I THE "PRUDENT MAN- TAKES NO LONG SSi III I X l I i a W y V TV .1 t.L.V a ,fKM , HE .. !' ) HIS MMmMmpAFE in ms&wJm the wMmmmm BANK MM ,M;i ijil i When making an investment it is absolutely FOOLISH for a man to send his money a long way oft and trust it to some body who has not good enough standing at home to sell his get-rich-quick schemes THERE. When he invests at home and WATCHES what he does, a man often gets "plucked". We will cheerfully give you our opinion on investments at any time. We may save you a loss. Make OUR bank YOUR bank First State Bank ALLIANCE, NEBRASKA Reo Garage Moved We are now located in our new home, having moved this week from the Norton block at 116 Box Butte to the ricCorkle Building: On W,st Third Street formerly occupied by the Koeler-Coursey company. The new location gives us more room and better facilities, and better enables us to attend to your wants. A new lathe has been added, and other improvements will be made from time to time. Prompt Service Careful Workmanship RSO GARAGE Nicolai & Eaton ILER GRAND HOTEL 16th and Howard Streets OMAHA, NEBR. All Stockmen know this Hotel Most of them stop with us Well Located Always Comfortable South Omaha Cars Pass Our Door BATES: $1.00 to $2.00 Single; 75 cts. to $1.50 Double Try us once under the new management You will come again Harry Ryan still in charge of the Bar Popular Priced Cafe P. W. MiKESELL, Prop. A half dozen fine Bone Tipped Corn Cob Pipes, symbols of the comfort we furnish, mailed to you FREE OF ALL CHARGE, if you send us this add with your address Hemingford Department Frank Nagloschneider had the mis fortune to be k Irked by a horse, re ceiving a broken log. Mrs. A. O. D.wlg and son Clarence were llenilngford visitors Tuesday. Mrs. Ira Holand experienced an ex citing buggy ride on her way to town Saturday. The team she was driv ing became frightened and ran away. None were hurt but the buggy was demolished. Quite a number of Hemingford people accepted Invitations to Mr. Kuester's, Saturday evening. Mr. and Mrs. Keusler have J list furnish ed a new limine and extend a cordial invitation to all their friends to par take of their hospitality. The even ing was spent In dancing, and at midnight a lunch was served, after which the guests departed, wishing the Keuster family all success and long to enjoy the home they havo worked bo hard to prepare. Walter Marshall and Blanche Ken nedy were married In Alliance Monday. Howard Young, who has been working for hiB brother George the A New Roof must be put on the houso or barn this spring. The old shingles can not withstand the sun aud storm an other season. If this Job is not to be' done over again for at least ten years you bei ter use OUR Shingles They are good for that length ot time, anyway, and perhaps longer. At a lower price we can sell you shingles not quite so good. Lumber, too, for repairs about the place. Dierks Lumber Co. past month, returned to his home stead near 1'awlett, Tuesday. Mrs. V. K. MoClung arrived from Lyons, Nebr., where she has spent some time visiting. Mr. and Mrs. E. 12. Franzcn, Mrs. 11. U. Shepherd, L. Sanipy and A. 11. Mabln autoed out to John Sampy'B, Sunday. Mrs. Ira (Irilllth or Johnstown 1b visiting her uncle, Brady Fenner. Frank Bartos was In from the farm Tuesday. Barney Sin pherd and C. U. Can field returned front a trip in the southeast end of the county. The lecture by David V. Bush at the- M. K. church was well attended Sunday eve. Revival meetings will begin Sun day at the Methodist church. Itev. N. O. l'almer, pastor, will conduct the series of meetings. Paul Thom as, of Alliance, will have charge of the music. A general invitation Is extended to all who can to attend these services. SYDNEY TOOK GAME Squad of Veteran Came up and Trimmed Alliance Hoys Score, 27 to O Alliance lost the second football game played this season, but the boys have no reason to feel discour aged, as they went up against a pret ty stiff proposition when they tackled the bunch that came up from Sidney last Friday. Several of the members of the visiting team were old veterans of the game, and they showed it as soon aa they came onto the field. Among them were Strand, who play ed with Cottier four years; Dunlap, a Hastings half-back of former years, Swanson and liixby, both of whom are former football stars. Had the team been composed of students of the Sidney high school, there Is not much doubt but that the local eleven would have taken the honors, but at the same time they re ceived some good practice Friday that will stand them in good stead when they play their next game. The 11 boys pulled oft Beveral good among them a well-executed pass which gained them thirty yards. The game was a fast one through out, and at no time until the very last was the game assured in Sidney's favor. The next game 1b with Scottsbluff tomorrow, and the boys expect to make the trip overland in automobiles. There was a good sized crowd at lat Frlday'B game, and it Ib probable that a number of "root ers" will go to the Bluffs tomorrow to assist the boys. Subscribe for The Herald $1.50 per year. BSMHnBsf &LW.C The Pleasure of Reading by artificial light is denied many people on account of im perfect vision, or of wearing the wrong glasses. You may seem to suffer no inconvenience by reading in the day time, but find it difficult to read, or do fancy work, under artificial light. If you suffer this incon venience you are injuring your eyes every day you put off com ing HERE. DRAKE & DRAKE Registered Optometrist Over Lotspelch's Variety Store A Full Stock of L u m ber Since our large new shed was com pleted we have made many additions to our stock, and vye now feel safe in saying that we can supply anything you want in building material. Hememher -no lumber bill is too small nor no bill Is too large for our attention. We take the same pains with the small buyer ati we do the large one, and we give both the best lumber that money ran buy. LET US SHOW YOU (iKOlUiE A. H FILM AN, Mgr. PHOXE 73 Hundred! of Boys and Girls from all over the Country. Including THE GREAT NORTHWEST, eeme to us each year for business training. Write for our beautiful catalog NEBRASKA SCHOOL OF BUSINESS Lincoln, Nebraska THE ROOMING HOUSE OP ALLIANCE, NEBRASKA COMPORT WITHOUT EXTRAVAGANCE 47-ATLAS ROOMS-47 Per Day, 60c and Up. F. L. SMITH. Proprietor RATES: Per Week, (2.00, $2.50 and $S.SO Every Woman Should Know There are three entirely dif ferent kinds of baking powder, namely: (1) Cream of tartar, derived from grapes ; (2) Alum, a mineral aold; and (3) Phosphate of Lime. (1) Baking Powders mado of Cream of Tartar add to the food the same healthful qualities that exist In the ripe grapes from vhich Cream of Tartar is derived. (2) Baking Powders made of Alum add to the food some form of Alum or Aluminum, a heavy metal, wholly foreign to any natural article of food. (3) Phosphate of Lime is made from rock or by burning bones which by chemical action are changed into a white, powdered acid. It is used in baking powder only because it is a cheaper substitute. A Cream of Tartar powder never contains Alum or Phosphate. Every housekeeper should read the names of the Ingredients printed on the label and know what she is using. DR. PRICE'S CREAM BAKING POWDER Made from Cream of Tartar WHAT SPACE TO USE Trade Paper DIscushch Relative Mer ita of Iargo and of Small Advertising SNK'e One of the principal questions that cornea to an advertiBer'B rulnd when he inserts an advertisement in bis local paper is, "How much space shall I use?" Both the large and the small spaces have their inertia, de pending to a great extent on market conditions, the advertised goods, and the bargaln-Bnle argument. The Omaha Trade Exhibit briefly dis cusses the space question In the fol lowing: Is it better to use a quarter page four times or a full page once? Of course you will say that it all depend a and bo It does, but Just as an abstract proposition it has been proven by psychological experiments that the quarter page ad with its four time repetition attracts more atten tion and creates a more lasting Im pression than the full page ad run once. But it has alBo been proven that there are various other things to take Into consideration that may cause that rule to fail. It has been proven that a full page space carries more weight of prestige than the smaller space, and the dou ble page space is Bometimes vorth its cost merely for Its attention, power and the implication that the Arm or store using it has a proposition worth the outlay. There are bo many things to con sider in getting one'B money's werth from advertising that it sometimes seems dlstouraglng, but when we consider the power of good advertls ing in business building and the waste In poor advertising, it makes all the study the subject requires am ply worth while. 8 T. S. Fielding The Wardrobe The only odorless cleaning in the City. We have the only power machinery in Alliance for the cleaning of clothes none of that odor found in hand cleaning. The price is no higher. Try us and be convinced. 315 Box Butte A ve. Phone 682 such a way that their auditing Is ln possible. Pi the wording of the re port. From June, 1911, to Febrw- ury, 1912. the first eight months of the school, the cash book was kept In a couple of stenographer's not books and the cash book which has been in use Blnce that time hat no page numbers. The books show a balance of $2,810 on hand on Sep tember 1 of this year, but vouchers for four years back will have to be checked over before it can be ascer tained if the amount is correct. PERU NORMAL NOTES SPUD CELLARS PROGRESS Alliance, Hemingford and Maryland I tranc he Will Hoon He Com pleted ami In I'xe W. U. RusRom, who has charge of the construction work on the potato cellars being built at Alliance and Hemingford by the Miller company, of Chicago, says both are nearlng completion, and that they will be in use in a abort time. An oflice and sorting room is be ing built over the Alliance cellar, but at Hemingford the oflice is located up in town. The capacity of the cellars in both places is about the same. At the present time the spuds are being loaded directly on the cars, and they are coming in fast at both stations. Farmers all over this part of the country are more than pleased at the start the Miller people have made, and next year will go after their po tato crop with more optimism. Part for Sufferers Pain results from Injury or con gestion. De it neuralgia, rheuma tism, lumbago, neuritis, toothache, sprain, bruise, sore stiff muscles or whatever pain you have yields to Sloan's Liniment brings new fresh blood, dissolves the congestion, re lieves the Injury, the circulation is free and your pain leaves aa If by magic. The nature of its qualities penetrate immediately to the Bore spot. Don't keep on suffering. Get a bottle of Sloan's Liniment. Use it. It means instant relief. Price 25c and 50c. $1 bottle holds six times as much as the 25c size. Peru, Nebr., Nov. 3 Prof. C. H. Heard, of the Department of Biolo gy, haB accepted a pos itlon as assist ant professor in the Department -ef Horticulture of the University ot Ar kansas. Ills time will be equally di vided between teaching and research work along promological lines. He will probably continue his work la Peru until the close of the semester. Ills successor haB not yu been elected. Dean Mattle C. Ellis was guest ef honor at the meeting of the Omaha Peru Club Friday evening. Miss ta ils brought before the club the pro posed plan of establishing a studnat hospital in Peru, to be known as Lb Eliza C. Morgan Health Home. This movement is being agitated by the Alumni Association In view of ta fact that it is their desire to e tct some memorial to Eliza C. Morpaa, and since such a mea orial would of untold benefit to future Btudcnts of Peru. The Normal is proud of the new stereopticon which has been instated in the lecture room in the Depart ment of Geography. A movement la well under way toward the purcl xs lng of a moving picture attachmi nt. The lantern has already proved it ."If an invaluable addition to the gen ral equlpmeut of the school. The annual Peru banquet wll! be held in the Home hotel, Omaha, ;. ' o'clock, Thursday eveiiln:;, Ncven i.ir 4. Letters announcing this reus: co have been sent to the two thousi- 'I. two hundred and ninety-; jur alu tii together with a news letter 1 au President Hayes concerning the arl ous Improvements upon the can ius and the genorol activities of the school. Friday afternoon a lai Ke and ' n- thusiastic crowd witnodseu one of the most spectacular gar es of foo. ball ever played on the home fiold, -iad Tarkis College went down to ddeat at the hands of the Peru Normal, the final score being 40 to 14. The halt ing team resorted to the forward pass time after time, but succeeded only five times out of fifteen an l for a total gain of only seventy-five yards. Two of these passes were In tercepted by Houston of Peru, onoe for a seventy-yard run, and onc for a fifty-five yard gain. Meents uti Craig also made gains easily witness ed from the bleachers, Craig starring in a thirty-five yard drop kick. While the work of the other men in the line was not so spectacular, much credit is due them for the manner In which they filled their various posi tions. Miss Lulu Sturgeon will spend the short vacation with her friend Miss Jimengarde Dender, at the tatter's home, in Sutton, Nebr. NORMAL SYSTEM LAX State Accountant Bays Stenographers' Hooks I' Red for Cah Items at CTiadron Normal That the books kept at the State Normal school at Chadron resemble a butcher's block book, is the report of State Accountant DeFrance In his showing made to the governor after inspecting the Chadron Normal. Heware of Cheap Substitutes In the .e days of keen compotltioa it is Important that the public should see that they get Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and not take substi tutes sold for the sake of extra profit. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy has stood the test and been approved for more than forty years. Obtainable everywhere. Knapp Got Spreader For the sum of $86 P. J. Knapa last week purchased an Internation al spreader from the Rheln-Rousey company. The regular price of the spreader is $135. It was sold by sealed bids, which were opened Sat urday night promptly at 6 o'clock. This was Rheln-Rousey's principal bargain for Market Week, and Mr. Knapp admits that he got a "real "The books have been kept In 1 oue".