' " (ft1?! orft-H M -l-"0m A' r j- r . tj" fi&mA ' 3 &W -' .i3Mf A wftJ A Plastered Gable Cottage. This Design Provides a Comfortable Dwelling at Moder ate Cost Can Be Erected For About $2,500. Ocilmed by Thomis L. Wtt. Seittle, With. FIVE SLAIN IN RIOT Trooper, Deputy and Three For eigners Are Victims, SCORE OF PERSONS WOUNDED CHARLIE TAFT 0ET3 DUCKltfQ Dory Upsets nnd Boat From Yacht Sylph Rescue president's Son. Salem, Mobs., Aug. 21. Chnrlio Tun, tho president's son, nnd an on- glnoor from tho president's yacht END FOREST FIGHT Denver Congress Passes Reso lution With That Object, ASK REPEAL OF TAX ON OLEO. If BRENNAN'S SANITARY FOUNTAIN It couldn't be better IT'S BEST fr ri - v' Deadly Result of Wild Riot at Pressed Steel Car Plant Near Pittsburg. Mounted 8tate Troopers Gallop ' Through Streets, Cracking HeadB of All Loiterers In Vicinity of Mill. Women Take a Hand In Rioting. Pittsburg, Aug.- 23. Ono Btnto trooper, ono deputy shorlff nnd threo foreigners wero shot nnd killed last ulght In a wild riot at the Pressod Stcol Car plnnt In Schoenvillo, whoso oiuployeos nro now on strike. At letiBt a scoro of persons wero wounded, ton scrJouBly. Tho rioting followed a dny of qulot nnd broko out without warning. Tho following pnrtlnl list of dead and Injurod wns mado up from roports from tho morgue, hospitals nnd Bovornl phyBiclnns' olllces. Dead': John h. Williams, stnto trooper; Harry Exlor, deputy sheriff; throo foreigners. Fatnlly Injurod: John S. Smith, trooper; L. C. Jones, state troopor; sovon foreigners. Georgo KJtch and John O'Donnell, Btate troopers, woro seriously injuspd and ono woman was shot In the neck. Over a scoro of persons recelvod more or less sorlous Injurlus. Whllo tho riot lasted, mountod state troopers galloped' Indiscriminately through tho Btroots with riot maces drawn, crack ing tho heads of all persons loitering In tho vicinity of tho mill. Doputy sheriffs nnd troopors broke In tho doors of houses suspected of being tho retreat of tho strikers nnd whole salo arrests woro mado. Scores of persons wero arrested nnd platied in boxcar jails In tho mill yards. During tho early stages of tho riot ing women woro conspicuous. Somo of them wero nrmed nnd others effec , tlvqly used clubs and stones. These women, all foreigners, lnsano wltb rago, wero mainly responsible for in citing tho mon to extreme measures. NATIONAL MU8EUM READY Will Be Future Home of RooBevelt Trophies of Hunt. Washington, Aug. 23. Tno' lnrgcst nnd most ornnto exposition building in tho United Stntcs has boon com pleted Just in time to receive tho unique trophies ot tho hunt gathered by ox-Prosldont Roosovelt in Africa nnd now about to be unpnekod in this city. This bulldjng of grnnlto, with floor space of approximately nine and one-half acres, and costing $3,500,000, has been eroctod by congress for the National museum and Is being put lu order for tho proper exhibition of va rious objects that havo been collected, chief among which aro tho Roosevelt trophies. Whllo no doflnlta arrangement has loon made, Jt Is likely that rooms on the first floor will bo tho future homo of tho Roosovelt specimens. Consid erable timo will be required to pro paro these skins, which aro packed in brlno, In motal casks. As soon as tho eighty-two polts gath ered by Mr. Roosevelt aro taken from the casks, thoy will bo tanned, as tho best process for their preservation "for all time." -- NO FEAR OF REVOLUTION ', Mexican Officials Deny Rumors of Pos sible Uprising. Washington, Aug. 23. "There has never been any fear of a revolution in Mexico," declares Sonor Marlscal, tho Mexican minister of forolgn af fairs, in a dispatch received at the Mexican embnssay. Tho Mexican am bassador, Sonor do la Harra, as he handed tho dispatch to nn Associated Press representatlvo, said that ho felt that It ought to djsposo of tho rumors which havo been current of late indi cating tho probability of an uprising in Mexico as n result of tho approach ing presidential campaign. The am baBsndor declared that the whalo country will firmly sustain tho candi dacy of Diaz for tho presidency for tho noxt electoral term nnd that the patriotism of tho people was such that thoy would brook no Interruption to tho era of progress on which Mexico had entered. DOG CAUSES BLOODY FIGHT One Man Killed and Four Others Wounded as Result. Charlotte, N. C, Aug. 23. Reese Huck, n promlnont farmer, was shot to death and four others wero prob ably fatally wounded In n feud fight grawjng out of a controversy over n Jog at Huntorsvllle, near here. Indians Burn Alleged Witch. - El Paso, Tex., Aug. 23. Believing a witch brought on the smallpox epi demic that caused tho (loath of many Of the.tr children, tho Indians ot Iluojotzlnge, near Puebla, Mex., It wai learned, burned to death an aged wom an, Juano Romlrez. Thoy barricaded all tho exits of her hut, set fire to It nnd wntched her perish in the flames. The woman was very old and was re gardod by both Mexicans and Indian as a witch. plan Bull Fight for Taft. Juarez, Mex., Aug. 21. The city au, thorltles hare voted t,o approprjau $20,000 to entertain Presidents Dial and Taft when thoy meet Oct. 16. A bull fight will be held. CHARLIE TAFT. Sylph were upset In the lad's dory off Salem and recelvod n ducking. Thoy clung to tho overturned' crnft until a bont from tho Sylph put out to them. Tho Taft dory Is a non-slnknblo craft. TAFT CONSULTS ADVISORS President Holds Another Conference With Cabinet Members. Beverly, Mass., Aug. 23. The cares of stnto weighed too heavily on President Tnft to permit more than an hour's absence from tho summer Whllo House, nnd It wns not until the sun was sotting that business gavo way to pleasure nnd tho big motor car whirled tho president away from n cnblnet meeting for a drlvo along the Essex county shoro with Mrs. Tuft. During tho forenoon a long list of par don cases weio considered, while In tho nftcrnoon Secretary of tho Treas ury MacVengh and Attornoy General Wlckorshnm and Secretary of tho Navy Meyor dlscimsod for an hour or more tho personnel of tho new tariff board, changes In the Interstate com merce ami null-trust acts, and somo economic measures which havo been Instituted in tho nnvy department. Tho mnkoup of tho now tariff bonrd was discussed' In detail and n list of forty or more names for tho threo places woro examined. Tho cabinet paused long over the namo of James B. Reynolds, assistant secretary of tho treasury, before hastening to tho othors, and It Is thought probable f the Massachusetts tariff rato export may bo further considered. FIVE KILLED IN AUTO RACE8 Trade Congress Delegates Submit Re quest to National Bouy Meet Ob jection of Dairy Interests by Re taining Stamp on All Imitation But ter plnchot-Balllnger Controversy Ended by Favoring Reserves. Denver, Aug. 23. A resolution call ing upon congress to repeal the 10 cents per pound tax upon oleomargar lne wns ndopted by tho Transmlssvls slpp Commercial congross. Some ob jection was voiced by tho dairy Inter ests, but this faded away when tho oleomnrgarlno representative offered no objection to tho retention of tho oleomargarine stamp on nil Imitation butter. Former Senntor Patterson offored a resolution calling upon congress for nct.'on defining tho boundaries of t'no forest reservos In such a manner ns to excludo mineral nnd agricultural lands. Frank Gowdy of Denvor said that tho resolution Inferred nn attack on Glfford Plnchot, head of tho for estry bureau, and opposed tho resolu tion. It was not until a resolution commending tho forestry bureau was adopted' that tho Patterson resolution was accepted and pcaco declared. Tho following officers were elected In addition to Colonel Ike T. Pryor of San Antonio, Tex., and Arthur Fran cis of Crjpplo Creek, Colo., president nnd secretary respectively: First vice president, A. C. Trumbo of Muskogee, Okla.; second vice president, Sam Dutton of Denvor; third vlco presi dent, Colonel W. F. Bnker of Council Bluffs; fourth vlco president, C. A. Jnstro of Bakersflold, Cal.; treasurer, L. J. Hart of San Antonio, Tex. FIGHT FOR INCUBATOR BABE JfMfrV' MBhJTTOMI.I1. ',.1.11' '" ' ' v "' ' -t v " &?f I " - M -m iMMHMW v &f r JH ' iKMLmtLlM ' ""'"'" ""'". "Z. MmKt .,q.ul "rssSI x"". ii -Tiiui.u.1 IfiEiiliS m$mMm:: & $m PERSPECTIVE VIEW-FROSI A PHOTOGRAPH. Three Slain In Second Accident at In dtanapolla Meet. Indianapolis, Aug. 23. Threo per sons woro killed and three Injured by racing automobiles nt tho motor speed way. This makes a totnl of five lives sacrificed to the high spocd mania ajnee the opening of tho tournament which dedicated the new race course recently constructed at a cost of $400, 000 and supposed' to, havo been nccl dent proof. Two of tho persons killed nnd one of tho Injured wero spectators. Tho other person killed was a mechanic In tho race. Tho spectators were run down when tho Nation"! car In the 300-mllo race left the track, plungoJ through a fence and Into a crowd gath ered near tho speodway side. Fifteen minutes after this fatality another car skidded near the same spot, hit a portion of the bridge, nnd tho driver wns injured. Following this, Referee Stevens stopped the race, which was for tho Whoelor and Scheblor $10,000 trophy, and In which the leaders had completed 235 miles. This brought the meeting to an ab rupt end Just when tho prospects for a successful wlndup were brightest. Kansas Officials Seek Extradition of Alleged Kidnapers. Topeka, Kan., Aug. 23. Officials hero begnn their campaign to Becuro possession of Mrs. Barclay and John Gentry, charged with kldnnp.lng Ma rian Blcakloy, the Incubator baby, here Saturday, nnd now under nrrest In Kansas City. Sheriff Norton went to Jefferson City with n requisition on Governor Hadley, asking tho return of tho two to Topeka to be tried on the kidnap ing charge. There is some doubt that tho requi sition will be honorod, on nccount of tho child having beon awarded to Mrs. Barclay by tho Missouri courts. In order to obtain possession of the prisoners, if Mlssourj refuses to glvo them up on tho kidnaping charge, Chief of Pollco Eaton has secured war rants against Mrs. Barclay and Gen try, accusing them of assault with at tempt to kill. This charge results from the attack on Clarence Belknap at tho Bleakley home during tho kid naping. Mrs. Bleakley, mother of the child, and Mrs. Ora Thompson, grandmother, went to Knnsns City to nld In the fight for possession of little Marian. ANOTHER ROW AT DENVER JL!.sy .IWBMSIIIIII jlll'l1 I !llr5 " J li i MTCnw I i R)g ii & -j io, I jtriijl.. J SfCTl Livitttggn Z MALL J :$rl W- V-0 t 12 JK :J' U.jy -MftMMn II4" $S1I I cnMCtD G awxs Z A Conrad Koch Jewelry and Watch Repairing Special attention given to RAILROAD WORK BRENNAN'S DRUG STORE P. J. CLATTERBUCK Farms and Ranches BOX I1UTTK AND DAWES COUNTIES For GOOD INVESTMENTS WRITE ME MAItSLAND, NEI1K. Cement Contractor For estimates on cement walks, ce ment blocks and all kinds of concrete work, see J. J. Vance. West Lawn. , Alliance, Nebr. .Phone 551. 34-4W I Time Table Alliance, Nebr. FIRST PLOOIt PLAN. SECOND FLOOR PLAN. The plastered effect Is well presented in the above photograph. Tho first story is covered with narrow cedar shingles, nnd. all nbovo this, Includ ing gables. Is finished in plaster on metal lath. Verge boards nnd the brackets of the gables In heavy rough stuff nnd roof of cedar shingles. Tho novel and nttractlve exterior details are paralleled iu tho interior. A largo arched column opening connects the living room nnd dining room, nnd tho living room is set off from the hnll by sliding doors. Tho living room has n large mantel with high leaded glass windows on either side: also beam celling nnd a bay wlndo'w. The Interior .finish throughout is native fir, stained. "Width of structure. 24 by 34 feet: height of first story. 0 feet: second story, 8 feet 0 inches. Basement under the whole house with concrete walls and cement floor. Laundry in the basement. Heated by furnace. With gas and electric lighting and porcelain plumbing, this house can bo built for about $2..r)O0. making an Inexpensive six room house at once complete and comfortable. THOMAS L. WEST, Architect. aoixa east An. t. t. lv. c. t No. 42, Dally. Lincoln Fly er stops ntHt'iicoa, 1! tok en How, Ittivemia, etc. ... .2:25 a.nu 3:50 n.m , No. 44. Dally, Local (rum Alliance tn Seneca; thence .stops at Meruit, liroken How, ltavennit, etc U:45a.m. l:00p.m No. 30. Dully, From Ed;?e niout and Dcudwood 1:33 a.m. aoiKU west ah. c. t. ia. si. t. No. 41, Dnlly, FJyer-Edge-niont. Deadwood,Newcuft tie, etc , 4:35 a.m. 4:10a.m. No. 43, Local, Edgemont, Newcastle, and west 1:30 p.m. 12:45 p.m. No. 33, Dally, Edgemotit and Dead wood 3:20a.m. QOINO SOUTH I.V. M. T. No. 301, Denver Flyer 2:55a.m. No. 303, Denver Local con nects at llrldgeport with Guernsey local 12:45 p.m. COM1NH NOHTH An. M. T. No. 302. Fiver from Denver. a;tn n.m. No. 304, Local from Denver and Guernsey 11:50 a.m. WELLMAN TO TRY AGAIN North Pole Expedition by Airship Is Reorganized. Chrlst,lanln, Aug. 23. To the gen eral relief of the members of the polar oxpcdltlon, Walter Wellman, although keenly disappointed at the bursting of his dirigible, balloon, announced that he wns more rtetermlnod than over not to abandon his plan, but would con tinue to wrestle with nil tho difficul ties standing In the way of reacldng tho North pole by airship, Mr. Well man plans to build a new ship, longer and narrower than that which explod ed, and of higher speed. Other Im provements will be made, profiting by experience. Workmen started enlarg ing the airship house and making all ready for another campaign. All the members of tho crew of tho nlrsh.Jp have tho utmost confidence In tholr londor and In tho ultimate suc cess of his enterprise Thoy have asked to go with him on his next voyage. Second Flood In Royal Gorge. Pueblo, Colo., Aug. 23. Tho Donver nnd Rio Grande opened tho Royal gorge line nftor traffic had been de layed for twenty-four hours by n sec otid big Hood within a week. Although tho Hood was almost as high as the first one. it washed out loss track. Wilson and Wiley May Clash at Meet ing of Food Commissioners. Donver, Aug, 23. Secretary of Agrl culturo James Wilson and Dr. Har vey Wiley, chief of the bureau of chemistry, will be 4n Denver tomor row to attend tho annual convention of food commissioners. As a result, it is oxpected that another contro versy between federal officers will be brought to Donvor, this time, not over forestry nnd Irrigation, but -over tho use of benzoate of soda In food. Supporting Secretary Wilson are soveral members of tho Remsen scien tific referee bonrd, whllo Dr. Wjley's chief supporter Is Commissioner J , W, Emery of Wisconsin, president of tho association. m P A L, A C E m 1 BAT ARKET &M Phone 111 MrM k a Miss Rose C Herman Cashier and Bookkeeper Jos. Skala, Jake H. Herman Gustav Lehr Wm. C Herman Meat Cutter Stock Buyer Sausagemaker and Butcher Delivery Boy AUTO PLUNGES OFF TRESTLE ;0&; Dies Trying to Save Wife and Babe. Pittsburg, Aug. 23. Trying to save his wife aid yoar-old child, W. C Caesber of Corapolls, Pa., was crushea to death when a switching engine ol tho Carnogje Steel company, nt Ne vllle island, overturned a trolley car laden with pleasure seekers. Driver and Four Women From Van couver Killed at Seattle. Seattle, Aug. 21. The four women drowned when their automobilo plung ed off n trestle In tho southern part of tho city were members of prom lnont families In Vancouver. The fifth victim was Ira Perry of Seattle, tho chauffeur and owner of tho car. . Tho dead: Mrs. J. Colvln, Miss Ag nes Colvln, Miss Maggie Paul, school teacher; Mrs. M. M. Grothe. Miss Kate Hiscox and MJss May Paul clung to tho automobile and were saved. Tho car was going thirty miles an hour. The women came from Vancouvor to see the fair and hired the nutomobllo to tnko thorn fornrlne Crusade Against Bucketshops. Little Rock, Aug. 23. A mnttor to be taken up at the meotlng of the Farmers' union next month will bo the organization of a crusade against bucketshops throughout tho entire country. It is the intention of the union to go before congress and wage the fight against tho traffic. 1 1 1 v Find Cure for Hog Cholera. Kansas Cfty, Aug. 21. That bogt by being inoculated with the serura discovered by Dr. Dorset, a govern mont specialist, aro Immune from chol era has been demonstrated to tho pat isfaction of government officials, whr. have been conducting a test at tht stock yards. S Best Equipped & I Most Up-to-Date S Exclusive Meat Market in Western Nebraska Swiffs Jrpmii im ? ferns - and Bacon i . & 3j SHOP OPEN from 6:30 a. m. to 7 p. m. Saturday, until 10 p- m. Sun jjfcf day, 8 to 10 a. in. 16th and 17th of each month, until 9 p. in. 2 Meat will be delivered from 7 a. in. to 6:30 p. m. i;rT: $&&&& Hlgh-Grade Meats, Fresh and Cured, Fish, Poultry, Etc. Try our home-made Palace sausages ivvv: rfi tl Wa " &?7r?Xl! )x wm JB Prompt Attention Given to Phone Orders ',4nMlhfciMMMAIMBM in' - friiittiirtniu 1 i'ftM -ilnir "--,