WILLIAM MITCHELL, ATTORNEY AT LIN. ALLIANCE, NEBRASKA BURTON & WESTOVER Attorneys at Law LAND ATTORNEYS Office First National Bank Bide,. I IMM iSo. ALLIANCE. NEB. H. M. BULLOCK. Attorney at Law, ALLIANCE, INI:U. F. M. BROOME LAUD ATTORNEY L ik' experience RejOSl ver D S. I. mil nftVc a guarantee fur prompt and efficient servlei Office in Opera House Block ALLIANCE, NEBRASKA BRUCE W ILCOX Lawyer and Land Attorney Practitioner in civil courts since 1893 at Kcc ter V. s ,nnd Office from 1903 to 1907 Information hy mall a specialty. OrriCK IN I IMnimi f BUILDINO ALLIANCE NEBRASKA. DR. H. H. BELLWOOD, Surgeon C. B. dt Q. Ry. Office Over Holsten's Drug Store Day Phone 87 Night Phone 86 OIUE t'OPPERNOLL lies. Phone DO P. J. PKTER8KP Res. Pbone 41 Drs. Coppernoll & Petersen OSTEOPATHS Rooms 7, 8 atid g, Rumer Block Phone 43 GEO. J. HAND, PHYSICIAN AND SCKSKOIt Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat DR. C. H. CHURCHILL PHYSICIAN AND SI RGEON (Successor to Dr. .1. E. Moure) OFFICE IN FLETCHER BLOC t Office hours 11-12 a.m. 2-4 p.m. 7:80-9 p, m Office Phone 62 Res. Phono, fc- H. A. COPSEY Physician and Surgeon Office Phone 30 Res. Phone 3M OaUi answered promptly day and night frot. offii e. Offices: Alliance National Baal Be: ilnsr over the Post Office. STORY OF COTTON IS A THRILLER A Narrative That Concerns the Welfare of Millions, SHOWS EVILS OF PROTECTION. J. P. HAZARD Surveyor and Engineer, ALLIANCE. NEBRASKA Pa 1 ties out of town should write, as 1 am out lunch of the time. Charges will not exec- 5.00 and expenses per day. Dr. Oliver McEuen Physician and Surgeon HEVIMGFORD, NCBR. SPECIALTIKS: Diseases of Women and C - ildren and Geoito Urinary Organs All calls aaswertd promptly day ar nijit HARRY P. COURSEY Live. Stock and General Auctioneer Farm Sales a . Specialty TERMS REASONABLE Phone 64 ALLIANCE. NEBR rR. 1. I TYLER DENTI8T, OPERA HOU8E BLOCK, PHONE 187 Alliance, Nebraska G-eo. O-. 0-a-d.s"b37- Licensed Embalmer uu ( Day 408 Phone s . j.7j 'Tween Seasons It's just at this season of the year that our Studio offers its host facilities for making yout portrait. The nis.li is over or has not jret begun - consequently ire liuve more time at our disposal which means inciv;ied at tention to your order Alliance Art Studio 114.E 4th Street Whole People Robbed by a Tariff That Rich Manufacturer May Benefit. Robert Kenneth MacLea, Consulting Expert of the Tariff Board, Shows That the American People Are Mulcted of $88,000,000 a Year. Now York, Aug. .Did you ever hear (ho story of cotton? It Is 11s thrilling as a narrative of nrl vent tire. It Is as Interesting as a novel -Interest inn particularly because It concerns the welfare of millions of pOOplw who wear cotton goods, ll is interest ing because It is the dress of the poor, the universal substitute for wool and silk. It is Interesting, fur thermore, because it Is true. The story of cotton is the story of a protective tariff for the lHneflt of rich manufacturers at the expense of the whole people who wear cotton goods. It has been reasonably calculated that because the cotton tariff is fixed by the Payne-Aldrich law the Ameri can people are paying $88,000,000 more very year than they should pay for their cotton goods and that a saving of this amount could be accomplished by a reasonable reduction in the pres ent duties. The story of cotton is told hy an ex pert. Rol)ert Kenneth MacLea. consult ing expert of the tariff board, in a se ries of articles published in the New York World. Mr. MaiT.ea's views are the views of a lifelong Republican, a friend of the protective policy of the Republican parly, but at the same time an opponent of tariff graft and favor itism. To this work Mr. Macl.ea has brought it varied experience, covering more than twenty years, in the man ufacture and marketing of textiles. He first distinguished himself as an advocate of honest tariff legislation by finding the "Jokers" of the Pnyno-Al-dtich act. when the agents of a few New England mills were permitted to write their own rates to stilt them selves. He was chairman of the tar iff Committee of the New York Dry ;oods Merchants' association and in that capacity conducted a campaign which attracted the attention of the newly created tarifl' board. To accept the position of consulting expert to the board he gave up the management of the domestic busiucss of the New York firm if R It. MacLen A Co and Ton verse A- Co The story of cotton la a companion piece to the story of Schedule K -the woolen schedule declared by Presi dent Tnfr to tie infamous and Indefen sible The findings of the tariff board with regnrd to the wiolen schedule a 'ere an alyzd by Chairman I'ml-ef w,. of the ways and means committee am) con demned as Inaccurnte, Incomplete and worthless as an aid to legislation When the tariff lioard's findings on the cotton schedule wore made public the World decided to make Its own Investigation concerning It. atd Mr. Macl.ea was selected for that purpose. The World had the findings of the board on manufacturers of cotton dis sected from the practical point of view of business. a na I zed In their relation to the interest of the consumer and the facts translated Into the language of the everyday man and woman? One hundred cloth samples purchased In representat ive domestic markets were made the basis of the tariff board's finding on the cost of cotton Cloth produced la this country. Mr. MmT.ea used the same cloth samples as concrete illustrations of the ork Ings of the) tariff and from these ex posed the very generally perpetrated fraud of selling American made goods as "imported" and showed why the excessive tariff permits and fosters this imposition. Recognizing that the tariff would be a vital issue of the campaign and that Controversy would center alnuit Presi dent Taft's "nonpartisan" tariff board and Its work, the World undertook the Investigation of cotton and sought an swers to the following questions: Has the work of the tariff board jus tified the delay in reducing the tariff and giving relief from the high cost of living ? What have the people gained in the three years under the Payne-Aldrich tariff IN RETURN FOR MORE THAN $5,000,000,000 TAXED OUT OF THEIR POCKETS AND INTO THE POCK ETS OF PROTECTED PRIVILEGE? How honestly, impartially and thor oughly did the "nonpartisan" tariff board undertake its task? Several months before the cotton re port was completed Mr. Macl.ea de clares that he discovered sinister in tluences in the tariff board's working to eliminate findings most damaging to the favored few In the cotton mill Industry. Such suppressed information as Mr. Macl.ea considers to be of vital Importance to the cotton industry and the public has been presented In the World. lie has also explained what the mass of figures of the cotton report signifies and presented tome Of the most Important of the conclusions to he drawn from that report, a work which the board saw lit not to attempt. The story of cotton, as written by Mr. Macl.ea and published In the Worid from time to time, forms one of the most interesting and important features of the preseut campaign. "JOKERS" HID REVISION UP Actual Raising of Duties Effected by Payne BilL COTTON AND WOOL SCHEDULES Facts Suppressed and Issues Evaded by Taft Tariff Board J3y '.70Bf KEJWJWETH MACLEA, formerly Consulting Expert of the Tariff Board. Under the pressure of promise to fight chicanery and fraud in tariff legisla tion, I deem it a public duty not to withhold the facts in ray possession relative to the Investigation of the cottou manufacturing Industry. Regretful that my experience with the board warrants such conclusions, I am com pelled to present the following Indictment: SUPPRESSION That the tariff board, tn Its report on manufac tures of cotton (Sched ule 1.) has suppressed findings of vital Impor tance to the cotton In dustry, to the public and to the government, but Inimical to the special privileges of a few New Kngland manufacturers who were permitted by Senator Aldrich to write the cotton sched ule to suit themselves. IL That the tariff board has perverted other tacts, thereby avoiding exposure of tariff injus tices that have benefited the few at the expense of the many manutac- PERVERSION turera. Let US iRINT SALE BILL EVASION INEXACT IIL That the tariff board has not. aa stated by President Taft to congress, drawn any conclusions that would "he valuable In advising ths congress and the people of the changes that ought to be made to make more equitable their (the wool and cot ton schedules) effects" The board did not at tempt to draw conclu sions, "scientific" or oth erwise. Iron Us "scien tifically" collected data, hut sidestepped that responsibility by arguing that sin ti I deductions aa Us data justified were Dot ! called for under the specifications of us! employment. IV. That the tariff board's report was ar ranged so as to be Incomprehensible to either legislators or Uyni-n; that tables were deliberately disas sociated or emasculated If not suppressed, and that a congressman would require the serv ices of a statistician and a clerk six months to make nead or tail of the Jumble of data presented as a basis for Intelligent tariff revision cost data on weaving necessary to enable It to make an Intelligent comparison with costs at home; that the board was offered opportuni ties for obtaining such data, but did not use them; that such foreign data as were obtained were In some cases suppressed and In others were Inadequate for honest comparison, although so util ized. VII. That the tariff board betrayed the con fidence of American manufacturers by pub lishing data that should have been held for con fidential Information of legislators; that compet itors were given thereby valuable trade secrete, while the foreign manu facturers divulged nothing of similar character or Importance. VIII. That the tariff board's treatment of econoniio questions vitally affect ing the relation of the tariff to the prices ex acted from consumers was disingenuous and I'M AIR DISINGENUOUS misleading. IX EMASCU-LATION EAV0RII-ISM Thst the tariff board avoided altogether inves tigating certain phases of tariff graft hidden in "Jokers" of the Payne Aldrich law. VI. I'ARIISAN CONVICTING That the tariff board falsely reported that It was Impossible to obtain abroad American stjnlnd f living" Both Indefensible, and President Taft Knew It Suppression of Facts by the Tariff Board Statistics Employ ed to Mislead the Public. By ROBERT KENNETH MACLEA. Formerly consult lug expert of the tariff board. J New York. Aug. .-On not n single one of the ninety five all cotton sain pies of fabric taken as the basis of the tarill board'! inxosilgalions of the cot ton schedule was there an actual re duction of the tariff by the Payne A Id rich law. The samples were selected wlthgie.it care by tba Combined Judgment of the board' experts. Indorsed by the lead ing jobbers of the Dotted Slates as being representative of all classes of fabric In use In this country, each sample being chosen because It was typical of the most used material of ley bill with higher rales than 'th Payne bill." When Mr. Tuft made this statement he must have known that It was tin true As for the wool schedule. In knew flint the rates were not hlghct in 1 he Dlngley law than In the Payne A Idrlcta law. for right after signing th latter bill did he not denounce lis woo rates ns "Indefensible V" And. as fot the cotton rates of the Payne bill. Ik knew I hey were Just as "Indefensible' as the wool rales, for at the time In made this statement in Host ,01 ho bail the tariff board's rUfJOTt on cotton be fore him ll Is true that the cotton report of the tariff board did not make this In formation available at a glance to Mr Tafi or to congress or to the public The tariff board carefully avoided glv lug this Information In a getatable, 1111 derslaiidable form Suppre. sd the Answer. "Was the tariff raised Of lowered'' has been an Insistent question cvef since the Pay tie A hlrh h law was en iCted three yens ago The tarifl board avoided imsw cring It In making my official report to the board I submit led a table Hint did answer Ibis question in respe t to each one. excepting three, of the 100 cloth samples arouml which our months of Invest Igal ion centered. After much side stepping and discussion this table was expurgated and published In its etnas dilated form, The board's excuse was that It was not Us duty to answer the question; congress COO I d make its own computations. The official explanation for refusing to publish the table show tfSvMstiaaaBBbtok jttr f i Wnaii3i'fr BseasBsr ifsBafflKftl liaffiaa From p. nut trig by Seymour Thomas That the tariff board has proved not to be me 'nonpartisan" and scientific Instru ment promised by President Tafe. that Its members displayed lnexierleuce In bust ncss. in competence and extravagance. I have been forced reluctantly after a ystr s Intimate association to accept tiie opinion that the tariff board has been nothing more than an effective cog in a "stand pat" political machine, ihit some of the men wlio clar.ored most loudly for a tai iff board and some of the men appointed thereto worked all the time complacently In the Knowledge that the creation of ttie board was a scheme to prevent genuine tariff lefoim as long as possible by "gum ming the cards and delaying the game." a charge frequently made, but which I for a long time discredited That auch facts as the tariff board has reported sustain the charge, aa tu bnth ire wool ana the cotton schedules, that the con sumer has been robbsd outrageoualy aa a conse quence of excessive du tle and that the pronts hive nut mnnm int.. , pockets of the laborei to 'SMUIlait! an -From New Yrg WortO. ! Its particular weave or class. Ninety five all cotton and live silk and cotton samples comprise the 100 that appear In the tariff board's cotton reKrt. Forty seven of the ninety Bra In the all cotton class pay 33. ISO per cent high er duties under the Payne Aldrich than they did under the hitiglev tariff. Payne-Aldrich "Jokers." Of these foiiy-seven classes of inn ferial on which the tariff was In creased nine are the funcy weaves made In three or four New Kngland mills commonly grouped as the "I.lp-pitt-McColl interests." This Is the clique of New Kngland manufacturer polltlciuus who were permitted by Sen ator Nelson V. Aldrich to write the cotton schedule to suit themselves. Of the nine Lippltt McColl fabrics the Payne Aldrich law Jacked up the average duty from 30.57 to (50.33 per cent. In other words, the premised "revision downward" on these goods was really a revision upwardatnounting to 04.97 per cent of the Dlngley rates. The remaining thirty-eight classes of all cotton fabrics on which the duty was increased wore not generally the product of the favored New Kngland ring. L'nder the Ldngley law these thirty-eight fabrics were assessed an average duty of 35.30 per cent, l'nder the Payne Aldrich law they pay 4 IM per cent a revision upward eipial to -S.07 per cent of the former rate as compared with iU.u7 per cent increase on manufactures of the favonsl few. On Just tints- among the 10u samples was there a decrease In duty. These were the silk and cotton fabrics (silk mlllsi that pay more than ino per cent duty. On these three samples the re duction averaged 5 .0(5 per cent on the former duty-a reduction from 110.70 per cent under the Dlngley law to 110 H pei- cant under the Payne A I drlch law On one of the silk and cot ton samples there was an increuse amounting to tlJi pat cent The fifth of the silk and cotton samples was left unchanged Oo the forty five of the ninety Ave all cottou samples there was uo chauge In duty. Ou the three remaining samples (completing the total of 100) no com parlson Is made Lsn-ause of apparent lack of authentic foreign prices And still President Taft said iu bis speech at Boston. April 25 last: "If ((he Pavne-Aldrlch hill) was a vastly better bill than the Dingle) bill. If I bad refused to algu the Paynt bill It would have niaintitned tb- OIm Ing whether the tariff bad been raised or lowered was 1l1.1t the market fluctu ations made it of no value. This wa 1 only a quibble. I.ccause the respective tariff acts wee su arranged that tint increase in duty on a sliding scale kept puce with the price tlm i nations The tariff hoard I'nOMe to print tables that would show only the assessment of duty illldel the two He'- an I left It to anybody who desires the informa tlon to figure oat for himself the sig nllicant facia above set forth. Benefit Only to Privilege. From every point of view of the tariff grafter it Is no doubt highly de trabta that such facts, staggering as they are to the dishonest pretensions that the cotton tariff was really lower ed, should le buried as deeply as pos sible In a mass of unexplained statis tics, tint it is to the advantage of every honest manufacturer ar.d mer chant who is seeking stability In busi- ness and fair opportunity to make a reasonable profit that the truth should lie made known Just such poOciee of official evasion and suppressant have made sslbie iu the past the Juggling of tariff legislation by and in ladialf of the privileged few. It is undisputed that the cotton BCtiednle as written In the house ways and means committee by Representa tive Ben 0 K. Payne of New York did not provide the full measure of "revi sion dow nward ' that the Republican party had promised Still It was not until after the Payne bill went to the senate finance committee, of which Mr. Aldrh'h was chairman, that the "Interests" got in their most deadly work. It Is well known that Senator Aldrich freely consulted, if tie did not actually permit, the Lippltt McOoll In terests to write into the amended bill the duties affecting their own products -the fancy weaves made hy only a few of the largest and richest New Kngl.cid mills New York World Will Campaign In New York. New York. Aug .-Oornor Wood row Wilson will make his first Inva sion of New Y'ork for campaign pur poses when he will be the guest of honor at the Worklngmeu's Woodrow Wilson club of the lower east side at a dinner to be held at the Cafe ilotile vard on Sept. 4 (ioveruor Wilson will deal, it Is expected, with the problems of Immigration and the false impres sions that have Itecii put fjun his views hv the quotations of Isolated entciicee from his different books I CONDENSED NEWS Nhaiaguan rebata attac ked and cap tutrd the town of San Jorge. Part of the $272,(mm loot robbers goC ."rom hc Hank of Montreal at New Westminster, B. C, has been recov ered b ChlcilRO police. It Is almost certain that Nat C. Ooodwlb, comedian, never again will anpeai on the stage to play a part. The ai tor is paralyzed In his lower limbs Colonel Ra Hiai Vasques and Cap tain Theodora Rodriguez, held for cot Inlraejr to violate the neutrality law, tawad their way out or Jail at Dour la Aria. Opposition to the recall of Judges and of to in 1. il (f-ci inn ; was expressed at the annual convention of the N llonal Association of Probate .fudgee at Chicago. M s J. Ogdeu Armour, after under going a serious surgical operation fot the removal of a fibroid tumor at a Chicago hospital, was reported to be rapidly re overlng Because one man refused to Join the union teveml thousand workmen are idle at the collieries of the high company In the Panther creek allej . PanMJ i aula Bitten by a pet cat suffering with rabies. Hatty Hanson of Mountain Iron, Minn., may he a vbtlm of hydro phobia. The hoy was taken to 8t. Paul fin' the Pasteur treatment. The ' were HI mine workers killed in the herd coal mines of Pennsylva nia iu 1911. according, to the annual report issued hy James E. Roderick, chief pf the . late bureau of mines. Mrs. Champ Clark was named aa president of the Missouri Ham and BacOfl show, which is to he held farm ers week, In January, at the tTniver sdty of Missouri agricultural college. Progpsc, on the Panama canal is -' i satisfactory to the chief engliie -r. The Upper gpriroach wall of the Pedro Miguel locks has been brought to the full elevation throughout the entire length. Two Cormm military officers were killed while flying near Fi"hurg. This to ikes Hie third double fatality in Bu mp, during September in which mem bers of aim flying corps were the victims. The interstate commerce commis sion suspended freight rates on grain, proposed by the Northwestern and the Chicago. Milwaukee and St. Paul rail ways fiotn pottttS In Iowa to Chicago and the cast. Rebel movements to the east and west of Agua Prleta WON reported, leading to the conclusion that the mobilisation of Mexican rebel band with the view of attacking Agua Prl eta had failed. rsVangeOem in the United States has "degenerated Into commercialism and professionalism," according to Dr. I M Hray, dean of the Moody instl tue, who spoke before the National Conference of Kvangelist at Chlcaga The third annual convention of the Ajnertcan Manufacturers' Export as sociation ended In New York with a banquet, t Its closing busnp ,s slon the association e'ected Congress man William C Eladfleld 01 Hrooklyn president Two witnesses were examined In Hoi Sprlnss rk., before Special Com missioner C. P- fluff in Hie hearing to determine what Sam Scheppn said !n Hot Springs at the time he was taken into rus'.ody as a witness In the Ro .1' nt luil niitrrf-M- case. Jose RnissJnaa Of Inn Antonio, Tex., was shot and killed an. I Francisco Rasquez w.-.s seriously wounded as t':e rosult Of a rare quarrel among circus ; !oyeps at Rochelle, IU. Police are : arching lor a negro who Is said to have done the shooting. The board of directors oi the Modern Woodmen i tad a formal call for a reii rendura vote of the membership to determine whether the action of the recent bead catup held in Chicago In increasing th society's ln-urance ratts shall be imiitnad The Guatemalan government has re jected proposals ot a syndbate headed hy 1)-. F 8. Pearson, an American, who Is pre ideal of the Mexico and Northwest mm Railroad company, to Ir rigate the e'ensve plains of the Zacapn district In OuateniHla. Mr- John Epps. who served twenty three y ears in the Indiana woman S ! risen for the murder or her basbond and Who sms paroled six years ago, has keen vindicated b)' the deathbed lonfession of Henry Epps, a brother, who. before dying, said that he had fjOilOnsI his h: other. Hrad.M reef- s:is- All In all, busi ness, despite this or that irregularity, is certainly in exros of all but the best 01' previous rears and the fact that there Is no disposition to rush things ladieati s hi&althv conservatism, that tends to make the absence of speculation enaspb noun, A silvr service has been handedS over by the Panama government to the setretary of tie American lega tion. W. W. Andrews, to be presented to tlie 1'nlted Stall's guntioat York town. In recognition of services ren dered by that vessel In connection with the foundering of the steamship Tahoga Helen (itay. an investigator, wbosa work at the last session ot congress for the (Jraham committee of the touse, created a scene upon the floor, in which she was charged with being a "woman lobbyist," was arrested up on a warrant sworn out by the Indian bureau, charging concealment ot pub lic records