Typewriters for Rent Machines cleaned and repaired Expert Public Stenographer Work done neatly and quickly at reasonable prices. Lloyd C. Thomas phone 281 Room 20, Rumer Block When you plan your home remember the importance of Good Plumbing I do sanitary work and guar antee it. I install Standard bath room fixtures. Steam and Hot Water Heating- with modern, up-to-date Ideal Boilers and American Radiators right in my line. FRED BRENNAN Wn. James, Exclusive Dealer in COAL & ...WOOD 'Phone Alliance, No. 5. Nebraska. SUMMER VACATION TOURS TO THE PACiriC COAST: Daily low round trip rates to Portland, Seattle, Ta coma, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and San Diego. Slightly higl'ier to include both California and Puget Sound. One whole business day saved by our new schedule to the Pacific Northwest. TO EASTERN RESORTS: Daily low excursion- rates to Canada, Michigan, Min nesota, Wisconsin, Massa chusetts and New York tourist resorts; also low ex cursion rates to tourist re sorts in Maine, New Hamp shire, Vermont. 1000 TAMILIES WANTED: For newly irrigated lands in the Big Horn Basin, Wyoming. No cyclones or Hoods. Water your land as needed. Soil is rich. Timber and coal plentiful. Price $40 to $50 per acre. Personally conducted ex cursions first and third Tues day of each month. Write -your friends back east about these lands and send their names to D. Clem Deaver, General Agent, Landseekers' Information Bureau, Omaha. 3VWuite, "ttt. W L Wakklky, G. P. A., Omaha Neb. Do you wish to increase your earning capacity from $30 to $100? Cor respond, .with Chadron Academy, Chadron, Neb. POLICE SEK NEPHEW Capture Suspect, Who Proves to Be a Tramp Believed Nephew Lured Woman to America and Then Murdered Her for Her Money Bullets Aimed at Daughter Fall Tells of Tragedy. Believing they wore ubout to cap turo August Eberhard, the grocer's clerli, who is sought by the police of New York city in connection with the I murder or his mint, Mrs. Ottilllo Eber-1 of the stnte for this year Is $5U,oio, hard of Vienna, the police nnd a posse ! 299 higher than last year. This indi Df citizen 8 senrched a thicket at Onk I :ates an actual Increase in value of dale, N. J., finally capturing the sus- five times this amount, or $250,051, pect, only to learn that he was a j 495. Thomas is the only county in tramp. The police do not think that , the slate so far which shows a de the murderer will be captured near crease in land values, the shortage be the scene of the crime. They say Ing explained by a falling oft In the that anyone who could display such j number of acreB under cultivation, cold blooded cunning as wus shown Judge Edgar Howard of Columbus In the murder plot, would' plan to get ' appeared before the state board of Bafely away before the crime was dls-1 equalization to dlscusB his protest covered. It would have been easy for i against the alleged omission of $9, the murderer to get to Paterson by i 000,000 worth of material from the re trolley and from thlB place to get a I turns made by the Union Pacific train. A brother of Eberhard waH ' General Superintendent Park of the found at Woodslde, N. J., and he haB Union Pacific, who had been cited to furnished the police with an excellent appear before the board, was not pres photograph of tho mlsBing mnn. The j ent, but A. W. Scrlbner, tax commls brother was deeply affected when ho sioner of the Union Pacific, appeared learned the police are searching for j In his stead. Mr. Scrlbner contended his brother. Ho sayB that he did not that when Mr. Park said the Union know that Mrs. Eberhard and her daughter had Intended to come to this country. He thinks hla brother Was also murdered. FriendB of Eberhard nre at a Iosb to account for his dis appearance after tho killing of his aunt and the wounding of his cousin and affianced bride. There was n pathetic scene enacted when Miss Eberhard was taken to tho scene of tho tragedy. The girl showed a remnrkablo memory and ac curately guided the detectives to tho railroad tracks where her aunt was slain and where she herself was wounded. The girl was deeply affect ed, but she showed great courage and retold tho story of tho shooting. Miss Eberhard says she saw a Hash coming evidently from behind a car on a siding nearby and then a second nnd a third. As her mother fell to the tracks, the girl felt a bullet graze her own neck, cutting a gold chain from which a locket was suspended. Suddenly Eberhard urged her to run as a second bullet plowed' Into her shoulder, and she started down tho track screaming. Once she turned back to.seo If her mother wns follow-1 lng her, nnd ngaln there was a shot, which passed above tho bridge of her nose, the blood from the wound half blinding her. She snld her mother carried $2,(100 In her clothing. It Is believed Eberhard lured his mint to America and murdered her for her money. DESPONDENT, ENDS THREE LIVES Woman Leaps from Ferryboat With Two Children In Her Arms. Ill nnd despondent and fearful of the fate which might await her two little children If they were left alone to face the world, Mrs. Gussle Reason bought paco for all beneath tho ' waters of tho East river. The bodies I se". victims of the tornado in June, of the mother w.d her little ones lie ' ure 'l1' aul to bo out. although Mrs. side by side In the morgiio at New . Shlvely Is lame, and her husband's York awaiting burial. face Is still bandaged. As soon as Por several years Mrs. Benson had ' they are able, they will go east to lived with her husband and childreu have his nose treated. About forty of on a South Dakota farm, but when her j t-'' friends and neighbors went Into health failed, she decided to'return to their oats field and had the grain bar her old homo In New York city. I vested In half a day. This field was Mrs, Uenson spuing from a ferry- well sprinkled with broken boards. i boat with tho childreu In her arms. Boston Plans Aerial Route. Aeroplanes will be carrying pas! . n8cra and freight between Now seugers York and Boston within tho next , eighteen months, if the plans of the American Aerial Navigation company, ' which is being organized by a law firm of Boston are carried out. Tho company, according to tlie backers, is nl'imti.fl fnr till, tutrtmen nf innniifnnhii. ing and operating aerial devices and the establishment of aerial routes for the transportation of freight and pas ( bongors in the United States, Canada ! mm .Mexico. According 10 tne present plans, the first experiments will be , made with small dirigibles, with a 1 carrying capacity of two passengers in aiiuiuon 10 tne operator. Ice Cream Eaten on Wager Fatal. Thomas McMillan is dying at Ho hart, Okla., from tho effects ol too much led cream, eaten on tho Fourth of July on a wnger with Pred Wakefield that he could eat more of the delicacy. Wakefield died ton days after the bout, having eaten al most a gallon. McMillan finished a few saucers behind the winner. Both were taken 111 on the night of the , Fourth. 1 Decrease In Immigration. Immigration to America from all conn 1 tries, particularly Russia and Japan, showed .a marked falling off for the month of June, as compared with tho j Eame month of 1907, according to fig-, ures made public by the bureau of Im ' migration and naturalization. The to 1 tal Immigration aggregated 31.047. .compared with 154.734 In 1907 ado1 1 crease of 79 per cent. ' i I ' Drew Murder Still a Deep Myster;.. Troy, N. y., July 21. There is htlll I no trace of the murderer of Hazel Drew, whoso body was found In Teal's pond, about twelve miles from this city. July 11, The affair is as com- plttely bhromleit in- hiystoryas at any Blage of. tho Investigation,, so far as tangiLte ilews are 'com rtL.M OE Big Increase in Real Estate Assessment of the State. Thomas Is Only County In Nebraska Decrease In Land Values Mrs. Ban ner of South Omaha Fatally Shoots Her Brother-ln-Law. Lincoln, July 21. With assessors' tcttirns missing frbm Custer, tinge, 3rmlt, Nance, ScoU'b Bluff nnd Hooker iountles, the real estnte assessment Pacific had $9,000,000 worth of mate rial and other stock In Council Bluffs, Omaha and along the lino to be addea' to the value of tho property, he meant that this value wbb to be scattered along the entire system. Judge How ard Insisted Mr. Park had told him this property was In Nebraska, and the board decided to order Mr. Park to nppear in person at a dato to be determined later. Bridge Gangs at Work in Saunders. Ashland. Neb., July 21. Several bridge gangs are at work in Saunders county, replacing the bridges washed out in tho flood of two weeks ago. Close around Ashland two bridges over Salt creek, a few miles west of the city, which were found stranded In fields below where they should have spanned the river, have been re placed on the piling and will soon be In serviceable condition. A force of men Is also at work lifting the heavy girders of the new steel bridge over Salt creek, on Silver street, from the bottom of the stream. Over fifty bridges of various sizes were taken t by the floods In Saunders county alone. E. J. Christy Only Stunned. Genoa, Neb., July 18. E. J. Christy, a miller who It was thought was buinud' to death in tho destruction of tlu mill nf ITmwln lirntllors hnr wns ,oum, by MmQ freml8 at Gnuu, lfcl. and. While using a torch In the lower part of the mill, tho explosion that started the lire stunned him. He does not remember, but now thinks he crawled out of a window and wan dered in a half demented condition to Grand' Island Tornado Victims Recover. Geneva, Neb., July 20. Mr. and Mrs. John Shlvely and Edward Pus- Candidates File at Lincoln. Lincoln, July 21. Pred Abbott filed hls ,,p"caU?" l lV? ! """ 7? 'V tho Kepubllcnn ticket us a candi- date for railway commissioner. Law 5on Rrlan filed as Republican candi date for state treasurer, to succeed himself, and George Anthes of Oma ha filed for the Republican nomination for auditor. Edgar Howard filed ns a Democratic candidate for congress from thu ""lijllatrlct Fatally Shoots Her Brother-ln-Law. South Omahn, July 21. Pred Ban- n0r, a young speculator at the stock , yards, was shot and latally wounded by his brother's wife. The buleet lodged ' the brain. Por the past few days thu friends of Mrs. Banner say sho has been practically demented. Sho wns a widow when she murrled Ban ner and has a daughter seventeen years of age. It Is said that Pred Ban ner and the girl, Miss King, have been going together for some time and that this is the cause of the shooting. Guardsmen at Ashland Camp. Ashland, Neb., July 21. Tho first contingent of Nebraska National Guardsmen went Into camp at tho ' guards' new ritle range, two miles ( north of Ashland, 011 the Platte river. The first contingent, consisting of ' twelve companies and the Secoud regl- mont band, under command of Major ' George A. Eberiy, will bo here for ton days. McKinley Club Elects Officers. ! Omaha, July 21. Charles E. Foster I was elected president of the McK u- ley club; J. P. Palmer, socretary, and ., . .' ""'"" ' "v ",'" "" !ueotl"f "? C,"b esterdi! "'" lng. R. B. Howell appeared before T. B. Dysart,- treasurer, at the annual the club, representing the Fonteuelle 0lub, with a proposal to morge the Fonteuelles Into tho McKlrlo club. ' i Veteran Found Dead In Bed. i Alnsworth, Neli., July 20. George Rlxley, aged seventy-six, was found , dead in his bed. He was a civil war ' veteran and leaves a wife and six gruwa iLilureu. NEWS NEBRASKA GHUMWAY MUST PAY PENALTY Supreme Court Rules Murderer Must Hang for Crime Mear Adams. Lincoln, July 18. R. Mead Sluim way must pay the death penalty on Oct. 30 for the murder of Mrs. Sarah Mnrttn, near Adams, In Qnge county. Thl Is the decision of the supremo court, which affirms the findings of tho lowpr court, which tried anil convicted the man. Shumwny was employed on the Mar tin farm. One day last spring Mr. Martin went to town, and while he was gone Shumway murdered Mrs. Martin, sixty years of ago, stole what money he could find and fled to Mis sourl. He was tracked, arrested and hi ought back to Oage county nnl tried. Tho Jury brought In a verdlc of murder In the first degree. The ense was appealed on a technicality, but the supreme court affirms the de cision of the lower court, Shumway Is in the penitentiary. Believed Truman Was Murdered. Falrbury, Neb., July 17. Robert Truman was found dead In his farm home, near Daykin, and the autopsy revealed that death was caused by two bullet wounds In the head. One of the bullets had lodged In the brain, and the other passed clear through the head. Mr. Truman owned a sec tion of land near Daykin and had lived on his farm since the end of his sec ond term as county treasurer. His estate goes to brothers and slsterB. There is a general belief that he was murdered, but there Is little evidence as yet beyond the course of the bul lets. Board of Equalization Meets. Lincoln, July 20. The stnte board of equalization, which meets today, will have to pass upon the values placed by tho county assessors upon railway terminals. The value of rail road property In every town or city of Nebraska where there is any rail road mileage will have to be equalized by the board. . Although some of the returns from the assessors have not yet been received, It Is estimated that the new assessments will show an In crease In actual value of real estate alone In the stnte of $250,000,000. Range Cattle Come Early. Omaha, July 18. Range cattle are pouring into South Omaha two weeks ahead of the usual time, in fact before all the range cattle from the Pan handle of Texas are arriving on the ranges. During the last week tho Burlington has handled several car loads from Sheridan and other Wyom ing points and from the Black Hills country. 'The Northwestern also re ports a heavy movement In sight from the Black Hills. Railroad officials ex pect this heavy cattle business to keep up until time for grain to start to move, Buethes Family Holds Reunion. Tecumseh, Neb., July 18. Twenty families of Buethes, about hundred persons In all, were present at a re union of the family at the residence of Mr. and Mrs. C. P. Buethes. The reunion was in celebration of the ar rival In this country of the late Carl Buethes, father of several families rep resented, fifty years ago. Bridge Foreman Killed. Fremont, Neb., July 20. D. C. Wool ring, a bridge foreman, was accidental ly knocked off a bridge at noon by a chain connected with a pile driver, which struck him on the temple and threw him into the river. He was dead when taken out. Woolrlng lived at Lincoln and his body was taken there. Child Kicked to Death by Horse. Tekamah, Neb., July 20. Morris Chrlstenson's three-year-old son was kicked to death by a horse. Hearing a scream, the child's mother ran to the barn and found the youngster al most lifeless, with the top of his head almost kicked off. Tho Chrlstenson farm is ten miles north of here. Stranger Killed by Train. Blair, Nob., July 20. Samuel C. Lossol, a sti anger here, wns killed by a train two miles north of here. Pa pers In his pockets showed ho had $100 deposited In a bank at Pocahon tas, Ark. His skull was crushed and one log wns broken. Glenn Jacobl Killed by Bolt. Blooiufield, Neb., July IS. Glenn Jacobl, who recently resigned as town marshal, was struck by llghUilng and liihtautly killed. He wns In tho barn feeding his horses. The lightning did not, damage the barn. A wife aufl three small children aro left. Tressler Buys Barneston Herald. Beatrice, Neb., July 18. Edward Tressler of Table Rock has purchased the Barneston Herald. Mr. McCoy, who ofetablished the pape- several years ago, Is understood to have se cured a government position, and this is his reason for selling. Nebraska Farmer Shoots Himself. Pawnee, Neb., July IS. Prank Frol bauer, a young Bohemian farmer llv Ing seven miles east, shot himself with a rifle and his condition s sorl ims. Despondency was the cause of his attemptud suicide. Death of Judge Mr-.gee. Council Bluffs. la., July 21. J. E. P. Mngeo, formerly of this city, who wns' judge of tho superior court from 1891 to 1S99, died suddenly nt his home nt Independence, Kan. His brother, Harry G, Magee, left at once for Independence, and will bring the body hore for burial. Judge Magee was born in 1SG1, and married a daughter of the late W. H. M. Pusey. Since leaving Council Bluffs he has lu.1 engaged In the oil Lusiuess. WE WANT TO 5ELL OUT our stock of high-grade Groceries, because we are in business and want to buy more. Try our High-Grade New York Fruits and Vegetables Three Brands Livingston Revere Lily of the Valley Have you tried Morning Glory Flour? It is Best We carry a full, clean, up-to-date stock of GROCERIES Save your cash coupons. For $20.00 in these tick ets we give a solid silver spoon, or redeem them at 5 per cent in trade Phone 128 J. A. nailery Money Laid Out: On Groceries in our store is always well spent. You get your full money's worth, besides the satis faction that you are consuming only pure goods. Even all the Canned goods that are so much consumed during the summer season are bought by us from the most reputable packing houses, with their guar antee that we can warrant the purity ot each article to our customers. Our Pickles. Soup, Sardines and Fruits are the besf manufactured today. JAMES GRAHAM KALDAL BROTHERS Contractors, Builders AND Brick Manufacturers ALLIANCE, NEB. Try My Flour and you won't have any more worry about your bread. My brands of Ai and Cow are not excelled anywhere in this country, and ladies who have used them are my best adver tisers. Phone No. 71 Res. Phone No. 95 J. ROWAN THE FLOUR AND FEED MAN G. W. ZOBEL DRAY LINE Office at Geo. Darling's Store Phone, 139. Residence Phone 570. GEO. W. ZOBF.L. H. NELSON, Painting, Paper Hanging and Kalsomining Phone 641 Ace - T-,tT,tj, tersBfi! ' "Sou T&uWe CostAb anA. SuTovcaV Cases Qbstataics a 5ccaWj R.a&s, $o o $2o ct c&V. Strtni4e E. Cutc, Supl. Miss Mary E. Smalley TEACHER OF VOICE Hiss Edith H. Swan TEACHER OF PIANO STUDIO 424 Laramie Avenue Phone - - 220 I DR. G. W. MITCHELL, Physician ane Snrgeon Day and night celli Office over Uogue Store. Phone 150. L. W. BOWMAN, PHYSICIAN and SURGEON. Offlce In First National Bank block. Alli ance Nebraska. H. A. COPSEY, M. D. Physician and Surgeon i'honc 300 Calls answered promptly day and night from offllce. omces: Alliance- National Dank Unlldlng over the Post Otllce. DR. CHAS. E. SLAQLE WITH DR. BELLWOOD Special Attention Paid to Eye Work GEO. J. HAND, 11 O M K O I A T 11 1 C PHYSICIAN A NO. SURG BUN Formerly Interne Homeopathic Hos pital University of Iowa. Phone S31. (J Illce over Alliance Shoe titore Residence Phono J5l. Churchill & Thornton PHYSICIANS AND SL'KGEONS (Successors lo Dr. .1. E, Moore) OFFICE IN FLETCHER BLOCK Omeo hours 11-12 a.m., 2-4 p.m. 7;30-0 p.m. Office Phone 62 Res. Phone, Dr Thornton, 187 Night calls, Phone 02 or 187 Drs.ICoppernolI & Petersen OSTEOPATHIC PHYSICIANS (Succt'dsors to Mrs. Frey Si Ihi'fe) 17 and 18 Rumer Block Office Phone 43, Residence 20 C. L. WEBER PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON With Dr. llowman Office Phono 65 Res. Phone 184 Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Lockwood UNDERTAKING AND UMHAI..MING Funeral Director and Embalmer Phones Office 214. Res. 205 ALLIANCE NEBRASKA GUY H. LOCKWOOD Graduate Chlcnco School of Kmbnlmtng WITH B, F. LOCKWOOD. " AUG. F. HORNBURG Private Nurse Phone 492 WILLIAM MITCHELL, ATTORNEY AT HW. ALLIANCL. NEBRASKA. EUGENE BURTON Attorney at Law Office in rooms formerly occupied by R. C. Noleman, First Nal'l Bank blk 'Phone 180. ALLIANCE. NEB. F. n. BROOME LAW AND LAND ATTOKNLV.I Long experience in state and federal courts and as ReRisterand Receiver U. .S. Land Office is a guarantee for prompt and efficient service. Office In Land orflce HuIldliiK. AI.I.IANCi:, - - Ni:ilKASkA. H. M. BULLOCK Attorney at Law, 8IIITII P. TUTTLE. JHA E. TASII TUTTLE & TASH, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. REAL ESTATE. ZOHhMalu St., - ALLIANCE. NEB.