Nebraska Land & Auto Co. 1. C. McCotMl, Mir. GARAGE IN McCORKLE BLOCK Link Lowry, Supt. of Garage We handle the $OVb cars ami will sell you one for list price. Will store and keep; furnish gll and lubricating oil; $15.00 per month; you run .is much as you desire. Storage for cars, $5.00 per month. We sell all best brands of oil from 25 to 50& lower than other places. JfOrt cars are the most popular car on the market and every piece in them is guaranteed by the company during the life of the car. See us before buying. Only garage In western Nebraska open day and night LEARN THE SCIENCE OF DRY FARMING SIXTH DRY FARMING CONGRESS COLORADO SPRINGS, COLORADO, OCTOBER 16 20, 1911 This meeting will be a conference on better agriculture, including tillage, drouth resistant plants, machinery and effect of climate on crops. The exposition offers about $5,000.00 in value in cash and other premi ums. Competition is open to counties", districts or individual farmers un der dry-farming methods. Premium lists can be had upon application to John T. Burns, Secre ti ry, Colorado Springs, Colo. WOMEN INVITED The First International Congress of Farm Women will be held to organize the women of the United States for better rural home life. RATES AND TICKETS. -Ask your local agent about rates to this Congress. HARNESS HORSE NEWS Clark's Weekly Letter Condensed for This Issue of The Herald I CONDENSED NEWS t t MANY HORSES DIE THIS YEAR D. Clem Deaver, Immigration Agent LANDSEEKERS INFORMATION BUREAU 1004 Farnam Street, Omaha, Neb. I Another car of Peters' Loaded Shells just re-1 ceived. We have the load you want. Special price in case lots. I (Hy Palmer L. Clark.) Penisu Maid In dead mid great Is the loss. Delicately and daintily fashioned, a superb trotter and the season's aspirant for two-minute hon ors, the little mare succumbed last week t(. a wholly unexpected attack arid the entire trotting hots- world mourn: the loss of its uncrowned queen. There Is n bit of coincidence in the demise of Pensia Maid and in the death of Hamburg Belle 2. op, for which 1). R. Manna, of Cleveland, O., paid $40,000 two years ago, only to lose her that winter Just as the daughter of Axworthy was being hailed as tho coming trotting queen. Now It is Pensia Maid which the grist) rt aper has garnered and though the loss, measured by dollars and cents, W but a passing item to R. J. McKeniie, of Winnipeg, Manitoba, the disappointment is Indeed keen; not only to himself, to the trotting world in general, but to a little wo man in far away Manitoba to waon Pensia Maid was a bridal present, Mr. McKenzle purchasing the mare less than a mouth ago for the prince ly sum of $25,000 and presenting her to Mrs. McKenzle; and it Is with this lady, those who loved the trotter mourn. Nor will the McKensde vic tory in the classic Chamber of Com nierce, with Vernon McKinney the past week assuage the bereavement. A sportsman, every Inch of him, is the Canadian horseman, but he, like all the rest of the world, knows that there was but one Pensia Maid the little mare of romance. m Newberry's Hardware Co. I m E i I See the New Line of tas and Spring b AT I. L. ACHESONS Hardware and Implement Store Before Buying OPERA HOUSE BLOCK ALLIANCE Something over 5.000 horses have either died or been disabled from the effects of the heat so far this summer In New York City and very near ft like number in Chicago ami In consequence there is an almost un precedented demand for all classes of horses, especially the draft type and delivery chunks. At this season, with the excessive heat, horse own ers cannot be too careful in using preventive measures to protect their unimals from heat prostration. Un questionably the loss of thousands of I tlS. these horses could have been pre vented by proper treatment. Robbers entered the Flank of Taft, Ok I blew the safe and escaped with Chart's H. Moyer was re-elected president nf the American Federation of Miners. Admiral Togo, the Japanese naval hero, was a guest of President Taft at the White House. Minister Kumiss reports that a con fllct appears inevitable between the Haitien rebel factions. The senate passed the bill which Inci eases the membership of the house nf rem i sen tn Mi m In ill Lincoln Ueachcy won the air rac from New York to Philadelphia, flylns two hours for u $.",00t price. Forest fires raging for the last week In the Angeles national forest, California, have gotten beyond con trol. The construction of fortifications of the Panama canal will begin this week al the Pacific entrnnce of the waterway. J. H. Cnrlin, former superintendent of the Rock Island terminals In Chi cago, shot and killed himself at El Paso, Tex. Two Italians were killed and four others fatally Injured when flrty men were buried in n sewer cave-In at Midland, Pa. A suit In equity directed against an alleged coal combine and various railroads was filed In the United States cOOfl at Columbus, O. Lieutenant Charles E. BrfllhaJi of the United States navy was found dead from a bullet wound In his room at the Hotel Astor in New York. Major A. A. Phlpps, multi million aire iron manufacturer of Pittsburg and former partner of Andrew Car negie, died at I-os Angeles, aged fifty seven. Unable, she says, to "make a man" of her husband, Anna Laugley, a frail little woman, aged nineteen, shot him at Ran Francisco. They had been man led fifteen months. Former President Roosevelt took the stand In the congressional inquiry Into the steel corporation and said he Indorsed the steel merger in 1907 to avert a financial panic. During an electrical storm lightning struck and killed Julius C. Baldeman, a homesteader, lhing near Kaduka, S D., und George Brown, a horseman, living in Redstone Basin. Following the discovery of seven teen cases of pellagra In the Etistern Kentucky Insane asylum, it wbb re ported that more than 100 cases had been found In Rell und Whitely coun STRIKEJN COURT Order of Judge Obeyed by Com pany and Men. NEW WAY TO SETTLE STRIKE. LEGAL NOTICE IN THE DISTRICT COURT OF BOX BUTTE COUNTY. NERRABKA. The gray pacing horse, Earl, Jr., by The Earl, which won the champ ion sweepstakes at the Kalamazoo Ciand Circuit meeting, has develop ed into one of the whirlwind slde wheelers and a consistent race horse. He was Introduced to the light har ness horse world some three or four years ago at Peoria by a farmer boy from southern Illinois. He, unex pectedly, I might say, unintentionally, won hta first race in fast time at ttiat meeting, much to the astonish ment of the wise boys who didn't have a line on him. The colt was gtvm his first lessons on an irreg-u-htr half mile track marked off In u Another Hindu, laboring under the hallucination that members of the white race had entered Into a con rplracy to prevent him from obtulning employment, has been arrested In Chicago. Pauline Wayne, White house cow, will contest for the blue ribbon to he awarded the finest cow In the United States and Canada, at the Interna tional Dairy exposition at Milwaukee In Octoher. By the breaking of a thirty-Inch water main, the court house at Chi cago, one of the pt'.bttpftl hotels and adjoining skyscrapers received a flood ing that did thousands of dollars worth of damage Papers, demanding an absolute di vorce, on t.'ie grounds of infidelity, were served by attorneys rep resenting Ethel Harrymore Colt, on Mandatory Injunction Stops Promised Bitter Struggle and Cars Are Again In Operation Men Are Out Only Forty Hours Crowds Cheer Crews. Street car traffic was resumed in f)cs Moines and the forty-hour strike is us terminated. For (he first lime In the history of the country the order ot a court has put an end to what gave every Indlva tlon of becoming one of the bitterest struggles ever wnged between organ Iced labor on the one huud ami capital on the other. The mandate Issued by Judge lw rem e lietiiati ol the district court was promptly obeyed by the Des Moines City Railway company and the car men's union, and while there Is ample prospect of a fight later In the courts one thing Is certain, un Injunction lias restored, temporarily nt least, nearly 600 conductors and motornien to their original positions. The scenei attending the resnnip tlon of traffic rivaled those of Friday night when the men turned the cars In for what ninny of them thought would be the last time. The streets in the vtciut ol' the central waiting rooms at Sixth and Mulberry sti ei ts were thronged for nearly three hoars before the time set for the first ear to pass. When extras announced that the first car had left the Tweniy fourth street barn enthusiasm began to show itself, and when car No. 188 of the university line passed the sta tion, the crowd tendered the crew a rousing ovation. Cheers for All Crews. It was not long before the first car on every lino had reached the station and each of the crews as they came up was greeted with cheers. That a new method of handling labor difficulties has been discovered Yas the statement of N. T. Guernsey, attorney for the street car company, following the acquiescence of the com pany in Judge DeGraff'a order. At the nune time he said his clients were by no means satisfied that the court was within Its jurisdiction in Issuing the mandatory injunction, but for the present they were willing to abide by U, leaving to a later date the trlul of the case on Its merits. Nearly a hundred strlkcbretkers who had hoarded a Chicago Great Western train, hound for Chicago, were attacked hy rioting union sympathizers. Rocks and bricks were used as weapons and every window In the special car occu pied hy the men was shattered. Sev eral of the strikebreakers were injured. In the Matter of the ppllcntlon of Cassle I). Hall, Guardian of the estate of Mlgnon M. Hall, Willis W, Hall and Vivian K. Hall, for Leave to Sell Real Estate At the adjourned April 24, 1011 term, to-wlt: July 26, 1!11 this cause eninc M be heard upon the petition, duly verified, of Cassle D. Hall. Guardian of the person and estate of Mlgnon M. Hall, Willis W. Hall and Vivian E Hall, minors, for license to sell the following described real es tate, to-wlt: Southwest Q.unrlcr of Section 27, Northwest Quarter of. Seetlon 26, and Southwest Quarter of Section 25, In Township 27 North. Range 47 West, also West Half of Section 1 In Township 26 North of Range 47 West, In Hox Butte coun ty, Nebraska, for the purpose of re investment and Tor raising funds for the support, education and mainten ance of said minors, and It appearing from said petition that said real es tate consists of unimproved, wild prairie lands situated In said County of Box Butte, and (hat no income is obtained therefrom; IT IS THEREFORE ORDERED that the next of kin of Haiti minors and all persona Interested In said es tate appear before me nt Chambera In the court house In (he city of Rushvllle, Sheridan county. Nebras ka, on the 26th tiny or August, 1911, nt o'clock A. M., to show cause, If any there be. why license should not be granted to said Cassle D. Hall, guardlnn, to sell said real estate for tho purposes above set forth. AND IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that a copy of thla order be publish ed once each week for three success ive weeka In the Alliance Herald, a newspaper printed and published in said county of Box Butte. By the Court, W. H. WESTOVER, Judge, 34-12B-4t LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS ploughed field. He Is now one of ' her husband. Russell Griswold Colt, the pacing stars of the Grand Cir son of tho Rhode Island millionaire. cult. All of which goes to prove that winners may be developed al most anywhere. HEED THE WARNING Many Alliance People Have Done So When the kidneys are sick they give unmistakable warnings that should not be Ignored. By examin ing the urine and treating the kid neys upon the first sign of disorder, many days of suffering muy be sav ed. Sick kidneys expel a dark, Ill smelling urine, full of "brickdust" sediment, and painful in passage. Sluggish kidneys cause a dull pain In the small of the back, headaches, dizzy spells, tired, languid feeling . and frequent rheumatic twinges. Doan's Kidney Pills are for the kidneys only. If you suffer from any of the above symptoms you can use no better remedy. Alliance people recommend Doan's Kidney Pills. Mrs. L. A. Benedict, Sweetwater Ave.. Alliance, Nebr., says: ,-For several years I have used Doan's Kidney Pills and consider them an excellent kidney remedy. Dunn the winter mouths my kidneys be come disordered but I always pro cure a supply of Doan's Kidney Pills ut Fred E. Holsten's Drug S(ore and ll ey drive away my trouble. Doan's Kidney Pills have been taken by other members of my family and have brought great beuefit. I high 1 recommend this remedy to other kidney sufferers." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foater-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, Ne. Vork, sole ugents for the Unit ed States. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. As a result of many protests from citizens, Alderman Mitchell, chairman of the decoration committee of the I ondon "Old Roys' " association, or dered down nil American flags which rail been Included In street decora tions. With eight knife wounds in his body, one of which penetrated tlx 'ung cavity. Will Miller, aged forty five, lies very dangerously wounded at Oilman, la., following a stabbing affray then- Archie Baltin Is charged with the assault. Former United States Senator Edward Murphy of Troy. N. Y., died at his summer home; at Elberon, N. J., aa the result ol an operation which he underwent two weeks ago for an enlarged abdominal gland. Mr Murphy was 76 years old. A stay in the deportation order . .'inst Theodore M a I koff , a Russian political refugee, now held at Ellis I -kind, was granted by Secretary Nagel afte- a presentation of the fac is by Representative Berger of Wisconsin, Socialist At the dosing meeting of the an nual convention of the Knights of Columbua. at Detroit. Dr. James WaNh, dean of the sc-hool of medicine at Kordhuiii university, strongly pro tested against the educatiou of Cath olic youth In secular schools. In a turmoil of excitement, rivalling a heated political convention, Dallas, Tex., was chosen as the next conveo lion city, and Gorge W. Coleman of R if ton was Ic-cted president, at tie closing sesflou of the seventh annual convention of the Associated Adver tising Clubs of America at Boston The end of the Moroccan trouble between Germany and France Is in sight. Jules Cambon, the Frenc h am bassador at Berlin, ami Major von Kiderlin Waechter, the Ceriuau for eign secretary. tound u c ommon i: round of settlement on general line. thougo the details remain to be woilJ ouL INQUIRY INTO RATES ON MEAT Freight Charges on Live Stock and Packers' Products Under Probe. An lnqulty into freight rales on live Stock, packing house products and fresh meats, in effect throughout the portion of the country west, south and southwest of Chicago, was ordered by the Interstate commerce commission. The proceedings will begin at Okla homa City on 8ept. 11. The Inquiry will be made a wide one. It will affect directly not only the live stock and packing house prod vet rates throughout the centrnl west, but also those east of Chicago and west of Denver. The Investigation Is based on com plaints of the rates filed with the com mission bv the railroad commission of Oklahoma, the Texas Cattle Rals eis' association, the American Na tional Live Stock association and oiaers Interested In live stock and nieat products shipments. Incidental ly, commercial rivalry between two sc ts of meat packers In Chicago en ters into the case. ACEVED0 SURRENDERS State of Nebraska ) ) ss. Box Butte County ) In the Matter of the Estate of Chloe Purlnton, Deceased. I, L. A. Berry, County Judge of Box Butte county, Nebraska, hereby notify all persons having claims and demands against the estate of Chloe Purlnton that I have set and ap pointed the 24th day of February, 1!)12, at 10 o'clock !n the forenoon, at the County Court room In Alli ance, for the examination of all claims against the estate of suid de cedent with a view to their allow ance and payment. All persons Interested as creditors of the said estate will present their claims to me at said time, or show ci.use for not so doing, and In case any clulms are not so presented by said time they shall be forever barred. This notice shall be served by publication (hereof for four consecu tive weeks In the Alliance Herald, a newspaper published In Alliance, prior to the day of hearing. Given under my hand and the seal of said court this 31st day of July, 1911. L. A. BERRY. ISeal County Judge. 34-4M24 LEGAL NOTICE Man Who Attempts Revolt in Cuba li Mentally Deranged. General A"evedo. who endeavored to start a revolution In Cuba, stirren dered to Governor Asbert in the town of Santa Maria Del Rosarlo, a short c Mounts, executor of the estate of NOTICE OK HEARING ON PETI TION FOR DISTRIBUTION OF RESIDUE OF ESTATE State of Nebraska ) ) BS. Box Butte County ) Tc all persons Interested in the Es tates of August Mayer and Charles Mayer, deceased. Notice is hereby given that William distance south of Havana, In the vicinity of which he had been hiding He was brought to Havana and placed in Jai! to await the action of the civil lourt Apparently he is In the last staget nf tuberculosis and there Is HttU doubt that he Is deranged. Govern ment officials regard him as not be ing responsible for hU actions. Edward E. Jackson Fined $45,000. E. E. Jackson, New York attorney termed by the prosecution the "head and brains" of the wire trust, wai fined 145,000 upon his plea of nolc contendere to nine Indictments chars lug him with the formation of wlr pools. Judge Archibald Imposed l fine f $". nii i on each indictment, af ter d.nylng tin plea of United State. District Attorney Wise for a prisot sentence . Chicago Youth S ay His Father. Joseph Vacek, seventeen years old confessed that he shot bis father, t wealthy Chicago contractor, and thei sought to blacken the memory of the dead man b) means of a "Black Hand' note pinned to the clothing of tin body. He Is said to have slain hil father after making a demand foj un in . ami after the elder Vacek ha4 reprimanded him for not working. August Mayer, deceased, and as ad ministrator de bonis uon of the es tate of Charles Mayer, deceased, has filed his petition In said court, the object and prayer of which are that a decree of distribution may be made of the residue of said estates now in his possession to the parties en titled by law to receive the same, and for an order for his discharge as such executor of the estate of Aug ust Mayer, deceased, and as such administrator de bonis non of the es tate of Charles Mayer, deceased. You are hereby notified that said petition will be beard by the county Judge at the county court room in the City of Alliance, Box Butte County, Nebraska, on the 14th day of August, 1911. It is ordered that a copy of this order be published for three suc cessive weeks prior to said day of hearing In the Alliance Herald, a newspaper printed and published in said county. Dated this 25th day of July, 1911. Seal L. A BERRY. County Judge Boyd and Barker, Attys. ts-at-iii