j MB THt G.. SAID Of WANT TO BUT something? Hun dreds of people weekly scan these want ad columns looking; for whet you or others have to offer. Get quick results by advertising In The Herald Wtit Ad depart ment. WANTED AGENTS on Ray Puncture Proof Tires; large commissions; no competition; write or wire Rubber City Sales Co.. 2064 Farnum St., Omaha. 15 FOR SALE AUTOMOBILES FOlTSAL Urlag. In excellent shape. F. A. BALD, hoe 3 OS or 476, Alliance, tf HELP WANTED FEMALE WANTED Girl for general house work. Call 17J. tf LOST 5TOn,9dne1 road west of Alliance or in the city, one pocketbook containing a money order receipt for $7.86, 120 in cash. Reward. Return to 618 Big Horn. 12p WANT TO RENT HOUSES FRSALRTRAE 3dyr2oom modern house, 2 lots. .Nettie M. Campbell. Phone 712; 506 Cheyenne Are. tf WANEDTOnNTCluOolJlS , WANTED Room with evening meal furnished. Widow with family pre ferred. Inquire at The Herald office. 12p WANTED RAfiS THrTfiEllALwifi" for good, clean, white rags. FOR SALE RANCHES FOI? SALEToO areimproved ranch, 2 miles from Antioch; 50 acres In crop; 90 acres of hay; bal ance good range. An ideal dairy and poultry farm to supply city of An tioch. Ready market for all pro duce. For particulars see or write Thomas-Bald Investment Co., Al liance. tf FOR SALE LAND Sandhill ranch, 2680 acres for term of years; cash lease. Wild hay, alfalfa and pas ture. Will sacrifice cattle with bay to feed for quick deal. Wm. Pace, Bingham, Neb. T-6-13-20-P FOR SALE LIVE STOCK TEAM, harness and wagon for sale, Phone 624. Wm. Davidson. tf MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS FOR SALE Edison mahogany phonograph; Al condition and eighty-seven records. Style ten VIc- trola, mahogany, and thirty records; Al condition. Write T. W. Gee, Box 323. 15 FOR SALE Used player, excellent condition; also a new player here in Alliance. For information write Knight-Campbell Music Co., Denver, Colo., or T. W. Gee. Box 323. City.15 Real Estate. Loans and Insur ance. F. E. REDDISH, Reddish Block. tf . Receivers are sought for Idle coal mines. They do not aeed receivers. They need outputtert. Financial America (New York). STILL THEY SAY, this is TVUS lFB. I f ath En., tump, )1M AJMO 1'i.L. I ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION The Wyomlng-Nortb eastern Company 0:1 We, the undersigned incorpor ators, do hereby. In pursuance of the laws of the State of Nebraska in such cases made and provided, asso ciate ourselves as a body politic and corporate in the name and for the purpose hereinafter mentioned. ARTICLE I The corporation herein contem plated shall be named and known as Wyoming-Northeastern Oil Com pany. ARTICLE II The principal place of transacting the business of the corporation here in contemplated, ahall be in the city of Alliance, Box Butte County, Ne braska. ARTICLE III The general nature of the business to be transacted by the corporation is. as follows, to-wlt: Locating, vali dating, and prospecting for oil and other minerals on Government lands subject to the same;' to buy, lease or otherwise acquire lands contain ing, or believed to contain oil or other minerals; to purchase or other wise acquire, lease, build, sonstniet, operate drilling rigs, construct and maintain refineries, mill works, lab oratories, pipe lines, rights of ways for pipe lines, side tracks, tele phones, storage tanks, dwelling houses for workmen and others In connection with the purposes in this article set forth. To carry on the business of pro ducing, refining, storing, supplying, marketing, and distributing oil and oil products of all classes and de scriptions. To contract for oil lands or lands containing oil or other mineral de posits; to acquire by purchase, lease, contract, or' otherwise, oil and lands believed to contain oil and other mineral deposits. To contract, lease, lease on royal ties, or otherwise, sell or dispose of to others oil lauds, leases, or lands containing oil or other mineral sub stances. The corporation may buy, hold, or dispose of such real and personal property as the directors may deem proper for the promotion of Its busi ness, or that may be necessary In the proper conducting of said business. ARTICLE IV The authorized capital stock of the corporation shall be One Million ($1,000,000.00) Dollars, divided Into One Hundred Thousand (100,000) shares of Ten ($10.00) Dollars each. Two Hundred Fifty Thousand ($250,000) Dollars of the capital stock shall be fully paid ap and sub scribed upon the organisation of the corporation. Said stock may be paid for in cash or Its equivalent in prop erty necessary and useful to the cor poration in the transaction of Its business and when said stock is issued it shall be fully paid up and non-assessable. ARTICLE V The highest amount of indebted ness or liability to which the cor poration may subject itself shall not exceed an amount equal to two-thirds (2-3) of the paid up capital stock Issued by said corporation and no stockholder shall be liable as an in dividual for any debt or liability of the corporation. ARTICLE VI This corporation shall date from and commence on the 16th day of September, A, D., 1919, and shall terminate on the 16th day of Sep tember, A. D., 1969. ARTICLE VII This corporation may be dissolved at any time prior to its own limits tion, by consent of two-thirds of the outstanding capital stock of said cor poration by a resolution dissolving p ' Z vTA W H W I y sru uooW. i I ft THIS" IS r.. , 1 , ' ' THE AtiMAN'OK HtittAM). ALLIANCE. XKURAKKA, J ANITA ft Y 0, 1920. "THIS IS THE LIFE." BY the corporation spread upon its rec ords and certified to the Secretary of State. ARTICLE VIII The business affairs of the cor poration sLall be conducted by a Board of Directors consisting of nine and the officers by them to be elect ed, as hereinafter provided. ARTICLE IX The voting power of said capital stock shall be, one vote for each Bhare of capital stock Issued by said corporation. ARTICLE X The first meeting of the stock holders shall be held on the date of the commencement of the corpora tion, or as soon thereafter as prac ticable, and thereafter the regular annual meeting shall be held in the city of Alliance, Box Butte County, Nebraska, on the 2nd Monday of Jan uary, 1920, and on the second Mon day in January of each succeeding year. At said first meeting, and at the annual meetings thereafter the Board of Directors shall be elected br the stockholders from their own number, to hold office until the an nual meeting next after their elec tion and until their successors are elected and qualify. ARTICLE XI The Directors shall in each in stance as soon as convenient after they have been elected and have qualified select from their own num ber the president, vice-president, secretary, and treasurer, who shall hold office until the annual meeting next after their election, and until their successors are elected and qual ify. Any two of said offices may be held by one and the same person. ARTICLE XII In the event of the absence of the president, the vice-president shall have full power to perform all the duties of the president ami to sign, execute, and deliver any and all in struments, and to do each and every act with full power and authority as the president coula perform if present. ARTICLE XIII The Board of Directors shall have full power and authority to make all rules and bylaws for the proper gov ernment and control of the business afflalrs of the corporation and they may alter and amend the same at pleasure. ARTICLE XIV Vacancies occurring in the Board of Directors shall be filled by the stockholders, and other offices vacant from whatever cause, shall be filled by the Board of Directors. Five out of nine of the Board of Directors shall be a quorum for the transac tion of business. ARTICLE XV The offleers of this corporation for the ensuing year and until the 2nd Monday in January, 920, shall be as follows: F. A. Bald, President; C. M. Looney, Vice-president: Lloyd C. Thomas, Secretary; A. II. Miller, Treasurer. The Board of Directors for said corporation during the ensu ing year and until the annual meet ing in January, 1920, shall be: F. A. Bald, C. M. Looney, Lloyd C Thomas, A. M. Miller, R. M. Baker, P. J. Michael, O. W. Gardner, F. T. Morrison, Chas. F. Greunig. ARTICLE XVI The Secretary and Treasurer of said corporation shall furnish a good and sufficient bond, to be approved by the Board of Directors. ARTICLE XVII These articles of incorporation may be amended at any time. Every amendment shall be first approved by a majority vote of the entire Board of Directors and upon being so approved it shall be entered at w I rJr that Rnrn .jr-'j2rrsr:.KfT rv ' II 1 . I w V X S7J . . t tS 'rr'Z '..rwZs fl VMS'! I. Ah fJt M i r i . . t-n i nil i RUSS WESTOVER. T7 nrtllW - v7 H""'Jhto large on the records of the Board. A draft of the proposed amendment or amendments, as the case may be, shall then be submitted to each stockholder with a notice of the meeting called for the purpose of voting on samo, which notice shall be given ten (10) days at least, prior to the date fixed for the meeting. If such amendment or amendments, or either of them, shall, then be ap proved by the holder or holders of a majority of the outstanding capital stock cf the corporation, each and every amendment so approved akall be considered adopted and be made part of the articles of incorporation and . the Board of Directors shall thereafter "-ribe, acknowledge, record, and p"itfth the same as by law require' In testimony wnereot we nave hereunto set our hands this 16th day of September, A. D., 1919. (SIGNED) ' F. A. BALD, CHAS. F. GRUENIO, F. T. MORRISON, R. M. BAKER, J. BURLINGTON, JR. P. J. MICHAEL, GEORGE F. SNYDER, W. L. M'KILLIP, A. M. MILLER, J. A. SMITH. C. M. LOONEY, L. E. PEQUETTE, O. W. GARDNER, F. W. MELICK, , LLOYD C. THOMAS, L. S. OLSON, J. C. PARKER, , H. S. THOMAS, LAURETTA HODGKINSON, F. A. PIERSON. State of Nebraska1) bs: Fox Butte County J On this 16 th day of September, A. D., 1919, before me, M. S. Hargravea, a Notary Public duly commissioned, qualified for and residing in said county, personally came F. A. Bald, Chas. F. Gruenig, F. T. Morrison', R. M. Baker, J. Burlington, Jr., P. J. Michael, George F. Snyder, W. L. McKilHp. A. M. Miller, J. A. Smith, C. M. Looney, L. E. Pequette, O. W. Gardner, F. W. Mellck, Lloyd C. Thomas, L. S. Olson, J. C. Parker, H. S. Thomas and Lauretta Hodgkln son, to me personally known to be tho identical persons whose names are affixed to the above and forego ing articles of incorporation, as in corporators, and who severally acknowledged the execution of the same to be their voluntary act and deed for the purpose therein con tained. (Signed) M. S. HARGRAVES, (SEAL) Notary Public. My commission expires January 25. 1923. 14 NOTICE The annual stockholders' meeting of the Wyoming-Northeastern Oil Company will be held at the offices of the Thomas-Bald Investment Com pany, in the Alliance National Bank building, in the city of Alliance, Ne braska, on January 12, 1920, at 7:30 o'clock p. m. F. A. BALD, President. Attest: LLOYD C. THOMAS, (Janl2) Secretary. NOTICE TO DEFENDANTS In the District Court ot Box Butte County: Calvin J. Wlldy, rialntlff, vs. Oil ver Rlegel, Mrs. Oliver Rlegel, first, tree and real name unknown, wife cf the Defendant. Oliver Rlegel; and the unknown heirs, devisees, lega tees, and persenal representatives, 1 A ?iA .J S id all other persons Interested i he estates of the Defendants, 01) or Rlegel, Mrs. Oliver Rlegel, Irsi rue and real name unknown, wlf f the Defendant, Oliver Rlegel, an he Northwest Quarter (NWU) o ection Twenty-five (25), Townshl' 'wenty-four (24), North Range Fit v-two (52); West of the SIxU 'rinclpal Meridian in Box Butt 'ounty, Nebraska, Defendants. Hate of Nebraska 1 iss: Oox Butte County J The Defendants, Oliver Rlegel. Mrs. Oliver Rlegel, first, real and true name unknown, wife et the dc fendant, Oliver Rlegel, and the un known heirs, devisees, legatees, per sonal representatives, and all other persons Interested in the estates of the defendants, Oliver Rlegel. Mrs Oliver Rlegel, first, real and true name unknown; wife of the defend ant Oliver Rlegel, and the Northwest Quarter (NWK) of Section Twenty five (25), Township Twenty-four (24), North of Range Fifty-two (52), West of the Sixth Principal Merid ian in Box Butte County, Nebraska, and all persons claiming any. inter est of any kind in said real estate, oi any part thereof, will take notice thai on the 26th day of November, 1919. Calvin J. Wlldy, filed his petition in the District Court of Box Butte coun ty, Nebraska, against you, the ob ject and prayer of which are that a decree may be entered in favor ot the Plaintiff, and against the Defend ant, quieting the title of the Plain tiff in and to the following describe' lands, to-wit: 'AH of the Northwes Quarter (NWA) of Section Twenty five (25), Township Twenty-four (24), North Range Fifty-two (52) West of the Sixth Principal Meridian, in Box Butte county. Nebraska, and every part thereof; that the Defendants may bt perpetually enjoined from bring ing asy action' at law or in equity to recover possession of said land, and that they may be perpet ually enjoined from setting up an; claim or interest, or claiming any in terest adverse to the title of . the Plaintiff or his grantees, and from disturbing the Plaintiff and hlr grantees in the quiet and peaceable enjoyment of said premises, and that he nay recover his costs. You are required to answer said petition on or before the 19th day of January, 1920. Dated this 1st day of December, CALVIN J. WILDY, Plaintiff. Lee Basye, Attorney II FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday morning our services will be devoted entirely to the call of the inter-church world movement, and the special subject for consideration will be, "The Awakened Church, Its Dynamic Prayer." This will be the concluding service In the great pro gram provided for the week of prayer. There will be special music The evening service will be a study of "The Great Temptation." We are delighted at the Interest shown at the special services held during the week ot prayer, in the co-operation of the different churches. We are glad that we bad a part in the sue cess of the special services. Please remember - that our church is "Home-like Church" and that every body Is always welcome at our serv ices. The attendance last Sunday was splendid and we are starting the year off right. Next Sunday will be a splendid time to worship with us again. J. ORRIN COULD. Minister. "More dough for , less dough' might well be the slogan of the Unit ed States Grand corporation. Phil adelphla Evening Ledger. SEVEN I lll HUYTI.UI VN ClltltCH The week of prayer services we bellrve are fulfilling the call for an awakened church. Friday night the last of the series will be held at the Christian church. Rev. Mearl C. Smith opens the discussion. The following extract from an art icle in the New Era magatlne la keyed to the needs and doBtlnles of the present hour: Home New Visions A new world of opportunities looms before us. Building a better America la the urgency of all good, Americans. And that Is the home mission Ideal today. A new concept tion of our task makes It Immensely broader and more difficult. Here la a republic depending for Its perma nence on the intelligence and virtue of Its people. As to intelligence. 25 per cent of the adult males are il literate. As to virtue we have no census, but daily revelations paint a dark picture. The home mission task now. in. eludes a christian impact on every form of unrighteousness and unhap- piness in society and In the nation. What can be done to make thia a better country purer In . personal lives, purer, richer, stronger, nan- pier In community life. Nothing less is me task, and so It relates itself to habits of people, to customs of so ciety, to civic conditions on national units from the town meeting un to the national legislature. But there is a yet wider meaning to be considered. The last four yeara have flung us Into the middle ot all nations. We, a people who for two centuries had been on the defensive. have moved out into the world cur rents. In that view, what does home missions 'import? Mr. W. T. Ellis, a world traveler, has recently said. "The entire christian Izaticfn of North America Is one ot the greatest single enterprises confronting the churches of the whole world." The success of the foreign missions rests on the success of home missions. This waa true years ago. It is a hundredfold truer, today. What we are may de termine the destinies ot nations yet unborn. So we come to the practical ques tion, "What agency Is sufficient for these things?" How shall the . church meet the stupendous chance forced upon her? There is only one way. It is for the church to fling herself on her task, as the nation just now flung herself on her sacri ficial duty. Our shattered boys as they come home tell the story of a nation's heroism. The silent witness of fifty thousand graves across the sea declares it. There has beon no limit to the national passion. Such national surrender of self that there might be national victory Is born only out of the agony of the call ot God. ... With this agony dare we compare tho easy-going march of the chris tian church? Is there any bloody sweat in our religious passion? Do we take, up the miseries, physical, mental, spiritual, social, of our peo ple in a sacrificial spirit? The rattle of small coin on the collection plates sounds like an Ironic laugh at such a question. The closed church doors on week days ami the closed pews on Sunday seem to bar the church against' such a challenge. The help less little mission on some east or west' side, submerged under tides of gnorarice. and sin and social mis'.ry. is a Bit Ire on such a question. Does any one say, "But you are not giving the steps by which we can commandtiur tasks"? The steps are unimportant now the church Is on fire. When the Fifteenth regiment marcbod ' up Fifth avenue they watched their steps. Everything was as proper" as a cathedral service. When- they went into the Argonne forest they broke ranks and flung themselves hito the conflict with a passion no military drill could with stand. The result then was the dif ference between militarism and pas sion. " The church has been the church militant long enough. Her discipline has been fine. Her movements have had a eacred order. The world has crowded the sidewalks to see her drum beats and see her procession. She has marched as if sometime she intended to. fight. Has not that time come? The Psalmist said, "While I was musing' the fire burned." Is. it not time our musing on the miseries of the world took fire, our philosophy become a living flame and our lives a perpetual sacrifice? Then the task will begin to be accomplished. Regular services next Sunday, All cordially welcome. A. J. KEARNS, Pastor. A POPULAR DIVLSION The Inaulsltlve old lady standing beside the discharged but still uni formed soldier kept eyeing his red chevron persistently. "What division does that repre sent?" she asked. "That, ma'am," replied i-c represents the division between ma and the United States army." He is truly a shiftless man who la too lasy to shift for himself. L. E. Bliss FARMER AUCTIONEER live Stock a Specialty Phone Birch 8182, Alliance