I PROFESSIONAL DIRECTOR Rates: One-inch cards, 50 cents; two-inch cards, $1.00 H.A.C0PSEY Physician and Sargeoa ( ' 19m Phone, 110 ' Res. Phone, 141 Cans answered promptly day and atx&t from office. Offices: Alliance Ka3onal Bank bonding, orer the FMt Office. I 0. B. SLAQLE, M. D. Physician and Surgeon OBee phone, 66 Res. phone, SI jw ". ..4. ...-ajsai ALLIANCE NEBRASKA arte Coppernoll F J. Petersen Res. Phone 41 Phone 10 Dn. Coppernoll & Petersen Osteopaths KOOlf I. OPERA HOUSE BLOCK H. M. BULLOCK Attorney-at-Law ALLIANCE NEBRASKA L. W. BOWMAN Pfcysldaa and Surgeon omCE, First National Bank Bldg. raONE8: Office.' ICS; Residence, II ; DR. D. E. TYLER r v Dentist PHONE S62 . OTKB FIRST NATIONAL BANK ALLIANCE : : NEBRASKA PUBLIC STENOGRAPHER AT THE HERALD OFFICE UASONABLE RATES PROMPT SERVICE J. D. EMERICK Bonded Abstracter 1 have the only set of abstract books In Box Butte county. ' OFFICE: Rm. 7, Opera House Block ; J. F. Y ANDERS , TAILOR and HATTER HBST RATIONAL BANK BLDG. ALLIANCE, NEBRASKA "LET ME CRY FOR YOU" HARRY P. COURSEY LITE STOCK AND GENERAL " SALES SPECIALIST AND AUCTIONEER Farm Sales a Specialty TERMS REASONABLE . PHONE: 64 ALLIANCE NEBRA8KA LEG SORES M ULCERS W SlnlWS In Kimu OltT. I hT ooorv (. olltll iiuumnie i.iu nunui VAH1COSK V1X.EK8. My lone nfMiii-e, mlinwl with original d iiKMlrra nifihcxte lraiwn. teivn-t. wlthunl kntO or pain. j . i I""TTIC0 " : I Miee . ! . ' . ' I'tr- .atiMta lltl, Mo. BURTON & REDDISH Attorne.v-at-l.aw lirtixl Attorney rFICE: First National Bank Bldg. THONK 180 ALLIANCE NEBRASKA PHONE: 181 CLARE A. DOW , Electrician HnuM Wlrtl Metor and Anto-starter Kepalrlng ALLIANCE NEBRASKA GEO. O. OADSBY LJt'nl KintMliucr PHONE: Day. 4IS. Nistat. lit aLUANcy: . . nehrabka PROFESSIONAL PHOTOGRAPHER Any kind of Photos. Interior and exterior tiowh QUALITY PORTRAITS Alliance Art Studio M. J5. Grebe, Prop. 114 East 4th Phone Black 111 JAMES M. KENNEDY, DENTIST First National itnuk lluiiiliu-. Alii aace, Nebr. Phono; Ofiire. Hen- ..Hence. Black IO. Xiirm i.l-ml- It . .... v vHdniitereov J. Jeffrey, D.C. Ph.C. A. Q. Jeffrey, D.C. CHIROPRACTORS 303y2 Box Butte Ave., Rooms 3 and 4 Office Hours, 10 a. m. to 8 p. m JAMESOSBORN Contractor and , Builder Estimates Furnished Free ALLIANCE , t : NEBRASKA THOMAS LYNCH Att'y-at-Law 1519-1521 City National Bank Building OMAHA Special Attention to Lire Stock Claims AUTO LIVERY - - PHONE 573 - - C. E. Morgan Ora. "Toiar Trip take with you a box of good and a lete . Get them at up-town news stand , or at depot fULLER BROTHERS RED PEP'S PHILOSOPHY "It's avful theway sotr.e of us chase temptation: It bs'nt a chance to escape! WE ARB HEADQUARTERS For Auto Supplies and Oil and t oline Free Air on the Curb Alliance Auto Supply Co. Phone 29 Geo. J. Hand, H.D. Asthma and Hay Fever , - Eye. Ear, Nose and Throat PHONE 251 Halls answered from office dn o night. Wni. Ritchie, Jr. C.S. Pfrr? RITCHIE & FERRY 1 Attorneyi -a t-Law BRIDGEPORT, NEBRASKi Office in Lincoln, 1411 O St., firm Wednesday of Each Month WHEN IN OMAHA VISIT THE 'Jrand Nv 8v? :,,, , rj0, C.n,,c EVERY WE IViiww -L MuKLUQak j i DIL ti'Y VI'. IV THE GAYETY HEWS FROM LlliCOLII Governor Morehead Announced TliAt He Will Not Htm for Ite-elec-tlon Other Capitol News (By Special Correspondent) Lincoln, Nebr., Feb. 2 This letter Is written through other than the us ual agency this week, owing to busi ness snd difficulties over which no one has control. Editor Expert Ac countant Charles Q. DeFrance has been sent to the Institute for Feeble Minded a't Beatrice, white associate editor, Deputy Secretary of State Hugh L. Cooper, Is convelesctng from a severe attack of grippe. Mr. DeFrance, by the way. Is occupied In checking up the books of the Beatrice Institution preparatory to making the change contemplated by the board of control. Dr. Fast, the present head, will be transferred to the Ingleslde hospital for Insane at Hastings tak ing Dr. Baxter's place as superin tendent, while Dr. O. F. Griffith, sec ond in command at the Lincoln asy lum, has been appointed to take charge of the Feeble Minded Insti tute at Beatrice. According to Its annual report for 1915 the Live Stock Sanitary Board paid out $2,929 which went to pay owners of horses which had been killed on account of glanders. For dourine-effected horses which were destroyed the board paid $727.90. Outside of two horses now being test ed for dourlne and recently Imported into the state, the board reports no other cases In Nebraska at the pres ent time. That the business methods adopt ed by Auditor Wm. H. Smith when he took charge of the auditor's office a year ago this January, has resulted In a large saving to the state Is Indi cated by a comparison of his first year and his predecessor's first year in oTFes. In 1913. which was the first year of Mr. Smith's predeces sor's term, the expense of maintain ing the auditor's office totaled $22, 244.05. In 1915, with conditions practically the same, or if anything a little more strenuous, due to the In crease in the business of the office, the total expense for the year was $18,436.99, or an actual saving of $3,808.06. This saving has not ef fected or retarded In any way the ef ficiency of the office. On the con trary the department work has n9ver been more efficiently executed. There has been a paring down and a con solidation of some of the minor posi tions, more modern methods of book keeping and recording adopted, and as a consequence one person is now doing the same work which has re quired the services of two or three heretofore. Governor Morebead gave out a statement the fore part of the week In which he declared he would not ! be a candidate for a third term as (governor. This has somewhat upset the plans of his legion or menus ana admirers who were In hopes that he might be prevailed upon to make the race again. Probably no'chief execu tive of Nebraska has ever been so popular, or accomplished so much in the short three years that he has been at thfThead of the state's affairs as has Governor Morehead. His business acumen and influence has been felt In every department of the state. He has truly been Nebraska's business governor and It will take a pretty good sized fellow to fill his place when he steps down from the executive chair. The automobile department in the o fflco of Secretary of State Charles W. Pool haB been a very busy place since January 1 sending out the nl.to, trf iha vmr 191ft. and al- i m J C A A A Vintm Vnan ready mure mnu iovw ua,? uvu mailed out and the work is s'till go ing merrily on. All number plates are now on an equal footing and none will be issued on former num bers. Jump from Bed in Morning and Drink Hot Water Tells why everyone should drink , hot water each morning before breakfast. Why Is man and woman, half the time, feeling nervous despondent, worried; some days headachy, dull and unstrung; some days really incapaci tated by illness. If we all would practice inside-bathing, what a gratifying change would take place. Iiibtcad of thounnds of half-sick, anaemic-looking soula with pasty, muddy complexions we should see crowds of happy, healthy, rosy, cheeked people everywhere. The rea son Is that t!:e humnn syntem does not rid It-uU each day of all the waste which it accumulates under our prec cut mode of living. For every ounce of food snd drink tkon Into tho system nearly an ounce of waste materiel must be carried out, else It ferments and forms ptomalne-llke poisons which are absorbed Into the blood. Just as necessary as It is to clean the ashes from the furnace each 'day, before the fire will burn bright and hot, so we must each morning clear the inside organs of the previous day's accumulation of Indigestible waste and body toxins. Men and women, whether sick or well, are advixed to drink each morning, before breakfn t, a glass o' real hot vaur Wth a teaspoonful or limestone phosphate In it, as a harm less means of washing out of tho stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels the Indigestible material, waste, sour bile snd toxins; thus cleansing, sweeten ing find purifying the entire alimen tary canal before putting more food lmo the stomach. Millions of people who had their turn at constipation, bilious attacks, acid stomach, nervous days and sleepless nights have become real cranks about the morning Inside-bath. A quarter pound of limestone phosphate will not cost much at the drug store, but Is sufficient to demonstrate to anyoue, Its cleansing, sweetening and freshening- effect uood the system. Com uAyAlv 'vwrvo dwvvj vrotrVbutA rt coJfcoXotU . laalitUj cwvd JtAvvco. Q AAKJt M arvtA GitM. evvwtA Cotoaactor Stock and Supply Tanks Will outlast several steel tanks or several tanks made from other ma terial, and cost less money. These tanks will keep the water cooler In summer and warmer In winter. Send for price list today. ATLAS TANK MFG. COMPANY, Fred lloisen. Manager, 1102 W.O.W. Bldg., Omaha, Neb. THE Real Estate Exchange Is the best advertising medium for the real estate dealer. Cir culation covers the United States, and directly to Interest ed people. Results are certain. -Write us todajr for special re duced rate advertising proposi tion. i Subscription $1.00 per Year Including a oue time 60 word ad, and set seven commercial maps of Illinois, Missouri, Io wa, Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkan sas, and Texas. Maps alone worth double the subscription cost. If yon are not on our list, send your subscription to day while this special offer is open. REAL ESTATE EXCHANGE Belle, Mo. V 910O Reward, flOO The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there Is at least one dreaded disease that science has born able to cure In all its stages, and that Is catarrh. Catarrh being greatly Influenced by constitutional conditions requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken internally and acts thru the blood on the mucous surfaces of the system thereby destroying the foun dation of the disease, giving the pa tient strength by building up the con stitution and assisting nature In do ing its work. The proprietors have so much faith In the curative powers of Hall's Catarrh Cure that they of fer One Hundred Dollars for any case that It falls to cure. Send for list of testimonials. Address: F. J. Cheney & Co., To ledo, Ohio. Sold by all druggists, 75c. Adv Feb Nearly new, late model, typewriter for sale cheap. On easy terms. . In quire at The Herald office. Don't Say, "I Want a Box of Matches" Ask for Safe Home Matches and you will get the .very best matches that money will buy. Noh-poiaonous don't spark don't sputter don't break a real safety strike-anywhere match. Inspected and labeled by the Un derwriters' Later iorie. Sc. K rrrivr.1. Ask for ,t m bj name. The Diamond Match Company A6AIN3T PREPAREDNESS r York (Nebr.) Itiiihltran J In. trreitlng IVewt of the Can of lrrarediH'ftN IHMitnnri The York, Nebraska, Uepul; had the following to say In I. week's issue regarding the present national scare and the demand for preparedness: Evidently Hudson Maxim and oth er manufacturers of war material are apprehensive that the people of this country are liable to wake ud some morning and And a hostile army oi nve or six million marching across the country, burning, murdering and Vlllalxlng. Just to quiet their pain ful aprehenslons In that regard it will not be considered Impertinent to remind them that wars between civ ilised nations are not comemnced In that way. There Is usually a diplo matic discussion, rising higher snd higher through a series of weeks, months and even years. Then one of the disgruntled governments with draws Us diplomats and the way is open for trouble. After glowering and threatening still further for a time, one or the other Issues a for mal declaration of war. Then it Is high time to look out. Now, Mr. Maxim, suppose when the great war In Europe ends with the total exhaustion of the nations In volved and they, lying flat on their backs, financially, and every other way, one of them, say Germany, Is so sore at us that they want to start something. Now we have arrived at the point where demands for expla nations are chasing each other, and crisscrossing each other. Then there will be an ultimatum and some harsh words that the other nation does not choose to swallow. At that Juncture Count von Dooxleschoff will demand his passports, which will be cheerful ly erantedr- Also Professor W. Jam mer Nincomb will ask for his pass ports, which the kaiser will hasten to deliver to him. Now the time has come to declare war and It matters very little which country throws down the gauge, for the other Is sure to grab it up with suspiciously eager promptness. Now Germany is all ready, and Is going to Invade. How many men can the kaiser get across the pond, in Bay six months, provid ing we have no navy at all, no super dreadnaughts, no torpedo boats, no destroyers, no submarines at all? Low fast can Germany land troops on our shores? That's the question that confronts us now. Well, It re quired six months for Canada to move 3.00,000 soldiers across the At lantic, and they were In a hurry, too, and hud a comparatively clear coast, sm whatever pretentions others may make, Britannia rules the seaB, not withstanding that a few of her ships have been blown up. or down, or first up and then down. While all this has been going, on what have we been doing? Are We sufilciently "prepar ed" so that we can in six months, say, protect ourselves from the ravages of 300,000 men, landed piecemeal, a boatload or perhaps two, at a time? Calm your fears, Mr. Maxim, and you, Mr. DuPont, also Mr. Winchest er, or the good people who run the Winchester works, and Remington as well. The quaking fear that has seized you is more imaginary than real. When the war clouds begin to loom up in gloomy, magnificence, across the Atlantic, we can begin to march, and countermarch, to"pollsh up our 'brassj buttons and our shoot ing irons. We will unsbeath the sword of Bunker Hill, and get ready to give the Invader a warm reception. Meanwhile, you better eat less meat take a brisk walk before breakfast, and if that does not settle your nerves and relieve your gloomy fore bodings, apply to a surgeon. You need an operation on your, cranium. For a Bilious Attack When you have a severe headarh accompanied by a coated tongue loathing of food, constipation, torpl' liver, vomiting of partly digests food and then bile, you may kn that you have a severe bilious attack While you may be quit' sick 'then- i much consolation In knowing Hum te lief iray be had by taking three oi Chamberlain's Tablets. They art prompt and effectual. Obtainnble erywhere. Adv Feb SALTS IF KiGIYS A Harmless to flush Kidneys and neutral I iza irritating afida Snlendid for system. Kidney and Bladder weaknee result from urie acid, says a noted authority. The kidneys filter this acid from tlte btiod and pass it on to the bladder, where it often remains to irritate and inflame, causing a burning, scalding sensatioa, or setting up an irritation at the neck of the bladder, obliging you to seek relief two or three times during the night. The sufferer is in constant dread, the water passes sometimes with a scalding ! ncrifcation and is very profuse; .again, ti.-re U difficulty in avoiding it Jiladdur weakness, most folks call it, lipAause they cau't control urination. : While it is extreofly annoying and tome : times very painful, this is really one of the nir.st simple ailments to overcome. (iet aUmt four ounces of Jad kalis from jour pharmacist and take a table tpoonful in a glass of water before breakfast, continue this for two or three days, 'ill is will neutralize the acids in the urine so it no longer is a source of irritation to the bladder and urinary or gans which then act normally again. Jad Salts is inexpensive, harmless, and is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with litbia, and is used by thousands of folks who are subject to urinary disorders caused by uric acid irritation. Jad Salts is spies' did for kidneys and causes no bad (Tects whatever. Tiers you have a pkaaant, effervescent litliin-water drink, which quickly relieves L ladder trouble. BOTHER T'lE PQT 2f CH:.7SI3 "OLD KEUTUCKY" ?:rfcct Plugs Produced t the Most Wholesome Methods ITS FLAVOR A DELIGHT There's more genuine tobacco enjoy ment in a rich, mellow, juicy chew ! I.ifcli-gradc than inany other forr of tobacco. Ami there's rto plug made that Is U'licious and appetizing as Old Kea tucky. It has the fresh, sweet, mellow taste that Nature gives the tobacco leaf. You Ret rc-il tobacco flavor in Old Ken tuckyand you get it pure. From the. time the ripe Durley leaf reaches our factory, until it goes out U gladden your taste with its rich flavor in golden brown plugs of Old Keav tucky, it is kept pure by the most mod ern method ever applied to the mak ing of chewing tobacco. No factory could possihiy be ckaner or mure sanitary than the great, newr factory In which Old Kentucky is made. For a good chew get a plug of OK Kentucky. Try a 10c plus to-day. Old Kentucky No. 6 . BOYS' AND GIRLS' CLUB Purpose, Nature, Organisation a Other Details Concerning Club Work in This State ' 1. The purpose of the Nebraska Boys' and Girls' Clubs is to help boy and girls to study agriculture a ad home economics, and thereby mas their home work more Interesting. It affords a definite plan whereby home project work can be systematically , correlated with school work. 2. Each active member carries oa at home, during a season or a year, one or more branches of club work and keeps such records and make such reports as are deBlred by cleft leaders. 3. Thru letters and bulletins, the Agricultural- Extension Service of the University of Nebraska and the U. 8. Department of Agriculture will send - to, each club member plans, sugges tions, and Interesting Information. ' V- , 4. Active membership is open t "' Nebraska boys and girls who are 19 years oid but not 18 years old bufore January 1, 1916. One may enroll any time before May 1, 1916. - 5. Any younger or older .person may be an associate member, receive copies of all letters and suggestions, and attend club meetings. 6. The State Club consists of all the members in Nebraska. Each county club consists of the members who live or attend school in that county. A local elub, with some - older person as leader, may be organ ized wherever several club uieuibers can and will get together fur clb meetings. . ' ( 7. The club contest pvomqtes and organizes au ong club members ;i friendly rivalry for tho achievement of results and houor In club work. Results are shown aud honors award ed in the annual club exhibit. Local and county exhibits are held in the full. The county champion in each branch of the work represents th county rlub In the state exhibit tbs following winter. 8. Every club member who coin-. pletes the feanon's work has u re ward In the us for rale of his or her product. Trophies, medals, ribbons, and other premiums are awarded lit . local, county, and state clubs to those who do the best work. - 9. Achievement In club work 1 measured by Quantity and quality of product, profit on investment, and reports and Btory of season's work. 10. Tne follow Ins are the branch es of-the club work to be carried en by the members in each. PIG CLUB liaising one or more pigs. Records of kind and amount of feed consumed, growth of ;:gs. and other records requested by elufc leaders. , COHN CLUB Growing n.plfit of corn not smaller than one acre. Del ing all the work. Records of tim , and other things that count In cost of production. CALF CLUB Raising one calf. Keeping record of kiu.l and amount of feed consumed, growth of calf, and manner in which calf was cared for. POTATO CLUB -Growing a plat of potatoes not smaller .than one eighth of an acre. Doing all tb work. Records of cost of production as in Corn Club. SEWING CLUB Course I. Twelve !.ssons in Sewing. Course II whea I Is completed. COOKING CLUB Course I, II lessons In foods and their prepara tion. Course II. " . POULTRY CLUB Division I, Hatching ami rearing, from 15 er ;uore eggs. Feed records. Dlvlsiom 2. Egg production, from or mor birds. Egg records. COW-TESTING CLUB Record of feed. milk, and milk-testing. Mem berships in cow-testing accepted only In groups of 10 or more from ta same community. GARDENING AND CANNINO CLUB Raising a garden, one-tent of an acre if possible. Doing all tke work. Tomatoes chief crop. Reoos4 of cost and produce. Canning fr winter. ' Old papers for sale at The Hersi4 office. Five cents a bunch; ssg bunches for a qsarter.