"ONrlU:TK fiOKS TllltU WINDOW Two Men Narrowly Kraped Ilclng Hit by Missile What might hare proven a very serious accident occured at the court house last Saturday when workmen were dynamiting the floor of the old Jail In their efforts to loosen it so it could be removed. County Attorney Basye's office is on the third floor, on the same side of the building as the Jail stood. The first shot of dynamite made quite a scatterment but nothing was thought of It, but the second and last shot was the one which produced "re sults". The small pieces of concrete went up in the air, and one, slightly larger than the others, made a direct drive for the window of Mr. Basye's office, going through the glass and falling on the floor. Clerk Har graves and Mr. Basye were standing In the room at the time, watching the performance, and noticed the piece coming their way, but thought it would go on top of the building. Had Mr. Hargraves stood still, he would probably have received a mor tal wound on top of his head. How ever, both men sidestepped and no damage was done except to the win dow. The hole In the plans was clean cut, and about four Inches In diameter. Occupants of the district court room and of other offices In the building Were startled when the con crete began to drop onto the roof, and those with vivid Imaginations might have thought themselves In London, wtth Zeppelins dropping deadly missiles on their shelter. Trtxle King (Joe to Asylum Trlxle Sing, the woman dope fiend who came here from Sheridan, Wy- Over 90 per cent of Business Men Fail Men fail in business because they do not know the game. They lack system and a thorough knowledge of their business. The reason why so many would-be farmers fail is because they know little or nothing of the science of farming. They think anybody can farm and then are surprised to find that their crops will not grow. The farmer who is always behind, who always has bad luck with his crops, is the man who farms by guess and trusts to luck. If he were in the mercantile business he would be in the hands of a receiver within a year. He is a failure but he hangs on because the poorest farmer can get a living out of the land if he only plows and 6ows the seed. An Agricultural Education The first thing a young man who intends to go into busi ness should do is to take a course in a business college. Here he can become familiar with the first principles of business, without which he will fail. The first thing a man who expects to farm should do is to take a course in an agricultural college, if he can, but if he has not the time or the money to spend in a two-year course, he can get the same instruction at home by taking a course in the Campbell Correspondence School of Soil Culture. Everything is furnished books and all at a very slight cost, and the best thing about it, he docs not have to leave the farm or his work. He can choose from the following courses: Soil Improvement Course Cereal Culture Course Horticultural Course Dry Farming Course Small Fanning Course Farm Engineering Course Soil Tillage Course Summer is the time to study agriculture, and the farm and garden is the laboratory in which to work out the problems. Don't wait for fall or winter to begin, but get bsuy now. You will learn more in one summer applying your instruction in the fields than in a dozen winters sitting by the fire. Send for our catalog Number 8. It will not cost you a cent. Campbell Correspondence School oming, and who was held here for two days and then sent to Lincoln, Is now in the asylum for the Insane at Norfolk, Nebraska, being taken to that place from Lincoln. The Lin coln authorities were at first dis posed to return the woman to Alli ance, but an article In the Lincoln News explained that they had decid ed her mental condition was such that she should be put in a house of correction. "Trlxle" caused consid erable commotion here when she was locked In the city Jail, by climb ing up on the bars over the windows, calling to men on the street to give her a cigarette, shouting for help, and in other ways. It Is hoped that a sojourn In the asylum will be bene ficial, but it Is thought her case is hopeless. ScottsblufT Hoy Klertror-uted A press dispatch rrom Scottsbluff to the Omaha Bee of Monday, the 19th, states: Atlas Smith, aged 10, was instant ly killed by electrocution on the transmission lines of the Cross & Roberts Electric Co., where they cross the bridge between Scottsbluff and Gering, today. He was attempt ing to untangle his flshllne from live wires. The body was recovered from the river, where It bad fallen after being burned blue. He was the son of V. P. Smith, city scavenger. Too many women struggle under pains and acnes. They are not sickbut weak, nervous, irritable. Such women need that blood strength that comes by taking SCOTT'S EMULSION. It also strengthens the nerves, aids the ap petite and checks the decline. If veifm or tnothtt frr ttuily or look mm down, SCOTT'S EMULSION win build htr p. SHUN SUBSTITUTES. LINCOLN NEBRASKA Try This on Your Eczema If you are afflicted with Salt Rheum, Tetter, dry Eczema, Acne or Pimples, buy a jar of Dry Zensal. For that watery eruption or Weeping Skin, use Moist Zensal. 50 cents the jar. HA1Y F. TDIELE "Yes, mother's right here; but how's everything, Jack?' When the Son Telephones Home It's wonderful how much pleasure can be obtained from a talk over the telephone. It's so pleasant to those far away to hear the laughing, cheery voices of the home folks. The Bell Telephone heeds no city limits, no county lines, no state borders, no rivers it goes on and on to every nook and corner of the country. The Bell Telephone has become the dependable mes senger of the American people, giving the most efficient service enjoyed by any country In the world. Bell Service it Efficient and Dependable Service NEBRASKA TELEPHONE COMPANY II llo'o Column The time Is at hand when a man of the household goeth forth with a spade, a hoe and a rake and maketh a garden In his bark yard; and he watcheth the growth of the young vegetables day by day and Is much pleased; but lo, and behold! he goeth forth to look upon his garden on the ninth day of the third month and he flndeth It not, for the eblrkens of his neighbors have laid waste the tender onions and radishes and the crispy letture. And In the evening and the morning and at noontime of the tenth and eleventh and succeeding days, the man who had a garden but now hath it not, aitteth on the back fence of his yard with a shotgun, ly ing in wait for the chickens of bis neighbors. lion bushels of potatoes still unsold in the state of New York, yet press quotations In metropolitan dailies are almost as high as If there were no overproduction. In other words, the price to the consumer Is from seventy cents to one dollar and twen ty cents a bushel In the large cen ters, although according to the coun try weekly newspapers of the state of New York potatoes can now be bought from the farmers at from fifteen to thirty cents a bushel. They say that if there were not such a dis crepancy In price between the pro ducer and the consumer It would be possible to dispose of more of the present overproduction. Various plans have been suggested for dis posing of the crop, but not one Is said to offer a suitable solution of the difficulty. According to the fed eral department of agriculture, the potato has practically only one com mercial outlet In the United States and that Is as human food. In Ger many, the potato is the basis for at least forty different products, includ ing potato flour and alcohol. The outlet for potatoes through this source In this country Is at present said to be almost negligible. while riding with an illiterate negro, the minister began gravely to chat ter Italian to his brunette driver. The negro looked wildly at the minister and aald nothing. Finally the white man, In pretended pique, said: "What's the matter T Why don't you answer?" "I dono what yo'-all talkln' bout." "What's wrong? Haven't you any brains?" "Yassah, I got some brains;, but dey aln' no use to me now." "Mother," asked Tommy. "Is It correct to say that you 'water ft horse' when he Is thirsty?" "Yes, my dear," said his mother. "Well, then," said Tommy, picking up a saucer, "I'm going to milk the cat." Ladles' Home Journal. Something Wrong Here There are said to be fifteen mil- IF IS Mill GRAY. USE SAGE TEA Don't look old I Try Grandmother's recipe to darken and beautify faded, lifeless hair. That beautiful, even shade of dark, glossy hair can only be had by brewing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur. lour batr la your charm. It make or mars the face. When it fades, turns gray, streaked and looks dry, wispy and scraggly, just an application or two of Sae end Sulphur enhances its appear- ince a hundredfold. Don't bother to prepare the tonic; you ..n get from any drug store a 60 cent notlle of "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy, ready to use. This can always be depended upon to bring back the natural color, thickness and lustre of your hair and remove dandruff, stop scalp itching and falling hair. tveryliody uses wyeth's" Sage and Sulphur because it darkens so naturally and evenly tlint nobody can tell It has bfcart applied. You simply dampen ft sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through the hair, taking one small strand at time; by morning the gray bair bas disappeared, and alter another application it becomes beautifully dark and appears glossy, lustrous and abun dant A Word on Advert Iwing It has been a long time since the merchant bas had the opportunity that now lies at his very door. The winter that Ms passed was a hard one, financially, for many people, and customers are more alert than ever for good bargains. The mer chant who can secure bargains for his customers and honestly adver tise his wares Is sure of large returns for the advertisement. The great trouble of some adver tisers Is that they are not exactly truthful In the ads. The ad may not be purposely misleading, but the article or articles are not lust as they are represented to be, and the read er loses faith In the merchant. It would be a revelation to the mer chant If It were possible for him to know how many people look at his ad to see what he bas to offer In the line of bargains, and right here Is the mistake of the reader. Adver tisements are not concerned or should not be concerned with bar gains only. The reason that they are so often looked on as bargain an nouncements Is the fact that so many advertisers pay for printers' Ink only when they have bargains. It Is a wrong attitude on the part of the merchant and the buyer. Goods should be advertised whether they are marked down or not. Advertis ing is getting to be a necessity If one would draw trade, and the sooner the merchant realizes the necessity of constant, truthful advertising the oftener will he turn over his stock of goods. We Should Smile The thing that goes the farthest toward making life worth while. That costs the least and does the most, Is Just a pleasant smile. The smile that bubbles from the heart that loves Its fellowmen Will drive away the cloud of gloom and coax the sun again. It's full of worth and goodness, too, wtth manly kindness blent; It's worth a million dollars and It doesn't cost ft cent. There is no room for sadness when we see ft cheery smile. It always has the same look It's never out of style: It nerves us on to try again when failure makes us blue. Such dimples of encouragement are good for me and you. So smile away; folks understand by what a smile Is meant It's worth a million dollars and It doesn't cost ft cent. He-published by request. Maid (knocking in the morning) Madame, I've forgotten whether you wanted to be waked at seven or eight. What time is It now? Eight. Simeon Easy, after living sixty years on a farm, finds his quarters on shipboard are somewhat cramp ed. He obviates the lack of space, however, by stowing his trousers and shoes Into a round cupboard In the side of the vessel on going to bed. Seven a. m. startling disclos ures! "Steward, last night I put my clothes In that subby-hole, an' they ain't there now." "That ain't a clothes press; that's a porthole, sir." A well known Mississippi minister was fond of playing pranks. One day, 5 I S T. S. Fielding The Wardrobe The only odorless cleaning in the City. We have the only power machinery in Alliance for the cleaning of clothes none of that odor found in hand cleaning. The price is no higher. Try us and be convinced. 315 Box Butte A ve. Phone 682 Little Robert Ma, was Robinson Crusoe an acrobat? Mother I don't know. Why? Little Robert Well, here It reads that after he had finished his day's work, he sat down on his chest. FINE HKKD POTATOES Have a car of Minnesota Red Riv er Ohio seed potatoes ordered. They are free from scab and dry rot. Each farmer should get enough to plant five acres this year. , It will not cost you much to get enough for five acres and It will pay you big to get pure seed that command a better price on the market when you raise them to sell. I have given Mr. Seidell ft sample of this seed. Ask him his opinion on this seed and to snow you the sample. Place your order wiia. me at once for your amount. Deliver ed price if taken off the car is 90 cents per bushel sacked. CLARENCE ROSENBERGER, s Sec. Com. Club, Hemlngford. lS-tf-5405 Demand for Alfalfa Heed There Is a big demand at a good price for alfalfa seed grown in Box Butte county, and persons who are so fortunate as to have a supply to sell are strictly in it. A few days ago County Commissioner Cat Hash- man received an order froia Kimball county for thirty bushels at ten dol lars per bushel. FIRST CLASH HLACKSMITHINU For first-class blacksmlthlng and horseshoeing go to the new shop In the alley back of Rodgers' store. W. L. CARROLL. Still Adding to Homier Ranch Hall & Graham continue to in crease the size of tbelr Bonner ranch by purchasing adjacent land. Last week they, closed a deal thru the Acheson Bros, real estate agency by which they added another pectton of land to their holdings. Storage Sale of SEWING MACHINES BSSaBBBBBBSSSBSBBaana Commencing Wednesday, Harch 17, and continuing until all are sold all mm All PRICES Call and see them at Snyder's Cigar Store GLADDENS "Tir SORE, JED FEET "TIZ" makes sore, burning, tired feel fairly dance with delight. Away go the aches and pains, the corns, callouses, blisters and bunions. "TIZ" draws out the acids and poisons that puff up our feet. No matter how hard; you work, how lung you dance, how far you walk, or how long you remain on your foet, "TIZ" brings restful foot comfort. "TIZ" is won derful for tired. aching, swollen, smarting fet-t. Your feet just tingle for joy; shoe never hurt or seem tight. - Get a 25 cent box of "TIZ" now from any druggist or department store. End foot torture forever wear smaller shoes, keep yor.r fTt i-f'-.' "v'rt nl happy. 1 HITS Granite and Marble PaiDt-Fishburn Granite Co. Grand Islaad, Nebr. Write for Information or call on our Local Agent AL. WIKER Agent t Alliance 2 jLia