The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, July 02, 1914, Image 1

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The Alliance Herald
OFFICIAL OHflAN NF.I1UASKA STOCK UKOWKRS ASSOCIATION. HKACIIKS KVFJIY MKMItKIl
Section 1
2,500 Copies This Iwwae
Section 1
PAUF.H 1 TO S
OFFICIAL OIW3AN NEBRASKA VOLUNTEER. FIREMEN'S ASSOCIATION. IT REACHES EVERY DEPARTMENT. 1 1 E A IMJU A RTERS FOR lil.OOO VOLUNTEER FIREMEN
VOLUME XXI
ALLIANCE, BOX BUTTE COUNTY, NEBRASKA, THURSDAY, JULY 2, 1914
NUMBER 30
DARLING WAS
STAR FEATURE
Altenre BaKineen Men Will Profit by
Taking: Advice of an Expert
Bus! new Builder
EVERYBODY VOTES BUT MOTHER
Nelson S. Darling was tbe star
feature on the list of Chautauqua at
tractions this season. So Bay those
who listened to his stirring speech
last Friday evening. Darling is a
man who has made a study of busl
eesa building, advertising, and the
problems of the small town mer
chant He has been a traveling
talesman, merchant, sales manager
aad advertising manager.
Darling had his audience with him
frem start to finish. It is impossible
to tell in this article all tbe good
i kings he said. The Herald has en
HHged Mr. Darling to write a series
of twenty-four articles dealing with
these problems. These will begin
Non and one will be run in each is
sue. They should be read by every
nan, woman and child in Alliance
aad surrounding towns.
Darling is a powerful speaker and
brought his audience from smiles to
tears and back again. One Alliance
laan who had never been seen to
aiaile before in public laughed right
eet loud. And with all of his good
glories Darling brought home telling
paints that will do Alliance much
geod.
"The man who believes in the 'op
ea town is of 22 calibre, short, rim
fere," said Darling
fMT ,Wr woThr) v foV frr tyx vbooth'
! ' ' ' - 1 II. " I
SPECIAL TRAIN
PLATTE VALLEY
Eight (kNMhea Will Leave AHIaace)
Early Haiarday Morning, Re
Having Late That Night
month. Your local newspapers can
get a contract for a full back page
to run one year at twenty-five cents
an inch if they would take It, from a
big mail order house.
"The Larkln Soap Club is another
evil. I will purchase all the articles,
including the premium, in a If 11.12
Larkln order, from your home mer
chants for 17.12.
"I know, a lot more about this
town than you think I do," Bald Mr.
Darling, as he took a rap at tbe
nnn't rieiav the I Sunday booster excursions. He then
BURLINGTON TO
EXTEND LINE
General Superintendent E. E. Young
of Alliance and Oilier Oflk-ials
Start laying New Road
social and spiritual life of your town.
Will this town grow and increase in
papulation? In fifteen to twenty
years from now, Beventy-flve per cent
f the towns of one thousand popula
tion or under will be wiped off the
aap, many towns of five thousand
will be cut in half, and towns of ten
thousand will ga backward. . Our
population is going from the small
town to the cities. Dr. Hillis, the
Casper, Wyo., June 26 The Chi
cago, uurlington & tjuincy ioaay pui
500 men to work laying steel on its
extension from this place to Orin
Junction, where a connection with
the Colorado & Southern will be
made and a Hill system line from
Piipet Sound to the Mexican eulf so
roiiowing me lecture nir. uariing completed. General Superintendent
repeated The Town Creed, printed
elsewhere in this issue of The Her
ald. This has been printed on cards
for hanging up. Copies will be fur
nished free to Herald readers on ap
plication.
em, as forecast, will Include an en
tirely new line from Cheyenne to
Chugwater, reducing the rail dist
ance between the two points about
twenty miles, and a new line from a
point about six miles north of Chug
water to Guernsey, where connection
will be made with the Guernsey
Wendover link of the Burlington
which now is in construction. This
work wll mean rerouting of about
100 miles of the Colorado & South
ern line between Cheyenne and Orln
Junction.
was kept busy for several minutes
shaking hands with people In the
audience, who crowded around, anx
ious to express their appreciation of
sreat speaker, told me that the Unit- the good thoughts In his speech.
d States had reached Its halcyon
ays. That some of these days the
eoantry will go back so far that it
writ take us one thousand years to
gut back. There Is only one chance
for saving the country and that Is
y tbe people in the small towns and
a the farms,
"The big problems before thi
ceantry today are tbe re-distribution
of wealth and population. Seventy
fear per cent of the wealth of the
ceantry is controlled by four per
cent of tbe population."
Darling is from a prohibition state
aad is for prohibition. He said, "In
fifteen years there will be no saloons.
Ike United States government will
etese every saloon in fifteen years."
Me cited statistics showing the ad
vancement made by the state of Kan
sas under prohibition.
"Twenty-two states in the Union
lest in population during the last
fire years," said Darling. Among
these states were Nebraska and Io
wa. "The population la becoming
congested in the great centers. There
are only two solutions. The social
ists' plan and one which I have to
give you. Perhaps you don't think
the socialists are strong. Watch the
veto this fall. I am not a socialist.
I am a bull mooser."
Mr. Darling spoke on social serv
ice, spiritual service and commercial
service. He questioned several in
the audience regarding the courses
taaght in the public schools of Alli
ance. "This is tbe best town I have
been in in Nebraska," he said.
Herald readers should watch for the
copyrighted articles by Mr. Darling
which will appear in The Herald reg
ularly for twenty-four weeks.
K. E. Young, Assistant General Man
ager E. S. Koeller and several other
officials are here in connection with
the resumption of track laying.
Four hundred of the men put to
work today will be employed in con
nectlon with a track-laying machine
which will place steel at the rale of
one and one-half miles dally.. At
this rate the connection at Orin Jun
ction can be made within forty days.
Division Superintendent M. J. Fo
ley stated that through trains over
the Denver-Klrby Colorado & South
ern-Burlington combination track
will be run this fall, and that within
a year three fast trains In each dir
ection daily will be operating over
the new system between the sound
l...lwtjlu nl Inlmxllnn I,. tul.x Kn. I ttnl tbe Stilt.
I "Th. n t n t n r. n ri that IhA amit Kimn
mat ptciiooia win on nianu&rU'
Barn Pauce Sat unlay Might
There will be a barn dance at the
Henry Hler place on Saturday night,
July Fourth. Ladies are requested
to bring basket lunches. All are in
vited to come and have a good time.
Alliance music will be furnished.
d. TO RE-ORGANIZE
NORMAL SCHOOLS
Ized oil Plan Adopted
adacatlonal system is of the very
highest."
"Help keep the woman on the
farm," be continued. "Farmers are
ceutantly buying new and Improved
Machinery for their own work but
they are not modernizing their homes
tm as to make the work easier for
heir women folks. No farmer
ftaould buy an automobile until be
bub furnished his wife with running
water in the house, modern wash
iwg machines, and other modern con
veniences to save her steps and la
ker. "Tou have a live wire for a secre
tary of your commercial club here in
Alliance. When I arrived in Alli
ance I found that he had been called
away by sickness but that he had left
a letter for me telling all about your
town.
"Alliance is called 'the sucker
tewn of Nebraska' by tbe big mall
erder houses. Every thirty days
(18,000 Is sent outside of town to
aae catalog and mail order houses
far goods that could be purchased
at home. The merchants are to
Maine for this. Their advertisements
are usually run simply to help out
the home paper. Their advertise
ments should be run to produce re
salts. Here 1b an advertisement that
sgves a picture, the price and des
cription of the goods offered. That
is the kind of an ad that produces
business. The reason that the cat
alog bouses get the business 1b be
cause they do the advertising that
pays. A big mail order house pays
116,000 per year to tbe man who
superintends the getting up of its
catalog.
"Make the buyer want your goods.
Ten departments of instruction in
each of the state normal schools are
provided for in a plan adopted by the
state normal board at its meeting In
Wayne this week. The new scheme
of dividing up the work was formu
lated by a special committee, of
which A. L. Cavlness was chairman.
The board empowered this commit
tee some time ago to undertake the
task of unifying and consolidating
departments, which are now conduct
ed on a rather hit-and-miss basis.
One of the main objects is to put
each department under a single head,
as is done at the state university.
The committee report provides that
this shall be effected without work
ing any injustice as to salary upon
any member of the faculties. Heads
Your I of departments must have bachelors'
passenger traffic will be taken via
Guernsey is erroneous," said Foley.
"The Colorado & Southern line to
Cheyenne will be reconstructed to
handle the passenger business to the
gulf. It will require two years time
and an expenditure of $2,000,000 to
complete the cutoff and tunnel work
between Wendover and Guernsey."
The reconstruction of the Chey
enne line of the Colorado & South
PEOPLES' INDEPENDENT STATE
CONVENTION
Alliance people who wish to spend
the roarta ef July In the' North
Flatte raBey can do so by leaving on
the special train of eight coaches)
which win leave at 5 o'clock Satur
day scorning, arriving at Scottsbluff
at o'clock, and Guernsey at 10:20.
The train will start the return trip
from Guernsey at 8:30 o clock that
evening. The Scottsbluff program
ill be found elsewhere in tms eat-
Hon of Tfce nerald.
Spurts! Train Schedule
Leave A.M.
Alliance 6:09
Letan . . :i
Bonner 5:29
Angora 5:42
Vance 5:54
Northport '0S
Arrive
Bridgeport '.IS
Leave
Bridgeport 6:30
Atkins :
Bayard 7: IX
Bradley 7:1
Snell T:2
Minatare 7:3
Heyward 7:4
s:vv
The state convention of the Peo
ples' Independent party of Nebraska
is hereby called to meet at Hastings,
Nebr., on Tuesday, July 28, 1914, at
2:80 p. m., for the purpose of adopt
ing a nlnt form nf nrlnrlnlea. for the
... ... ' ,.. I Hrnttsblu
nn;iivu ui new oinio tuuimuiru i n . a. it
uoven o.
Mitchell 8:2
8:3Z
8:41
and for the transaction of such oth
or hiiRlness as mav be reaularlv
brought before said convention. lt. ,.T
.i i .j A .i wn .... w ...kwa. i Mornii
hub utrcu unviucu iu ubbo iuv i frfri tt-i - C.RC
Rent nt Inn at on ndeleaate at lartre I enry
.- i . - v. inn I Torrineton
cast for Edward Roth, presidential Yuhn l!2
elector in 1912, which will entitle
the various counties to tbe following
CIVIL SERVICE KXAMINATIONS
The United States Civil Service
Commission announced the follow
Ing examinations for Alliance on the
dates given:
July 12.. Metallurgical engineer
(male), salary $2,000 to I4.G00. for
service at Pittsburgh, Pa. Assistant
mining engineer (male), salary fl,
600 to 82,400.
. July 22. Dental Interne (male),
salary 8600 per annum with main
tenance in the government hospital
for the Insane, Washington, D. C.
Map colortst, both male and female,
salaries from 600 to $720. Trans
itman (male), salary $800 to $900
for position In the forest service.
July 27. Assistant in plant mal
nutrition (male), salary from $1800
to $2400, to fill vacancy in the bur
eau of plant industry, Washington,
D. C. Instrument makes (male),
salary $3.84 per diem, for duty at
the Naval Observatory, Washington,
D. C. AsshTtant In agricultural edu
cation (male), salary $1800 to $2,
500, to fill wacancies in the office of
Experiment stations, Washington,
D. C.
degrees and at least two years' suc
cessful experience In teaching, of
which one year must have been in
some training school of recognized
standing.
Special departments will be estab
lished from time to time as the need
for them may arise. Extension work
to be done by faculty members will
receive encouragement from tbe
board, but aside from receiving ex
penses the teachers who engage in it
will get no additional compensation.
Tbe regular departments which
have been created are:
English (this includes grammar,
rhetoric, literature, debating, etc.);
mathematics; physical science (che-
mlstry, physics, etc.); biological sci
ences (botany, xoology, physiology
and agriculture); Latin and other
ancient languages; German and oth
er modern languages; geography
(political, physical and Industrial,
etc.); history (civics, political and
social science); education (history
of, psychology, child study, etc.);
training of teachers (practice and
theory of education, physical educa
tion).
Members of the faculty at each
normal school will rank In this or
der: President, dean, professor, as
sociate professor, teacher and assist
ant. Salaries will be as follows:
Professor, or head of standard de-
partment, $140 to $200 per month;
assistant professor, $100 to $150;
teacher, $90 to $125; assistant, not
exceeding $90. Salaries will be in
creased regularly each year, $5 per
month being added until the maxi
mum Is reached. Teachers on leave
of absence will be paid the regular!
Kan cuts, give prices and descrlp-1 increase when they return, provided
Hons. And do constant advertising. I tDeX attend tome school approved by
1 would rather see a half-page ad ev-the president and the normal board.
cry week than two Daces once a I Lincoln Star.
THE TOWN CREED
By Nelson S. Darling
I BELIEVE IN ALLIANCE. I believe in her peo
ple, in her boys and in her girls. I will male
myself a committee of one to make of Alliance
a good place in which to live and a mighty hard
place to leave.
I BELIEVE IN ALLIANCE. I believe in her insti
tutions, in her schools, in her churches and in
her stores. 1 believe in the street broom and
street sweeper and in the paint pot. I believe
in ne'er an empty can on vacant lot or plot but
many a full one in the larder. Never again
will I throw waste paper or rubbish in the
street or alley. Never again will I spit on side
walk or on floor.
I BELIEVE IN ALLIANCE. I believe in trees,
God's first temples, grass instead of ash heaps,
and flowers instead of weeds. I will forget
jealousies if I have any and treat all people
with charity and consideration. May Qod blew
the tongue that gives honest praise and com
mendation and may lie doubly bless the ear that
is deaf to scandal and to gossip. If I cannot
speak good of my neighbor 1 will hold my peace.
When it costs me nothing, at least, I will spend
my money here, and by so doing leave a part of
the purchase price to circulate in the channels
where its equivalent in wealth was originally
ereated, to circulate and do good among tht
folks who are a part of the community of which
I am a part, in the place that I call home,
sweet home.
I BELIEVE IN ALLIANCE
ttitmtntmtrmmttttt nttttttttntnmttttrtttttttmtmt nt m
vote:
Adams 22
Antelope ... 13
Banner .... 2
Blaine 3
Boone 15
Box Butte . . 6
Boyd 8
Brown 6
Buffalo . k . . 22
Burt 11
Butler 19
Cass 21
Cedar 16
Chase 4
Cherry 12
Cheyenne ... 4
Clay 18
Colfax 11
Cuming .... 16
Custer 26
Dakota 7
Dawes 7
Dawson .... 17
Deuel 2
Dixon 9
Dodge 21
Dougles ... 131
Dundy 4
Fillmore ... 18
Franklin ... 12
Frontier .... 8
Furnas 14
Gage 27
Garden ....
Garfield .... 3
Gosper 6
Grant 2
Greeley .... 10
Hall 22
Hamilton ... 15
Harlan ..... 10
Hayes 3
Hitchcock . .
Holt 16
Hooker 2
Howard . ... 12
Total
Llngle 9:10
Barnes 9:41
Vt. Ijiramte :
Whalen 10:05
Arrive
Guernsey 10:20)
lleturn Trip
Leave P.M.
Guernsey
All passengers will hold regular
forms of transportation. Agent will
sell round trio tickets to a many ,
a possible in order to avoid congestion
r" ; at Guernsey the evening of July 4th.,
Jefferson .
Johnson . .
Kearney . ,
Keith
Keya Paha
Kimball .,
Knox 20
Lancaster ... 68
Lincoln '.... 12
15
10
11
4
31
21
McPherson
Madison
2
3
18
NEW ItOOKS FOK IJIMIAKY
MerHck .V.V. U ' i--,?l!!l,ur
Morrill .
Nance . .
Nemaha
Nuckolls
5
8
15
14
Otoe 20
Pawnee 11
Perkins 4
Phelps 11
Pierce 10
Platte 21
Polk 11
Red Willow.. 10
Richardson . . 21
Rock 4
Saline 20
Sarpy 10
Saunders ... 22
Scotts Bluff . . 6
Seward 17
Sheridan .... 7
Sherman .... 8
Sioux 5
Stanton 8
Thayer 16
Thomas 3
Thurston .... 9
Valley 9
Washington . 13
Wayne 9
Webster .... 13
Wheeler .... 3
York 20
1188
It is recommended that the county
conventions be held on Saturday, Ju
ly 25, at 2 p. m., at the county seat
towns where other arrangements are
not made by proper officials. It is
desired that all counties be repre
sented in th estate convention and to
this end the state committee suggests
that mass conventions be held in all
counties where a regular organiza
tion has not bee nmaintalned and
that at said mass convention a per
manent organization be perfected. In
view of the Importance of the forth
coming election and the fact that a
complete set of state and county of
ficlals are to be chosen in November,
it is urged that every believer in the
principles of the Peoples Independ
ent party make arrangements to at
tend tbe county and state conven
tions.
Delegates, friends and workers in
the cause of true reform are urged
to be with us at Hastings on the date
herewith given.
By order of the committee.
J. II. GROSVENOR. Ch'man.
. A. WALRATH. Sec.
auce Public Library
Mrs. Wilson, librarian at the Alli
ance public library, kindly furnishes!
Tbe Herald the following list oi ma
new books received and put on the
shelves this week:
Fiction
Dark HoUew Anna Katbrine Greed.
People's Man Phillips Oppenhelm.
Burbury Stoke William John Hop
kins.
Full of tbe Moon Caroline Lock
hart. Forrester's Daughter Hamblln Gar
land.
Diane of tbe Green Van Leona Dal
rymple.
Shea of the Irish Brigade Randall
Parrlsb.
Fortunate Youth William J. Locke.
Best Man Luts.
Flying U Ranch B. M. Bower.
Precipice Hlla W. Peattle.
Red Emerald John Reed Scott.
Intriguers Harold BlndlosB.
Bobby, General Manager Olive Uig-
gins Prouty.
Non-Fiction
Poems of Pleasure Ella Wbeeleff
Wilcox.
Poems of Sentiment Ella Wheelea
Wilcox.
Maurine.
Princess Malelnc
linck.
Complete Works of James Wbltcomty
Riley.
In Tune with the Infinite Ralaht
Waldo Trine.
What All the World's a-Seektng
Ralph Waldo Trine.
Juvenile
Adventures of Peter Cottontail
Thornton W. Burgess.
Adventures of Uncle Billy Possum-
Thornton W. Burgess.
Rolf in the Woods Ernest Thomp
son Seten.
Girls of rairmount Etta Authory;
Baker.
Cattle liaech to College Russell
Doubleekiy.
Beatrice Leigh at College Julia A.
Schwarta.
William ef West Point Hugh SL
Johnaoe.
THREE DAYS' MEETING:
fourth of July to be Celebrated with
Kellglous Service
Rev. W. H. Foster, who resides in
Alliance but preaches at Edgemont
and other South Dakota points, has
arranged for meetings in Alliance,
Friday night, Saturday and Sunday.
II r. Foster hands Tbe Herald the fol
lowing notice with request that It be
published:
There will be a union meeting
held for the promotion of Bible life
In the Christian church, commenc
ing July Jrd and running over the
Lord's day. Rev. H. Tore will be
la charge. All are Invited.
-Maurice Maeter
Wheat Crop
From a parts of the state cornea
report ol a record breaking wheat
crop. The twenty acres of wheat
planted ea the site reserved for a
tractor exhibit at the state fair
grounds Bum been harvested. A num
ber of the heads contained as hlgts
as 64 grataa. After making allow
ance for hedging In one portion of
the field M was estimated that the av
erage yleM could not fall below fortH
bushels. .
WW Inspect Fire Tracks I
Coanclhnan P. B. Romlg will leaf
Alliance aext Sunday for a two)
weeks' tst Inspecting the dlffereaSJ
makes el aato fire trucks. He will
visit Chicago, 8L Louis, anaas City
Denver aakl Paeblo, aad make st
thorough) twrestlgatloa of the differ
ent make.
The Alliance Herald SLCO fseag