Classified Advertisements The following "Want Ads" are classified under appropriate headings for the convenience of readers. CA8H RATES One cent per wo. d each insertion. No ad received for less than ten cents per inser tion. Black face double rate. CREDIT RATES One cent per word each insertion, but no advertis ing account opened for less than twenty-five cents and no ad charged for less than fifteen cents per week. Black face double rate. Ir answering Herald want ads please mention that you saw It in this paper. A classified advertisement will In troduce to each other the next buy er and the next seller of property In this town. ABSTRACTERS F. E. REDDISH Uonded Abstracter. 1 have the only set of abstract books in Box Butte county. Office In MeCorkle Building. lO-tf-570 TO RENT FURNISHKD ROOMS BY DAY OR week. Modern conveniences; clone In; prices reasonable. THE ORES CENT HOUSE, L'L'l' Bail Second St. Phone 82. (37tfl410) FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT 314 Sweetwater Ave., Phone 387. Itfl083 FOR RENT. Office or living rooms. First Nat'l Bank Building. 17tfll86 MISCELLANEOUS Buy your coal of Rowan & Wright. Phone 71. tf LEGAL NOTICE All kinds of feed, in any quantity desired, at E. 1. Gregg & Son's. Phone 155. Wtf-1342 Money to loan on real estate. F. E. Reddish. 3tf Ctrtis Best and Oooch's Ues-t flour at E. I. Oregg & Son s. Every sack guaranteed. Phone 155. M-tf-1342 Rowan & Wright, coal, wood and posts. Phone 71. tf Coal office at Rowan's feed store. ROWAN & WRIGHT, phone 71. tf PAINE-FISHBURN GRANITE CO. Grand Island. Nebr. Make the best monuments and will save you money. Call on AL. WIK ER, local salesman of Alliance, or eer.J to Grand Island for price list. SECOND-HAND CLOTHING AND SHOES I'.jught and sold at 405 Box Butte a tue. Highest prices paid. E. PA-tKS. (40-3M438) FOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS WHITE PLYMOUTH ROCK COCK ERELS. - I have a few full blooded White Plymouth Kock cockerels for sale. Phone 801 (Ireen. (41-41448) B. I. SWEENEY. PIANO FOR BALE on easy t rum, But sllg! iy used and in first-class C litic:. APPly a4 Herald office, tf FOR SALE 5 room house close in. Price 1050 if taken quick. (40tftttt ACHESON BROS. FOR BAIJ& -Two seated carriage. Se- W. B. Young. (3-l14l$) Old papers at The Herald office at 6 cents per bunch. WORLD-HERALD DELIVERED REG CLARLY at your door, daily and Sui.day, 60 ft 8. per month. (42-41450) CHARLES KIPP. IN THE COUNTY BUTTE COUNTY. Before L. A. llorr In the Mutter of the See E. C. Whisman for lowest prices on painting, paper hanging and kalsomining. GIRL WANTED FOR HOUSE WORK. Permanent. MRS. GEORGE HAND, LammM Ave. (40tfl440) FOR SALE. RESIDENCE LOTS CHEAP. Best kaoatina in Alliance A I. WELCH. SOS Rig Horn Ave. Paean 36i. 4'.' 5-1451 1 COURT, IK) NEBRASKA. County Judge. Estate of I ) loutse Barclay, deceased. ) TO ALL persons INTERESTED IN THE ESTATE OF louise Bar (lay. Deceased: Eleanor B. Clark having filed her petition, under o;ttli. in this court, praying that administration Of the estate of said Ixnilse Barclay, be dispensed with and for a StONO de termining who are the heirs of said ionise Barclay, deoennedi it is or dered thai a heating DO had on sciid petition at the county court room In eld OOUTity on the 2tJi day of Sep tember, l!tl2, at the hour of 1 o' clock P, M. and that notice of the time and place fixed for said hearing be given to all person.-: of this order for three successive weeks in Tlte Alliance HeraMi a noon paper printed and published in said county. Dated tins Wth day of August, 1811 L. A BERRY, (flenJ) County Judge. (114-178) WHAT WE NEVER FORGET a uding to science, are the thing i elated witli our early home life, Mi' i as Itucklen's Arnica Salve, tliat mother or grandmother used to cure our bums, boils, scalds, sores, skin erupt ions, cut. prains or bruises. For ty years of cures prove its merit. Unrivaled lot piles, corns or cold soree Only II cents at Fred E. Ho'sten's. L. M. Scottf Auctioneer Lakeside, Nebraska Will try your sale's anywhere. St'-' DM r leave- date's at the Alliance Herald. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO CREDITORS i. L a Perry , Oonatj Judge of Bon Butte County. Nebraska, hereby not ify all persons having claims and demands against the estate of Ern estine Kiltelmann. decea-sed, 1 have set and appointe?eI for the leooptlOB, examination and adjustment of claims and demands against her estate, MArch :',l8t, 1913. at the county court room at Al InUt OS in said ('aunty. All persons so interesled in said estate will appear at said time and DbsCS and duly present their said claims and demands in the manner required by law ; and In ea3e any of sstid Claims shall not be presented by .said Ante, the same shall he t'otvvcr barred. Given under my hand and seal of the county court this Itth day of August, 1911. L. A BERRY, i Seal I County Judge. C;s-4-l77 LEGAL NOTICE SHERIFF'S FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICE IS Hereby given that un der and by virtue of a decree of foreclosure and sale given In the district court of Box Butte County, Nebraska, in a cause therein depend ing, in which the Equitable Land Company was plaintiff, and One E Phillips. Ira Bogard, and Jane Bo gard his wife whose true Christ ian name is unknown were defendants, I will on the 7 day of October. A.D., 1912, at one o'clock in the afiernaon, at the west front door of the court house in the city of Alliance In said county offer for sale and sell at pub lic vendue to the highest bidder for cash the following described mort gaged premises and real estate, to w it : The South East quarter of section twenty two (2S) in town ship twenty five (25) north of range fifty one (SI) west In said county. for the pavment and st Us fact ion of said decree. C. M. COX. Sheriff. A. W. CRITES, Attorney for Plaintiff. (894179) LEGAL NOTICE SHERIFF S FORECLOSURE SALE NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that under anil by virtue of a dwree of foreclosure and sale alma tn tan dia trict court of Box Butte county, Ne braskn. in a cause therein ds pending in which the Equitable Land Com nanv was plaintiff, and Ora E. Phil lips. Frank A Ma-ssLc. Annie E. -Mas sie. Cordel Colvln. ESmma Colvin, J Lanfrenee Bowman ami Mary Bow- man were defendants. I will 00 the 21 day of October. A. I). !:m:', at one o'clock in t lie afternoon at the west front door of the court house in the city of Alliance, in said county, offer for sale and sell at pub lic vendue to the highest bidder for oanhi the following described mort gaged premises and real estate, tow-to : Tan south east quarter of BSC tlon T hi It OOP (IS) in township twenty six (25) north of range fifty two t.V.'i west in said coun ty for the payment and satisfaction of said decree. C. M COX, Sheriff. V W. ('KITES, Attorney for Plaintiff. I 41-5-1 SO I LEGAL NOTICE HEMINGFORD Mrs. ai-f to Rolls Jotsneoo Alliance on M a Nis.sen Wednesday. Mrs. Belle llrowii, who has been spi nd lnn a few ebeys with her daugh ters. Mrs A. E. Clark and Mrs. Geo llodgecock. returned to her home hi Alliance on 44 Wednesday. Mrs. Dick Kenner came in on 43 Wdncsday for a few- days' visit with Ik i" parents. The First National Bank opened its doors for business Thursday. It is in Dr. McEuen's new office building. Mrs a. m. Miikr returned noedny from' her trip to 'ht s s Wad ivgo. Mr. and Mrs. (itorge Palter w re Alliance rial tore Thursday afternoon. Mrs Hire and daughter came Thursday from Mtchtaaa for irl with Mrs BnMI turnkey. returned n 43 days' visit wit 1 1 Mrs win Bpencc Friday after a few- friends bn Alliance. Miss Laura llettneka. Rjajen Of Mrs. J F. Neeland. came Thursday from Canada to act its cashier in tlte First National Bank. Miss Alice Petmcsil came in c.n 43 Sunday from Alliance after a few days' visit with her brother Frank Mrs. Ed Wildy spent a this week visiting a) the ranch. tew days Pol niesil BRUSHING UP THE OLD HAT, y From New York World Miss Mayme i .inc oln. Miller left Friday for F. T. White left for his home at Waco. Nebr.. after a short raft! with friends here. t; h. ciayton returned from the eastern part of the state Sunday. PRESENT TARIFF FOSTERS FRAUDS Tom Hopkins cattle to Omaha hipped t.wo Monday. cam of Domestic Cotton Fabrics Sold Americans as "Imported." CHEATING THE CONSUMER. (Jeo malia Taylor Mondny Shipped cattle, to O- Mrs. Holla Johnson was ger to lAlllance ThUredaj a passen- CUffond V. hitakcr had th tune to lose his pocketbeok inc ISS.1S in lietuinuford hyst day, Anyone finding the saint be rewarded by return an to Owner. jBvtafor c-ontain- I'ri will the Isaac Kcxkcy Tuesday. Mrs. him for a short returned from Wirt returned time. Less Than 2 Par Cent Comes From Abroad, but Americans Pay Ex orbitant Pries For Home Goods Bs cause of Deception and Prohibitive Tariff. EARLY SELECTION OF SEED CORN Professor Pugsley Says It Will Greatly Increase Yield. SUMS UP SITUATION IN STATE . i owe Willi W. C. Mounts and family visited with Ben Price's Sunday. Just a they got to Hemingt'ord cn their way homs their car broke down. A. M. Miller took them home. Mr. Mounts came up Tuesday after the car. Fred Quads, an old man living few miles north-west of town, died very suddenly after a lew hours ill ness Tuesday. Funeral services will he held at the cemetery at two o' clock Wednesday Mrs. Waddell returned on 4.'! from a few days' visit with her daughter. Mm. Edgar Washburn. Mrs. Arthur Donevaii coining passenger on 4 a nee Tuesday. was fr an in iin-Alli- DR. F. W. BO LAND Office Over First State Bank Memingford, Nebr. NOTICE OF HEARING ON PETI TION FOR LETTERS OF ADMINISTRATION o o o o oooooooooooo MOUNT PLEASANT OOOOOOOOOOO o o o o More rain, and Jack Frost has vis ited this pari of the county loft his tracks. Too had and Mr. and Mrs. W. S. gone to old Missouri father. Miles Hagainan Is home again af ter being down on the Spade ranch haying for four or five weeks. STATE IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE OF NEBRASKA, BUTTE COUNTY BOX To all persons interested in th Bstate of John P. Weinel. late cf said County. Deceased. You are hereby notified that on the 7th day of September, ISIS, John Weinel filed his petition in the coun ty court of said county for his ap pointment as administrator of the estate of John P. Wetnel, late of said county, deceased, and that the same wiH be heard at the oountv court return in the city of Alliance, in said county, on the "iji day t! October, I Hi:.', at the hour of 10 o' clock A. M. It is further ordered that notice of said hearing be given all partings interested Ul .--aid eM.it-- b the pub lie at ion of this njutU-e for thr suc cessive weeks in the "The Allium e Herald", a newspaper printed, pub lished and circulated lu aid county Dated (his 7th day of September, ItlS. L. A. BERKV. I Seal l Count v Judge. 4u-::-ii $$ GET WISE ADVERTISE G. h. Hagamaa is abase DMlta where he has been cattle this week. jefcaale and Stanley Wright raise squ . b i every year, but this year beat hem all. They have six big Stacon loads They weighed tnree of them. One weighed 41. one 41 and Diie 4 pounds. Mr. and Mrs. J. C Hawkins flatting P. S. Malley's Sunday ate VatesaaelOa and report a time Miss Shirley Hagaman is house for .Mrs. Coker while ter has gone to Missouri. a e s Marsh brothers are clone few P, S Mailey at last. George Clark young beef this bors say it was butchered week Hi; good. Miss Itouuie HagaJiuin went to ner to visit her sister Ethel. Albert Wright is visiting hi I lee lives near Mallnda. Little Veerea Wright has thtx Back list this week By ROBERT KENNETH MAC LEA, IFormerly consulting expert of the tariff board! New York. Aug. .The prohibitive tariff, revised upward by the Pay US Aldrleh law. permits and fosters wholesale tVauds upon the American j consumer of cotton goods. Less tliuu 2 ter cent of the co'too "fabrics consnmecl In the United State comes from abroad, because the pro I te live duties have been made so high that Importation is unprofitable. Yet fully one-third of the cotton piece goods golug over retail counters I sold as "IM POUTED" or under mimes Implvlng a foreign origin. Thii deception is generally perpe trated upon the consumer for the pur pose of obtaining exorbitant prices for domestic goods. The c-ouMitner, believing the goods are Imported and knowing that the tariff nelds excessively to their cost, pays 50 to UN) per cent more than a fair price and does not suspect that he is being cheated. Drains the Pocketbook. I.et us go straight to n specific ex ample of the operation of this fraud. Take the tnriff hoard's cloth sample No. 50. described as a "printed dim ity." This Is a medium priced cotton fabric known to almost every Ameri can housewife What woman or girl hasn't peaaaased a dimity dress within the Inst few- years? And If she went to the cotton goods counter and bought the material by the yard she no doubt saw such signs as: X IRISH UIMITY. The World's tariff editor visited with me a department store in a New Eng land city of lOO.(XM) Inhabitants and found recently a counter idled with these goeals. placarded: X REAL IRISH DIMITY. J IK ct. We procured samples of all of them. There was not one piece of Imported goods in the lot. Investigation proved that the store buyer had purchnsed these "Irish" dimities from a Hifstoti leaner at 10 cental a yard snd that they were made In a New England mill. Here was a supposed "bargain" In a supposedly "in) ported" fabric, on' whieh the retailer was taking a prolit of !M) Hr cent; This happens to te a fabric repre senting the highest sBrtOPCy in Amer lean manufacturing. It Is a class of goods In which we can compete ad vantageously with any couutry In the world The tariff lxard's liivestlga tions discovered on sample No. 50 an American cost of production of 7 1-3 cents a yard lu all the mills Inves tigated the board's representatives found that the low and high ccMta of manufacture of this fabric did not vary half a e-ent a yurd. Who Gets the Profit t The mauufa. liner of this American . dimity, that U sold as "Imported" and folks "Irish." eloes not iret th. nmuilva prolit. hi Home Instances the manu facturer does, but asm he sells to the been on jobir vy 8 cents, taking only a nom- Coker have to visit his 1 inainanvm.' timng inroni en two-thirds cent a yard. The Joblter sells to the retailer at 10 cents, a 25 per cent mar Bin for the jobber, In Canada, With 2.". per cent tariff, a cotton fabric costing lo cents s yard would lie sold to the cousumer st 12' or sometimes nl Ifl cents if the pattern huppem-d to In- in -.f, i.il demand. In the Onltetl Ma; --, with its prohibitive tariff, the retail prta" is always much higher. The standard price retail is 15 cenls for the fabric wholesaled ut 10. Itllt when the tariff Is excessive--It Is 54 per cent on this printed dimity the dishonest retailer can "get away with" his deception and double or metre than double his normal profit by selling tho domestic article as "Imported." The retailer knows that be could not buy a genuine imported dimity of this quality from I foreign manufacturer's agent In New York for less than 15tj or I6V4 cents, and the trade would re tail this at 25. He compares the do mestic and foreign fabrics and linds the American made Is equal In every respect to the fabric from abroad. So he says to himself. "Why not sell It as foreign goods at a price that will make J It attractive?" Mill Man Pockets It. In some cases the manufacturer! takes the tariff favor for his own podteC Tariff board sample No. 34 Illustrates (his No 34 Is n fancy w hite goods used for elress wear. Its ( manufacturer encountered a fair de-1 mauel for this material during the past i aeason. Table No. 100 of the tariff board's report shows a manufacturing prolit of ftl pei rent. It costs to manii factum this cloth l-MO cents n yard.' The mill refuses to sell to any one ex-j ceptlug the Jobber, and through this channel the cloth reac hes the retailer at Sm to 2T cents a yard. The retail er charges (he consumer 35 to 31) cents, according to location and local COtnpo-1 tltion For comparison take the value of the fabric on weight. At the manufactur ing cost of 12.16 csntt a yard one pound of this goods is worth $1.23 as it leaves the mill. When it reaches the : consumer (at 39 cents a yard) the price has been boostod to $4.20 a ; pound. The manufacturing cost of this cloth In England Is practically the same as ! here, yet the English manufacturei j sells it for I.14I cents a yard, the Job , Iter at 17 .'JO cents and the retaller at 22 j , cents. i Hear lu mind that the "diffetem-e in cost of production a home and abroad'' i I In this class of fabric reprcwented by ; , sample No 34 I mounts to tmltiing 1 but the Pame-AldHt-h tariff on It j eipials s, per cent, or S1 cents er running vard. Kan y goods of the t y i of sample1 No. 31 are produci of Ihv Mpdt Mc Coll class nf mi'ls. The I'avii- lMrV hl!l raised III duty on thi- I'ktftl from 3r. Ut !UtftU per cei:t Is p nil wolaler 111 it KViMliir l.l;pftt ami 111 Met ,,l from O- shlpplni W i I r.i rut Mlti Nil ri-t'-el Vie k i nvudltiu World tie o o o o oooooooooo MALINDA SQUIBS oooooooooo o o o o Well, lure we are when is en ths pumpkin, twit the not row s all in the- shock the frost fodder is by severul w ere ! and fine- Mr. and Mrs. tfiaatam with a day. Cal Duerr went to IckicI of spuds Moil keeping the lal haying a fine neigh-1 lion Miss Hertlia Sharp came up Mon day to help Mrs Cal Iuerr while I the men folks are digging the spuds, which are many on the luerr farm, e Mr. and Mrs. Bert Miller visited al the Ed Denker home W daeada) i afternoon Seine of our people braves! the elements Thursday and drove to Alli ance to attend the fair, which prov ed to be u fizzle this year. POCKaTFBOOiC LOST eontaiulng $. 1'ockcHbook had inscription on it, "Compliments of Oklahoma State Hank." Finder leave at Her aid office and receive $5.l reward t4l-2-1441'l IT PAYS TO ADVERTISE By C. W Pugsley, Director of the Farm Extension Department, State I'nivcrsilv. Nebraska was brought face to face with i be necessity of a "Seed Corn Se lect ion Week'' when the governor of Nebraska' Issned a proclamation set ting the wee of Sept. 30 to Oct. 5 ae "Seed Colli Selection Week." A seed corn shortage this spring was dm- lo I he I. aril freezes before the corn was dried out. As s result all available seel was used for the 1912 planting We have no surplus seed on hand. Reports from all sections of the state show that the corn crop Is from one to three weeks late this fall and if we should have an early freeze, an other seed corn famine would result. At winter Nebraska was shaken from renter to circumference by n seed corn campaign, probably the greatest ever carried on In the world. It was carried out by the Publicity Bureau of the Omaha Commercial club, with tii'' co-operation of the Ne braska Expetimcnt station. Thoso thoroughly familiar with the campaign and only those can reallzs the benefits. A proper observance of seed corn selection week will eliminate the ne cessity of an epensive campaign as that of this spring. Of course testing should he followed even with properly s itected seed, bnl the chances of an other seed corn famine would be re llttced to the minimum If the present warning la heeded Why It Is Necessary. A seed coin selection week Is neces- sary beeanae the corn is from one to three sreeks late; because it may get f OlOn and the norms killed; and be cause then If no surplus seed In ths siatc ; also early selected seed corn yields much better. Bvery single point is In favor of an early selection. The custom In Nebraska haH been to select eed corn either from tho crib or hnstlly from the field while "shucking" These practices ofttimes give satlsfactcry seed. However, as a general proposition, both, especially the flit, ore decldely fault The weakness of crib selection lis tn the fact that good looking rather than good seed ears are chosen, re the crib, one cannot teli under what conditions the corn grew. prarin? ear deserves no nldralon. The vitality of corn considerably lowered crib, due to the slow large hulk of corn. Seed corn selection, as one h:;sks, has one great advantage over crib se leition the corn does not suffer the damage to gennlnatlve power, which r"sults from storing In qunntlt'es. HoWOTOf, in both methods, the -ars hang on the stalks n month or more longer than they should. Special early selection nvo'ly s!l the objections utg d against th crl'j and husking atcthoda and .v .-s splendid opportunity to spot mo! stalks, which t :'a toad errs uc'-'r ordinar tV!.! eins. At th's H"" i'e position o; ear the npn!nt f-'iska, and lytU3 'eaves oil show c! mf ly the stalk, which gets Its car wp'1 tipened before th" frosts Corn Must Dry Early. Beriv pick id seen corn must begin drying rapidly at th earliest possible movent, if left lying in a pile for as much as a fen hours the growth of mold la liable to start. The ears should he setwrst' d as si;on a . thoy are pl.-ked !;i o- Jer to avoid moid. Some farmers use the "corn trts" for drying, while others use the "see saw'' method. The latter Is slmil and popular. For ten to twelve ears. ItboUl twelve feet of binding twine Is BU Sclent The ends of the string are tied together forming a sort of a ham BMCfc, The corn is then Inserted BJ the manipulator winds the string in and air.und tue ears. Either this or th'. "om t'ee" met hoi. whic h consists of a number of heavy nails driven Into some sett of an uptight, will serve to spaarat? the ears. Th. aeed 'orn aitnar'.on may bs wosned up tnueljr: Pick your seed corn before heavy frosts. Select seed corn from strong, nor mal stalks, whose ears are drooping snd a. low as will husk conveniently Avoid selecting seed corn from spots in which the stand is thin or eondl tlons especially favorable. After husking the corn, hang It at once In a dry, airy place, where It will dry quickly without heating or mold Ing Extension Bulletin Free. An Kxtension Bulletin has been pre pared by the state Experiment station on the selection and proper care ot seed corn It contains suggestions for the early selection and the proper cur ing of the corn after aekM tlon It is known as Extension Hm'c in No. 9 and will he sent, free of cost, from ths Nebraska Experiment station, line g or the Publiciiv Bureau of the Com mercial club of Oma n To gt one all you have to do is f J airily to eider of ths-M arganl it. one A fine ap special con- is liable to b while in the drying of the