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About The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922 | View Entire Issue (April 27, 1916)
't H warded GOLD MEDAL ml World Iwnttnltion Ma F ranciaoo Sciential man Itm White Light rmmremt to day llohl In color Costs You Nothing to have this wonderful new Aladdin coal cil (kerosene) mantle lamp demonstrated right in your own home. You don't need to pay us a cent unless you are perfectly satisfied and agree that it is the best oil lamp you ever saw. Twice the Light On Half the Oil Recent tests by the Government and noted rcientists at 35 leading Universities, prove the Aladdin gives more than twice the light and burns less than half as much oil as the best round wick, ooen flame lamps on the market. Thus the Aladdin will pay for iiaelf many times over in oil saved, to say nothing of the Increased quantity and quality of pure white light it produces. A style for every need. $1000.00 Will Be Given by the Mantle Lamp Company the larg est Coal Oil (kerosene) mantle lamp house in the world to any person who shows them an oil lamp equal to the Aladdin. Would they dare invite such comparison with all other lights if there were any doubt about the superiority of the Aladdin? Let Us Call and Show You This Greatest of all Lights Perry Mailey Alliance, Nebr. Stock and Supply Tanks MORE NEW HOMESTEADS 2,(Kl.-.MH) Awn l.ljtiuttMl littler Knlargt'ri Homestead Art In Month of Mflrili Secretary Lane announces that during tho month of March 2,065, 000 acres were designated under the enlarged-honienlead act, which per mits homesteads of 320 acres. Un der this act It is possible for an pu tt yman who has already entered 160 acres under the old homestead law to also acquire an additional 160 acres. The lands thus made available for these larger homesteads have all been passed upon by the ecological Survey as non-irrigable but a consid erable proportion have already been patented, entered .or filed on: in fact It is the practice of the Interior De partment to consider applications or petitions for the opening up of spe cific tracts of land under the enlarged-homestead act, in which case the applicant has the first right to file on the land. To determine what par ticular section, township or range In any land district is not already filed on necessitates an examination of the rtact books at the local land office. IN MONTANA there were 84,000 acres, opened to entry as above stat ed, including some tracts free from any claims. Of this 69,000 acres are in Cascade county, over 10.000 acres in Teton county and nearly 4.500 ac res in Chouteau county. IN OREGON. 120 acres were so designated in Grant county. IN SOUTH DAKOTA. 1,290,000 acres in the central and western parts of the state were opened to en try, of which 187,000 acres are lo cated in Meade county, 126,000 ac res In Pennington county, 60,000 ac res in Lyman, 50,000 acres in Per kins, 29,000 acres in Tripp, and 23, 000 acres In Gregory. The other South Dakota area opened to entry In 320-acre tracts includes about three-quarters of a million acres, sit uated In Washabaugh and Shannon counties, of unallotted lands In the Pine Uldge Indian reservation. These were opened to general settlement In 1911. IN WYOMING, 675,000 acres were opened to entry under the enlarged homestead act, as follows: In Natro na county, 147,000 acres, in Johnson county, 100,000 acres, Hot Springs county, 80,000 acres, Albany county. 55,000 acres, Platte county, 52,000 acres, Converse county, 47,000 acres and oGshen county, 32,000 acres. The total area that has been desig nated as non-irrigable and subject to entry under the enlarged-homestead act Is now over 257,000,000 acres. Will outlast several steel tanks ot several tanks made from other ma terlal, and cost less money. These tanks will keep the water cooler 11 summer and warmer In winter. Send for price list today. ATLAS TANK MFG. COMPANY. Fred Bolsen, Manager, 1 102 W. O. W. Bldg., Omaha, Neb. ALL WHOM) 'llie Mistake is Made by Many Alli ance Citizens Look for the cause of backache. To be cured you must know the cause. If it's weak kidneys You must set the kidneys working right. A resident of this vicinity shows , you how. T . - - I - t ; . i Ai 1. .1 x . . I. .. rjugene rv. r ihiht, i inturuii. cui says: "For twenty years kidney trou ble kept me In misery, being caused by heavy lifting. My back was ex trpmplv nn infill seclallv when I ; stooped or lifted and in the morning ' when I got up. I was lame and sore. I often had headaches and dizzy Fpells and I was always languid and tired. At night I had to get up to ' pass the kidney secretions and this j weakness convinced me that some ' thing was wrong with my kidneys, j Two boxes of Doan's Kidney Pills cured me and during the past three years, I haven t naa a sign oi uie trouble." Price 50c. at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the Banie that cured Mr. Fisher. Foster-Mil-burn Co., Props., Buffalo, N. Y. Tinner MKTAL WOKK lira zing We do all kinds of tinning, repair ing and metal work. Radiators and aluminum crank cases a spec ialty. W. K. HAG AX The Tinner With Rhein-Rousey Co. Phones: 98 Res., 695 Legal Blanks for Sale at This Office The Imperial Orchestra MILT H. WHALEY and II. A. DUBUQUE. Managers High Class Concert and Dance Work Price on M embers of Application A. F. of M NOT BY EMPLOYES ltailriari Employes llrotherhooris ( lalm That Increased Operating Costs Not Caused by Them Cleveland, Ohio, April 26 The publicity bureau of the railway em ployes brothernrods haf issued the following statement: Any advances in operating costs of the railroads have not been due t' adde ' outlays to transportation em p'r.yes. Train and enuiiie crews h iv. divert to the transportation compan ies mere than they have received In iiicrafitd rates of pay. This fact Is clearly shown by the reports of the railroads thete selves to their stock holderfe and to the interstate com merce oommis ion. Although engin eers, firemen, conductors and train men have received some advances in rates of pay during recent years, they have had to work harder and have handled more traffic each year for etch dollar of additional com pensation received. Transportation employes are piece workers. They are engaged in han dling freight and passenger traffic. The requirement for a standard day's work is to haul so many tons of fieipht or so many passengers 100 miles. If the weight of a freight train is increased the cost to the rail roads for labor in handling each ton of freight 100 miles is less. The constant increasing of train loads has been the predominant fac tor In recent railway operating prog ress. The growth In weight of trains has been more rapid than the ad vances In rates of pay to transporta tion employes. Engine and train crews have transported proportion ately a greater volume of freight than they have received increases in wages. As a consequence, the labor cost to the railroads of engine and train crews has decreased. During the course of the recent ar bitration between the western rail roads and their engineers and fire men, it Is shown that the propoitlon of total operating expenses arising frorn payment to transportation em ployee was 14 per cent less In 1913 than in 1890. In 1913 it was also shown that wage payments to trans portation employes required only 19 cents out of each dollar of revenue earned by western railroads in 1913 as compared with 21 cents out of each dollar of revenue in 1890. When considered on the basis of freight tonnage, it was found that It cost the railroads for wages to locomotive en-' glneers and firemen 6.r cents for each ' 1,000 tons carried one mile in 1890, i while, In 1913. engineers" and lire-' men transported 1,000 tons a mile, for only 33 cents, a decrease of cost ' to the railroads for these employes! alone, during this period of slightly more than f0 per cent. It was also shown further by exhibits submitted during the western arbitration that during the more recent years, 1900 1913, the cost to the transportation companies for wages of engineers, and firemen decreased 12 per cent for each 1.000 tons of freight hauled one mile. It Is apparent from these facts that the productive efficiency of transpor tation employes has increased faster than their rales of pay. To produce these results for the railroads they have had to work excessive hours. The present movement for an eight hour day Is, therefore, a reasonable request by transportation employes to participate in the results of their own labor, not primarily In terms of dollars and cents, but In form of a shorter work day. I.yle Herry, who had been here for o short visit with his parents, Mr. ami Mrs. L. A. Berry, returned to Lusk, Wyo.. the first of last week. He made the trip in his Ford car, leaving Alliance at 5:30 in the morn ing and encountering about forty miles of mud and bad roads, reached his destination at 3:15 p. m. the same day. Mr .Berry Is superintend ent of the city electric light plant at Lusk. Win. Roes, age 25, a -anrhr-r of near Canton, and Miss Minnie (iass llng. of HemlnRford. ae 19, were granted a marriage license last week b County Judge L. A. llerry. Tames Graham and Ma A. Morri son, both aged :2 years, secured a marriage license April 20 from Coun ty Judge L. A. Berry. Foil Sl,l ltestniiraiit equip ment. Apply cook at linn Tun Cnfe. IV Unite Avenue. 2 l-tf-689 1 Mr. and Mrs. F.d Crane, of Scott bluff, returned home Monday nooft after having spent several days It Alliance visiting relatives of Mft. Crane. Skinner's Macaroni Products, made In Nebraska. Ask your grocer. AdT. "TIZ" FOR ACHING, OR E TIRED FEET Good bye sore feet, burning foet, swol ln feet, sweaty feet, smelling feet, tired feet. Good-bye corns, callouses, bunions avnl raw snots. ' N more shoe tight ness, no more limp in? with nain or drawing up your iac in agony. "HZ" is magical, acta right off. "TIZ" draws out all the poisonous exudations which puff up the feet. Use "TIZ" and for. get your foot misery. Ah! how comfortable your feet feel. Get a 25 cent box of "TIZ" now a any druggist or department store. Don't suffer. Have good feet, glad feet, feet that never swell, never hurt, never get tired. A year's foot comfort guaranteed r money refunded. NEW HOSPITAL BUILDING Plans Are Being l"reared for Free tiou of New St. oJm'Ii'k Hos pital in Alliance (Contributed) The sisters of St. Joseph's hospit al are earnestly thinking of begin ning the work of the new building in May or the first of June. The plans are about ready and specifications are being made so that within a very short time all will be ready for contractors to hand in their bids. Although tne plans are ready and everyone seems anxious to see work proceed, tiie sisters say, "If the good people of Alliance and the neighbor ing towns do not generausly assist us, we are unable to undertake the work." Some time ago the sisters were greatly encouraged by some good friends who promised assist ance if they should build. The ap proximate cost, as near as can be es timated now, will be about $40,000 to $45,000. If all who are able to help and have the welfare of the pub lic and of suffering individuals at heart contribute their share, there is . ro question of raising this amount. ' All those who have had any experi ence at the hosiptal or in contact with the sisters and their work, know that all are equally well taken care of without regard to religion, nation ality or other circumstances. Being well acquainted with the work I can only say the sisters are deserving of all assistance possible in order that the plan may soon be car ried out. There is no doubt but what a new hospital will benefit our whole town and every business therein and also greatly improve that part of town. Any donation will be gratefully accepted at any time by the sisters at the hospital. The sisters auree to have the ns'Mics of tb -i" -lonovs t tiblished in this paper, w-'i-kly. unless requested not to !o n. -A Friend of the Hospi'al. The Aches of Motive Cleaning The pain and soreness caused by bruises, over-exertion and straining during house cleaning time are sooth ed away by Sloan's Liniment. No need to suffer this agony. Just apply Sloan's Liniment to the sore spots, rub only a little. In a short time the pain leaves, you rest comfortably and enjoy a refreshing sleep. One grate-. ful user writes: "Sloan's Liniment is. worth its weight in gold." Keep a ! bottle on hand, use it against all i soreness. Neuralgia and bruises. Kills pi'in. 25c at your druggist. Adv 2 .- V V V V . 4 We -Waist You to keep in mind the fact that in addition to printing this news paper we do job work of any kind. When in need of anything in this line be sure To See Us Such tobacco enjoyment as you never thought could be is yours to command quick as you buy some Prince Albert and fire-up a pipe or a home-made cigarette 1 Prince Albert gives you every tobacco sat isfaction your smoke appetite ever hankered for. That's because it's made by a patented orocess that curs our bite and parch! Prince Albert has always been sold without coupons or premiums. We prefer to give quality I iisif- mm On lh rcvwM aid of thii tidy rd (in you will raadi "Pro- cm Patented Jul .lOlK. IU07." which haa mad thrm man amok ppa whra na anokad bat oca I IOMQ HURNINC BIRC AMD me Albert the national joy tmoke has a flavor as different as it is delightful. You never tasted the like ofitl And that isn't strange, either. Men who think they can't smoke a pipe or roll a ciga rette can smoke and will smoke if they use Prince Albert. And smokers who have not yet given P. A. a try out certainly have a big surprise and a lot of enjoyment coming their way as soon as they invest in a supply. Prince Albert tobacco will tell its own story I R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO, Winston-Salem, N. C. Bay Princm Albert every where tobacco it told in toppy red bag, Sc; tidy red tint, 10c; handeomm pound and half-pound tin humi dor and that corking tin pound cryttal-glatt humi dor with iponge-moitlener top that kempt the tobacco in tuch clever trimalwayt I Another BUICK Record Alliance Men Make Record Run to Pocatello, Idaho, in New Buick Six After complete invostiation of all makes of oars, Dr. .1. V. MaxficM of Alliance recent ly purchased a new Buick Six, 1916 model, froniM. L. Nieolai, local nifent. On Thursday morning, April 13th, Dr. Maxlield and party, consisting of himself and I. V. Hajfr, .1. .Mull ring, and "Punk" Johnson, left Alliance for Payette, Idaho, overland in lite new car. Sn, day morning the following telegram was received from Dr. Maxfiehl; NIGHT LETTER WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH COMPANY Pocatello, Idaho, April 15, 1916. 5:30 P. M. V. M. Sauerbrunn, Alliance, Nebr. Total mileage 780. Fifteen miles to gallon gas oline average. First car to reach Evanston on its own power this season, also Montpelier and by bear lake. Struck lots of snow in hills. We look like lobsters with whiskers. Refuse to wash or shave till Monday noon. Have Alliance air in tires, no trouble or adjustments. Simply keep driving. Dr. J. P. Maxfield. Buick cars make the records and give satisfactory service. vestigate Before you buy your new car in- VALVE-IN-HEAD -fhn &3i MOTOR CARS J. L Nieolai, Agent Phone 164 118 Box Butte Avenue