The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, June 03, 1915, Image 3

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    Exchange Gossip
We overlooked last week mention
ing the death of Peter Rubendall of
Alliance. Mr. Rubendall was a
brother of our Mrs. L. A. Gorr. He
died Thursday the 20th. Mr. and
Mrs. Gorr attended the funeral on
Saturday. The remains were taken
to Lincoln for burial. Cbadron
Journal.
The Alliance Boosters are coming
to our city on their booster trip, and
If the weather does not Interfere, a
balloon ascension will take place.
When the balloon ia up In the air 300
feet a large banner will be unfurled,
and to the boy or girl who catches
the banner and returns It to Secre
tary Fisher of the Alliance Commer
cial Club a cash prize of one dollar
will be given. The Boosters will ar
rive about 12:30 p. m., May 31st.
Crawford Tribune.
Chas. and Mrs. Tully and Wm. Mc
Laughlin, wife and two children au
toed over from Alliance Tuesday and
were guests at the L, C. Musser home
for the day. Rushvllle Standard.
attends strictly to business and will
make a goo 14 d home for the lady of
bis choice. His bride will do her
part In making a happy home, and
the best wishes of their host of
friends Is for continued health and
success. L'dgemont Express.
On Thursday, May 27, 1915, Ben
Kolter and Helen IZttrich, both par
ties well known, were married, Rev.
P. Donnelly of Alliance tying the
knot. The groom is one of our well
known young men who with his par
ents has resided In Burton for years.
He Is now engineer on the water wa
gon and has all he can attend to. He
, ? a x. i
1
PL
Saturday morning Secretaries
Fisher and Rundin, of the Comiuer-
jclal Clubs of Alliance and Crawford,
respectively, will leave Alliance for
Crawford, marking the entire road
between these two cities. Iron posts
will be erected, wooden stakes put
down where needed, and everything
possible will be done to mark the
;road making it possible for all
strangers traveling via this Black
Hills Loop to find the way. Secre
tary Rundin also is planning to
mark the road between here and Hot
Springs via the new road at the
state line connecting there with Hot
Springs. When t Is is done the en
tire road between Deadwood and
Denver will be properly marked.
Much credit is due the Associated
Commercial Clubs of Western Nebr
aska who have had this matter In
charge. Crawford Tribune.
A visitor was being shown thru
the hospital for Insane at Lincoln
when the attendant said: "This is
the automobile department. Do you
know there are 97 stark-raving auto
mobile maniacs In there." "But,"
said the visitor, looking in amaze
ment, "I can only count six in there."
"Well, the remaining 91 are all un
der the beds trying to find out why
the blamed things won't run," said
the attendant. Ex.
is. ,
Do cold settle on your chest or in your
bronchial tubes ? Do coughs hang; on, or
are you subject to throat troubles?
Such troubles should have immediate
treatment with the strengthening powers
of Scott's Emulsion to guard against
consunfption which so easily follows.
Scott's Emulsion contains pure cod liver
oil which peculiarly strengthens the res
piratory tract and improves the quality of
the blood; the glycerine in it soothes and
heals the tender membranes of the throat.
Scott's is prescribed by the best special
ista. You can get it at any drug store.
Scott flt Bowne, Bloomfield. N. 1,
Did you ever notice that If you
place the transmitter of the tele
phone against your chest, Instead of
your mouth, It makes no apparent
difference to your auditor? If you
are talking over a desk instrument,
it is often easier to hold it against
the chest than to your mouth. Sim
ply hold the transmitter to your
chest and talk Into the open air. The
entire chest wall vibrates In unison
with the voice and will transmit the
sound vibrations over the telephone
as well as your voice. Ex.
Coleman appeared In the operetta
"The Wise and Foolish Virgins", and
Calla Neumann took part in a Span
ish ance, "Senora." The News
'Blade Is informed that Angora's
bootlegger is again doing a flourish
ing business, carrying In his stock
'on the night trains alternately from
Bridgeport and Alliance. Sec
retary Fisher of the Alliance Com
merc'al Club notifies the News-Blade
that the Alliance boosters will arrive
at Bridgeport on trip No. 4, June 6,
reaching here at 10:45 and leaving
at 12:30. All right, gentlemen;
come right along; but as June 6 hap
pens to be Sunday you may find all
the Bridgeport fellows at church.
However, seats will be reserved for
the Alliance brethern at all places of
worship, and the rreachers will be
instructed to pray for the visitors
with all the eloquence at his com
mand. Come on, boys. Bridgeport
News-Blade.
Mr. and Mrs. John E. Coleman
wept to Alliance yesterday. Their
daughter. Miss Mary, graduated at
the Sisters' academy, and the com
mencement exercises were held last
night. Brldgport Herald.
Frank Hedgltn returned last Sat
urday from Alliance fully recovered
from the effects of his recent opera
tion for appendicitis, and Is again at
his chair In the O. K. barber shop.
Miss Mary Coleman of this
city graduates this week from St.
Agnes Academy at Alliance. In the
program rendered at the Phelan op
era house Wednesday night Miss
Out of a Job"
You don't have to be everlastingly watching the "want" columns
if you have the knowledge that not only puts you in a good position,
but that also keeps you there at a steadily increasing salary.
It's not a question of being a walking encyclopedia, but of having
the sound, practical training that makes you an expert at your chosen
calling that brings you a good salary year in and year out that puts
you first on the promotion list and last or the "laid-ofl list" that keepa
your position safe and sound while other cjsps are going the rounds
looking for work.
The International Correspondence Schools, of Scranton, deal in train
ing for higher salaries. The I. C. S. comes right to your home and makes
you an expert whether you're sixteen or sixty whether you live one or
one thousand miles away whether you're an outside or an inside man.
Does it in your spare time, without requiring ycu to buy a single book.
To learn how the I. C. S. can help you, mark the attached coupon and
mail it today. No charge for the information and advice it brings.
A Good Position
and More Money
Not a dollar or two more, but
your salary doubled, trebled,
quadrupled. That's the kind of
success thousands of poorly paid
men and women have already
won through I. C. S. help. On
an average 400 students every
month voluntarily report salaries
increased and multiplied as the
direct result of I. C. S. help.
Mail the coupon NOW. w
Always the Best Work
PAINTING, PAPER HANGING
AND DECORATING
Estimates gladly furnished Work guaranteed to please
PHONE BLACK 282 B. V. REEVES ALLIANCE, NEBR(
Attorney Joe Westover was up
from Alliance Tuesday attending to
legal business. Crawford Courier.
International Correspondence Schools
Box 688, Scranton, Pa.
Fleate explala, without further obtitetloa ea my
put, how I ess quality for Ibe poeittin, trade, cr
piblctiiuh before which 1 have maiked X.
AytemeeHe dunning
Peultff Farming
eeekeeper
ttenegraphef
Aeverttalne. Man
haw-Caie Writing
Window Tnmmme
Cemmereiel Hiwelratlrif
rnewtlnel Daalonlne
rchitacturel O'altemen
Ce"fet f "eniai
Laneuaaee J ererei
nuirg 1 Qeimen
C rii . ca tl'e'.an
Oeelrleel Wtremefl
theatrical tnglnaer
Mechanical Dratlawan
Mechanical f ngmeer
Teieanene treert
tetienarf Cngnr
Ttlie Manufacture,
Civil Cngmacr
miaing Centreeter
Architect
Concrete Cenetructien
P'emhing, altera filling
Mine fereman
Mm, gucer'nleneent
DYE & OWENS
Transfer Line
1 ," Ocav Pnono ' a
'S AT Household roods
' moved nromotlv
K,;4 1 . f i.
s&r$rre solicited.
teeldanee phone 131 and BIim 17
AT THE ACADEMY
Commencement Kierclae1 Held At
Holy ItoHMry Church ImhI Tlitinc
lay KveniiiK for Academy
Commencement exercises for the
High School of St. Agnes academy
were held at Holy Rosary church on
Thursday, at 8 . m.
The altars and sanctuary were
beautifully decorated for the occas
ion. The clergy from out of town who
honored the graduates by their pres
ence were: llev. Fr. Dolan, from
Chadron; Hev. Fr. Link and Dr. Mc
Laughlin from Sidney; Rev. Fr. Mo-
lony from Ogalalla; Rev. Fr. Moser
from Crawford; Rev. Fr. Gleason
from Broken Bow; Rev. Fr. Kaiser
from Hemingford; Rev. Fr. Byrne
from Scottsbluff.
Father aKiser gave a very Instruc
tive lecture on education. After this
Fr. Donnelly presented gold medal,
diploma and teacher'a certificate to
Marguerite Carey, Mary Comer, Mar
garette Kuester and Mae Schaefer;
teacher's certificates were awarded
to Mary Becker, Clara Becker, Mary
Coleman and Ella Moravek; Dorothy
Llehe, Elizabeth Carmlchael and Mae
Blaln received diplomas for the com
pletion of commercial course; Mary
Comer and Margarette Kuester were
each awarded a gold medal for mu
sic.
After the services the parents and
friends of the graduates assemble
at the academy auditorium. Lunch
eon was served, a short program giv
en and a thoroughly enjoyable even
ing closed the last school day at S.
A. A.
Strut and A'..
Citp.
.Statt-
I.
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 M ere 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 sows 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 does not have to
leave the farm or his work.
lie can choose from the following courses:
Boll Improvement Coarse Cereal Culture Course
Horticultural Course Dry Farming Course
Small Farming Course Farm Engineering Course
Soil Tillage Coarse
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
LINCOLN .... NFIUMSKA
T. 5. 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 Ave.
Phone 682
E TEA III
LIFELESS, GRAY HAIR
Look young! Common garden Saga
and Sulphur darkens so naturally
nobody can tell
J
TNE PRUDENT MAN DOES NOT
TAKE A C NANCE - E PUTS NS
MONEYN TNE BANK WHERE IT 3
SATE, AND READY EOR A GOOD
BUSNESS OPPORTUNITY
Make Our bank roix gam.
we CAHtDvs rou.
Foollhh, indeed, Is the man that "chances" all the earning of
his life on borne good aeemlng lnvenUaent without f1rt thoroughly
investigating Ita merit. We shall cheerfully advise our ruNtonier
and friends on money matters.
We, ourselve, stick strictly to (SAFK HANKING burine; and
we advlae everyone to iook before be leap", and take what may
prove a disastrous chance.
Make OUR bank TOUR bank.
First State Bank
ALLIANCE. NEBRASKA
Grandmother kept her hair beautifully
darkened, glower and abundant with a
brew of Bae Tea and Sulphur. Whan-
erer her hair fell out or took on thai
, dull, faded or streaked apearanoe, Uiia
I simple mixture was applied with won
I derful effect. By asking at any drug
' store for "WyetVs Sae and Sulphur
Eair Remedy,' you will get a large
: bottle of this old-time recipe, ready to
' use, for about 60 cents. This simple
! mixture can be depended upon to restore
I natural color and beauty to the hair and
! ia splendid for dandruff, dry, itchy scalp
I and falling hair.
I A well-known downtown druggist says
! everybody uses Wyetb's Sage and Sul
phur, because it darkens ao naturally and
evenly that nobody can tell it has been
applied it's so eaay to use, too. You
simply dampen a onmb or soft brush
and draw it through your hair, taking
one strand at a time. Py morning the
gray hair disappears; after another appli
cation or two, It ia restored to it natural
color and looks glossy, soft and abundant.
T, P. A, PROGRAM
National Convention of Traveler
rrotectlve Asmiflatlon to lie
Held In Omaha In June
The National convention of the
Travelers' Protective Association la
to be held In On.aha the week of
June 14th. Several of the nierabera
of Post M of Alliance will attend
among them being Hoy C. Strong and.
Roh't Ludinaton, delegates.
The proxram for the convention
will be as follows:
MoiMlay, June 14th
9:30 a. in. Parade. Trices for
the best appearing delegation and
the most unique delegation.
10:45 a. m. Convention called to
order by II. O. Hoel, chairman of the
Executive Committee.
Welcome on behalf of Post A -O.
L. Wohlford, President.
Invocation Kev. A. A. Drooka.
Welcome to Nebraska Governor
John II. Morehead.
Welcome to OmahaMayor Jas.
C. Dahlman.
Welcome, Ye Travel In ft Men
Congressman C. O. Lobeck.
Welcome Address U. S. Senator
Gilbert M. Hitchcock.
Response National President V.
Schoenecker, Jr.
Business Session.
Adjournment.
2:30 p. m. Business session.
3:45 p. ra. Memorial services.
6:30 p. in. Koine Hotel, compli
mentary luncheon to the State Pres
idents' Association.
6:30 p. m.- Henshaw Hotel, com
plimentary luncheon to the State
Secretaries' Association.
8:00 p. m. All visiting T. P. A.'a
will be entertained by the Knights of
Ak-Sar-Den at the Den, "the event of
the week."
8:00 p. m. At the Hotel Fonten-
elle, card party and reception for all
visiting T. P. A. ladles. Cards, mu
sic and refreshments.
Tuewlay June 15th
Morning business session.
Afternoon business session.
3 p. m. Visiting ladies will bo
guests at the Omaha Field Club.
8:30 p. m. Reception and dance
for all delegates and ladies given by
the Hotel Fontenelle. Informal, the
opportunity for all to get acquainted.
Wedneaday, June 18th
Morning business session.
12:30 noon Inspection of the It
en Biscuit Co. 's plant, followed by a
complimentary luncheon to all visit
ing delegates and ladles.'
Afternoon business session.
2:80 p. m. Reception for visiting;
ladles at the Carter Lake Club. Mu
sic, aquatic sports and refreshments.
There will be a high diving contest,
with entries from all over the coun
try. 8 p. m. Reception to the visiting
delegates and ladles by the Omaha
Commercial Clnb at their clubw
rooms. ,
Thurtitlay, June 17th '
Morning business session.
10:30 a. in. Visiting ladies and
delegates will be taken to South Om
aha, where the packing houses will
be Inspected and a luncheon served
by the Union Stock Yards Company,
of which E. E. Buckingham is presi
dent. Afternoon Leaving South Omaha
special cars will take the ladles and
delegates direct to Council Bluffs.
Ia., where they will be given an op
portunity to Inspect the Wllcor
greenhouses (the largest In the
world). Following the party will be
taken to the grounds of the Council
Bluffs Rowing Asuoclatlon and Fish
and Game Club on Lake Manawa.
where Page Morrison, secretary of
Post B, Iowa Division, will serve one
of his famous cattish bakes. In the
evening the visitors will be given
their choice of dancing, boating, etc.,
as guests of the Council Bluffs Row
ing Association. If the laws permit,
we will endeavor to pull off an old
fashioned badger light.
Friday, June 18th
Morning business session.
Afternoon business session.
Evening entertainment will be.
provided for.
OLD I'APKIW for knle at The Herald
Office. Five cents per bundle.
FARE $322 MAILY BETWEEN
CLEVELAND &
saiBUFFALG
The Great Ship
fcj The larireei an 4 meet rtwUy etrwuner on any inland water of tha world.
liona lur lw paaaenKara.
M 'CITY OF ERIE" 3 Marwlf iceat Steam XXTt OF BUFFALO'
N Bfciwtm
"e e,i m a mew. w ea ai m a . w - ww tun a
Blasniac aacccnmoila-
CLEVELAND Dafly, May 1st to I
LI Leava Cleveland i.faf.M. Leaea Buffalo
a a AnivabuffaM . 30A.M, Arriea Ciaealaad
UlLentnl (Standard 1 ime)
ete reeding between Cleveland and Bntlalo ara good iur traaspiartaliui ao ear ateamara. Aafc
jwir tir.f, aymi kit iir,w ,n y . qi Line.
OOP. M.
peiuiiiuuy swiorsMi seeuvnai puis: rraarx, tiiowmg uuci a baaraur anu inwrsur uc
Ship "Ei.EANLHlvK" swnt on rint if nv mil to frrir pCTrtagt and anwHaif ,
.. na (l.e... .... I -.1 - - U 1.1. S
THE CLEVELAND U BUFFALO TRANSIT CO
IbeUraatl
. AJaaaeh I
I
aeHUiiiniiatiaaMaj
.. CUa.aa. Ohi jfr
New Dairy
I have equipped a sew dairy with
Jersey and Durham Cattle
and am sow prepared to supply the people of Alliance with
the Finest Milk and Cream
16 Quarts of Milk for One Dollar
Delivered Anywhere In the City
George D. Workman
I
I