$100 In Payment of Loss June 26. 1911. Mmn Gray A Guthrie, Agents, Indiana A Ohio Live Stock Ina. Co., Alliance. Nabr. Oentlemen, Wa are thla day In receipt of draft for $100 00 in payment of lees of our mare, Queen, which dlad while foaling. Thla loaa occured ahortiy after wa mada application for inouranca, and while it coata mora than ineurance agalnat flra and llghtig, it being a LIFE policy, Inaurlng agalnat DEATH FROM ANY CAUSE, It glvea abeolute protoc tlan to any one having valuable atock. Thanking you for prompt set tlement, wa are Vary truly yours, MURPHY BROS. k j By Chaa. E. Murphy. The Indiana A Ohio Llva Stock Ineurance Company la tha old at In Ra Una, being in Ita 24th year. It la tha strongest, having a paid up capital of $200,000, aurplua of $200,000, and aaaata of $461,000. Ineuree animal, agalnat DEATH FROM ANY CAUSE. SEE GRAY & GUTHRIE AGENTS . , Phona 138 Alliance, Nebraska BARGAIN DAY AT MOLLRING'S TUESDAY, JULY 11th 35c value 15c value Ladies' Girls' and Bovs' White Aprons Blk- Stockings all sizes 22c 8,3c i I 15c value Ladies' 10c val. Standard Fine Black Checked Stockings Ginghams 8"c 6l2c 15c value Embroideries and Insertions - - Iv 25c value Art Craft 4Ar Colonial Draperies - ItC 12J4c value Standard all linen Calicos crash Toweling all colors 6c 5c .1 YOURS RESPECTFULLY GEO. MOLLRING NEBRASKA AS IT SHOULD BE KNOWN Paper Red Before Nebraska Press Association at Omaha. BY WILL M. MAUPIN OF LINCOLN Central Lumber Co. Building Haterial, Piles, Posts HEniNQFORD, and Coal Nebraska aaaal I flavfi '. aaaaaaaaa- Lim. J a . S'T Office at Rodgera' Grocery, Phona 1. JOHN GARRETT 'Saccular to Frank WalUci TransfeMU Household goods moved promptly and transfer work solicited. Rea. phone 583 We of Nebraska should know, and knowing tell all the world, what Ne braaka la and la to be; wHat Nebraska offers to the homeseeker, the invest ment seeker and the health seeker; what hidden potentialities for human happiness lie dormant in her fertile oil, and what she Is annually contrib uting to the sum total of the world s created wealth. In the beginning of this necessarily brief paper I want to say, and say em phatlcally, that the last session of the Nebraska legislature, which performed many good deeds, neglected the ripest opportunity aver offered a legislature to confer a laatlng benefit upon the state. I refer to Its failure and neg lect to make the Initial appropriation for a bureau of publicity and immigra tion. There was no reasonable ground for opposition to the measure; no rea sonable objection in economy. In fact there was no opposition to the bill. But, unfortunately, it did not offer op portunities for log-rolling and trading. It had behind It the solid backing of very enterprising organization in the state, of every wide-awake man who la anxious to see Nebraska take her rightful place among the states of the republic. But because legislation to day has become largely a matter or "You tickle me and I'll tickle you;" so largely a matter of trade and barter, this splendid measure calculated to give us a start in the great work of making the truth about Nebraska known to the world, was allowed to die of inanition, of mal nutrition, of sheer neglect. And in doing so the legislature worked a grave injury to the commonwealth. States, like corporations and part nerships and firms, must advertise in these strenuous days or fall to the rear. Constant, persistent, insistent, intelligent advertising is the keynote of success in any business, and then la not greater or more important business than the building of a stale. Rut there Is a condition precedent to intelligent advertising. The con tntCtOr Of the advertising must know what he Is advertising. No man en gaged in advertisement building can hope eer to know too much about tlio business or the goods Ire is exploiting. It la all well enough for the newspaper men of Nebraska to claim that tbey are constantly advertising Nebraska, but tire plain, unvarnished truth is that they are not doing it as it should be done, and for the very simple rea son that they do not know all they should know about Nebraska. 1 have lived in this state for a quarter of a centitry longer by several years than the aeruge Nebraska editor. I have tried in my weak way to advertise N'e brack to the world, and I thought for years I knew Nebraska pretty thor oughly. Something like six years ago I began studying Nebraska from a dif lerent angle Formerly I had studied it frojn a ear window or in political conventions or by converse with friends in my office. Now, after study ing Nebraska for six years as any mer chant studies his stock any success ful merchant. I mean I have just be gun to realize that what I knew of i Nebraska up until six years ago waa as nothing. : nd that If I keep on ac quiring knowledge for the next six or eight yeara as I have during the past six or eieht. at the end of that time my knowledge of this great state may qualify me to emerge from the kindergarten class and enter the first primary. The longest span of human life in this age would not suffice to en able one to graduate from the great school wherein knowledge of Nebraska is imparted. Merely as a basis upon which to work intelligently while you study, I purpose giving you some concrete tacts about our beloved state. I will not waste your time in detailing bald statistics. The average human mind can not think in millions Statistical tables appeal only to statisticians. Columns or figures frighten and repel he average man Because of this I undertook, while serving as chief of the statistical bureau of the state, to present the statistics about Nebraska In a more attractive form Mian the usual table of figures I hope I may be pardoned If I lay claim to having achieved some measure of success In edvertlsine Nebraska abroad I am of the opinion that the crop statistics of Nebraska, and all other statistics, re ceived a wider range of publicity un der the plan I adopted than thev had achieved before. One bulletin of com parative statistics reached a circula tion :f T'l.O'iu, with requests for up wards of ?so,ooo more. And such great Journals as Collier's. Leslie's W aly, Munscy's Magazine. The American Magi?.lne and the Cosmopol itan, to say nothing of the great daily new papers, gave free to Nebraska a measure of publlcitv that could not have been purchased with rnonev Now. here are some tacts abour Ne braska, tersely told, that will serv as the basis for manv a good advertise ment of Nebraska: Nebraska was admitted to the union In March. lPfi7, and Is therefore forty four years old six years less than half s century All thla progress, all this wonderful development, has bees wrought In lees than ftfty years. Olvlll ration's history records nothing like It Seventy-seven thousand square miles of territory, 415 miles east and west snd 205 miles north and south. Forty nine million acres, 18,000.000 acres cultivated. Upon these 18,000.000 cul tivated acres Nebraska In 1810 raised upwards of $400,000,000 worth of grains and grasses Of the 30,000,000 uncultivated acres more man one-nan are Just as good for corn, wheat, oats, rye, barley, alfalfa, potatoes, broom torn, etc , as the iR.ooo.OOO cultivated Seres, and one half of the remaining acreage will In time, under Intelligent cultivation and proper knowledge of the conditions to be met, be added to the wealth producing area It took Nebraskar.s more than a quarter of a century to learn that they .could not adapt Nebraska soil to the Nebraska man. Then came the most wonderful discovery of the age the discovery that by adapting the man to the soil, Nebraska could be made the greatest agricultural wealth producer In the world Since that discovery every year has seen hundreds of thousands of acres of soil, heretoforejponsldered worthless, brought Into cultivation and yielding returns that are so astonish ing that it Is hard to make people be lieve the truth. There Is room In Ne braska for a half million more tillers of the soil who will till Intelligently. Landseer. when asked what he mixed his paints with, replied, "With brains!" And there In no better fertilizer thaa brains. Nebraska la the third largest corn producing state, and the youngest of the three, raising more corn to the acre than any other Btate. Nebraska Is the fourth largest wheat producing state, and the young est of the four, raising more wheat to the acre than any other state. Nebraska Is the fourth largest pro ducer of oats, and the youngest of the four, only one state excelling her In production per acre. Nebraska is the third largest pro ducer of Bugar beets. Nebraska manufacture? more butter per capita than any other state, and her dairy Industry Is In its infancy. Nor is Nebraska alone an agricul tural and live stock state. Twenty- live years ago we shipped in practical ly every manufactured article we con sumed, last year our total manufact ured products were approximately worth S250.00O.000, or almost one-half as much as our total of agricultural products and 4ive stock Startling as it may sound, there is no state mak ing such rapid strides in manufactur ing lines as Nebraska. There is a reason. A dollar invested in Nebras ka manufacturing establishments brings a greater return than a dollar invested in any other state. But, as I said early in this paper, the human mind cannot think in terms or millions. II I say that in 1910 Ne braska produced 11,000.000 pounds of butter we merely smile and say. "that's some butter." But you'll prob ably sit up and take notice when I tell you thnt II all that butter were packed In pound cartons, and the cartons stacked up end on end. It would make a column of butter two and one half inohes square and 285 miles high; or if loaded into standard freight cars t would make a train over thirty miles long! In 1910 Nebraska hens produced 102,000,000 dozen eggs 1,200,000.000 eggs. Placed end to end they would reach once and a half times around the world, and they were worth more monev than all the gold and silver dug out of any one state in this Union during the same year Ever hear of "King Cotton?" Texas In the greatest cotton producing state, yet her 1910 crop of cotton was not worth as much as Nebraska's corn and wheat crop by $30,000,000. The total tobacco production of the nation last year wasn't worth as much as last year's crop of Nebraska corn, and it wasn't our best corn year, either Pennsylvania Is the greatest coal pro ducing state, but her coal output last year was not worth as much at the mine mouth as the grain, hay and live stock of Nebraska on the farmsteads. All the gold dug rrom Uncle Sam's soil In 1910 wouldn't pay for Nebraska corn and wheat In 1910. And mind you, this with less than one half her fertile soil under cultivation. us load upon freight cars all the grain, grasses, live stock, butter, eggs, poultry, irotatoes and sugar beets produced in Nebraska in 1910 Would they make a train long enough to reach from Omaha to Sidney? Yes. and a bH further. From Omaha to San Francisco? Yes, and a little fur ther. Well, how long? In order to get a main line fack long enough to hold that train it would be necessary to bridge the Atlantic ocean, the Eng llsh channel and the Baltic sea With the caboose of that train in St Peters hrrrg. the conductor who carried or ders to the engineer in the cab would have to walk and walk and walk until jje reached an engine that projected out into the Pacific ocean 1.400 miles West of San Francisco, tor that train ould be 10,004 miles long. In 91Q Nebraska, with a population of less than a million and a half peo ple, produced more from her .roll than Japan w ith 40 OOO.noO people, pro duced and purchased from other na tions The per capita of agricultural ealth production of Nebraska in 1910 worth more than the baby crop of all the other states combined. You think you know Nebraska! I doubt If there is an editor here who Is familiar with the history, the produc tivity and the resources of his own county Nebraska a desert! What other state has as many miles of riv ers within her borders? Nebraska has over 800 miles of Platte river wholly within her confines. And with the Blue, the Nemahas, the Loups, Pine, Stinking Water, Republican. Salt, and creeks too numerous to men tion, she possesses an undeveloped water power that would rival Niagara. She ought to be manufacturing from Nebraska grown raw material every finished product that humanity eats snd wears, and pretty near everything that humanity uses, using Nebraska power and paying wages to Nebraska workers. I claim that Nebraska, with more to advertise than any other state, Is the least known state at home or abroad of any state in the Union. Kansas spends $30,000 a year In pub licity and Immigration work; Missouri spends $40,000 a year; Colorado spends $30,000 a year; Montana spends $15,000 a year; Washington snd Ore gon spend $25,000 a year each; Cali fornia spends a quarter of a million and Nebraska doesn't spend a dollar. Any wonder thousands pass us by to invest in the higher priced and less productive lands of the northwest? Any wonder that Canada is getting some of Nebraska's best? Any won der that -the Ncbraskan In New York who undertakes to tell some of the real facts about Nebraska is laughed at and set down as a chronic prevari cator? Time that we made Nebraska known to al', ihe world! High time that we acquaint the world with the marvel ous Improvement that has been wrought within her borders In less than a generation! High time that we let the world know that right here In the heart of the once "Great American Desert" we have bullded In less than a generation a state that stands at the front in education, that stands at the front in wealth production per capita, that stands in the front In develop ment of manufacturing, that leads all other states In civic reforms and ac complishes them without revolution and wholly by thoughtful study and intelligent progress. But before wje can adequately tell the world we must first know Nebras ka. So this Is the message I bring you, fellow newspaper men: ijet us study Nebraska, study her history, her resources and her possibilities, to the end that we may be fitted to adver tlse our beloved state to all the world for what shp is the most productive, progressive and pushing; the most en terp rising, energetic and enthusiastic; the most intelligent, industrious nnii Inspiring in short, the greatest area of productivity peopled by the most progressive people in all the world. This toast I give to you: "Nebraska, the producer of the best of all thines; of bad things the pos bessor of least : a state without a 'bread line' or a child sent breakfast less to school; with a futrrre unlimited and a past to be proud of; a state of homes and schools and churches her greater development our duty, her bounty our ruifieient reward." CHILDREN'S DAY AT PATMORE Prosperous Sunday School in Sand Hills Country Living in Nebraska. O, the glories of Nebraska! With her fields of waving grain; With their promises of plenty 'neath the summer sun and tain. Rippling wheat fast turning yellow f. the choir which were the harvest soon to be: Rustling cornblades in the h- zes making sweetest melody: Billowed fields of scented clover cur ing 'neath the skies of blue: Sunny slopes and shaded valleys with the clear streams rippling through Over all Is peace and comfort, not a trace of sorrow's pall. And to live in Old Nebraska is the greatest joy of all! O, the glories of Nebraska! Far abroad her stores are spread: From the measure of her harvests are the distant nations fed. Here within her wide dominions, wrought from stretch of desert lands, Is the greatest work of progress ever wrought by human hands; Here, within a generation, we have builded, strong and great. On a de ep and sure roundation, a pro gressive, happy state. And at even, resting, lls'nlng to the children's laughing call Say. Just living in Nebraska Is the greatest joy of all! O. the glories of Nebraska! Like an Eden Garden spread: Filled with nature's fruits and flowers. and a blue sky overhead. Like that "Land of Milk and Honey" that the l.iraelitish spies Said spread out across old Jordan to delight their wond ring eyes: Like old Canaan seen by Moses as he viewed rhe landscape o'er. With that country's richest treasures laid before him and some more O, there's lots of Joy in living where the streams or plenty flow. And to live in Old Nebraska is the greatest man may know' Sing her Perhaps the editor of The Herald and the readers of your valuable pa per are not aware that down twenty miles northeast of Alliance and twelve miles northwest of Lakeside, In a beautiful valley, the garden spot of all the Kinkaid claims, is situated the Patmore school house, a beauti ful little white building finished and seated In modern style and supplied with a first-class organ. This school house is located among some of the best homesteaders and ranchmen in the sand hills. A great many have proven up on their claims and the others are hustling to do so and are all here to stay. Among the old settlers that have made these bills and valleys what they are today are Mrs. Martha Pat more and her two sons, Tom and Dave Brlggs, Wm. Wilkerson, Ira Johnson and son Clyde, Elmer Sly, Fred and Lee Helling, Mrs. Mary Brice, Jesse Brice, John Zerks. Geo. Hughes, Peter Long, E. V. Doyle, Lee George, W. B. Baumgardner and many others, but It is the Sab bath school and its work at this place that I wish to write of. This Sabbath school was organized by Mr. Bundy of Alliance, as a un ion school in the spring of 1909, and Mrs. Fred Helling was elected sup erintendent and this Christian lady's whole heart seemed to be In the work, and the school prospered and was built up and on the way to do good work In the future. Early In April this year we reor ganized by electing the writer, A. L. Monroe, superintendent, and start ed out determined to make it one of the best and hardest working between Alliance and Rushville. To this end we have all worked unani mously together with only the good of the cause at heart through the second quarter, and today, July 2nd, we are closing up the second quart er with Children's Day exercises that would be a credit to any school In the county. When we concluded to have a Children's Day exercise it was late and there was trouble getting a pro gram. Mrs. Sly, Mrs. Helling and Mrs. Mary Brice were put on the committee to make all the arrange ments for the day. and these ladies have worked for nothing only suc cess, and have made one of the most joyful and happiest days of our lives in the Sabbath school work, for the program gotten up by them was very good and they determined we should spend the entire day. From Reno on the south to C. Joy's on the north came well filled baskets, with fried chicken, cake, pie and all the good things that go to make a hungry sand hiller happy. These good things were spread out on tables and on the grass, and about sixty people sat down and ate until they were full and happy. Then came the children's part, speaking, Blnging, and reciting dia logues, interspersed by songs by all rendered very nicely and pleasing to the audi ence. I wish to say that much of the success of this day's happiness is due to the volunteers that rallied to the help of the committee and will mention the two Mrs. Johnsons, Mrs. Geo. Hughes, Mrs. Jesse Brice, Mrs. Tom Brlggs, Mrs. Baumgardner, Miss Susie Johnson, and the Misses Wil kerson. So closed one of the most pleasant days in the Sabbath school work in the sand hills. Hefore I close this article I want to send up a Macedonian cry to the ministers of Alliance. We hardly ever see a minister down here, hardly know one from a cow boy. Can't you take turns and come down and tell us of the good way once in a while? We are a good people, and will send you home happy and financially better. A. L. MONROE, Lakeside, Nebr. THOSE PREMIUM WALL CHARTS O, the glories of Nebraska' praises full and free' Wondrous past that's but the promise of the gitatness yet to be; was greater than that of any other pouring forth her wealth of products state Her two main cereals corn aH from Plenty's Golden Horn, and wheat, are worth more than thei Filling all the world's storehouses with nation's out nut of copper: her four I her crops of w heat and coru. main cereal corn, wheat, oats and rye. were worth more than the na tion s output of iron ore; her butter, eggs snd poultry were worth practical ly as much as the nation's o.itput of crude petroleum: her hay output was worth more than Alaska's output of precious metals, and her isby crop Spread be; ween the mighty river and the mountains of the west. Fairest land in all creation, by the God of P.ounty blest. And from rose of early dawning till the long, gray shadow fall Just to live in Old Nebraska is the greatest joy of all. W M U- An Elegant Present to Herald Sub scribers While They Last Of all the premiums that we have known to be offered by newspaper publishers, the beautiful and useful Premium Wall Charts. Which are now being offered Tree to subscribers who pay two years' subscription in ad wince, are among the nicest and most useful. In fact, we do not re member any premium that we have ever known to be offered free that would equal them in beauty and utility. New subscribers who take advan tage of our special offer which is being made this week, may secure one of the charts by paying two years in advauce; however, we will accept only one year's subscription at the special reduced price of one dollar per year, if a I reinium Wall Chart is taken. In answering Herald want ads please mention that you saw it in this paper.