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About The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 8, 1902)
.;). NKliJIftwM 5e 3Vavce LeffaU. PUBLISHED EVKRY FRIDAY. nrrtninl PnhUr.ntlnn nf nnt Butte Countu, T. J. O'KKBFE. IAMKS WILCOX, .EDITORS. Entered at Uio I'ostofllco nt Alliance, Nebraska, am Second-Ulas Mall Matter. fUTHS OF SUtBOfllFTION. I'orrcardn advance) ei.OOThroornonlhs...... 40centa Six month 75 1 Sample copies free to any nddrcss 137" Advertising rates rnado known on application. The City of Alliance. Alliance Is ft thriving pushing, growing llttlo city of 3300 souls, with a future full of promise-InOfcd, so bright Is the outlook, It Is freely predicted thnt within tlvo years It will hare a popula tion of from 5000 to 8000. In all of Northwest Nebraska there Is no town, In point of population and volumo of business, that can approach It. Its railroad facilities aro tho best, being located on tho main lino of tho great llurllngton and Missouri lllvor railroad system) and Its schools and churches aro not surpassed any where. Itspeoplo are hospitable, enterprising and Intelligent. Its cllmato Is healthful, Invigorating and Inspiring. In tjhort, no town In Nebraska presents superior Inducements for men of capi tal, enterprise and push to locate within her lwrdcrs. Letters of liiiilry addressed to tho Alliance Hekalu will bo answered promptly and in detail Fusion Ticket. STATE. For Governor W. H. THOMPSON, Of Hall County. Lieutenant-Governor E. A. GILBERT, Of York County. Secretary of State JOHN H. POWERS, ' Of Hitchcock County. Auditor C. Q. DeFRANCE, Of Jefferson County. State Treasurer J. N. LYMAN. Of Adams County. Superintendent Public Instruction CLAUDE SMITH, Of Dawson County. Attorney-General J. H. BROADY, Of Lancaster County. Land Commissioner J. C. BRENNAN, Of Douglas County. OONQRE88IONAL. For Congressman, Sixth District Gun. P, H. Barry. ' Of Greeley County, Tan fight is on in this, the "Big Sixth," and thus far Pat Barry, the old soldier, is leading Moses P., the tricky lawyer, hy several lengths. "Our Man Mickey" is making no speeches, because he can't. A glance at his picture which hangs in the north and cast window of the Times business office tells why. It's the shape of his head. "Let Us Have Peace, If We Have to Fight for It." Those aro the words of the immortal Abraham Lincoln, and ever since wo knew their meaning we have pinned our faith to them. Tho war is over and peace reigns supreme in this bright corner of the earth. It is to be a lasting peace, says the man who threw the first stone. This is as it should be, and exactly tho result tho Hkrald had hoped for. There was absolutely no occasion for tho beginning of the un pleasantness. Tho Herald never spoke of the associate editor of the Times other than in kindness until ho made it necessary. Every reader of the Herald knows this to be true. All in God's world tho Herald is desirous of is to be let alone. There is ample room for the Times, the Grip and the Herald in Alliance, otherwise this paper would not bo hero. Two months before tho proprietor of the Herald invested his money and became a citizen of Alli ance the Times and the Grip joined hands and began a scries of assaults that they foolishly imagined would pre vent the coming of the Herald to this city, and ever since then they have been throwing out sneaking innuendoes and doing all in their power to strew tho Heralds' path not with roses but thistles and thorns that wore meant to impede its progress. But they have ignominiously failed in their purpose. Such underhanded methods always fail. The. Herald has prospered and will continue to prosper, despite the predictions of those who do not like the paper or its editors. The Herald is willing that the dead past shall bury its dead. And it means exactly what it says. Right here and now let it make this statement: The name ot the Times, or its editors, will never again appear in these col umns in other than respectful terms, until compelled, in defense of its own interests, or tjiose of its friends and sup porters, to refer to them otherwise. Isn't this fair? What fairer treatment could a fair-minded man ask for? There is room for you, gentlemen, and room for us, in Alliance. Keep on your side, and we'll keep on ours. And we feel just this way toward Bro. Broome only a good deal more so. Deep down in our heart we like the man and always have; and it has hurt us to say what we have said about him. But until he makes it plain that he will attend to his own knitting and rises above the position he has taken that of a jealous-hearted, narrow-minded, childish com petitor, and like the editor of the Times, avows his inten tion of letting the Herald severely alone, why, we'll just have to keep on throwing tho harpoon into him, that's all. Wc would have it otherwise if he would be good. How about it, Bro. Frank, anyhow? George Darling tho I'umlturo Dealer. We ICnoA That Host People are Out for a Proposition to Save Honey. Briefly Stated--?051 TO FUR- FURNITURB, BETTER and PRETTIER, at a LESSER PRICE than you can buy elsewhere. All we ask is for you to visit our store and allow us to demonstrate what we have said . , . Professional Cards. ATTORNEYS. WILLI AH MITCHELL, A special dispatch from this city to the Lincoln Journal states that the presence here of Col. John S. Mosby has oc casioned considerable uneasiness among the stockmen of this section. There is no occasion for uneasiness. Those who have fences around government land were long since apprised of the fact that those fences must come down, and Col. Mosby is here in accordance with the wishes of tho interior department to see that the law is complied with. His mode of procedure will be, as the Herald un derstands it, to notify parties who have fenced in any part of the public domain, to remove said fencing within sixty days after notification. Tho immediate cause of Col. Mosby's presence in Alliance is a speech delivered at tho cattlemen's convention held in this city last February, by President S. P. Delatour, in which the statement was made that in the Alliance and Sidney districts there were over 6,000,000 acres of government land under fence. But be that as it may, there's nothing to be made by protesting against the inevitable and growling about the hardships and inconveniences that will accrue. Uncle Sam says these fences must come down, and that settles it. Auout tho best all around county scat weekly in Ne braska is the Alliance Herald. Exeter Enterprise. That's short and sweet, brother, and mightily to the point. But it's a whole lot more than wc claim for our little paper. A thousand thanks, just the same. ATTORNEY AT LAW, ALLIANCE, NEBRASKA. Office Phone ISO. KESIDENCB PHONE203. R. C. NOLEMAN, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Itooms 1. 2 and 3, First National bank build ing, Alliance, Neb. Notary In ofllco. W. G. SIMONSON... Attorney at Law.... Ofllco Up-stalrs Over Postofllce Druggists and Pharmacists. THE PERFUME SENSATION, 4 Mad am Butterfly' The New Japanese Odor, One of the Most Delightful and Fragrant Perfumes Ever Produced. "WE DE3C--V-E3 IT The Difference. In one of the fairest little cities in the great state of Iowa tho population of which is but little, if any, greater than that of Alliance there are published three semi weekly newspapers, making their appearance on successive days, so that on every day in the week, except Sunday, the inhabitants of the Iowa city are privileged to read the home happenings of interest. One of these publications is a straight-out democratic newspaper, published by a man who is utterly fcailcss and dares to tell the truth, though the heavens fall. Another is equally pronounced in its ad vocacy of republican doctrine, whose editor is a gentleman, whenever and wherever you meet him ; and the third is what some people call a conservative sheet, with a slight leaning toward republicanism, and whose editor is also a good man. The three move smoothly along, their relations perfectly amicable and each striving to enhance the per sonal welfare of their friends and supporters and the mate rial interests of their town. And all this is exactly as it should be. How different, thouch. is the situation in the Nebraska city. And who is responsible for it ? This is a free country and no man has the right to imagine that it is his privilege to monopolize business in his line in a given territory because he was there first, and because he can't do it, to get mad and display a littleness and peevishness that is foreign to the character of a manly man. Senator Hanna is going to make a personal campaign in Clevejand, determined to overthrow Mayor Tom L. Johnson if he has to talk to every voter in Cuyahoga coun ty between now and election day. He has even intimated that on a pinch he might kiss the babies. Omaha Bee. Yes, but he won't content himself with talking and kiss ing the babies. He nevei does. He will take with him, when he goes to Cleveland, thousands and thousands of dollars, as he did when he went to South Dakota to accom plish the defeat of Pettigrew, which he boasted in the senate chamber he would do, if it cost him one hundred thousand dollars of his own money. But the old corruptionist will have need of every dollar ho can command for such a pur pose when he pays his contemplated visit to Cleveland. And then he will fail to corrupt the friends and supporters of Tom L. Johnson, the laces of whose shoes from the standpoint of principle, honesty of purpose and geuine manliness Mark Hanna is unfit to tie.' Harry Tracy, the most desperate and daring man of whom the public has taken cognizance in recent years, who has held at bay and defied the authorities of a dozen counties since the date of his escape from confinement, June 9, has at last succumbed to the unequal struggle. He waB su'Tounded in a wheat field near Spokane, Washington, on the evening of Wednesday, August 6, and after a des perate battle, in which his leg was broken, and realizing that the end was near, placed the muzzle of his pistol to his forehead and blew out his own brains. The aggregate of tho various rewards offered for his capture, dead or alive, amounted to near 5,000. His marvelous nerve was the cause of his undoing. How illy proportioned things are in this world, anyhow. Here was a man with nerves of steel, who feared not man nor devil, yet possessed of neither judgment or the slightest sense of right. Suppose he had had these, together with an education, what might he not have achieved in an ordinary life-time? " Pity 'tis, 'tis pity," that such things can be. Priest Attacks Trusts. Rev. Father O'Brien of Toledo, Ohio, delivered an address in that city on June 6 which created a genuine sensation. His subject, "The Anarchy of Wealth." He said: "I cannot shut my eyes to the dangers that threaten our republic. The greatest danger I can see now is the anarchy of wealth. The union was saved and slavery abolished by an army of poor men from the generals down to tho privates. Now we see the wealth of the country in the hands of a few men who never risked their lives for the flag. The agricultural and mineral resources of our magnificent country have been cornered by a few men with money, and every bite of meat we take is doubly taxed by the beef trust. If our government is ever changed from a republic to a monarchy or empire, it will be done by men of wealth, not by poor workingmen. In pagan times the man who would corner provisions to raise the price of living for tho poor would have been put to death. That was good, natural pagan justice. The millionaires who have cornered our provisions and raised their price on the working people deserve the same fate. 't7 . 1l .. .... 41.nl Jrwl .iAam.A 1a iitnrlf tlitl- VClClUlia, iCl ua l'lV " u I'icacin; wic ui w.uv the Grand Army has done, but if our officials and legisla tors do not relieve us from the unjust and unlawful bur dens imposed on us by the trusts the time may come when we will be obliged to take the law into our own hands and demand our rights at the point of the bayonet. The American workingmen are patient, but will not submit to the tyranny of wealth forever. "May God avert for us the horrors of war, and may the white-winged angel of peace continue to hover over our be loved land." L. A. BERRY, ATTORNEY AT LAW. ALLIANCE. NEBRASKA. SMITH P. TUTTLE. IKA E. TASn. TUTTLE & TASH, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. REAL ESTATE, North Main St, ALLIANCE. NEB. Also the New Odors.... Violet of India, Rose of India, English Violet, Juliet and Others. Give Them a Trial. They're Sure to Wo Guarantee Their Quality.... The Alliance Pharmacy, J. S. flEKINNEY, Proprietor. F. J. Brennan & Co..., W. M. IOtDEMCE, ATTORNBy - -A-T - TiA.W L'ractlceOu nil the courts v Hcmingford, Neb 1'HYSICIANS. II. II. BFLLWOOD, M. D. W. 8. BELLWOOD. M. D. Bellwood & Bellwood, PHYSICIANS and .. . SURGEONS. Holstcn Building, - ALLIANCE, NEB, J1?-!! .AAA.' -.'WW M-wWM"XK DEALERS IN. Drugs, Perfumes Toilet Articles. I Paints, Oils and Wall Paper. "pTescTvpVvoTxs Car exW& omvovtuta&. Alliance, Nebraska. FIRST BANK NATIONAL BLOCK. AA' T.I..: :-w :H-HHH:H-:w-:-HMHJ L. W. BOWMAN, PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. Ofllco In First National Bank block. Alli ance, Nebraska. Q. W. MITCHELL. M. D PHYSICIAN and SURGEON. ALLIANCE. NEB. Ofllco In Lockwood I Building J Day 'Phono 205. Night 'Phono 37, J. E. MOORE, M. D. FLETCHER BLOCK, ALLIANCE, NEB. Calls answered from ofllco day or night. Telephone No. 63. flOLSTEFS PHARMACY.... Is One of the Most Up-to-Date Drug Stores in Nebraska Prescriptions Carefully )-, Compounded Watches and Diamonds. A SELECT STOCK OF What would the people of Des Moines, Burlington, Sioux City or any other Iowa town do if a Nebraska cor poration lawyer should venture to interfere in their local politics and appointments? Would they not have just erounds for resenting it as a piece of impertinence? Yet that is precisely what John N. Baldwin's defensive alliance with Dave Mercer means tor Umalia. umalia uee. The Bee should be consistent. Why deplore the methods of Baldwin in one instance, and endorse them in another? If Mercer is bad for Omaha, "Our Man Mickey" is bad for Nebraska. Both aro the servile creatures of tax-shirking, dictatorial aggregations of wealth that fatten and grow sleek on that to which they have not a scintilla of right. Why condemn Mqrcer and laud Mickey? If one is un worthy of confidence, the other must be. They represent identically the same interests. Sheriff's Sale. I,.. l.,,in nf nn r,r1 fir nf SalO lsSUCd by tllO clerk of tho district court of Dor Uutte coun ty. Nebraska, upon a decree rendered by said court lu favor of T. M. Lawler, plaintiff, and Wln.t ISft Wegener and rfr , Wegener, Xer f endaXwilUam Wta.M and Ann 0 Wlnans. defendants. I will on the 12th day of August. A I). ltXB. at 10 a. m. on said day. at tho west front door of the court house in Alliance in said county, sell the following described real estate, io-wlts the southwest quarter of section 20 In township 25 of range 47 west or uipoiu pnm;.- pal meridian in Uox utniu county, " '.' ...ii ....n.i..r. m tlm lilirlip.st iblude casn T to satisfy said order of salo iu tho Sum of70.M and interest, costs and accruing co3t,, UtA. HEED. ci.n.lir nf Hnlri Oonntv. r Frank aiarun, iwnuiy.j Wm. Mitchell, Attorney lor riainuu. Nebraska, r ror .l. At Fine Watch Repairing a Specialty. . F. E. XOLSTEN, Proprietor. Alliance, Nebraska. Ladles' Furnishing Goods. Order of Attachment. Tn lustlco court of I.. A. Horry, one of tho rrv. , foi lustlces of tho peace In and for llox Ilutto county, Nebruska. J. E. Joder vs. S. it. Harnett. H. Jt.Uarnett will take notico that on thq 18th day of July. IftM. L. a. Uorry. a Justice of the peaco. of Uox Ilutto county, Nebrasku. is sued unorder of attachment for the sum of 3U.0O in nn action ntmdlng before him, , where in .1. E. Joder is plaintiff and S. It. llurnott, dofondaut, that property of said defendant, consisting or money In hands of tho Chicago, llurllngton and Qulney railroad company has been attached under said ordpr. bulrt course wart continued to the 7tliday of August, lB.atUO'clocka.m.i)EU( ' Wm. Mitchell, His Attorney. Mrs. Thos. Regan, Has a Large and Complete Assortment of TVULLIINERY, iS T ADIES TAILOR MADE Suits, J Shirt Waists. Muslin Under- wear, Fancy Notions, Chil dren's Headware, Battenberg flaterials, Embroidery Materials, Stamped Linens, Hair Goods, ote M Opera House Block. OO- X T T X t y r