n u ' 1 !l II u v i i I OUR STANDARD OJF MERIT f " 219 Box Butte Avenue z i A. D. RODGERS Reliable Grocer A full line of Groceries, Provisions, Flour and other goods usually found in a first-class Grocery ' Telephone orders filled promptly i Phone 54 Alliance, Nebraska S. W. Cor. Box Butte Ave. and Second St. O. NORTH r "A Good Sign will Improve .Your Business" Painting of All Kinds Done on Short Notice. Satisfaction Guaranteed. 603 Box Butte Arenue. First house north Court House ALLIANCE, NEBRASKA ISTJELSOIS JBC.ICXCHIDTt FIRE INSURANCE A GENCY WKPHESBNT8 THE POLLOWINQ INBUWANOE COMPANIES. Hartford Fire Insurance Company. North American of Philadelphia. ruoenix or uiooKiyn. iew oru. Continental of New York Olty. Niagara Fire Insurance Company. Connectlcutt FJre uoromerciu uniou Assurance uo bonaontiremans ! una insurance to. Sertuanla Fire Ins. Co Kochesier German Ins. Co. tstateof Omaha Office l'o-Stelra.rictcticrlllock. ZMJL JfflCHlSttR HHHHHHI Will Promote Beauty Women desiring beauty get wonder, fnl kelp from Bucklen's Arnica Salve. It banishes pimples, skin eruptions, sores and bolls. It makes the skin soft and velvety. It glorifies, the face. Cores sore eyes, cold sores, cracked lips, chapped .hands. Best for burns, scalds, fever" sores, cuts, bruises and piles. 23c at r?. J, Brennan's. WE' BELIEVE you will recog nize that we have ably maintained our stand ards that our display for Fall and Winter, 1 9 ion, exactly ex presses your idea of fine fabrics, select style, choice patterns and correct tailoring. Call and be convinced. Always pleased to show goods. Your money's worth or your money back. Liverpool. London and Globe Ins. Co. German American Ins. Co., New York, New Ilamphlro Columbia Fire Insurance Company. Philadelphia Underwriters. Phoenix Ins. Oo.. Hartford. Conn m Repeating Shotguns' USED IN THE U. S. ARMY. The U. S. Army authorities know a gun; that is why, when they decided to equip some troops with repeating shotguns, they selected the Win. Chester in preference to all other makes. The experts of the U. S. Ordnance Board also know ft gun; that's why, after submitting a Winches ter Repeating Shotgun to all sorts of tests, they pronounced it safe, sure, strong and simple. If you want a shotgun buy the one whose strength and reliability led the U. S. Army authorities to select it and the U. S. Ordnance Board to endorse it that's the Winchester. THE RELIABLE REPEATERS Thanksgiving Proclamation. ' "Washington, Nov. 8.- Tho vigorous growth and progress of tho country as reflected by the records of population and harvests and tho general condi tions of International peace aro things for which thanksgiving is principally due for the year 1910 according to the annual Thanksgiving day proclamation issued by President Tatt- CLASSIFICATION OF INDIANS Board Makes Rules for Santec and Ponca Tribes. Klokrata, Neb., Nov. 7. f. U. Ay bott, assistant commissioner of Indian aflairs, was here consulting the com petency board regarding the Santte and Poncn Indians. Thin board, cum priding Superintendent F. E. Mclntyre, Chief Clerk A. O. Pollock and H. P. Marble, has decided to classify the Indians thus; First, all restrictions removed as to his ability to manage his estate, when found competent; sec ond, those deemed capable of mnkim; their own lease and attending to their own business to u limiteu extente,and third, those considered incompetent and will have the same government protection aa heretofore. Commis sioner Abbott is also considering the advisability of bringing the tiust lands of the Indians under the Brown law, which taxes them, but does hot serve us a lien on the lands. The government will protect counties in this wherever Indians have leased lands and will bold the individual In dlan responsible pending the issuance of bis patent. 1 - RAILWAY MAGNATES ON TRIP Big Stockholders of Harriman Lines Impressed With West. Omaha Nov. 5. Nine millionaires and directors of the Union Pacific, railroad passed a short visit in Oma ha while their special car was being switched for the journey eastward. The capitalists were returning from a lengthy trip over tho Union Pacific lines in the west and were on their way to Ch'.rRgo Following were those who composed the party: Otto H. Kahn, member ol the Kuhn-Loeb company; L. F. JLoree, president of, tho Delaware nnd Hudson railroad; Alvln "W. Peck, president oi tho Mercantile TruBt company; Frank B. Keech, Eugene Kahn, Martin Erd man, William Whltehouse, Henry R. Winthrop nnd Dr. Joseph Ftankel, All of the party were greatly Im pressed with the phenomenal growth of the west. BANDITS CONFESS TO GUILT Disgusted Over Comrade's Treachery, Three Admit Guilt. Omaha, Nov. 5. As the perpetrat ors of an appalling number of highway robberies and burglaries, four men acknowledged their guilt to Chief ol Detectives Savage, after being iden tified by two of their victims. They gave their names as Fred Bledge, Frank Truman, Tony Pasha and Joe Trimble. In their confessions the highway men said that Truman, the prize fighter, always did the searching of the victim's pockets nnd on nearly all of the "Jobs" he held out the larger part of the booty. fIre day widely observed All Schools of State Have Drills and Ceremony. Omahn, Nov. 5. Fire day as set by the state superintendent of Instruction was observed in every school in the state with appropriate exercises and drills. In Omaha the drills were civ en Indoors in most schools, because of the inclement weather. At the Comenlus school nil the entrances were closed but one and it was planned to get the children all out, by that one exit so that they would not get Into the habit of rushing about the building in all directions and increasing their own danger. MlssShallenberger Named Bookkeeper Lincoln, Nov. 4. The governor's daughter, Miss Grace Shallenberger, has been appointed to the position of bookkeeper in the governor's office the appointment taking effect at once. O. C. Hunted, who has been bookkeep er, resigned and was at once appoint ed chief clerk to the governor, to take the place vacated by Leo Mat thews, who, it is understood, will be named to take the vacant place of oil inspector, Hanging Pays Stryker. Lincoln, Nov. 7. George Stryker has filed his bill with the state for $143.50, which Is .the amount he charged for superintending the execu tion of Bert Taylor at the state peni tentiary. Of this amount, $43.40 Is for expenses and the $100 is his fee. Tho expenses were divided as follows: Railroad fare, $2.70; battery and ex press, $12.50; day's work on scaffold, $17 20; rope and express, $11. Wtlson Appeal Next Week. Tecumeeh, Neb., Nov. 4. The dis trict court for Johnson county will convene in adjourned session in Te cumseh on Nov. 8. Judge Pemberton will preside. It is expected that the case of Duncan Kinneburg, on appeal from the findings of the county court in the John Wilson matter, will come up for trial next week. Child Dies From Burns. Omaha, Nov, 5. As the result of fearful burns about the body, little Mary Hults, one year old, died at St, Josoph's hospital. The child received her injuries at the home of her par ents at Louisville, Neb, . She was rushed to Omaha immediately, but she died within half an hour after ar riving here. Money for Soldiers. Lincoln, Nov. 7. Governor Shallen berger has received $4,952.54 for the soldiers' home at Grand Island nnd $2,100 for the home at Milford, The money was sent by the government as a quarterly payment on the $100 per member of the soldiers' homes, which it pays annually. im $ CONDENSED NEWS 1 ---l,.r,Aj..t.Jll.J- iAj,i,i . The directors of the Pennsylvania railroad company declared the regular quarterly dividend of 1 per cent The negotiations by a syndicate to secure the controlling stock of the Cramp Shipbuilding company have been declared off. Carrying nearly a thousand passen gers, military and civil, the United States army transport Sheridan has departed tor Manila. The main building of the Ontario Wheel company works at Gannnoque, wlth all Its contents, was destroyed .by fire. Lobs, $175,000. Four miners, all FlnnB, were killed by an explosion In the Leonard mine at Butte, one of the properties of the Boftton and Montana company. Carl Rohr, a defaulting bank clerk of the National Union bank of Water town, N. Y., whose alleged shortage Is $13,000, was arrested at Seattle. The Uruguay revolutionary leaders have agreed to disperse and disarm, provided the candidacy of Ordomez for the presidency is withdrawn. Charles Ritch and George Oviatt were killed and John Gordon was fa tally Injured when a threshing engine boiler exploded near Lapeer, Mich. Municipal elections throughout En gland and Wales show a considttabk growth in the labor and socialist par ties. The wdmen candidates fi badly. The Standard Oil '.-".c; :.. taken over the hold!rf., o. the J. t Trees Oil comj-- .,i . PltitTuir; Carro parish, Louisiana, paying Jo 000,000. The Jewish quarters In Shlraz, thi capital of the province of Fars, Per ela, have been Sacked by Khasgals Eleven Jews were killed and 5,000 are destitute. John J. Smythe was sentenced to denth In Norfolk, Va., for the murder of his wife. Bullets intended for Mrs. Smythe also killed a thirteen-year-old daughter. J. M. Studebaker, president and one of the founders of the Studcbakei Brothers Manufacturing company, Is seriously ill at his home In South Bend, Ind. Albert Leo and Samuel Watson wer killed and Jefferson Davis was per haps fatally injured when the boiler ol a traction engine exploded at Green castle, Ind. Emperor Nicholas of Russia, attend ed by Sergius Sazonoff, the Russian minister of foreign affairs, and a suite of fifty, arrived in Potsdam for a visit to Emperor William. The first case of yellow fever ever known In Honolulu has-been, discov ered aboard the Japanese liner Hong Kong Mam, which arrived there from Manzanlllo, Mexico. An effort to restrict the use of in junction by tho courts of Arizona, es pecially In industrial disputes, was defeated in the constitutional conven tion after a heated debate. Arguments on the petition of de fendants for writs of habeas corpus In the Illinois Central graft cases were begun in Chicago before Judge Chet lain in the superior court. Helen Starr, sixteen years old, was killed, her sister, Anna, fourteen, sjigbtry hurt, and Laura Waldkirk, fifteen, seriously injured in an auto mobile accident at Akron, O. Asbury Spicer, who has figured con spicuously In the Breathitt county, Kentucky, feuds for many years, was given a life sentence for" the murder of Asbury Fugate laBt spring. John Sekanlna of Chicago, who de serted his wife a year ago, entered the little grocery kept by her, shot and killed her, wodnded the baby in hei arms and then killed himself. George B. Clows, head of the firm of George B. Clows & Co., publishers In Philadelphia, was arrested to an swer an indictment filed at Kansas City, chargtng that he used the malls to defraud. William H. Hoffman, a chauffeur, was arrested and charged with mur der In New Orleans, following the death of John Kelly as the result of in juries iufllued when Hoffman's ma chine struck him. William mlth, a native of New York, famed as an impersonator of the character o Uncle Sam from his re markable likeness to cartoons, died n a hospital in Tucson, Ariz., at the age of ninety-one yearB. A Barton Hepburn, president of the Chose 'National bank. New York, and former comptroller of the currency, was elected president of the chamber of commerce, to fill the vacancy caused by the death of J.. Edward Sim mons. In compliance with an Imperial edict Chinese Consul General Ly Yung Tew and the entire staff of the San Fran cisco consulate appeared without queues and attired as Americans, causing a mild sensation in the ori ental quarter. W. R. Allen, president of the First National bank at Enloe, Tex., and E. T. Cook, president of the First Na tional bank at Sftvey, Tex., convicted at Paris, Tex., on the charge of violat ing the banking laws, began serving sentences of five years each In the penitentiary at Leavenworth. John A. Dlx, Democratic candidate for governor of New York, while en route from Albany to Troy, figured In an automobile accident when his ma chine ran into a street excavation at Watorvliet and was badly damaged. Mr. Dlx and the members of his party escaped -with a severe shaking up. McCLUER'S We have just received a fine line of Ladies' Waists Which We Offer at Prices that are VERY ATTRACTIVE Ladies' Black Satin Waists, pleated front and back, tucked sleeves, finest grade CD ftffl Ladies' Black Silk, handsomely trimmed 4aDU Ladies' Black, Allover Net, spangled "J fjfj trimmed "" Ladies' Black ana White Shepherd's Plaid 4.50 Ladies' Beautiful Persian Waists, in green, Ej ftf blue and brown, at . JUU yyALL Paper Mi Lots of Odds and Ends . 10c to 40c Values, all go for 5c a Roii to clean up 33Y3 dicount on regular line to clean up We have a fine sock of G Paper to go in bunch lots, 2, 0 "c from 5c to 1 5c values, all go at per roll HOLSTEN'S r Popular Price M EALS AT Younkin Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm Restaurant I have purchased ,the Younkin restaurant and it will lpe run on a popular priced basis. Expert cooks and attentive waiters. Try our meals and you will be a regular customer. REGULAR DINNER. 25c Open Day and Night I. H. RICHARDSON Hearing :aie i tt V: THE Boards of all descriptions for any part of a house or barn. DiekWer&CoalCo. Phone 22 D. Waters, Mgr. u1 Y f i"s -zsserzajni