The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, October 21, 1915, Image 5

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Brand Ca
Goods
This brand of canned goods is of
the highest grade of goods on the
market. The fruits are in a 40
degree granulated sugar syrup
put in lacquer lined cans which
assures the most sanitary food
products to be procured for par
ticular people.
Look at the prices of this brand of goods as quoted
below and you can sec that they are but very little more
expensive than the cheaper grades of which we carry a
full assortment.
California fruits in No. 2Vfc lacquer lined cans sell in
the regular retail way for 35c a can. The following
prices are for dozen lots all of one kind (or assorted doz
ens :
Apricots in halves, dozen ..$3.10
White Cherries, dozen - $4.25
Black Cherries, dozen $4.15
Sliced Pineapple, dozen $3.05
Bartlett Pears, dozen $3.80
Yellow Free Peaches, dozen $2.90
Lemon. Cling Peaches, sliced, dozen $3.25
Plums, dozen $2.80
Logan Berries, dozen $3.00
Small fruits in 40 degree syrup in No. 2 cans that sell
regular for 30c a can, in dozen lots of any one kind or as
sorted dozens, at the following prices. You eau't afford
to overlook these:
Blackberries, dozen $2.75
Red Raspberries, dozen $3.30
Black Raspberries, dozen $3.15
Red Pitted Cherries, dozen .,. $3.55
Strawberries, dozen - - $3.40
Don't forget that we have two other grades of fruit
for less money.
L. H. HIGHLAND
Phone 56
Week
Is to be one of the events of the
year, and you cannot afford to
miss attending this celebration of
the bountiful harvest of Box Butte
county, and while taking in this
you should take advantage of
the opportunity to look at our
stock of Groceries, Queensware,
Glassware, Toilet Soaps, and the
best line of Candies in the city.
You will asknowledge after going through our store
that you have seen one of the cleanest, freshest and the
most complete assortment of goods handled in our line in
northwest Nebraska.
We are going to offer some special bargains this week
and prices published here are good for the entire week or
until the stock on hand is sold out. There, will be other
special items on sale not published here so it will pay you
to watch our windows, as well as to look inside for some
thing special. Bear in mind that every article offered
here, or that may be put on sale during the entire week,
will be fully guaranteed by us in every detail.
QUEENSWARE
We have an exceptionally large stock of the follow
ing goods that were shipped us by mistake, and the fac
tory says to sell them, rather than pay freight both ways
on this heavy ware: '
Plain Cups and Saucers, with handle, sell regular at
$1.30 a dozen, special for this week, dozen ,. $1.00
Plain 7 in. Plates', regidar $1.30 a dozen, special, doz. $1.00
Light weight 7 in. Plates that sell for $1.30 a dozen
will go at, a dozen ... $1.00
Light weight .r in. Plates, sell for $1.00 a dozen, a '
bargain, at, per dozen 80c
Three-quart Water Pitchers, pure white, a 65c article
for 50c
uiassware
Has all of the high qualities of
cut glass and is more durable and
not so expensive. It will give
your table the finished appearance
that will be pleasing to the most
particular.
Wc arc going to make some exceptional priees on this
line of goods for Market Week, and you will find it to
your interest to study the following list of goods and the
prices below :
THREE DISTINCTIVE PATTERNS OF .TUMBLERS
Regular price $2.00 a doz., special, doj'.en .... $1.60
SIX DISTINCTIVE PATTERNS OF TUMBLERS
Regular $2.00 a doz., special $1.60
One pattern, regular $I.C0 a doz., special $1.20
One pattern regular $1.20 a doz., special .: 90c
SHERBET GLASSES
Tall footed, regular $3.(K) doz., special, doz , $2.40
Medium footed, regular $2.40 doz., special, doz. . $1.95
Low footed, regular $1.80 doz., special, doz. $1.45
Low footed, regular $1.60 doz., special, doz. t $1.20
THREE PATTERNS SAUCE DISHES
Regular $1.80 a dozen, special, per dozen $1.35
ONE PATTERN SAUCE DISHES
Regular $1.60 a dozen, speeial, dozen $1.20
TWO PATTERNS CUSTARD CUPS
Regular $1.60 dozen, special, dozen $1.30
PITCHERS
Two patterns, regular $1.00, special, each 75c
Three patterns, regular $1.25, special, each 95c
Two patterns, regular 7.rc, speeial, each 60c
One pattern, regular $1.35, special $1.10
CREAM AND SUGAR SETS
Regular $1.35 Set for , $1.10
Regidar $1.10 Set for 85c
Regular 55c Set for '.. 45c
L. H HIGHLAND
Phone 56
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BECOME
AN EXPERT AUTOMOBILIST
BY ATTENDING THE
AMERICAN
Automobile College
2059 Farnam Street
OMAHA, NEBRASKA
You can soon become expert under the instruction of our
able teachers. It will pay you well, whether you wish to be
come a professional chauffeur or handle only your own car.
No dealer is properly equipped for his business without thus
instruction.
We do auto repairing and rebuilding, self starter repair
ing, etc., giving students practical knowledge under the in
struction of experts "who know how to tach others.
Write at once for further information, which will be glad
ly given free upon request.
nmmnnnmtttnnfflm
REPORT OF CITY SCHOOLS
Nebraska Tent & Awning Co.
TENTS
and
Stack Covers
at living prices
If your dealer does not handle them write direct to us.
AWNINGS for Stores or Residences
All goods guaranteed as represented or money refunded
709 So. 16th St., Omaha, Nebr.
Keud for Price List No. 10.
Submitted to u ll Mini of Kducutioii
by Superintendent I'ate for
the Vt-ar 11 1-15
Superintendent of Schools W. It.
Tate has liled his animal report of
schools for the school year 1914-15
with the board of education; and
from this report many interesting
facts in connection with the school
work for last year are gleaned.
The. school census for 191T shows
a total of 1413, of which 715 are
boys, and 698 are girls. The total
enrollment for 1914-15 was 945, of
which 765 were in the grades, and
180 in the high school. The enroll
ment for 1914-15 is the largest on
record, which niakes it the largest
since the school district was organiz
ed. This was due to the large in
crease in the high school, as the
grade enrollment was less in 19 lu
ll, although greater for any other
year. The average daily attendance
was 729 575 in the grades, and 154
in tliu hign school, which is also
greater than ever before. The total
disbursements for 1914-15 were $30
939.43. Cost of Schools IVr I'll i I
Cost per pupil on enrollment .$32.62
Coat per pupil, average attend
ance 4 2
Cost per pupil for books
Cost per pupil for pupils' and
teachers' supplies 1
Cost for books and supplies . . 1.98
For the purpose of comparison it
will be interesting to note thsit Ihe
cost of education per pupil on enroll
ment in Nebraska, including the
country schools, many of which are
in session much less than nine
months during (he year, is $30.11
per year and the cost per pupil on
the average daily attendance is $10.
54. Manual Training
The permanent equipment of the
shop prior to 1914-15 was $911.30.
Additional permanent equipment
amounting to $12.40 has been added,
making the present value of the per
manent equipment $923.70.
KXPKMUTrilKS:
(leneral supplies lumber,
glue, stain, etc $318 68
Permanent equipment 12.40
Material on hand, beginning of
year 82 50
Hundreds of Boys and Girls from all over the Country, Including
u THK GKKAT XOItl IIWKST,
feme to us each year for business training. Write for cur beautiful catalog
NEBRASKA SCHOOL OF BUSINESS
Lincoln, Nebraska
.44
.79
.19
Total $413.58
RECEIPTS:
Amount collected from grades 40.10
Amount collected from H. S. . . 88.15
Amount due from district ar
ticles made for dist 99.71
Value of pieces awarded as
prizes 300
Pieces left by boys unable to
pay 4.00
Material on hand nails, etc.. 8.00
Lumber on band 40.00
Non-saleable pieces 15.00
Total receipts $308.00
Total cobI of department . 105.68
Equipment and cost of repairs 16.40
Net cost for department 89.18
Cost per pupil on enrollment. .67
The increased expense this year
over last year is due to the fact that
all lumber iiad to be purchased,
while last year the lumber from the
partitions built after Central tire
were used; also to the fact that forty
more students were enrolled in the
department this year than last year.
The articles made in the shop for
school use during the .year are as
follows:
3 oak tables for Agriculture
room $31.50
2 pine tables for sewing room. 10.20
1 music cabinet for orchestra
music 3.40
1 teacher's desk and filing cab
inet Agriculture room .... 7.95
1 filing cabinet for superintend-
cut's oflice 11.90
6 drafting boards 2.10
2 shelves in assembly room,
high school 1.44
1 tiling cabinet for manual train
ing shop 2.27
3 music staff liners 30
3 large drafting instruments
drawing class 40
liook shelf and brackets for
shop 4 0
Dook rack for shop .30
Corn judging box for agricul
ture 50
Movable tool rack for shop . . 2.7 5
Shelf for Agrie. room 1.00
Table for typewriter room . . 2.95
Paper rack for assembly room .40
Heading table for assem. room 1.55
Pedestal for Lincoln statue .. 1.00
Hook stand, recitation room . . .40
Oak for Emerson swings .... 2.90
Teacher's desk, oak, at shop . . 7.75
Lumber on walls for exhibit
purposes 2.50
Hack for rakes and hoes in ag
riculture room 35
6 doz. garden stakes and nirak-
ers 2 .50
every child In the district legally re
quired to be in school was in school.
The number of non-residents in the
high school was greater than ever
before, 40 from outside the district
enrolling during the year, and the
revenue from this source alone if all
collected would amount to $940.35.
water, which bus been "Invented" iu
dry territory. They do say that It
has a kick stronger than any white
mule that ever lived. This puts the
, "squirrel" variety completely out of
I business.
Deafness Cannot lie Curt!
by local applications, as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
There is only one way to cure deaf
ness, and that is by constitutional
remedies. Deafness is caused by an
inflamed condition of the mucous lin
ing of the Eustachian Tube. When
this tube is inllamed you have a rum
bling sound or Imperfect hearing,
and when it is entirely closed, deaf
ness is the result, and unless the In
flammation ran bo taken out and this
tube restored to Its normal condition,
hearing will be destroyed forever;
nine cases out of ten are caused by
Catarrh, which Is nothing but an In
flamed condition of the mucous sur
faces. We will give One Hundred Dollars
for any case of Deaf nees . (caused by
catarrh) that cannot be cured by
Hull's fiiturrh fnrA fnr rlr.
- "-
cutars, tree.
V. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, O.
Sold by druggists, 7 5c.
Take Hall's Family Pills for eon-
j stipation.
In pursuance of Mr. Iiryan'S peace-at-any-price
policy, a toast of grape
Juice was drunk at his and Mrs. Bry
an's thirty-lirst wedding anniversary,
at a banquet held In his honor at
Hot Springs, Ark., the other day. Un
der the circumstances we wonder
that it was not soothing syrup.
A man has to have a pretty fat
bank account to say "I seen" and get
i away with it, but it has been in our
best circles right here in Alliance.
An old girl on the watch for the
Iist Chance can dress to fool a nian
but not a woman.
Men are a lot like dogs. They are
always staying out at nights when
they have no business out; they are
always barking at nothing and they
are always slicking their noses into.
j other, men's business.
The obi man often gets in bad by
telling mother she is as pretty as a.
picture.
I
3E3C
1
u Dusty's Dabblings
U II ir ir u in ill
Total $99.71
Domestic Science IH-partiiient
Com of permanent equipment
prior to 1914-15 '..$439.75
Additional equipment (range ,
to displace stove) 5.00
Tables and table equipment
purchased by department . 20.00
Miss Margaret K. Menzel. of Leip
sic, Germany, came from that place
' to Lincoln last week to marry Wil
liam P. He in pel. Did she think she
I w. getting away from ttie war one?
I r
A man In Gait, Ontario, lias in
vented a storage battery that can be
,' used In conjunction with gasoline
; automobiles. The battery rechargeH
las the auto runs, and when necessary
will furnish the power for twenty
I miles. It Is rumored that Fords will
I soon be equipped with this battery so
they can run on it Instead of their
. rcputat ion.
A man i.-ni't afraid of anybody but
hi wife, and his wife isn't afraid of
anybody but the neighbors.
If we ever get Into a war a lot of
those who yell the loudest now for
trouble will suddenly decide that
their duty lies at home helping with
i he family washing.
' If some husbands would try to kiss
i heir wives after all these years, said
wives would wonder where he had
been getting the habit, and there
would be a family row.
Total value of equipment
to date $464.75
Total cost of supplies for year 7n..r)2
Cost per mouth 7.83
Cost per pupil per month . . . .40
Coat per pupil per day 02
Total cost of department to
school district 7 5.52
Supplies 70.52
Equipment 5.00
Sewing
Cost of permanent equipment
prior to 1914-15 55.38
No equipment purchased, and no
expense to department during 1914-
1915.
School Work Satisfactory
The school work during the past
year was very satisfactory. There
was little sickness and no epidemic
to interfere with the school attend
ance. The compulsory law was en
forced as usual and so far as known
From a report of the dog show
which was held in Karats City last
week we learn that there are 286
kinds of dogs on record. Judging
from the caninic noises in Alliance
that occur about every other night
we had come to the conclusion (with
ja lot of other neighbors) that there
were 286.000 kinds.
At Sedalia, Mo., during the Mis
souri state fair latt week, a man and
woman were suspended iu the air
half an hour when the parachute re
fused to cut loose. This isn't the
lirst instance where a. man or woman
hi's been "up in the air" and for a
eoiisiiieiable longer period than a
lu.lf an hour.
And now comes a substitute for
whiskey in the form of corn meal,
cayenne pfpper, ginger, and rain
If a baby is pretty and smart it
takes after its mother's folks; if it's
homely and ignorant it takes after
its father's folks in a number of
ways.
STOP CATARRH! OPEN i
? NOSTRILS AND HEAD j
I Says Cream Applied in Nostrils f
t Relieves Head-Colds at Once. I
...... . . . . I
If jour iiostriU are cloggvd and your
liead it stuflYd arid you can't breath
.re ly because of a 1.1 or catarrh, just
-t a Kitiall buttle of KR'h Cream lUlnt
at any drug store. Apply a little of
tli is fragrant, antUcptic cream itvto
yeiir nostrils and let it penctritUi
' hrougii evvry air passage of your heL
aiMithiug and healing the in limned, swol
len mucous membrane and you get in--ttutt
relief.
Ah! how gotd it feel. Your ni
trils are it, your head is clear, an
mure hawking, snuffling, blowing; uu
more headache, Jrynes or struglint;
for breath. l'.ly'a Cream Halm is just,
what sulfcrfrs from head cold aud c
tarrli ied. It's a delight.