PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY Ratks: One inch cards, 70 cents; two inch cards, $1.00 BRUCE W ILCOX Lawyer and Land Attorney Practitioner in civil courts since 1893 and Register U. 8. land office from 1903 tb 1907. Information by mail a specialty. Office in Land Office Building ALLIANCE : I NEBRASKA BURTON & WESTOVER Attorneys at Law Land Attorneys Office First National Bank Building PHONB 180 ALLIANCE NEBRASKA Dr. Oliver McEucn Physician and Surgeon SPECIALTIES: Diseases of women and children, and Qenlto Urinary Or- All calls answered promptly day or night HEMINOPORD NEBRASKA H. M. BULLOCK. ATTORNEY AT LAW ALLIANCE NEBRASKA F. M. BROOME Land Attorney Lon experience as Receiver U. S. land office is a guarantee for prompt and efficient service. Office in Opera House Block ALLIANCE : : NEBRASKA WILLIAM MITCHELL ATTORNEY AT LAW ALLIANCE NEBRASKA 0. E. SLAG-LE, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Office phone 65 Res. phone 52 Alliance, Nebraska. Orie Coppernoll Res. Phone 20 F. J. Petersen Res. Phone 43 Drs. Coppernoll & Petersen Osteopaths Rooms 7, 8 and 9, Rumer Block PHONE 43 GEO. J. HAND, Physician and Surgeon EYE, EAR, NOSE AND THROAT H. A. COPSEY Physician and Surgeon Office Phone 360. Res. Phone 342 Calls answered promptly day and night from office. Offices: Alliance National Bank building over the Post Office. HARRY P. COURSEY LIVE 8TOCK AND GENERAL AUCTIONEER Farm Sales a Specialty TERMS REASONABLE PHONE 64 ALLIANCE NEBRASKA DR. 1). E. TYLER Dentist PHONE 167 OPERA HOUSE BLOCK ALLIANCE : : NEBRASKA Dr. JAS. P. HAXFIELD Dentist OVER BRENNAN'S DRUG STORE PHONE 526 RED All electrical equipment. Gas admin istered. Evenings by appointment A. J. KENNEDY Dentist Office in Alliance National Bank Building over Post Office PHONE 391 POPULAR TALKS ON LAW LICENSED EMBALMER PHONE: Day 498 Night 510 ALLIANCE NEBRASKA I :. A - HKHIIKRT CITY DRAY Office Phone 260 Residence Phone 182 At Wilson's new and second-hand store L. M. Scott, Auctioneer Lakeside, Nebraska Will cry your sales anywhere. See me or leave dates at the Alliance Herald office. Paul W.Thomas instructor ON VIOLIN Phonel75 Alliance, Neb. Voice Culture Teacher of Tone Production MISS EUNICE BURNETT Soprano Soloist Public- Engagements Solicjted STUDIO, 2i WEST SEVENTH ST. J. P. Hazard, the Surveyor, Is making a specialty of locating homesteaders. He claims to be posted as to lands still vacant and Has a Few Bargains in RELINQUISHMENTS Your chance is growing less every day. Don't stop for fear of bad weather the other fellow may beat you to it. IN LAND OFFICE BUILDING ALLIANCE NEBRASKA G. H. Wood Painting, Decorating and Paperhanging Phone434 Alliance, Nebr. At The Herald Office REASONABLE RATES PROMPT SERVICE , EAT AT NohesCafe BUY Nohe's Bread Pure and Wholesome AUGUST HORNBURQ Professional Trained Nurse Room I, over Rodgers' Grocery Alliance - Nebraska MRS. E. C. DRAKE OPTOMETRIST EYES TESTED GLASSES FITTED Cross Eyes Permanently Straightened With Dr. Copsey ALLIANCE NEBRASKA MILK AND MUNICIPALITIES By Walter K. Towers. A. B. of the Michigan Bar J. D . The regulation of the milk supply is a matter that is of vital Import ance to all of us. To the hahlrs ihe difference between good and bad milk Is a difference between life and death. To a good many of us milk and cream mean either 'nourish ment or disease according as It Is par or impure. Typhoid epidemics have been frequently traced to an impure milk supply and tuberculous cows spread a dreaded plague to those who consume the milk. The law has given the weight, of its authority to the regulation of milk by municipal ordinances and by state legislative enactments. These laws have for their purpose not only the safeguarding of the milk supply against disease but also the separa tion of all relations between the pro due' of the cow and the far-famed 'iiilkinan's pump. Watered milk has frequently drawn down the light nings of the law as well as furntah Inspiration for the professional joke snilth. It was the subject of the fol lowing diatribe, of which a St. iouls juoge recently relieved himself in the case of the city against a pur veyor of diluted milk. "Milk," said the wearer of the er mine, "an object of profound and vigilant concern to the modern law maker, has always been part and parcel to the dally life, the adages and toiKiore or mankind. Kor ex ample: We are told not to cry over spilt milk that is, not to fret over real logs that can't be helped. The Russian has an adase, That which is aken In with the milk only goes out marked with their capacity. i with the soul that Ip, early Impres sions last till death The Swede has one denoting hospitality, viz!, When there is milk In the can for one. there Is milk In the can for two. In the phrase, "The milk of human kindness," Is expressed the very heart and office of that gently but noble virtue. The bard of bards loes not hesitate to connect milk with philosophy, deeming that nei ther loses dignity by the Juxtaposi tion, he speaks of 'Adversity's sweet milk, philosophy.' All such amiable metaphors, saws, similes, associated ideas and folklore eschew the be littling idea of water in ml a'. Con tra, the milk held In mind is good milk. I recall but one instance to the contrary (seemingly the Inad- venture of a daring and erratia gen ius), viz: 'Oh Mirth and Innocence! Oh, milk and water! Ye happy mixtures of more happy days." Indeed, the universal, primal and spontaneous mental conception we have of milk, in the first Instance, Is that It Is unwatered. Take one case for example: Milk and honey ire emblems of pastoral good luck, CONTRACTOR and BUILDER FLANS AND ESTIMATES FURN ISHED ON APPLICATION I employ only first-class mechanics. All work guaranteed. PHONE 279 Residence and Shop, 7th and Mississippi. Alliance, Nebraska. DYE & OWENS Transfer Line 11 i . ... i ... i i .. t I moved Dromotlv rj- and transfer w ork iw,w,-tJi solicited. Dray Phone 54 Residence phone 636 and Blue 574 Let Us Do Your Job Work er than requiring licenses and pro hibiting adulteration. They have reg ulated the conditions under which the milk is produced and transported and prescribed standards of richness. Reg ulattons forbidding the sale within the town of milk from cows Ted on slops, or brewer's malt, or keipt In unsanitary premise have been up held. The dof initials In these eas es were not allowed to show tlmt the milk was, nevertheless, perfectly wholesctm : the fact that the law prohibits the sale of such milk Is fi nal. It is a matter properly within the regulation of the lawmaking pow er. The municipality may also re quire that all cows be subjected to tuberculin and other tests, and that no milk be sold within the town limit except from tested cows. Even though the dealer be licensed and his milk come from properly fed and cared for cows, and there be no iiliilieratlon of any kind, the milk may yet be barred because It Is not up to the required standard of rich ness. A requirement of three per cent of fat In milk and twenty per cent of fat in QTMlft has been held reasonable. Where the laws pro vide the health officers may seize without compensation milk enough to make tests.. The analysis of compe tent authorities, unless shown to be erroneous, Is taken by the courts aa the final test whether the milk In question was up to the required stand ard. Ordinances permitting the sei zure and destruction of all milk that Is found to be Impure or below the required standards are supported by the courts and generally enforced. Of course the municipality may make valid regulations governing the measures of quantity in use by the dealers. The citizens tthru their leg islative representatives be they al dermen or members of the village board may provide these regula tions as well as those protecting thei against impure or weak milk. All but officially-tested measures may be barred and ordinances not Infrequent ly require that milk shall be sold on ly In bottles or Jars permanently Lusk, Wvo Ranch people of W.vo llainer Informs The Herald that molng. like those of Nebraska, are ' had a "awell time", which la not at noted for their hospitality. Mrs. ; all surprising. If you are a consumer of milk rec ognize your rights. You can compel the enforcements of the regulations you now have and, If they are Insuf ficient, you may do nmich to secure the passage or acts that will be ade quate. (Copyright, 191.1. by Walter K. Tow Commend and Suggest Speaking of the recent quarantine In Alliance, The Herald wishes to commend and suggest. Plrat, we wish to commend the city officials for the vigorous and successful man ner In which smallpox and other con tagious diseases have been stamped out. Of course, almost any one can see where Improvement could have been made; but It Is easier to see how- a thing could have ben done better after it has been done than to do It better at the time. The main thing In view In ordering a quaran tine was to make It successful, and as It has been there isn't much room left for knocking. The suggestion we have to make peace and plenty a large and a good for the future- ,r vcr there happens land flowing with milk and honey. (Ex.. ill. 8; Jer. xxxii. 22.) But what : t lii' ftpriislnn l tt imp It Is hnHAl nn the unanimous opinion of physicians a derisive picture would rise to liar ass the imaginanatlon by U6e of the phrase, A land flowing with watered milk and honey? We think the onli nance proceeds on the notion that however much the cow waters her own milk in her own humble and honest way (letting nature take her course, the milkman has no right to designedly duplicate nature's gift of water by a furtive gift of bia own from the barnyard pump. It pro ceeds on the underlying theory that it is a fraud, a trick and a veritable cheat contrary to the common law and hence of that phase cf It known colloquially as the 'square- deal' to sell water, when milk, not water, la the commodity dealt in. If one is not to get a stone who asks for bread, no more (under the spirit of the or dinance) is he to get wafer who asks for milk." The regulation of a matter of such general and vital concern as milk is properly within the province of the state legislature. It is for the legis lative power representing the people as a whole to prescribe the meas ures that are to safeguard the sup ply. But the legislature may, and very frequently does, delegate this power to its creature, the municipal ity; so we find the individual com munities supported by the courts in their enactment and enforcement of drastic ordinances regulating the pro duction and distribution of milk. As these measures entail addition al labor and expense on the part of those engaged In the milk business many of the laws have been bitterly opposed in the courts, but quite gen erally they have been sustained. It is now clearly understood that mu nicipalities having the usual powers may UOtBM milk dealers and prevent all unlicensed persons from selling milk in the municipality. A reason able license fee may be c-naeted and the h il'li officers may be given the I Itjf to Issue or withhold llcen-i nd, unless it is shown that they from Improper motives, their! i in refusing to issue or in re- i 'i'ns a license, under the authority; ' .' the muni ipality, will be supported I by the courts. The leidlslut i luwlton mmm old They tell us that if there were uni versal vaccination smallpox could not spread, if that Is true, and we be lieve it is. It seem to us the easieBt and best way to stamp out an epl i no of smiallpox would be to re quire everybody "to he vaccinated. If thh v.cre done, business would not be fcts nated by the weeks and mon ths, pr ;crty would not need to be destrcyu aa is the case sometimes in (juara aline, and there would be less probability of exaggerated and false reports being circulated affect ing the city's welfare. Outing in the West Mr. and Mrs. Geo. E. Hughes and sen and daughter, BufonI ami Helen, left, on 41 last Thursday morning for a two months' outing In the w -t The object of the trip is health and pleasure. They will visit Seattle and Portland and other western points. At Seattle they were to meet Mr. Hughes' brother, Thoa. J. Hughes, a wireless telegrapiier in the employ of the Canadian government. A son, Carl Hughes, at Holtville. California, will be visited. Mr. Hughes has been a faithful employe of the Burlington railroad for six years, during which time he has not taken a vacation, altho some times being absent a few days to work on hiB claim. Before entering the employ of the railroad company he filed on a homestead claim, on which he proved up a couple of years ago. He la an enthusiastic north western Nebraska man. Before he left on the pleasure trip he showed his confidence In this country by his closing of a deal far the purchase of a half section of land near Lakeside. The Herald will carry the news to them while they are on their vacation. PLEASANT VISIT IN WYOMING Mra. W. K. Harper returned last week from a visit with friends at the MrCurmick ranch, twenty nille-s from rlba laws against aduit rations. WC IVQIlt tlaC young man who is ambitious to adulterant must be unw holesome be-j fore action can be taken against the parties responsible. But modern laws forbid all adulterants, whether harm lesa or not. Under these regulations water is an adulterant. So any pre servatives, or other unnatural sub stances, no matter how harmless, are adulterants If the law forbids i!ih sn1 wi wnnt In ktir imm ev ery buslaeas man who vitn 8E A LAWYER adulteration any person who adult.-r ates is guiltyaud may be punished under the law. Csually the statutes and ordinances also prohibit the sale of adulterated milk and under the usual form of the law It la not neces sary that the dealer knew that the milk iv as adulterated. It becomes his duty to aee to It that the milk which he sells is pure and up to th stand ard set by the. law. and if he dews not he is legally liable. Both the man who owns the business and the servant who drives the wagon are, in general, liable under the law. But the laws have gtne even furth- Uiat toe knew BUSINESS LAW. Writ er i ue Ul toll ih k.. r , v . . i.i I.. . Ml I l. j,. li, 1. .1 , ,w. , tara ) Ilk. 4 ,i.lpt4 kJuti a.. .lU.loJl..:U. U.I kvWi.lto.WM kv.lll in IkW IkkMl. U..4.4 M k. fr. ut mkm hiiepwe bir.iialwJMiU rj .III. la um g.a c.rv ,iatr4 i aw. mmm lMra.lMtUu.-Cun.IHf Mbt) bf Own wt.itk n r'.ri. tu4 (J) I'.ufl U rrtv-lM-.l. Euwu m L V Crtir.. tuf SuMiktM Mr. fl4 it te.l Ik. I e x. u4 w kow 4lf yu III ritoJ. lir l4k kauMi. t C- Uw wk.ta r-u J: I' - - (u.Tjriml l.ter lr kvlwu ..tolx 4 an .1 Kimlkl .Ui..lJlt.. r lal I . . -Ur'f pjr.r.Ujr kj ... . luwrue . mA. UL. ekul tui araise i-UHKiirukk5is MUl.UL Ul UW Ml IMriui lli. Str.il. B.. rB3tM3ttX I ft 3 Farm Implement Time is Here Disc Harrow Low Spreaders Plows We aell the kind that does good work in even the hardest kind of ground. Don't wait any longer bo fore ordering your disc harrow. Practical manure spreader that are high enough so they can bo used anywhere and yet not ao high as to cause unnecessary loaa of time or labor In loading. Light In draft, easy to operate, simple and durable. Gang and aulky plows, cultivator, also a full line of other Implements necessary to good farming. I. L ACHESON S. A. FOSTER LUMBER CO. Have the best grades of LUflBER at right prices Also, the only Cement, j Lehigh See us for Farm Gates CM MEAT W. R. Drake, Prop. Fresh and Cured Meats "The Best of Everything" Notice to Farmers and Ranchmen: We do our our own butchering and are on tne market for the best we can buy. If you have some excep tionally good stuff to sell, let us know about it. Corner Box Butte Ave. and 4th St. PHONE 40 ForNice,CleanNiggerhead Lump anjd Nut Eastern Hard Nut PHOITE TO No. 22 Dierks Lumber & Coal Co. Wise Ones Watch Want Ads