We are Meeting Our Many Sandhill Friends at Alliance and Are Getting Better Acquainted Donahue-Randall & Company LIVE SALESMEN OF LIVE STOCK - ' ? v ' r , : .. - s i 5s . . .. . .v ' .'v ---1 ;'. ....;: v T. J. DONOHUE Steer Salesman iniiinmnti;tiiimiiitiitmiitii:;iti;t Each Member of the Firm an Active Salesman niiwiiiiiiiiiiinniiiniiHiiiiiiiiiiinmna ALLEN J. RANDALL Cow Salesman No shipment too large and none too small to receive our closest personal attention. and sold on its merits. Each consignment handled References: Our Manv Satisfied Sandhills Customers. Rooms 100-102 Exchange Building South Omaha Everything You Need. Our stock is comprised of everything that is used in build ing from a chicken coop to a twenty r-ooiu house, and we al ways have the stock on hand for you, so there need be no de lay. Furthermore you will find nothing here but selected and tested materials the only kind you want in your buildings. We want to figure on your bill, whether it be large or small, and we will make you a price that will please you. Come in any time we are always ready to serve you and we assure you courteous treatment and prompt service. We handle all kinds of Builders' Hardware Dierks Lumber & Coal Co. F. W. HARGARTEN, Manager. THE ALLIANCE HERALD LLOYD V. THOMAS, Business Malinger JOHN V. THOMAS, Kill tor HARVEY K. RHODES, City Editor! Published every Thursday by THfcE HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY Incorporated (Joyd C. Thomas, President J. Carl Thomas, Vice Pres. John V. Thomas, Secretary Entered at the post office at Alliance, Nebraska, for transmission through .he mails as second-cUs matter. SUBSCRIPTION PRICE. $1.50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE The REMINGTON ALWAYS LEADS ! Every time-tested feature has been incorporated in the Model 10 no detail of improvement has been over looked and we know we have done a pood turn to both our conscience and the buyer when we bell him a Rem ington. Anions the many features will be found the new tabulator and new ribbon mechanism; improved feed roll lock on the release lever, 'he new single escapement, which is much better; drop forced type bars, which need no guide to keep them in alignment, and last but not least, the incomparable strength and durability of the machine. Then there Is the Rem"ngton Junior Just the thing for the busy stockman who does not want to be bothered with a heavy machine. The Junior is compact, strong, and will do any kind of ordinary correspondence or man uscript work and the biggest feature is the price $50. Either of these machines will be shipped on approv al for 10 days, without obligation to buy on your part. Write to Denver ollice at 16;W l'haiiikii Street, or see i. A. Robinson, Alliance agent, phone Itlack 431, and let Ust demonstrate. VM. KKIMlF.IMF.lt, District Representative WORK! Work is the one universal panacea for every human ill. Service is the sole purpose of, and only rational reason for, human existence. To reflect, clearly, the design of its Creator, every human life must, in its turn, create. The Divine Spirit that animates humanity, alone, produces the vision, impulse, zest to serve, and desire for self-expression, is the controlling factor in life, its electricity, gas, yeast. The gauge of progress; the measure of accomplishment. Assuming, then, that every human life is a Dual Personality; that the spirit, or Divine part, is the real dominant permanent force in ex istence; that the material part, seemingly so real which we see, touch, work and play with is the most unreal thing in the world. "A mist, a dream, a pleasant hour, A bit of shifting Band, A smile, a word, a fading flower, Then, -vanished from the land." How tremendously important becomes the obligation to work, to serve, faithfully with our whole strength aud ability, lest when that husk we call the body, that apparently real but actually unreal part of our dual personality, "Shall fall, perchance, in some sad vale, Before another moon may wane, And friends, reluctant, tell the tale, 1, Of work undone, life lived in vain." j Get the mist out of your eyes; the cotton out of your ears; the , laggard out of your steps. Study the ideals the soul hangs up for your inspection; hear the music of the march of progress; see the sig i niticant signboard by the way. "york while the day lasts, for the ! night cometh when no man can work." Clothe your feet with Divine i impulse, and run, to execute with sureness, swiftness and fidelity, those designs which the great Architect of the Universe has commit ! ted to your charge. Then, when the twilight falls upon your brief day's work and the Human Husk drops into oblivion, be assured the Soul will move onward into "Statelier Mansions" and be assigned to Service in the execution of still greater designs. Ford Times. THE MAN HIS MONEY SAFE IT "PRUDE tT Nft ff lll sAT n mmmmm-. CZU ... Ik. Ill I I I 'X fir Vi I Y i i i&$Sl OJ2BANK Burglars have a way of finding out the house in which money is hidden. That's the burglar's business. The man that hides his money in the house or elsewhere is always in great danger of losing both his MONEY and his LITE. Hide your money in our bank, behind our thick walls and strong locks, and where men of known financial RESPONSI BILITY keep it safe for you. Make OUR bank YOUR bank. First State Bank ALLIANCE, NEBRASKA A POTATO MYSTEItY . Some of the "boys" forgot their i . .... : . . istars, and th's accounted in some de-1 tarload Shrinks !M IliM.Hs lie. ' Rree for lhe confusion. Hereafter. I tween lltMiiiiiuford and Lincoln 4. . . u i..irp. ... i Judge Iierry is confronted with a BelldlnK a convention, have a star mystery, which he decided is unsolv- mtt(le a foot ln diameter. for the ben able. It is simply this: 'How can a efit of the reCePtlon committee, carload of potatoes shrink 100 bush-, els in transit between ltenungiord j In addition to being an emcient ' and Lincoln?" eheriff, Gus Severs, of Furnas, is a Last November Ed Wildy, of Hem- i crack shot with either a rifle or shot-i innford, shipped a car load of spuds gun. lie attended the state shoot at i to Chone Mozer, a produce dealer at: North l'latte in May, and made an J Lincoln. In selling the potatoes Mr. i envious score during the three days. Mozer kept his sales tickets, and af-It Is Bald that he can sight an escap ter they had been disposed of, he ing prisoner a mile distant, and he found the weights about 100 bush-jean shoot such curves that from that els short. After some argument, i distance he can break the buttons on j r . ADVICE A HOLT VOI H EY E It is necessary that you know how to buy' glasses intelligently. It Is equally necessary to know where and from whom to liuy tiiem. Al ter nil experience of sev eral years, we have kept in close and active association with many people we have treated for eye defects, and have as yet to find one complaint due to inetlh lent work. The pror lenses, with correctly lilted mountings, are es sential to proper results. DRAKE & DRAKE Itegistered Optometrists BROKEN LENSES DUPLICATED Mozer brought suit against Wildy ; the prisoner's coat one at a time.' for the price of the 100 bushels, but This is a distinction to which few at the trial Wildy introduced his 'other officers in Nebraska can lay scale tickets which showed there was -claim. i no shortage when the potatoes were ' shipped. Likewise, Mozer introduc- Among the familiar faces we no-! , ed his sale tickets which showed the tlced that of E. A. Iiosslter, of Cher shortage. That's where the mystery i ry county, who makes frequent via- j comes in. The case was heard be-; its to Alliance ln the performance of, fore Judge Berry Monday, but owing hia duty. For that reason he felt a1 ;to the evidence, he withheld his de-1 little more at home at the convention, iclslon until Tuesday morning, whenlthan did most of the other 'boys . It on" Mr. Cox considerably. The home man is putting forth every ef fort to add weight, and it la thought that by the time of next year's con vention he will have succeeded in putting the Webster county officer ln the shade. , he decided there was no cause for action and dismissed the case. I Koum Forms of Rheumatism Curable Rhe imatism Is a disease charac terlied by pains In the Joints and in the muscles. The most common forms are: Acute and Chronic Rheu matism, Rheumatic Headaches, Scia tic Rheumatism and Lumbago. All of these type can be helped absol utely by applying some good liniment that penetrates. An application of Regarding the Sheriffs It was a queer co-incidence. the officers looked Just like human j beings. The reception committee, Sloan's Liniment two or three times which met the trains, often made a day to the affected part will give .blunders, and sometimes picked out Instant relief. Sloan's Liniment lt common citizens, asking them If they! est solicitation of his friends. If it wasn't for his carrying an of flclal looking countenance all the time, he would be a pretty good look-, lng fellow. However, uossuer or- but ncial countenance was replaced by one of extreme agony and despair Tuesday afternoon when he sat down In the electrically charged chair in front of the Reo garage, at the earn- John Nelson is the oldest in point of service that attended the conven tion. He is now serving his sixth consecutive term for Nelson county. Next comes O. D. Hedge, of Webster county, with five terms. Even our own sheriff ranks up with the ma jority, this being his third term. good for pain, and especially Rheu matic Tain, because it penetrates tt the seat of the trouble, soo'.hes the afflicted part and draws the pain "Sloan's Liniment Is all medicine.' Get a 25c bottle now. Keep It hand) In case of emergency. were "sheriffs . one man wtio thought some one was trying to play a joke on him got a bit It has always been thought that sore" when'Cal Cox. Box Butte county's guard- asked the question, and responded in lan. was the largest In avoirdupois a surly tone of voice. "No. I'm not a In the state. But this Is not the sheriff." and walked on through the case; the honor belonirs to O. D. donot in a very f.l'gnant rner. I!?ir. f ro-.v;'. "Uo "Y J. F. Wilson, of Custer county, was made the "goat" Wednesday ev ening when a number of the other visiting sheriffs decided he needed a tonic. He was kept away from the carnival grounds all day, and In the evening was taken on the "Trip to Mars". He was unacquainted with the nature of the device, and when he went down the slide and came . .. p'.e on the "White Way" he waa ereatlv embarrassed, and was of the opinion that some people carry a Joke too tar. Are You Rheumatic? try Sloau's If you Want Olllrk and real relief from Rheumatism, do what so many inousana otner people are doing whenever an attack comes on, bathe the sore muscle or Joint with Sloan's Liniment. No need to rub it ln lust apply the Liniment to the sur face. It is wonderfully penetrating. It goes right to the seat of trouble and draws the pain almost immedi ately. Get a bottle of Sloan'a Lini ment for 25c of any druggist and have It ln the house against Colds, Sore and Swollen Joints, Lumbago, Sciatica and like ailments. Yout money back If not satisfied, but does give almost instant relief. No. 1 Adv 5265 it OT F T ttts t ...j . ti, rnld ,u'. Iive ents r bundle.