The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, August 07, 1913, Image 7

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

    Noted Reformers Views on
Present Day Tendencies
A leading Alliance business man,
ho talus a grcait deal of interest
in the welfare of the retail mer
chant and his relation to the great
mail order houses of the big cities,
has handed u the following article,
whlclh is an extract from an address
delivered by John B. Hammond, the
noted reformer and purity worker.
The connection of the 'big mall or
der houses, which are supported
anl kept up by business sent from
the small' towns and country, with
the white slave traffic, Is vividly
portrayed. This article Is well
wortlh reading.
"After viewing the social evil and
white slave conditions as we find
them in our country today, our r.ext
thought must be as to the causes
that are responsible for thee con
ditions. In fact we must establish
the cause before we can. decide on a
prevention or prescribe a remedy.
"A few years ago the retail mer
chant of 'the village and cross roads
was the commercial schoolmaster of
his neighborhood. It was here the
boys and girls from the farm, the
shops, the mine and' the homes,
with a naftural Inclination for a
commercial life, received their first
instructions in the rules of com
merce. The village general merchant,
hardware and implement dealer,
clothier, boot and hoe dealer, etc.,
were constantly looking for appren
tices and help to conduct their bus
iness from among the boys and
girl of their patrons. The imple
ment man selected a boy here who
showed a natural aptitude for ma
chinery, the grocer or general mer
chant selected another from an ad
joining farm, the dry goods dealer
selected a bright and clever girl and
as likewise dlkl the milliner and
dressmaker. As fast as boys and
girls could be spared from the farm,
A Bird in the Hand
is Worth
One
of our skillfully
made Portraits is
worth a dozen
carelesslv made
PHOTOGRAPHS
Quality Tells Every Time
Alliance Art Studio
114 4th St. Phone 111
the shop, the mine or the home,
who desired to follow a commercial
life, they found a place In which to
receive practical lessons in the bus
iness they desired to follow.
"From these local stores they
were finally promoted to positions
cf trurt and importance In the larg
er cities, or became partners with
the local merchant he worked for,
or succeeded him. If the young
man entered life In the large city,
he dkl so with a valuable knowledge
of the arts of trade and the prin
ciples of honesty and square deal
ing Instilled into his very heart by
his friend, the retail merchant. His
character had been formed and de
veloped under the very eyes of par
ents and boyhood acquaintances.
"This class of recruit for the
great centers of population gradually
developed Into prince of finance,
Into merchant-kings, into the very
bulwarks of the city and nation.
This pure, clean blood; firmly es
tablished characters, from the coun
try, lias ever been the salvation of
the city.
"Theee village stores not only
furnished a rendy market for the
. Alexander Iumn said dntv is
something that wo exact from other. Your
tmiT o yourwii is 10 ixe Aim io wan
Balsam when you have a dt-ep-ated rough
or cold. Not Linn will give you quicker
Hnd more permanent relief. Try it. p.
hot contain anything harmful. 25o 50c.
and fl.HO bottle at all denier.
Colic, and stomach
aclie usually relieved
with
Pamkrttev
This famons remedy seldom fails to
relieve pain, both external and in
ternal. 25. ol mt 80c. Bottle.
Whole Family Benefited
By Wonderful Remedy
There are many little things to
annoy us, under present conditions
of life. The hurry, hard work,
noise and strain all tell on us and
tend to provoke nervousness and
irritability.. We are frequently so
worn out we can neither eat, sleep
nor work with any comfort. We
are out of line with ourselves and
others as well.
A good thing to do under such
circumstances is to take something
like
Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills
to relieve the strain on the nerve?,.
Mrs. J. II. Hartsiield. 8i Plum St.,
Atlanta Ga., writes:
'I have on several occasion been
vastly relieved by the ue of your med
icines, especially the Anil-rain Pills,
which I keep constantly on hand for
the use of myxelf, husband and two
sons. Nothing in. the world equals them
as a headache remedy. Often I am
enabled by the use of one or two of
the Pills to continue my housework
when otherwise I would be In bed. My
husband Joins me In my praise of th
Anti-Pain Pills and Nervine."
Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills
are relied upon to relieve pain,
nervousness and irritability in thou
sands of households. Of proven
merit after twenty years' use, you
can have no reason for being longer
without them.
At all Druggisti, 25 doses 25 cenU.
MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind.
FinestPremium
ever given by a newspaper without extra charge
WITH every paid-in-advance subscription at
$1.50 per year, we will give, absolutely
free, a copy of this wonderful up-to-date book,
postpaid, as long as our supply lasts. Sub
scribers al
ready taking
the paper,
may pay one
year in ad
vance and get
Atlas
;; pkhples
MNDYATIAS.
v'' .;'", ;-tr J.r r
I . lit!'-'-- . ' i
17
AUI it
The largest and most com
plete HANDY ATLAS ever
published
132 pages, bound In red doth
The People's Handy Atlas of the World
contains the greatest number of maps ever
published in Handy Atlas form before. It
gives the maps of every State and Territory,
the United States Island Possessions, all
printed in beautiful colors. It also gives maps of the Can
adian Provinces, European countries, and for the first time
special feature maps showing farm products in each pro
ductive area, locating where wheat, oats, rye, tobacco and
other products are raised. It gives the value of dairy pro
ducts also. The new Conservation map with irrigation pro
ducts, also new Weather map are very instructive and at
tractive to a newspaper or magazine reader. New maps
of the World, illustrating the Commercial Languages, Forms
of Government, and Races of Men, are to be learned at a
glance.
Fill out the coupon below, enclose $1.50 check, draft or money or
der, and mail to the Herald. Atlas will be forwarded by return mail
The Alliance Herald, Alliance, Nebr.,
I enclose $1.50. Put my name on your list and send
me the Atlas.
NAME
ADDRESS.
produce- of the farm, hut thry nlaj
furnished a market for the surplus
' hoys and girl, with natural Inclina
tions for other than Uvea of agricul
ture, mechanics, etc. I saw many
boys, whem I can now recall, ad
mitted into the stores of n small
village t.f net, over 300 inhabitants.
I aw them behind tho counters day
after day; I saw them after they
had learned their commercial les
sons, with their characters estab
lished and their habits formed bid
ding their life-time friends goodbye,
before takl.ne lho.tr ricimrtnro ti o
jdUtant city to assume new and
greater responsibilities for which we
all knew thc-y were capable. We
were all anxious for euh boy's suc
cess, and he realized that the great
er his success the greater our pride
would be in him. In the little store
he vacated another promising boy
in the neighborhood takes his place.
He ever has tn mind the success of
the boy before him, which 13 an in
centive for htm to do his best.
"Today thl9 condition Is rapidly
changlrg, but we seem to be almost
unconscious of the change. The
little village and country Flore In
fast, disappearing, or sinking Into a
nonentity. In many sections the
buildings that once were the cen
ters of trade and activity are closed
and fast decaying. Annually thous
ands are either driven Into bank
ruptcy at less desirable occupation".
Many of those remaining are so lim
ited in their trade capacity 3 to
net require either hired help r ap
prentices. No lcarer is there any
envy or jealousy because some boy
has procured a pcsltion with a local
niertuant desired by many, as was
the ase a few years ago. Xo long
er is the local merchant watchin;;
fcr the most promising boy to' take
into his store, next. No longir is
the village or country ftore the cen
ter of social activity. No longer are
the stcrcfl the schools in Wh'ch were
founded great business characters.
Why this change?
"Let us lock for the cause. We
go to the. great centers of popula
tion and we find colossal fortunes
being accumulated through mam
moth retail concerns. We see the
crders for the farmers', mechanics'
and miners' needs a piled high on
these mall order 'des-ks. We see
the business that at one time made
the local merchant prosperous now
making the great, soulless corpora
tions more prosperous. That the
consumer may save a few cents on
some manufactured or Imported ar
ticle he has sacrificed dollars, by
trading through the mail in the
great city. He has not enly destroy
ed his local market for hU products,
but also destroyed the opportunities
for his beys nmd girls.
"Boys are born with natural In
clinations for commerce, transporta
tion, mechanics, agriculture and the
higher professions and their highest
succces lays In the path of their na
tural inclination. True, schools
have been established for the pur
pose of Instructing youth fjr these
various callings. These instructions
are all based on theory and b.t very
little cf the practical contained in
.hem. All the books in the world
on mechanics, committed to mem
cry, would not make a carpenter
nor an engineer. He must do the
aictual woik under a master. The
same thing can be caid of agricul
ture or any profession, and this
principle Is doubly true In the great
science of commerce. When the
farmer, the mechanic, tihe profession
al man, by his ac of patrontzinlg a
great retail corporation of a foreign
thus cripples or destroys the latter!'
he la robbing the boy or girl of ha
neighborhood, who wishes to follow
a commercial pursuit, of the privil
ege of acquiring the knowledge and
practice which these local institu
tions alone can afford. What Is thet
result ct ins en-anger ine Doy de
siring to follow a commercial pur
tiuit, takes a commercial courss in
some local school or correspondence,
school, and without any actual ex-
. .. : t v. .. .hi . .. i .. ... . I
lng people in a business way, and
without a character established, he
ia V once deprived of the Influence
nrd r strrlnt of home and friends
and finds himself In a great city
suit umled by strange is and the
r iy's alluring temptations. The
straistr'si face has no restraining
influence, and bis character Is not
sufficiently developed to assist him
In resisting temptation and he falls,
and becomes a victim to vicious hab
its. Instead of the success that a
strong, well developed manhood
would have insured we have a fail
ure and a menace to our Institu
tions. If he does not fall into evil
ways, at the beet, he becomes but a
cog In a great machine, and is lost
to the world. Again we find his
sister, being prepared by he same
Incompetent system of schooling, and
provided with a diploma, showing
her qualifications as a stenographer,
bookkeeper, short 'Story writer or
some other profession. Without that
practical experience, which should
have been afforded her through some
prcperoua local merchant, he en
ters the city and takes her place
with a great horde of other girls,
similarly inefficiently equipped, and
struggling for existence. She be
comes a victim for white slavers
and an early and dishonored grave.
"There are but two alternatives
for this dilemma. You must sup
port and maintain your local mer-
FLOOD IN DRY COUNTRY
Correspondent Writes cf Cloud
Burst In Mountains of Idaho,
Flooding Valley
MR. LIBBY'S SECOND LETTER
Welder, Idaho, July i6, HH.1.
Tclse had qul.'e a flood. Water
wi.t dewn a gulch and fprrnd over
twenty-five blocks- of the residence
section. Cellars were flooded, lawnut
ruined and skie walks covered' with
frcm two to 4x Inches of mud,
caused by a cloudburst In the moun
tains et the head of what is called
Hulls Oulch, which cnt a volume of
muddy water ix feet In height and
a liluk wide Into the c'ty at the
north end and spread over twenty
five- blocks, doing thousands of dol
lara worth of damage to the resi
dence property In that part of the
city. This happened Thursday the
21th. At the same time between
llolse and Welser, In what they call
the Willow Creek country, the
damage ia said to be over $150,000.
The water came down the canyon
twelve feet high, one ninn lost 30
nireis cf grain, another lost 40 acres
tf barley and 15 tons of hay In the
- tack, and his barn and wagom and
farm Implements. Another lost 7
hogs, 2 wagons, a new buggy, 20 tons
of rny and all of his crops. An
c iitr lcet 30 hogs and all farm ma
chinery and wagons and 70 acres of
a -::ilfu and ft 111 others all along the
valley suffered more or less. At
Wc'.ser we Just had a nice rain dur
ing the forenoon.
S. II. L.
ability. Dr. Ilcwtro-m, the ro lrlnR
veterinarian, any he 1 "abo.e the
average" ami commends the ap
pointment. WILL FEED CATTLE IN TEXAS
John Murphy writes frcm San
Juan. Texas, requiring that h
ncldrcfs for The Herald be changed
j . i ii
to that place from lakeside, Nebr.
He says: "Just got back frcm a
trip over to Mexico where I bought
a bunch of cattle which 1 am going
to put on feed down here. This
country Iws got the world bp-it for
raising crops. We have corn that
is going one hundred bushels to th
acre and alfalfa eight to ten tons,
besides we will get a winter crop."
chant, and through him provide an
opportunity for your boys and girls
who desire to follow a life of com
merce to get th preliminary train
ing and build their character at
home, or you may patronize the
large, soulles corporations, with
all their deceptive and fraudulent
advertising, of the great oJty, and
send your boys and glrlis desiring
commerce ns a profession, to them,
unprepared and unable to meet the
despeiate questions they must solve.
This U the one great cause of our
madern commercialized vice, and the
LsfIs cf white filavery. Every time
you write an order to a foreign mail
order house Instead of patronizing
your local merchant you are paving
the way for the ruin of some boy,
for the destruction of some girl.
This, I clap as the first great
cauin; cf molern commercialized vice
and white slavery.
"All Investigations into the cause
for commercialized vice lays a large
proportion of the blame at the door
of low wages; wages Insufficient to
sustain life. The grejit department
mail order houses are largely re
sponsible fcr this condition. As a
result we see the boys 'of ttw coun
try ddstriots robbed of their man
hood, the girls of their virtue, and
the city of its greatest resource,
the pure blood aad moral courage
of the country.
'The patronage of these mall or
der institutions in nothing more nor
les than llcentlng them to coin the
blood cf your boys and glrU into
dollars, and the few pennies you
may save In the original' purchase
's your share of this blood money.
Will you continue the partnership?"
REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS
America Leads
the World
n nupHoNE I if
m DIRECTORY ; ; -
k United States fJ tu?
113 EUR0PE 1 &
America lias more telephones than all other na
tions of the earth.
Of the 22 billion telephone talks a year in the
world, 15 billion are made in the United States; 8
million out of 12 million telephones are here.
In America the various Hell Telephone Com
panies operate under one policy, as one system, air
ing universal service.
Long Distance Belt Telephone
Lines Reach Nearly Everywhere.
NEBRASKA TELEPHONE COMPANY
I4 NT.
Repc.tcd by J. D. Emerlck, Bonded
Abstracter, Alliance, Nebr.
IBT DISPLAY OF
NEBRASKA'S FINISHED PRODUCTS
FAIN 3 SPECTACULAR
roiLB mmmmz- displays
rara3SEr FIREWORKS
Jl
m
Albert C. Reynolds to Jennie
Reynolds: NK4, Sty
XW4. Sty of 21-2852 1
Susan J. Holdrldge' to James
Keeltr: Ixt 8, blcck 4, Sec.
Co. addition, Alliance 1325
Kllzabeth A. Scrlbner to James
Butler: NWty 102551 200
Edwin. G. Kirk to M. C. Hub
bell, Lets 6 and 7, block 9,
original town, Alliance .... 1
George S. Miller to William
Haper, Let 1, bloc o. South ,
Alliance V)
Sophia Weinel to Peter Weln
el: Los 6 and 6, block 1,
Johnston 't addition. Alliance, 1
Uman B. Cornell to A. Die
bolt, Jr.. NWty 4-26-49 .... S300
Dierks' Lumber Company to
Oscar O'Dannon, tract 2, of
SEV4 35-25-48 275
Thomas S. Leith to Albeit Un
der wcod: NEV4 26-24-51 ... 4500
Guy O. Sprowls to Wlltlam Fo
ket: Lets 17 and 18, block
25, original town, Hemlng
ford 1400
Clare O. Marks to WllHam
King: Lot 3, block 1, sec. co.
addition, Alliance 600
Hattie Wheeler Johnson to
Mary A. Ward: Ixt 18. blk.
17, oris, town, Hemingford, 1000
C. A. Burlew. Exe.. to William
Wllken: NWty 9-27-49 4800
Lincoln Land Company to II.
T. Carey: Let 8, blork "E".
Sheridan addlt'on to Alli
ance 225
Kl tle A. Mackey Peabody to
Fannie Shanklln: NEi 34-24-49
1600
Wm. Roy ShankHn to Fannie
Shanklln: W4 21, SKty 28,
NWty 34,all in 24-49 1200
United States o Jeaper Jes
perten: Section 32-2-6-50 ..Patent
United States to Samuel J.
button: Ety SEty, NWty
SEVi. NEVi SW4 27-24-50. patent
United States to Henry Brus,
Iot 1. 2. 3. Sty NEVi , SE
'i. SEV4 NWty, Kty SWli.
6-25-51 Patent
United States to Benjamin F.
Elaea. 7-25-61 Patent
United States to Stephen Dol
an. Wty NWV4. Wty SW'i.
27, and SE4 28 23-51 .... Patent
New State Veterinarian
Governor Morehead has appointed
Dr. Lawrence A. Klgiu of Lincoln
as at ate veterinarian to surccJ Dr.
A. Uoatrom of Mlnden who occupied
the position under appointment of
Governor Aldrich. Dr. Klgln la a
graduate of the Indiana Veterin: ry
college and ha been practicing furl
yeurs, the laxt year In Lincoln, lie
is spoken of a a vdlerluurLiu cf
liberdti's Band sGrand Opera Co.
FIVE RACES DAILY
Patterson's shows.vaudevilll
ASK YOUR AGENT TOR R.R.RATE.
ate a
nit
Get
Suppose some o.ne offered to give
you $10,000 00 in cash the day
you completed an I. S. C. course.
' You would start to work rijfht
away, wouldn't you? But just
think, the Course is really worth
more than lio.poo.oo in cash, for
$10,000.00 in cash invested would
bring you at 6 per cent interest
only a net return of $600 a year,
while statistics made up from
many thousands of cases show
that the average technically-trained
man earns $950.00 a year more
than the average man without
Technical Training.
For full information concerning
any position write the
loteroatioDal Correspondence Schools, Scraotoo, Pa.,
or call upon their representative,
B. L. Craig, at Alliance Hotel,
from the 15th to 20th of each month
failta
1