THE ALLIANCE HERALD, TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1920. TIIRKH ANGORA. .,' John King and family of Bayard motored to Angora on business last week. LAuyd Miller of Bingham stopped off at Angora for a brWf visit with Ifuinrg me uibi ui lust vilfll, lit) iad been in Wyoming on business. George Venell was an Alliance Tisitor between trains Monday and went to Scottsbluff on the afternoon iruni. reiurninK nome ni inuinigni. Mr9. A. (i. blOIH't Wi.j ...uivd r come in ScottBbluff waa in Ancora first of the week on business. Little Harry Barber who became suddenly ill at school Monday and -was taken to his home is able to be back in school. Neil Miller of the Robert Graham ranch is in Angora for a few days. He expects to go to Wyoming with hla brother Lloyd Miller. Mrs. B. E. Maybell has received word that her brother Kenneth who Is attending High school in' Scotts bluff is suffering from an attack of measles. Mill Lillian Stoner was here last vreek making improvements to the buildings on her farm east of town. There was a box supper at the Beister School near Linn Wednes day night. Several from Angora at tended and report a good time. J. Claude Clow of Halsey was visit ing relatives in Angora last week. He bad been to Bridgeport to attend the funeral of his nephew Glen Crow. Mrs. Fannie Morehead, whose home is in Wyoming, is a gueBt at 4he home of her inother-in-law, Mrs. Elmer Morehead. Mrs. Emma Crawford of Broken Bow, who has been visiting at the L. D. Carnine home, left Tuesday for her home. , Mr. Shinsgang, who has been working in the Minatare lumber yard, came this week to be assistant in the R. S. Proudfit yard at this place. Manager P. B. McCauley has been alone in the store and yard, ex cept for Mrs. McCauley, who has been doing the bookkeeping, since the resignation of Leo Lewellen two weeks ago. Mrs. Gordon Temple Is working the third trick at the depot. Miss Leota Henderson has gone to Bayard to work in the telegraph office at that place. L. Gates, wife and baby are at home in the section house. Mr. Gates is the new foreman and he and his family come highly recommended from their home at Lingle, Wyo. j CJlen Crow. Particulars of the death and fu neral of Glen Crow have bein re ceived. The young man, whose death occurred on Thursday, May 6, was killed at Gerlng while switching a car. No one saw the accident, but the engineer raid Glen was on the back of the engine uncoupling the first car. The car did not get fully in the clear and the engine bumped aj-uinst it, crushing the young man. lie lived two hours and was con scious until the last. When asked I by i ue nurse if he wished 10 say any thing for his folks, he asked her to his him for his mother, which were his last words. I The death of tTils young man in the zenith of his young manhood shows that death is no respecter of persons. He was well and favorably known in this community. Last year he Hoiked as a helper at' the depot and his kindly disposition und eVii-ituuy binile won him many fritiiUs who are grieved over his demise. The funeral at Bridgeport Sunday was one of the largest ever held in that city. Six young men friends l were the pallbearers and six young ' lady friends draped in white were liuiiorury pallbearers and followed elube In hind the casket. The floral oii'erings were many and very beau 1 tiful. A wreath given by the busi ness people of Bridgeport was an evidence that the young man was held in high esteem. His train crew ' and the Northport Sunday school, of which he was a member, sent flowers. Four days before bis death, Mrs. Crow, his mother, gave a surprise party in honor of his eighteenth birthday. The young people were unusually Jolly upon this occasion. It is told that when Glen blew out the candles on the birthday cake, he made the remark: "Just like one's life soon blown out." Sympathy for the relatives is general in this community and friends are acquaint ances are grieving with them. A few more years of the present in come tax system will enable Ameri cans to rank as a nation of expert accountants. We Own and Offer for Sale First Mortgage Farm Loans. . TO NET 1 Our loans combine the features of absolute safety, good income and marketability. Tax exempt in Nebraska. THE GUARDIAN TRUST CO. Under Supervision State of Nebraska ItHAL KSTATK TIUNSFEUS. , : " :-.rl Reported by J. D. Emerlck, bonded abstracter, Alliance, Neb.: Daniel Foley, single, to John Fo ley, undivided half of e2 of 9-28-49, ,8(MI. Mary Ann Zedlker and husband to George E. Morgan, tracts n and 12 of Duncan's North Side residence tracts. $3,200. T. A. Hawkins and wife to James Kennedy, lots 1 and 2, block 6, town Bite of Berea, $1. F. M. Knlcht. unmnrriod. to M' nerva C. Blanc, lots 1, 2, and 3, block 24, in Box Butte addition to Alliance, $2,000. William L. Clark and wife to Amos II. Haile, nw4 4-26-49, $12,000. Jtrushu E. Baxter, widow, to L. B. Cornell, nw4 33-2.r,-48, $4,500. Edgar M. Martin and wife to C. K. Todd and Janette Todd, lot 3, block 2, original town of Alliance, $5,500. E. T. Kibble ahd wife to A. J. Ga hagau, nw4 17-25-47, $1. K. E. Robinson anil wife to Blanche McRoynnlds, e2 lot, block 26 town of Alliance, $1,300. Anna M. Rubeudall et al. to Win. M. Pruden, lots 3 and 4, ant s2 of nw4 of 2-25-49, $8,400. W. Z. Emerson to Frank A. Sa franik. undivided one-half interest in nw4 3-24-51, $680. The United Presbyterian church to Richard Carl Young, al lof lot 6 and strip 5 feet wide full length of lot 5, block 5, original town of Alliance, $5,500. E. T. Kibble and wife to Charlotte Walkin8, undivided one-half interest In sw4 of 2-25-48, $1. Charlotte Watklns, unmarried, to J. O. Kerns, se4 3-25-48, $1. Ralph T. Watson, Eingle, to Ernest A. Herbert, n2 of ne4 of 8-26-47, $1, 600. i i " i - Box Butte County Fair association to E. Essay, lot 9, block 2, Falrview addition to Alliance, $150. Oscar O'Bannon and wife to Dick O'Bannon, nw4 of 27-28-47, $4,800. L. B. Cornell, single, to Harry T. Godding, nw4 of 33-27-48, $10,400. Alexander Hill, jr., and wife to William Charles Watteyne, lots 8 and 9, block 6, Second County Addi tion to Alliance, $700. Elizabeth Kroll, unmarried to Kos ter Kanechlff, a par tof lot 3, sec tion 3-24-48, $2000. Elizabeth Kroll, unmarried, to Bessie E .Snyder, lot 6, block 16, Box Butte addition, $500. Jacob Herman and wife, William Herman, unmarried, to Nick Merino, lots 12, 13 and 14, block 4, Reddish addition, $185. John A. Pahlow and wife to Charles W. Hawley and Ollie, E. Hawley, se4 of 6-26-47, $9,300." B uiiM Home i Why bofrin your married life by living1 in n rented Home? Ileal happiness conies only through possessing n place you can rnll your own. Think of the thrill you will feel when for the first time you let yourself into Your New Homo There's a satisfaction lhat is difficult to beat it's worth trying for. Notice the couples among your friends the happiest those who get the most out of life, ore the ones who hove built o Home of their Own. A New Homo necessarily creates more .interest in homo life o fondness for one's own fire side ond family. In your New Home, you will enjoy in addition to peace ond contentment, a feeling of security Against the world's troubles. The first thing to decide is the kind of Home you wont to build. Will it be a Uungnlow, a Cottage, or of good old-fashioned Colonial style? You have ot your disposal oil of the many pious in our office. And ony of them moy be changed to embody your own ideas of comfort ond utility. Build It Now There is no reason for waiting until later to Build. Materials and Labor costs are not coming down. And even if they should, the item of rent saved to say nothing of the other advantages weighs heavily enough to overbalance the difference in costs. Stop in our office at any time and we will talk the matter over with you. Dierk's Lumber Co, : ' FRED HARGARTEN, Mangager. The consumer can find comfort In the fact that for every profiteer who Insists prices will remain high there are two honest economists who see a j downward trend. i!!!!uMiUuu,u;H ik'yiiidttikw Didn't rboso Dim Socrates lifted his cup "What's this stuff T" he asked. "Hemlock", replied the cup-bearer. "Oh!" said Socrates, "that's all right I thought It was one of those d d substitutes for beer." ii3 1 i How do 1 you jsdde on? The Biggest Shop Window in-Box Butte County These are the lhing9 that determine the true cost of a motor oil: the protection it gives the motor against wear, economy in fuel consumption, the size of repair bills for operation and upkeep. Polarine stands high when judged by these standards. It cush ions all engaging parts with a wear-preventing film that keeps moving pans snug-fitting, working easily with little vibration or noise. Polarine has unusual stability under high engine heat. It assures a fuel-tight and gar-tight oil seal in the cylinders maintains full compression and delivers maximum power. Use Polarine and reduce motoring costs. It is sold where you buy big-mileage Red Crown Gasoline at first class garages and service stations where this sign is displayed. STANDARD OIL COMPANY (NEBRASKA) OMAHA Ami T . . rm ) The Alliance Herald has no circulation records to break BUT ITS OWN Where Most Buyers Shop FIRST THE Biggest Shop Window in Box Butte county is 2,100 feet long. As a matter of fact, it is a very unusual Shop Window, but it is one in which nearly 75 per cent of the people of Box Butte county who have money to spend shop first generally before buying a dollar's worth of e very-day home needs. This Big Shop. Window follows no geographical lines or is it in any one location. More than 2,100 people, al lowing a foot for each person, can "shop" in this Win-' dow at the same time. The Biggest Shop Window in Box Butte county is The Alliance Herald's Shop Window the advertising col umns of The Alliance Herald itself. . Eighteen hundred buying homes in the Alliance trade territory shop first in this Big Shop Window, and the merchant whose desire is to select the cheapest and most direct route to the purses of those who have money to spend cannot afford to overlook the possibilities offered in this Window. A display in this Window is your own Shop Window magnified. All haphazardly planned schemes to reach the buying public of this Kingdom of Alliance fall by the wayside unless there is concentration in this miraculously large Shop Window. Assistance will be gladly given any local merchant if he will but say the word. Ask about our free illustration and ad-writing service. 1 " .4-11 ""'"pi""!. I. 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