am i.t - 5 Prince Albert gives smokers such delight, because its flavor it so different and so delightfully good; it can't bite your tongue; it can't parch your throat; you can smoke it as long and as hard as you like without any comeback but real tobacco hap piness! On the reverse side of every Prince Albert package you will read : " PROCESS PATENTED JULY 30tm, 1907" That means to you a lot of tobacco en joyment. Prince Albert has always been sold without coupons or premiums. Wa prefer to give quality I A H the national joy tmoke MM WlllUtttXXXKtlttttttV in goodness and in pipe satisfaction is all we or its enthusi astic friends ever claimed for itl y OU'LL find a cheery howdy-do on tap no mutter how much of a atranger yoa are in Ihm nock of t ho wooda you drop into For. Prmco Albert i right there at t no nrar place you paaa thai aella tobacco I I he tonpy too bat aella for a nickel and the tidy rod tin tor a dime; then thr re a rne nira Mim pound and half-pound tin humidora and the pound erjatal-tlaaa humidor with eponte-moiatener top that keepa the to bacco in euch bant-up trim all-tha- tomol I 14 paaa that Bella tobacco I 1 he tonpy too vs tt. bant-up trim I II"' yur li 1 t R- J. Karnokda Tobaooo Ca. so to It answers every smoke desire you or any other man ever had! It is cool and fragrant and appealing smokeappetite that you will get chummy with it in a mighty short time ! " Will you invest 5c or 10c to prove out our say so on the national joy smoke? R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., Winston-Salem, N. C. TOBACCO IS PREPARED i FOR SMOKERS UNOERTHE I PROCESS DISCOVERED IN MAKING EXPERIMENTS TO PRODUCE THE MOST DE- r- uTT-t ii tun uruAl c 1 tout TnnArrn rno riei S PR0CES5 FAJSNItlM COKMKY; WinstonSm.em.RC.U4A., DOES MOT BITE THE TONGUE i ',i :HN" ii:-m"'ii Thb 1 tha mat aide ol tha Princa Albart tidy rad tin. Raad Ihia " Patantad PrecaM maaaaaa-to-you and realize what H nituu bi making Princa Albart aa mwcfc to your likiaa. Musical Column KaIUcxI bj lUIh It. UnlM-ke, Violinist with the Alllanre Nrhool of MiikIc Music A A IJiiiKUHg '(Con.) As we have proprppsed In our re cent study of Music as a Language, we have found that the characterist ic of iiiubIc to he parallel with the characteristic, which make up simple vocal Rounds, and on analysis forced us to the conclusion that vocal music was the first music. For Instance, the characteristics of vocal sound be InK loudness, pitch. Intervals, quali ty, and rate of varintlon, are employ ed fully by man In the business of life, when expressing his emotions of pain or ploaspure. And they are equally employed by music to portray exactly the same emotions of pain or pleasure. hTerefore, It follows that since man, as far back as can be traced, always pave expression to his emotions, he must have Riven ex pression to his emotions Ions before he arose to high scalo where he wanted Instruments for an aesthetic portrayal of hla emotions through music. We have scant evidence of this fact, but taken all in all it seems more than reasonable. One evidence we do have which I believe bears heavy testimony to our theory. This la the chant used by almost every na tion. The very term seems to sug gest monotony of tone variation and but sight character. This Is true of, probably, all chants. Slng-songy re citation comes the closest of describ ing the conduct of the chants. Let us suppose ourselves to be ob serving a tribe of savages before the Invention of language and notice the constant use of the sign language. Every want, complaint, pleasure, an ger and love Is expressed by gestures. Thus we see portrayed our first prop osition that sensations or emotions of pain or pleasure cause muscular action. And what more natural de velopment In thetr tribal life than the Invention of a dance to express their affairs of life, perhaps, for the amusement of onlookers. I believe the substance of the argument and will ask each reader to accept It as much the method as ran be possibly discovered. When language was Invented and the Bavage began to tell of his dally experiences, what more natural thing paint whHt h sees and even pitfnt subjects expressing experiences if life. And so the tone world grew gradually ontlt the highest aesthetic method of expressing the sufmtance of life emotions Is through music. Is It no wonder that men have been willing that they may be able to paint for the world Life as they see It. IJfe with Its sorrows, life with Its Joys, tife with its sunshine and storms, life with the grandeur of the starry spaces and the clash and clash of world systems. Music thus viewed takes on a dif ferent aspect than a mere Instrument of amusement, and becomes an ex pression of life. This Is what I desire the Musical olumn readers to absorb thiuout their entire beings. Alliance Herald SOLD 99 HEAD OF CATTLE llcmiiiuford Farmer Had n cry cessful snip nt III Farm Wednesday of Ijitst Week Sticl L. M. Hawkins, the farmer living near Hemlngford, who held a public sale on Wednesday of last week, re ports a very suceesnful sale. 99 head of cattle were sold, bringing a tolal of ffi.842, an average of $56 per head. Mr. Hawkins advertised the sale In The Alliance Herald of the week before and was well pleased with the results of the advertising. Alliance Herald UNITED STATES RECEIPTS TOTAL$838,403,969 An Increase of 78.7:7,10 for the Year Compare Well With 1015 OOT'Pgr'OV JQ PUK1 Washington, July 1. The govern ment closed its fiscal year yester day with total receipts of $838,403, 969, an excess of $78,737,810 com pared with a deficit of $69,436,580 for the year ending June 30 last. oDth the Income tax and Internal revenue receipts In 1910 showed far above the estimates made by Secre tary McAdoo and swelled the bal ance. Income tax receipts amounted to $124,867,430 compared with $79. 828,675 last year, an increase of about $15,000,000 over the amount There is no after-glow When you blow out a Safe Home match, it is OUT. And it stays out. Every Safe Homematch is chemically treated to prevent after-glow. Safe Home matches are extra long and extra strong. The extra length means extra service. SafeHome matchesare non -poisonous. They are safe to have in the home. All grocers, 5c a box. The Diamond Match Company I yjl WON POt SOWOU ST I than the use of words put to the , PXpected by officials even as late as With Our Exchanges 31 tnnnn:::::u::u::::un::n:r::::n::n:; A Iloost for Alliance The Commercial Club of Alliance is one of the lives! of living things. They plan and execute" big things. Chadron people never fail to have a big time when they visit Alliance and when Fair-Vine comes w.; are always glad to entertain the people from Al liance. Let everyone who can go to Alliance. It is a nice drive to a nice town with the assurance of a grand good time. Do not miss this opportu nity of getting acquainted with the Alliance Boosters. Chadron Journal. araKlioH-r I'est In Sheridan For the past several .weeks grass hoppers have been quite numerous in various parts of Sheridan county. It is a pity to see the destruction they have wrought at several places. Some farmers have lost from 20 to 30 acres of alfalfa, wheat and other crops. Among the heaviest Bufferers from this plague in the Immediate vlclntly o K.!s?i'file arc the Mmci3 II l.rov.n, W. Holzberger and H. M. Barth. Many of Rushvllle's people autoed to the stricken districts and express ed their surprise at the number of hoppers and the amount of damage done. From all Indications this ter rible pest will spread to the sur rounding country and Infest the larg er part of the county If not checked. The farm demonstrator has been kept busy visiting the places of trouble and giving advice and Instructions for the benefit of the farmers. Ev erybody sympathizes with the unfor tunate farmers and all would help If they could. The grasshoppers are not of the migratory type, but are native, and tf not checked will be more numerous in years to come, the females depos iting up to lflO eggs a season. Cor don Journal. iJUitZtttt!'' ' shore where the water was about 12 feet in depth. The alarm was quick ly given and many rushed to the lake to give whatever aid was possible. Deputy Sheriff Steve Mader dove from a boat, and at the second at tempt brought up the body. Dr. Thornton was on hand and assisted by Dr. Frost and a score of willing workers, made every effort possible to resuscitate the poor boy, and af ter an hour of the hardest kind of work were forced to give up as every trace of life was gone. The body of the unfortunate boy wits taken to the Peel undertaking rooms and his parents at Trojan no tified. His father, who has been sec tion foreman at Trojan for 16 years, came down Thursday and took the body home for burial. The mother Is prostrated with grief. The prom ising young man. devoted to his mother, his tragic death calls foth the enrnesr sympathy of the whole Simmons of the sugar factory made a few remarks, stating that If the proper acreuey: of beets were signed un it was possible to pet the road. The farmers took hold of the matter with considerable interest and we are informed that 3,000 acres of beets were pled cod for the 1917 crop, and it is thoucht that another 2.000 will not be very hard to pet. Should this matter meet with suc cess there will be another sugar fac tory built In the valley next year to take care of the Increased production, which will be followed by more rail roads and more factories until Scotts Bluff county comes Into its own and crude chants to which they danced? A peculiar Instance of this fnet Is that there Is today Just such chants still extant nmoncr the boatman of the Fast. Still further la the evidence made stronmr when we consider the' Creeks. The ancient Creek lyre had but four strlnes upon which no more , thnn lust the four tones of the four strings could be produced and ft Is I easily observable what a monotonv of acres : tuneq roust bve been rendered. Yet i nnnn such n Ivro did Homer chant hi jTllind and Oddessv: and other fam-, ou Creek poets chant their Invs. ' I The chants of the ancient Chrlst , Inn church are notorious for thlr In- : ftuence In cheeklr? the development .of muqle. and even the chants In our mortem churrn noes not elve very Known In tiering The Courier has an announcement card of the marriage of J. Carl Thomas and Miss Eva Duncan at Al liance on Monday of this week. Mr. Thomas was for some time the lino type operator of the Courier and is quite well and favorably known here. Since he lived in Oerlng he has been on the Herald at Alliance, of which he Is one of the publishing company. While we are not acquainted with the bride, we know she has secured an excellent and Industrious young man for her helpmate, and we extend our cordial best wishes to them both. Oerlng Courier. Illame Chemical Poisoning Fci.i c. r leads of horses, 11 1 bend, arrived at the stockyards last Fri day with bo in e of the stock sick. Sat urday morning fifteen of the horses were dead. Veterlnarles were called from Edgemont, and Alliance, as well as the state veterinarian. The bodies were examined and different tests made to ascertain the cause of the deaths. The horses were a very fine lot purchased by agents of the Brit ish government and were on their way east. Later news was to the ef fect that chemical poisoning was the cause of their death. Edgemont Ex press. IVath of'Wm. O'Keefe. Will O'Keefe, a Burlington fire man, was drowned Wednesday after noon while bathing in the lagoon in this city. In plain sight of several yonng men and boys, all enable to swim, he sank within 35 feet of the community for the bereaved parents. He war about 21 e-irs of ape and was a general .favorite wherever known. Engineers for whom he fir ed unue in praises for his energy and npriuhtne'S. Edgemont Express. becomes the richest section of Ne-i trrent variety hraska. f not of the entire un on Very similar to the chants Is the All this we have dreamed of In the rotative In music. This recitative Is p.it. and. because we predicted such j bpf,t nitrated bv the Chinese lan thlnrs fifteen years asro we were euaee. In which every vowel and eon- laneld flt hv the editors of the Stir- ' c0nnn hoy different Infleetlnn r,f rounding country. However, thev lriA voire It w trmrh riioHuo that the ancient orations and leeends of the savapes. expressed In the met aphorical style natural to them. I arose; and out of which arose lyric poetry. Ann so it was that its par- a week ago. or the total, X56,909, 487 from individuals. The balance in the general fund at the close of the year was $236,879, 590. including amounts to the credit of disbursing officers. The actual balance was J174.965.231, the larg est balance in the general fund since 1908. In a statement analyzing the fig ures. Secretary McAdoo said larper Internal revenue receipts for the year have been duo In a preat measure "to the unprecedented prosperity of the country and the vleorous enforce ment of the Internal revenue laws." Custom receipts for the year, Mr. McAuoo said, amounted to $211,866, 222.31. as against $209,268,107.43 the previous year, and exceeding the estimate by more than $16,000,000. "Heceipts from Internal revenue," said his statement, "reached a toal of $512,740,769.58. and exceeding all lve nomination.) I appreciate to the full the burden of responsibility you have put on ma, I appreciate to the full that the trust you have placed in me can be met In only one way, and that Is that I shall so act aa to deserve the trust. With every particle of high purpose there is in me I pledge you my wort to place every bit of ability, every bit of good sense I have at your disposal to carry out the principles to whlcli you have dedicated yourselves. (Statement. Jan. 9, 1913T I strongly feel that wo should no more enter Into a combination wits the Republican machine than with the Democratic machine. . (Lincoln Day speech In New York, Feb. 12. 1913.) The progressive party has come to stay. It will amalgamate with nei ther of the two old parties, both of whlrh are boss-controlled and prlvll-epe-rldden. Oct. 3. 1913. New York address to progressives. ) This movement will never go back, and whatever may betide In the fut ure of one thing the disciples of an env opportunism may rest assured T will never abandon the principles to which we progressives have pledged ourselves, and I will never abandon the men and women who drew around me to battle for those princi ples. They and I stand with ouf faces toward the morning; we will never be sundered from one another. and we will never yield the ground begin to realize the future of this treat country and of late have been dolnsr some ood boosting for the j thlnes they once scoffed at. Scotts blnff Republican. Another Valley Ilailroad !ast fall this paper started a cam paign for the building of a railroad to cover the territory under the gov ernment ditch which was later taken up with the railroad officials at Omaha. The Union Pacific did not wish to take hold of the matter as It was not tributary to Its road, but the Burlington people promised to inves tigate. About three weeks ago a corps of surveyors came up and started from Covert, a beet dump five miles west of here, and later ran a line up Winter Creek Bnd branched o.it to tie oi.fi and wesf. These lin-' were run so as to give the railroad company an opportunity to estimate the cost. The sugar company has taken an interest in getting the mat ter in shape and Monday evening a meeting was held at the rieasant Valley school house to talk over the matter and see how many would sign tin for beets for next year's crop. H. T. Bowen of this city acted as chair man of the meeting, and Mr. Edmond 0k" rated on at Alliance Ed Dearlng, a well known rancher at Springer and a member .of the school board of this district, was tak en to Alliance on a special train Wed nesday afternoon and was operated on at 6 oYlock that afternoon. He xMel in music, the chant or recitative, that lyrical music arose. As life, became more and more complex, and as this complexity de veloped lanpuaee until abstract thoueht became possible to be ex pressed: so music, which may be termed the superlative method of ab stract emotional exnresslon. devel- becanie 111 with appendicitis last Sat urday but did not consider his condi- i oned more and more In Its posslbill- lion serious ann nnpwi mai in a uay lies or emotional exnresslon a of two he would be better again. Tuesday night his condition be came very critical and when a blood test was made Wednesday it was found that the appendix had broken and that an immediate operation would be necessary. Arrangements nd so In clonine our siihW of "Music as a La n run re" let us state a few fundamental facts. At the bottom of everything are our Innate emotions oh sensations i of pleeiire or n aln. which cause first musw'ar action In our physical belne. Pone previous estimates ny many millions, i we have taken or flinch from th Ordinary internal revenue receipts fjpht to whh-b h are nledeedV amounted to $387,873,339.30, and i Speech at Chicago. Oct. 19, 1914.) eluding the emergency revenue from' The republican party la not cora thts amount, these receipts were ap-j nz hack The men In the old parties proximately $304,000,000. or $32.- ma as well t.ike up their minds that 000,000 greater than had been estl-i?h.. procres."'e party Is here to stay, mated." I (,URf, ?2 19m, to the progress- .1 malice ncrum ' 1 . TEDDYS WEASEL WORDS" An IntervMliiK Collection of Sayings of Theodore Itoonevelt Inr Ing Itecent Years were made with the Burlington and of the muscular actions nrorf he was rushed to Alliance at once, cal sound, which a"U animals. Inclul A wire received at 6 p. m. Wednesday Ine mn. us to express the sena evenlng merely stated that the opera- j ttons felt. These sount are chnnr tlon had been performed at 5 o'clock, terlzed hv loudness, ounlltv nltcb ln- LATEU As we go to press Thurs day afternoon the report is received that. Mr. Dearlng Is doing falrlv well since the operation but that his con dition is very critical. Torrlnpton Journal. rervais. and rate of variation. These characterizations music snd man tveloned mentally he was flllp Wth the desire to evnress or nnlnt his life's experiences In sound. Just as a painter desires to (Aug. 6. 1912, to rPogresslve Con- ventlon. ) The two old parties are husks with no real soul within either, divided 1 on artificial lines, boss-ridden and j privilege-controlled, each a jumble I of incongruous elements and neither j daring to speak out wisely and fear- leBsly. The recent republican ; convention was not dominated by honest men. It was a convention j wherein sat, alas', a minority of men who. with sneering Indifference to ev ery principle of right, so acted as to bring to a shameful end a party which had been founded over half a century ago. by men In whose souls burned the fire of loftey endeavor. (Aug. 7, 1912, accepting Progress- j lve party. t I earnchlly bespeak from my fel-low-prop. refsUer their ii'iurudelnb Isuppott f Mr. Hughes. New York World. 1 Alliance Herald W Hsvt All Noticed 'It ' "Curses," sententious!) niited Pro fessor Pate, "come lionie to roost." Just so!" returned tin OUI 1 oik-rV '.'And tlie uioro onie.y t..,.i wiilUcJ they are thu more likeiy they'll be U telegraph us to scud llu tu tli money to come home on." Kaus'aa City Star. j Growth of Hog Industry in Northwestern Nebr. j in Ii Growth MAKES THIS OF SPECIAL 1NTKHF.ST TO MANY HKItALI) UKADEKS HEAD HOQ SALESMAN AND V. P. f MR. J. U. McPITATL, head Uog salesman ami Vice President of the Inter-State Live Stock Commission Company, has been actively engaged in the hog yards at South Omaha for over eighteen years. Mr. Mcl'hail has work ed himself up from the extreme bottom, lie is the son of Dan Mcl'hail, the vet eran 1100 MAN on the South Omaha market twenty-five years ago and in fact, was his father's successor. Mr. McPhail at the present time handles a large per cent of the daily receipts of hogs coming to Omaha, and has a wide reputation, as being the best ma nipulator in the game. He was born at Osceola, Iowa, 33 years ago. The Inter-State Live A Series of Cartoon Pull of Human Interest. COMt IN AM& WATCH M OPGPATE - I LI. SALC and weio JR.MSPHAIL V400 SALSSXAW and vci pais. Wl J M Stock Commission This is No. 2. BROUGHT UP ON A HOG Ilather should we say, brought up in the hog business, as will be seen by reading the item of information on the loft-hand side of the picture. Our art ist evidently hud this thought in mind when he pictured Mr. McPhail going to market on the back of a big, fat porker. The hog business is not as large as the cattle business in the territory in which this paper circulates principally, but it is growing and quite a few hogs are now shipped to market from Northwest Nebraska. It is well for our readers to know where the best hog salesman can be found. Co., South Omaha Watch for N. 3. Next Week. The Enormous Vol ume of Our Business is Strong Evidence of Our Ability to Clean, press and repair clothing so thoroughly that those who try us TRY AGAIN You ought to become fully informed regarding our Hoffman sanitary method of pressing clothes. Suppose you phone and tell us you're interested that's all Well call Keep-U-Neat Cleaners and Tailors Roy B. Burns, Prop. 205 Box Butte Phone 183