The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, October 26, 1916, Image 7

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    Prince Albert gives
smokers such
delight, because
its flavor is so different and so
delightfully good;
it can't bite your tongue;
it can't parch your throat;
you can smoke it as long and
as hard as you like without any
comeback but real tobacco hap
piness !
On the reverse, side of every Prince
Albert package you will read :
"PROCESS PATENTED
JULY 30th, 1907"
That means to you a lot of tobacco en
joyment. Prince Albert has always been
sold without coupons or premiums. W
prefer to give quality I
kxi
the national joy smoke
mm
in goodness and
in pipe satisfaction
is all we or its enthusi
astic friends ever claimed
for it I
y OU'LL find a cheery howdy-do on tap no
naffer horn much of a atranger yens are in tho
neck of (he wood you drop info. For, Pnncm
Albert nrfhf therm mt t he rf place you
pea f haf aeis tobacco I 7 he toppy re
bat aefe for a nickel and t he tidy rod
tinforedimetthenthero thehand-
some pound ana fiaf-pouna win
humidor mnd the pound
eryetel-ileae humidor mrrth
aponge-moiatener rop
thaf keep the to
baeoe in eucJl
bang-up trim
all-tho-
0. aponge-moiatener top W ill'
Qa. file - ll lit
EV. Daeoe in auon n H II,
bant-up trim IT ll;
all-tho- i
J to
K J lornokoa
Toliatco Co.
I
It answers every smoke desire you
or anv other man ever hadl It is so
aw
cool and fragrant and appealing to your
smokeappetite that you will get chummy with
it in a nwhtv short time 1
o at WW
Will you invest 5c or 10c to prove out our say- j
so on the national joy smoke?
1
R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., Winiton-Salem, N. C
TOBACCO IS PREPARED
forsmokersunderthe
process discovered in
Making experiments to
produce the most de-
DGHTrWANDWHOIH
I !i TOBACCO FOR ClfiL
57qT BITE THE IQKCUE
i ii : utiint 1 ! j Rj IT u HT I n Hi 1 1 1 1 t r
a
TKla ia the mm eiU al tke
IMsce Albert tidy Tai lis. rXeai
iUa Pateatee' Proceaa" iai
ajxi realise wkal tt aaeajM
la aaaklnt Priace AlbeH a mmck
to jamr likiaa.
EXPRESS TAXES BIG
Nebraska F-xpress Companies Will
Tay in $22,581.88 in Taxc.
for Present Year
(By Herald Correspondents)
Lincoln, Nobr. O. E. Bernecker,
aer.retary of the Btate board of equal
isation, reports that the tax received
from the express companies doing
business in Nebraska this year will
amount to 122,581.88. The law un
der which this tax was created is
known as Section 7477 of the Revis
ed Statutes of Nebraska, and was
passed by the 1913 legislature. Win.
II. Smith, present Btate auditor, who
was a member of the state senate in
1913, is the author or the bill. The
law requires that two per cent of the
gross earnings of the express com
panies be paid into the state general
fund as a tax. In 1914, the first
year of the operation of this law, the
express companies doing business in
the state, via: Wells Fargo, Adams j
and American, paid into the state I
treasury $19,880.92. In 191f the!
three companies paid $20,74 5.52.!
Before the Smith law was passed,'
the system of taxation was distrlbut-'
ed over about eighty counties of the
state, the sums collected were small
an I In ninny cases difficult to rolWt
It to't neatly a much to pet the
:i mounts Into (lie state treasury as
"iiiiio of them were worth. Cndcr
the present law the tax Is paid In
from the head olllccs, nnd tin trouble
or expense Is experienced by the
state In Its collection. It Is conced
ed to be one of the best tux laws on
the statute books of Nebraska.
A recent presidential poll of the
labor vote in thirty-one stutes. ex
tending from enact to coast, was
tniule by the Literary invest, ami the
results published In Its Issue of Oc
tober 7. The poll shows the elector
ll vote as follows:
Wilson, democrat, 332: Benson,
socialist. 47; Hughes, republican,
13; Scattering. 34.
Keduced to percentages, 1'resldent
Wilson received 72 per cent. Mr.
Benson 11 per rent, and Mr. Hughes
9 per cent.
The third quarterly report of state
expenditure for 191fi has Just been
Issued by State Auditor Win. 11.
Smith. The quarter comprises the
months of July, August ami Septem
ber, and the report shows thnt n to
tal of $1,557,380.40 was expended
during the period, as against $1,032
158.12 the previous quarter. Tho
last report, however, shows that
$438,778.87 of the above amount
was school apportionment. The state
university expended $424,573.24 for
building nnd maintenance. The fif
teen institutions of the state under
the board of commissioners. Includ
ing the board, used $320,322.75. The
balance of $373,705.54 is for gener
al state government purposes, but In
cludes $57,400 for Normal training
In the high schools, and $66,839.68
for the expenses of the four Normal
schoolB. The total amount expend
ed for educational purposes for the
last quarter was $987,591.77, or a
trifle over two-thirds of the total
state expenditures.
According to a report compiled In
the treasurer's office by 8tate Treas
urer O. E. Hall, from December 31,
1896, to March 31, 1915, the state
paid out over one million dollars In
Interest as a result of registering
state warrants. In some blennlums
of this period of years thTs interest
sum ran up as high as $200,000. In
the years 1913-14, the state paid
something like $47,000 interest.
When Treasurer Hall took charge of
the office on the morning of January
8, 1916, he was confronted with the
problem of stopping this waste of
the people's money, and In five days
after taking charge of his office gave
orders to discontinue registering
warrants. In the meantime he Is
sued his famous decree to county
treasurers that tax payments muat
be made monthly Instead of semi
annually as had been the custom of
the past. It took a supreme court
decree to finally bring some of the
county treasurers to an accounting",
but In the action Treasurer Hall has
saved the tax payers many thousands
of dollars. No warrants will be reg
istered under Mr. Hall's administration.
Subscribe for The Herald,
Buy Pianos At Home
Keep Your Money In Western Nebraska
The Wiker Music House buys its pianos direct from the factories the largest in the United States. In purchasing a piano from
us you are not compelled to pay the profit of several middlemen. We are not a branch house which remits everything taken in to
the main store, but your money, outside of the factory cost of the piano, stays in Alliance.
You can buy such high-grade instruments as ' fcSIZy
IVERS & POND and KURTZMAN
and other high-grade pianos at this store on easy payments. You should not buy an instrument elsewhere until you have investigat
ed our methods of doing business. We have been in the piano
business in Alliance for nine years and during that time
have disposed of hundreds of pianos. We can refer you to
these customers who have purchased after full investigation
and without being induced to do so by frenzied advertising.
"MMMMtaaaaaBSMWBaBaMaa
Pick out anv kind
or entertainment you want
You can have grand opera, comic opera,
vaudeville, band concert, minstrel show what
ever kind of entertainment you want right in
your own home with a Victor.
The world's greatest artists to entertain you and
your friends to perfection. And you arrange the pro
gram to suit yourself.
Come in and hear the Victor and Victor-Victrola. Let us show yotj
the different styles $10 to $250 and explain our easy-payment plan.
EXCLUSIVE, VICTOR VICTROLA AGENCY
We are the exclusive agents in Alliance for Victor Victrolas
and Victor records. You are invited to call and hear the
latest.
SMALL GOODS DEPARTMENT
You will find everything in music at this store. Our small
, goods department carries a line of sheet music and every
thing in the small-goods line.
Wiker Music House
Mrs. J. T. WIKER, Manager.
Accross from postoffice. Alliance, Nebraska
IMIWI0NAL
SMTSCHOOL
Lesson
tlly K. O SKI. I. Kit ArlliiK Hli.nr of
Siimlay School courxe, Moody llili e Id
flll'Jtr, Chli HK" )
LESSON FOR OCTOBER 29
THE VOYAGE.
I.KSSON TK.XT- Arm 2M-M.
(iol.MKN TKXT-AVnunlt thy war unto
Jrlu.-vah, tniFt al-m In htm, and h w'.U
hrliiK It to (. I'm. (7:6.
I'nul Milled from Ciicsnrca August,
A. I. r! (Unnwy), n few tlnyn nftor
M mlilrexK before AKrlpu. Ih
renclietl Malta nbmit November 15.
I'nul knew how to meet inolm,
I "t none of hln adventures are more
ntstandliiK than tho one we are
sttnl.vlnp today. Luke, his physician,
was a companion, and the historian,
-WcphuN, HtatcN that on hoard th
Mp there were more than 000 people
tiuvelliiR with I'nul. I'nul wan n mnn
of distinction, a llotunn citizen. He
lad his own hired house In Home.
Arlstnrehus may possibly have been
his servant to furnish comfort for
tht Journey. Itanisey believes I'nul
had received hereditary property, thu
making Mm a Homnn rttlr.cn of rauk,
of learning and of standing finan
cially. I. Fair Weather and Contrary Winds
(vv. 1-12). Sldon was about 70
miles north of Caesnrea on the coast
of I'ulestlne. Here Paul received lib
erty to go ashore and visit his Chris
tian friends. Myra la Id Asia Minor.
It requires 14 days to reach this point
from Sldon, a distance of about 400
miles. Here, Instead of going up the
Aegean sea route, often used In going
to Home, the centurion found a grain
ship hound from Alexandria to Italy,
and put his prisoners on board. Sep
tember 1 they started for Italy. The
direct course would have been west
whrd, but the wind was contrary, and
the progress was slow. On the 23d
they were opposite Cnldus, the south
west point of Asia Minor, 130 miles
from Myra. September 25 they
entered the harbor of Fair Haven,
nrar the middle of the south shore
of the Island of Crete. The fast day,
October fi, the day of the great atone
ment, wns observed In this place. Tho
question of nolng farther wns a de
batable one, yet the commander per
sisted, nnd about the 10th of October
they sailed for Fair Haven.
II. The Hurricane (vv. 13-20). Tak
ing advantage of n gentle wind they
I tit out of Fair Haven, and almost
Immediately encountered the hurri
cane. It wns perhaps hard for Paul
ilurlnK those 14 days to discern the
wise, gentle hand of (iod. ( Jonuh
1-4). God's most faithful servants do
not nlways find smooth sailing. (I'lill.
4:0. 7; Isaiah 20:3; John 10:33), but
they may. no matter how fiercely tem
pest tossed, know that Clod has not
ceased to look upon them with favor.
Sometimes the best thing for us to
do, when thus tempest tossed. Is "to
lighten the ship" (v. 18).
III. The Message of Cheer: "I Be
lieve God" (w. i-2ti). Neither sun
nor stars having shone for tunny days,
nr.d all hrpe that any should be saved
seemingly taken away, yet Clod Is nMe
to stive In the darkness as well as In
the sunshine. In the tempest as well
as in the calm, and there was in lint
brat one mnu at least whose hope was
not gone, for God had said to him,
"Thou must bear witness at Home
lilho" (23:11). I'll ill's message of
cheer In the midst of this despulr and
after they had been so long wltlu til
food. Immediately stumped him us u
lender of wisdom nnd power.
I'll ill could make this promise he
cause "un angel of (jod whose I am
n nd whom I serve" had come to him
nnd assured him that God would re
deem the promise made, two years be
fore. This Implies that I'nul had given
himself to prayer. Observe how one
godly man can save many ungodly
men (Gen. 18:22-33). God's vision
enme to I'nul, but I'nul used It for the
comfort nnd cheer of the whole ship's
company (II Cor. 1-4). A modern il
lustration of a (drnlliir experience was
thnt of Mr. Moody und Geueral How
ard, returning from Kun.pe on the
Mcnm.shtp Spree in is;r'.
General Howard relates that Mr.
Moody did a great deal to cheer the
passengers, by both his words and hi
nctiuns, during those days of stress
nnd storm. The darker and stormier
the night, the more likely ure the
lintel of God to appear If we ure in
d.ed his (v. 23: Cf. Ch. 18:0-23:11).
Sometimes these angels stand beside
us and we do not see them, we ure
taken up with the darkness and the
howling of the storm. It Is a greut
thing to be able to look up to the In
finite God and say, "I am his." To
make this stutement Intelligently, uud
with a deep realization of Its meaning
will give significance and solemnity to
ull.
IV. Paul, the Life Saver (vv. 27-37).
I'uul did not stop with simply saying
that God was his, but went on to suy,
"Whom also I serve." Many say they
are God's but do not prove it by their
lives of service. Paul loved to think
and speak of himself as the servant of
God (Horn. 1:0; II Tim. 1:3; Titus
1:1). Some of the sailors thought to
launch the boat, leaving the passengers
to their fae.
Ail the hurricanes that ever struck
the sea or the ships of the sea couM
not prevent the fulfillment of Gods
promises, and Paul fully accented the
tflgnlncuuce of God's word "fear not."
TEN WERE KILLED WHEN
STOCK TRAINS COLLIDED-
lmk of I,IcMm nnd UamliiK HlguuM
Nnid to lie ('iiu4'A-Kleeii Oth
er Were I'm tally Injured
Ten stockm. ., e.e killed aasff
eleven others fatally injured Sundafr
morning when n Iturllnpton trail
crashed Into the ruhnone In whiekr
they were ridlim. The wreck ae
curred twelve miles east of Elwood
Five men, who were standing on tlwr
rear platform of the caboose, rw
tho train coming and Jumped to safe
ty. One man who wns riding In tb
cupola was thrown clean of tbt'
wreck and escaped without Injury.
The colliding trains were sectloa
of a regular stock train. Survivor
claim that lack of warning signal
and lights is responsible for tbt
wreck. Tho victim. i are all resident
of tho western and central parts of
Nebraska, the majority of them be
ing farmers and stockmen.
The dead are: W. 11. Merrell, J. 0,
O'llryon, and William Sulivan of
Wallace; Adam Miller of llaln; Wit
Ham Kilnock of llolsteln; G. 8.
Kronley of May wood; J. J. O'Connor"
and William Heart of Elsie; William
Zanton of Venango; and W. Q. Ham
mils, Somerset.
Tho trains In colislon were the seo
ond and third sections of No. 15
The third section plunged Into 16"
second.
The second section bad some troe)
ble with hot boxes and had stoppW
at a point about half way between
Smlthfleld and llertrand.
Members of the crew of the see
ond section were at work on the ttf
boxes when ' the third section, r
nlng ten minutes behind the secoe,
crashed into the caboose.
It is declared by those on the trail?
that the crew of the second sectVoe
failed to put out torpedoes or want
ing lights to warn the train follovsv
Ing, and that the headlight on tftr
engine pulling the third section 1M
gone out
No one waa aware of the dangW
until the third section, waa wltbiiv
few yards of the rear end of the
ond. The engineer reversed bit
glne and did what be oould to lestW
the Impact of the collision, but aW
could not stop.
The heavy stock train Jumped lnfe
the train ahead, driving the way car
under a car of cattle. The twenty'
one men on the floor of the cabooMr
were Jnmbed into a space less that
four feet In width, and this was flB
ed with wreckage.
The railroad company ran a spa.
lal train from Holdrego with pbyaV
clans and the Injured were takes to
Hastings for hospital rare.
It wus reported that two of this
Injured had died on the way to Hast
Ings. The coroner of Gosper county
was called and he transferred tfir
dead to the undertaking rooms at"
llertrand.
Ittiy a used auto at a t-lienp prlc
Ne Jack True, Itumrr Motor Cum
pany.
lcHMiideiicy
When you feel discouraged unl
despondent do not give up but take a
dose of Chamberlain's Tablets an
you are altiost certain to feel alf
r'sht within a day or two. Despond
eney in very often due to indlgestloa
and biliousness, for which these tab
lets are especially valuable. Obtain,
able everywhere.
Adv Oct
The Ilumer Motor Company, dis-"
trlbutors for the Crow-Klkhart line
I of automobiles, has received anoh:f
; carload of thew- popular curs. Tlilr
makes a total of fifty-three of thos
cars received by this company In r
cent months, more than ary othi'f
'make of car shipped Into Alliance nt
. this price during the season.
SAYS HOT WATER
WASHES POISONS
FROM THE LIVER
Everyone should drink hot water
with phosphate in It,
before breakfast.
To feel as fine as the proverbial
fiddle, we must keep the liver washed
clean, almost every morning, to pre
vent its sponge-like pores from clog
tng with indigestible material, sour
bile and poIboiiouh toxins, says a noted?
physician. If you get headaches, It's your liver.
If you catch cold easily, it's your liver.
If you wake up with a bad taste, furred
tongue, nasty breath or stomach be
comes rancid. It's your liver. Sallow1
skin, muddy complexion, watery eye
all denote liver uncloanllncss. Your
liver Is the most important, also the
must abutted and neglected organ of
the body. Few know Its function or
how to release the dammed-up body
waste, bile and toxins. Most folk
resort to violent calomel, which Is
dangerous, salivating chemical which
can. only be used occasionally because
it accumulates In the tissues, also
attacks the bones.
Every man and woman, sick of
well, should drink each morning be
fore breakfast, a glass of hot water
with a tcaspoonful of limestoue phos
phate in It, to wah from the liver and
bowels the previous day's Indigestible
material, the poisons, sour bile ana
toxins; thus cleansing, sweetenlnaT
and freshening the entire alimentary
canal before putting more food lfit
the stomach.
Limestone phosphate does not re
strict the diet like calomel, because It
can not salivate, for It U harmless anI
you can eat anything afterwards. If
Is inexpensive and almost tasteless, and
any pharmacist will sell you a quarter
pound, which Is sufficient for a dem
onstration of bow hot water and Urn',
stone phosphate deans, stimulates .
freshens the liver, keeping you feellneT '
Qt day In and day out.