumers
We have good news for the
people of Alliance who have been
compelled to pay hitfh prices for
an inferior quality of meat. With
the opening of the Cash Meat
Market, in our new building at
f17 Sweetwater avenue, we can
positively announce that we are
selling BETTER QUALITY of
MEATS than the people of this
citv have been buying and at
LOWER PRICES.
We don't send away several
hundred miles to have the culls
from the big packing houses
shipped to us at great expense.
We buy the best tat cattle ami
hogs to be found in Box ButtG
and neighboring counties, we do
expert butchering a n d serve
meats to you in the best possible
style, and at prices liTi to 40 per
cent less than you have been
paying.
(JIVE US A TRIAL and we
will prove our claim.
Telephone orders delivered
promptly. Phone "0.
Cash Meat Market
DRAKE t BARB, Props.
317 Sweetwater Avenue.
Bids Wanted for Delivering Goods
The Merchants of Alliance, Nehr., are
going to inaugurate a co-operative dc
livery system and the following firms
will consider bids and propositions
from responsible parties to operate the
system. Desch & Birkel, Alliance
Grocery Co. A. I). Kodgers. G. W.
Duncan, Saxton & Roach, Watson ci:
Watson, I, W. Herman, I. L. Acheson,
Mallery Grocery Co., Phillips Grocery
Co. i tf 39Q
Notice of Attachment
B. P. Grinstead, first name un
known, will take notice that on the
2nd day of December, 1910, W S
Rldgell, a Justice of the Peace, in
and for Alliance, L'nd ward precinct
Box Butte County, Nebraska, issued
an order of Attachment for the sum
of (130.50), thirty dollars and fifty
cents, in an action pending before
him wherein W, V. Norton is plain
tiff and B. P. Grinstead, flrBt name
unknown, is defendant. That the
property of said defendant consist
ing of one lot of household goods
have been attached under said or
der. Said cause has been continued
until the 2nd day of Feb., 1911, at
one o'clock P.M.
W. W. NORTON,
3-4t-88 Plaintiff.
HU l'.H
WESTERN NEBRASKA
Interesting Items Taken From This
End of the State for Herald
Readers.
An Interesting set of statistics on
file In The Herald office Is a record
of the receipts of hogs, cattle and
sheep at the South Omaha slock
anls by months from the year 18X5
to 1910, and n reconl of the average
price of hogs and cattle at South O
maltu by days of the month since
the year ISM
The Scottsbluff Herald recently
contained an extended write-up ot
that city for the year 1910. The
buildings constructed there for the
year were described, among which
are the MSrqUll tipera Mouse, cow
ing 130,000; the Bowen block, cost
ing 30,000; the MeCrenry building,
costing $27,000; Scottsbluff National
Bank building, costing 113,000; the
Herald building; and many other
smaller structures.
D. .1. Willinms, Of Scottsbluff, has
purchased the stock of the Seotts
bluff Mercantile Company, and will
take charge of the business.
The Grand Island factory of the
American Beet Sugar company closed
one of the most success nil cam
paigns in its history last week.
The factory broke all previous rec
ords as to tons of beets sliced per
day and bags of sugar produced The
greatest number of tons worked In
any one day was 4;!.', while the great
est number of bags ot sugar pro
duced in one day was 1,300. The to
tal tons of beets worked this seas
on was 13,000, or
which were prodtlc
of granulated sugar. There was also
a large amount of by-products. in
cluding enough beet pulp to fatten
8,000 head of stock for the market.
most up to date towns In this section
of the country If the proposition goes
through
C K. Hansen, of Broken Bow. has
purchased the business of the Bro
ken Bow Abstract t'ompany and the
office building for $9.
The firm of Rowe and Albright at
Rushvllle hae dissolved partnership,
Mr Rowe continuing the business.
I, W. Harper sold the entire tel
ephone exchange, of Sidney, to Ned
McCue. of Omaha. Mr McCuc will
make his home In Sidney, and will
be Joined hy his father, mother and
sister. He wants to enter right into
all the plans for "Greater Sidney,"
and as a starter, through his Influ
ence, the great Bell Telephone OO
will connect on to the Sidney line.
Messrs McFarlund and G II Gut
ret t, Of the ttell Telephone Company
Wen here Tuesday completing nr
rangements to put in two heavy cop
per wires for their through business.
It is their plan to put In the copper
line from .lulesburg to Sidney, then
from Sidney to Alliance, where they
have bought out the e hanue They
Intend soon to ex t end It to Sterling,
and, inside of two years, to Chey
enne. The same parties have Just
bought out the North Platte ex
change. The annual election of the Mitch
ell Alfalfa Milling and Light Company,
was held at Mitchell January Jd.
The following officers were elected:
W. 1). Linden, president ; S. P.
Stryker, vice-president; R W Ho
hart, secretary; Jas. T. Whitehead,
treasurer.
Roy Cleveland, of liayard, died of
appendicitus last week. He left I
wife and two children.
Herald states
cold snap a
MORRILL DEFEATS ALLIANCE
In the swiftest girls' game ever
witnessed by people of Morrill, the
far famed MHnnce basket ball girls
went down to defeat last Friday
night, before the Morrill High School
girls. The game was witnessed by
the largest crowd that has yei
turned out to our Basket Ball games
The game was played without Hues
and was lively from start to finish
The Alliance girls were much the
larger and played a rough but act
Ive game There Is no use ilisput
ing the fact thnt Alliance has a
good team, perhaps one of the best
in the state, a much older team than
that of Morrill Much speculation Is
heard as to the secrel Of the Morrill
girls' victory over their moHt for
midahlc rival That it was not a
streak of good luck
the fact that all the
ern Nebraska have
fate at the hands
girls As Alliance
Scottsbluff, so did
is evident from
1 teams in west
met the same
of the Morrill
fared, so did
Mitchell, so did
The Thomas County
that during the recent
The operation of the factory cull
for an annual expenditure of approxi
mately 1266,700, The company pays
$70,000 for labor, $130,000 for beets,
125,000 for freight on beets and $40,-
Tini for supplies, while the farmers
pay an estimated $50,000 for grow
ing and harvesting the crop.
The outlook for the season of I'M I
i, (Mm cars, irom nllri,1R,n freight was stalled at
d twenty c urloails i rk,n Bow with four cars of hues.
half of which frotC to death Thirty
nine cattle were frozen to death be
tween llalsey and Dunning.
New furniture has been purchased
at Chadron for the city hall.
Is very encouraging and it is
believed that an unusually large ac
reage will be contracted. Omaha
Trade Kxhibit.
The new High scJiool building at
Broken Bow is nearly completed.
Gabriel Peyton, living with his
son near Callaway, was killed and
horribly eaten by hogs a short time
ago. It Is supposed that he wan
dered to the hog yard while asleep
and was seized with heart failure.
The Gate City hotel of Crawford
has been sold by .). M. Miller to
Chas. L. Leithoff.
Charles Griffith, 10 year old son of
Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Griffith, living
near Crawford, was accidentally
killed while sawing down trees with
some other boys. A tree which they
had been sawing, fell, striking the
boy and crushing his skull.
Joseph Thompson, of Crawford, re
cently Inserted an open letter in the
Crawford Tribune calling attention
of Chief of Police Hand to the fact
that he was hired by the people. It
seems that Hand got a little high-
beaded. The letter probably brought
him down.
Crawford is wanting a brickyard.
A move is on foot to incorporate
the village of Seneca. The immedi
ate purpose is to force the estab
lishment of a crossing through the
Burlington switchyards at that place.
A new short-order house has been
opened up at Seneca. As this is a
freight division on the Burlington,
this kind of business is good there.
Crawford is following the lead of
Alliance and is pushing for a new
Carnegie Library.
II. W. Conover, deputy county
treasurer at McCook, has resigned
and is going into business for him
self as an abstractor.
J. D. Gregory has filed a petition
in Scotts Bluff County asking $7,500
damages from Charles K. Neeley for
physical injuries caused by the latter.
W. Charles Hopper, who married
Mary Shatter at Gerin;: last summer,
after a mail acquaintance, has writ
ten the Gering Courier warning all
thoughtless "mail order" lexers
against such a proceeding, for he
and the lady have fallen out, and
gets a divorce. So much for "mail
order" marriages
It is reported that the Vnion Pa
cific has let the contract for the
grading of fifty miles of new track
extending from Northport., where trie
line now ends, to a point In Mitchell
valley. The report state that the
contract has been let to Kilpatrick
Brothers, who own a lot of land in
Box Butte County.
John Harmon nnd Vsta Petrel
were married Wednesday of last
week at Hay Springs.
The Ed. Sevier barn a.t Kdgemont,
S. 1)., was entirely burned last Thurs
day night. One horse was burned to
death. The loss will be several
thousand dollars, with small insur
ance. M. R. Gooch, of Crawford, has
been re-elected a member of the
city council. The Crawford Courier
says that Mr. Thorp is the only one
on the city council who was elected
last spring.
Fred Huxall, an engineer on the
1'nion Pacific was instantly killed
by a switch engine at Sidney last I
week. His home was at North Platte.
The Sidney Transfer and Imple
inent Company have been organ '.'.oil
to handle the goods of the Interna-;
i tional Harvester Company, and a
: line of Implements,
The Oshkosh Herald has installed
IS new Linotype, the same as this pa I
per is now using.
of
Ira Lapham,
Bxcelslor Springs,
O'Neill.
Mo., of
rrrrr i
established a furn
king business at
H. Wlnget lias
It tire and undert:
Mullen.
According to the Lincoln Star, Jno.
Mead, a real estate dealer of Chad
ron, shot himself while despondent
over domestic troubles. His wife
had left him for another man, tak
ing the baby with her and leaving
three older children.
A petition is circulating to re-survey
Thomas County, owing to the
fact that many corner stakes have
been removed and destroyed. Many
of the homesteaders have it hard
time locating their claims.
V. S. Haddix, of Mason, who has
been in the penitentary for the last
t wo years, was pardoned by Govern
or Shallenberger.
Morrill is to have a band with J E
Keebaugh as manager.
Following is the schedule of regu
lar terms of court in the loth Judi
cial district for 1911, Judge Grimes
presiding:
Kimball Jan. So, Sept. o.
Banner Feb. 2, Sept. 8.
Cheyenne Feb. 6, Sept. 11.
Keith -Feb 13, Sept. 18.
Scotts Bluff Mch. 20, Nov. 14
Lincoln Feb. ft, Dec 4.
Morrill- April 3, Oct. 2.
Garden April 10, Sept L'."
I'c i kins April 17, Oct. 16.
Deuel- April 24, Oct. 9.
b0gU - May 1.
McPherson May 8.
The new well for the city water
works at Rushville is nearly com
pleted. The well when complete will
have about thirty feet of water.
Gordon is figuring on potting in
an electric light and power plant
and a heating system, and a sower
system, at a combined cost of $13,
110, This '..til make It one of the
thou-For-were
been
High
died at
dropsy.
A. B. Smith, of Broken Bow, was
I arrested charged with robbing two
'guests of the Renueau Hotel. He
j got away as far as Oconto,, w here he
: was arrested and brought back for
! trial. The county Judge bound him
over to the district court for bonds
of $300. He is now in the Grand Is
lam! jail.
Over four thousand tons of bee ts
were recently shipped from Minatare
to the sugar factory at Scottsbluff.
They had been piled in one pile six
feet deep and covering one and one
half acres.
Beet growing has been taken up
at McCook. The farmers there have
agreed to raise at least one
sand acres the coming season
merly a great many beets
grown there but of late it has
dropped.
The pupils of the McCook
sciiooi are starting a school paper.
It will be called the "McCook High
School Megaphone". It w ill be small
in size, printed on good paper, and
will contain no advertising matter.
The city council of Chadron has
granted a franchise to Kass &
Klingaman for twenty years. The
city may buy the plant In ten years, j
P. J. Barron, editor of the Scotts-
bluff Sttir, proposed through his pa- I
per to the city of Gering that they
exchange the county seat for the
Scottsbluff Chautauqua plant, two
newspapers, village board, one post
master and the electric light plant, j
The Scottsbluff Star states that '
Alex Koch, living near that city, was
arrested and charged with passing a
bogus ch.ck He- claimed to be the
wrong party.
The entire stock of Baysinger &
Seyfer, of Minatare, is to be sold
at auction on February 7th. The
value of the stock of merchandise Is
$8,193.82. It will be soltl by NV. P.
McDowell, trustee
A BUSY GROCERY
Call up phone 32 some time if you
want to find a busy place It is the
Duncan & Son Grocery. These gen
tlemen are regular advertisers in
The Herald and their continually In
creasing business Is proof of the
good service they are giving their
customers.
Minatare, so did Sidney, The Mor
rill ami Alliance, teams were perhaps
a stand off in the matter of endur
ance. The only solution of the prob
lea lies in the fact that the Morrill
players were too quick and well vers
ed and accurate in the game for
their rivals. The Morrill line tip was
as follows: Rt. Ford, Ruth Sayre;
Left For'tl, Bessie Retnonder; Cen
tre, Irene Walsh; Ring Centre, Rth
id Beard stey; Right Guard, Kate
Harding; Left Guard, Eva Madlll;
Miss BlSte Larsen took EtVS Madlll's
place without having practiced with
the team for weeks.
We wish to praise the Alliance
girls for their ladlike deportment
while among us They have the ap
pearance of being students as well
as basket ball players Morrill Mail.
S
HAPPY WEDDING
The following clipped from the
newspaper at Wayne, Nebraska, will
be of Interest to these who were
acquainted wuh Miss Pearl Livorltm
house While she lived in Alliance:
Mr Bdward .1 Anker, son of Mr.
and Mrs. S. B. Auker, and Miss
Pearl Liverlaghouse, daughter of Mr.
ami Mrs. John Llvertnghouse, were
united in marriage at high noon yes
terday at the home of the bride's
parents, two miles south of Wayne,
by Rev, William Gorsl ol the M. E.
Church, the ceremony taking place
in the in id hi Of a circle of forty well
wishers, most of them relatives of
the contracting parties The bride
wore a gown of silk mull over taf
feta, and carried a bouquet of white
roses. Tlie groom appeared In the
usual black. The bridal party took
places under a beautiful wedding
bell promptly at noon when the im
pressive ceremony was performed.
Following the marriage and con
gratulatjmis, 11 sumptuous dinner
was served to the (leligbt of all,
and the afternoon was spent in gen
eral sociability.
The young couple received many
valuable and useful presents. They
begin house-keeping on tlie Lush
farm, BOUtttWOSt of the homo which
the bride leaves.
Before Hie bridal party appeared,
the head- of the two households to
be Joined in Wedlock, engaged In a
good-natured dispute over the com
parative number of children and
grandchildren to the credit of each.
This wedding takes away the young
est and last of the Llverlnghouse
family of four daughters and three
sons. Mr. Auker still has four BOM
and one daughter at home.
The bride and groom are both de
servedly popular, and commence mar
ried life with the hearty good wishes
Of a multitude of friends.
Among the out-of-town guests at
the wedding are the following: Mr.
W. (J. Merchant of Walnut, Iowa,
Mr. Sam Llverlnghouse of Meadow
Grove, Nebr., and Mrs. J. A. Gasuer
of Bridge water, s. D,
BRINGS QUICK ANSWER
The little local In the Herald last
uek asking what the reader would
do In ease a Christmas box was de
livered containing common garden
bricks, instead of gold bricks, was
rewarded by quick answer Here
it is.
"It is a fact that Christmas pack'
ages, like Country sausages, are not
always what they seem, and It is al
so true that the- average recipient
of holiday junk is, in his or her
childlike Innocence, often buncoed
into coming across with quite a gob
Ol good, untainted money to square
it with the expressman and get What
is coming to him, meanwhile chuck
ling gleefully to himself over the
mental picture of a possible diamond
shirt stud as big as a brick yard,
which he naturally feels would be u
trifle, all things considered.
"On the other hand, It is on rec
ord that Xmas gifts do not always
journey through the hands of the
transportation companies. N o t
much! As a case in point the writ
er recalls an iuuocent looking little
cigar box with about nine yards of
coiled spring properly adjusted so
that when the box was opened it
would she ic,t into space (not face)
like a brain stormed chicken hawk
under cultivation Would consider a
trade of house, business property,
city lots, or stock of goods. Address
"T". Herald office, or phone ,140.
$1 tf43f
The above ad. which appeared in
The Herald for several Issues, sold
three quarter sections (if land last
week. Did It pay the owner of t In
land, who Inserted the art? Ho says
It did, and many, many times over,
lie wanted to dispose of only two
quarters but the man who read the
ad In The Herald anil was sent to
him. wanted three quarters so he
mailt- a deal far thai many
We will be glnd to give the name
of the owner on application Try one
of these little want nils. They bring
results every time You read them,
So does every other one of The Her
aid s I, $91 subscribers,
4
ENTERTAIN OFFICE FORCE
Mr and Mrs F A. Hlvely enter
tained his office force lusl Saturdav
evening at their home. A sumptuous
dinner of five courses was served
and a general good time was had by
all Mr. Hlvely Is chief clerk to
Superintendent Weidcnhcitucr of t he
Bui line-ten and is wi ll liked by all.
ORGANIZE GYM CLASS
A Business Men's gymnasium class
Is now being organized among the
Alliance business men, The clas
will meet In the High School gym,
which Is up to date and fitted with
ail the latest appliances, including
shower baths.
The consent of the board of edu
cation was secured for the use of
the gvm two nights In each week,
and Prof. G II Williams nnd Philip
Noke will direct the squads, us there
will probably be two of them. The
sum of one dollar per month will be
contributed by each member for
lights and Incidental expenses
The enrollment so far Includes
K Warrick, Lloyd Smith. L
Kirk, Harold S. Thomas, John
Beac h, Lloyd C. Thomas, and B
Mver. Applications are now being
received from others who are inter
ested and want to lake up the work
It Is hoped that a class of at lease
twenty can be secured. Those de
siring to join should apply to Mr.
Williams.
NOTICE
- Tin- Teachers" Rending Circle will
meet January 14th at the High school
In Alliance. All note hooks must be
handed In at that time.
DKLLA M. RKKD. County Supt
ADVERTISING PAID
Col I M Dunn, the secretary of
the Danville, Ky , fair. Is thorotiKh
ly convinced of the value of country
newspaper advert Islng. He adver
tised the fair this year In no other
way; cut all posters, bills and other
ways which cost much but gave lit
tle results and confined himself ex
clusively to the newspapers
The result, Col. Dunn says, Is that
the Danville fair made money this
year, the first time In many years.
He says he will use nothing but the
country press in the future and ad
vises others seeking profitable ad
vertising to do likewise Kdgemont
Enterprise.
RESOLUTIONS OF SYMPATHY
Whereas, the Almighty Father has
seen fit to take from our midst the
beloved husband of our sister, Mrs.
B. J. Wilson,
Therefore, be It resolved. That wo
the Ladles' Alii Society or the M K
church of Alliance, Nebr ,do extend
to our sister and family our slncer-
i est sympathy In this, their great
hour of bereavement.
MRS. W It
MRS A T
MRS J. A.
PATH.
H'NN.
HUNTKR.
Committee.
B
L.
It
L
YOUNG MEN WANTED
Government Pays Railway Mall
Clerks $800 to $1,400 a Year
Free Bcbolsrsblps Are offered
I'ncle Sam holds examinations for
railway mail clerk, postofflce clerk
or carrier, custom house and depart
mental clerks I'repare at once for
the coming examinations.
Thousands of appointments are to
be made. Common school education
is all you need; city and country
people have equal chance, Start to
prepare now free Information. Froo
scholarships this month Write im
mediately to Central Schools, Dept
n 624, Rochester, N. Y.
jut-4(i:i
A KITCHEN CONVENIENCE
T. .1. Threlkeld is displaying a fine
Hoosier kitchen cabinet in his show
window, at his furniture store on
box Butte avenue. Mr. Threlkeld
has taken the ag-ncy for the Hoos
ier and expects to sell a large num
ber of theni during the coming year.
This is a well lid vert Ised anil well
known cabinet.
PENALTIES FOR OVER
LOOKING WANT
ADS
and give the recipient a cheerful
clout on his Adam's apple, while an
other section was busy chasing a
cold chill down his spine, but fell
down on the job by getting all balled
up trying to make a nest in his hair.
This action, besides mussing his
tresses and scaring him into a hys
terical trance demonstrated beyond
question that some one had been
camping on his Christmas trail and
had put one over on him just to be
sociable.
"Incidentally a stick or two of
gum carefully and wonderfully
wrapped and forwarded to one of the
conspirators helps some in lessen
ing the 'got stung' feeling, brought
about by the registered letter sys
tem of gift giving." Anon.
DOES IT PAY? READ THIS
FOR SALE OR TRADE A fine
half section of land west of Alliance
Will sell or trade my equity in quar
ter or the entire half-section for Al
liance property. The land is in a
good location and is level as the
floor. Cuts ."ood hay. P. rt has been
VISIT IN CHADRON
The daughter and son of Mr. Jas
Donovan, of Alllasce. have been vis
iting during the Holidays with their
uncle at (Oiadron, who is proprietor
of the Blaine hotel at that place
The youngsters enjoyed a Jolly good
time during thekr visit.
Mr. Donovan Is the proprietor of
oae of tin.- substantial restaurants of
Alliance,
A FLOURISHING BAKERY
A bakery that is always busy Is
the Philip Nohe bakery run in con
necfloa with the Nohe aefe. Their
brand of bread is well known and
It ke-ps them busy supplying their
many customers.
MARRIED
Miss nettle Maycock, formerly of
this city, was married to Mr. C. C,
Holmes of Denver on the 8th day
of January at her home In Louisville.
The bride faithfully filled the post
(Hon as Alliance night telephone op
erator until about a month ago when
she took her departure for sunny
Colorado.
THE NEW CARTOON
A local philosopher, laughing over
0He of Ralph Wilder's cartoons in
The Chic ago Hecord-I lerahl the Oth
er day, remarked thai 'he- cartoon
is mightier than tie- sermon. Cer
tainly the humorous picture that has
come to be- so popular a feature of
the big city newspaper often hit I ol'
the news of the hour with a veritable
stroke of genius.
The whole art of tin- cartoonist
has become more kindly, less slash
ing, than in the days when Thomas
Nast began it. The cartorjnist no
longer hits somebody over the head
for your amusement, but tickles you
under your ribs somewhere near the
heart. He does it by illustrating the
little humors of human nature, ot
domestic life, of boy nature, of fem
inine foibles -any sort of homely
Joke that both husband and wife can
laugh over at the breakfast table.
One Of the gentlest. rlsrsfSaU and
happiest cartoonists or this nee
school is Ralph Wilder, whose dally
picture on the front page of The
Chicago Record Herald is an unfall
ing delight. Mr. Wild.-r's drawing i
unsurpassed, and his humor, if Mot i
sidesplitting, always has a "point "j
with a smile in It. His picture; kelp
io origmen llle alio send one to one s
own task more cheerily They help
to explain why The Record Herald Is
the favorite family newspaper ifl the
West.
a
An exchange tells a story on a
man who was caught out in the
woods during a storm. He did not
want to get wet and the only dry
place he could find was a hollow log,
into which he managed to crawl
The rain lasted a couple of hours,
when the fellow decided he had bet
ter go home He tried to extricate
himself from the log. but the soft
wood had swelled and he couldn't
budge There alone In the desolated
woods, many miles from the nearest
habitation, of all the mean things
he had done the poor man lay think
ing, when all at once it dawned up
on him that he bad read the home
paper for three years without paj
lug a cent for it, aud it made biiu
feel so small that he crawled out
of the log thruih a kuui hole.
You may be paying too much rent,
for your home or place of business,
solely because you have not been a
want ail reader!
You may be getting too small a
salary for the same reason -or be
paying too high salaries to others.
For, as it "pays" to read and ans
wer and investigate ads, so it
"costs" not to do so! 5-2L461
SAVES TWO LIVES
"Neither my sister nor myself
might be living today. If It had not.
been for Dr. King's New Discovery"
write A. D. McDonald of Favette
ville, N. C., R. F. D. No. .S, "for we
both had frightful coughs that no
other remedy could help. We were
told my sister had consumption. She
was very weak and had night sweats
but your wonderful medicine com
pletely cured us both. It's the best
I have used or heard of." For sort
lungs, coughs, colds, hemorrhage, la
grippe, asthma, hay fever, croup,
whooping cough, all bronc hial (roub
les, It s supreme. Trial bottle tree
BOc and $l.oi. Guaranteed by F. J
Brennan. 3.t
OF INTEREST TO RAILROADERS
A very Interesting article in "The
Railroad Man s Magazine" for Janu
ary would be of interest to Burlington
men. The title of the article Is, "On
the .diddle West Main Lines," by
John Walters. .Mr. Wall, is shows
that the railroads in this, the mid
dle west, are earning more than ever
and why there is such a shortage In
cars. The following extract from
tin- article is of interest:
Illinois now claims to he the pre
mier rail wi,y state. It claims near
ly 13,300 miles This Includes the
electric railways. The nlwim ruii.
roads, already in operation in 1908.
according to the report of the inter
state Commerce Commission, totaled
nearly 13,000 miles. In addition to
these hues various Important new
lines ami extension bare been built,
Mnrlng the total Up to the; above
figure.
i in- rec ord is approached only by
Te xas and PennsylVSJlla. The ime
Star State, by reason or her vast
prairies and interminable distances,
has the largest mileage, possessing
at the latest official reports 12.847
miles of railroads. Pennsylvania is
the only other close competitor with
1 1.M1 miles of track.
A comparathe statement
mileage in tlu-
siniilar class shows
railroad
states of
lows :
Illinois . ..
Texas . . .
Pennsylvania
Iowa . . . .
Michigan . ,
Ohio . . .
Kansas . .
New York
Minnet-ota
Missouri
Wisconsin .
of the
various
as fol-
L'l. 500
1IT
11441
II
S.01 1
9.13!
8,918
8,410
8,407
8,02
7,556
Can you tell us why the cattle of
Nebraska have decreased over 500,000
head in the past two years? If so.
tome to the meeting of Organized
Agriculture at Lincoln, January ltith
to kOth, 1911, and let Nebraska larm
r be ready to take advantage of
the high priceB of the future which
must come from the decreased out
put. OLD SOLDIER TORTURED
"For years I suffered unspeak
able torture from indigestion, con
stipation and liver trouble," wrote
A. K. Smith, a war veteran at Erie
Pa , but Dr King's New Life Pills
fixed me all right. They're simply
great." Try them for any stomach
liver or kiduey iroubte
F. j. Bi t-Quau i.