.1 HI til i 'li !!! !,1 .1 1 . : : .i t ; i ': J 5 V V i .if !'jjjt!!HtiT Wtftl i 1 c Down the Stairs to Answer the Telephone Do you have to do this, when the telephone bell rings after you have "turned inM for the wht? Or do you answer the call from an extension telephone in your bedroom? RESICEICE EXTENSION TELEPHONE RITES With a bell 75 cents a Month. Without a bell 50 cents a Month. mm mtsx "-""- . NTH ' ft kT1 W 'IL-Al Hand mad from best material. Outlaat any factory nade goorta. Call and aee. Harness repairing by experienc ed harnesa maker. J. M. tXIVICKT At M. D. Mclinla' stand. Alliance Go to BRENNAN'S FOUNTAIN DRUGS Unexcelled for Cool Drinks, Ice Creams and Luncheonettes Everything Sanitary Prompt Service TOILET ARTICLES F. J. BRENNAN :uk ROOMS SAFETY FIRST soo KOOMS When you are In Omaha come where all Stockmen aton. You will always find your friends and acquaintances at the HOTELCASTLE 16TH AND JONKS STS., OMAHA Omaha's new absolutely flire-proof hotel. We welcome the Stock men. We'll make you comfortable and our rates are moat reasonable In the city. Rooms with private both, 11.50 to $1.75. Rooms with private toilet $1. Good car service to tho Stock Yards and Depots. Have your commission firm telephone for room reservation. FKKU A. CASTLE, Prop. COMFORT WITHOUT EXTRAVAGANCE LIVE STOCK PRICES AT SOUTH OMAHA C2lt3 r.'srkotS eady o Strcrg; Fair Receipts BOSS ARE ABOUT 53 LOWER Fat Lambs Active at Steady Figures Light Supply. Smallest Run for a Monday tn a Month. Old Sheep Stronger Ewa Set Fall Record, $7.60 Very Few Feeders Here Feeding Yearlings at (8.03. Union Stock Yards, South Omaha, Nebraska, November 14, 1916. The week opened with a fair run of cattle for a Monday, some 273 loads, about 7,200 hoad being reported In. Receipts included a very pood percentage of corn fed Mock, but the ripe well fat ted stock was rather scarce Dressed beef men all wanted onttle, and as the offorlnRS were limited they paid steady fipurcs to get them. In fact. the good to choico boeves selling around $9.7010.25 looked a little stronRer. The fair to good 1,100 to 1.200. pound beeves selling around $8.75fi '8.50 wero largely quoted as steady, nnd tho trade was somewhat slow nrvl Irrerular on the warmod up and only partly fntted steers. I3e- tween twrnty-flve and thirty car of cows and heifers showed up Monday. Quotations on cattle: Good to choice yearlings, $10.0011.10; good to choice beeves. J9.75fn0.50: fair to good beeves, $8.501 9.75; common to fair beeves, $6.rnff7".2:: good to choice heifers, $6.507.25; good to choico cows, $6.50(f?;7.00; fair to good cows, $5.75'? 15.50; ennners and cut ters. II.25W5.50: veal calves. $8.00 10.00; ho'ocna bulls, $5.00 615.50; beef bulls. $'. .50(716.50. Intimates placed the hog run at 112 cars or 7,900 head, It he'np a lit tle larger than for any Monday In a long time. The ninrltet opened fairly active, and around 5e lower than at the clise of lnt week. The shipping mnu partners orders were llllotl at a nickel red net Ion. A small run of heep and lambs showed up for Monday, only about fifty-five cars, or 13.200 head being re ported In. Supplies of Iambs were hardly up to packing requirements, and movement started early at good steady prices. Hulk of tho good lambs sold upwards from $11.40, wl'h several loads a? Iilfh as $11.00, the new fall reeord established at tho close of last week. Fat sheep were scarce, and like the lambs, moved early. Prlcqa wero strong and looked some what hlg'.ier. Some of the best ewes brought $7.50(ff 7.fi0, the latter price being a record brwnker for the season and for this time of the year. Quotations on sheep and lambs! Lambs, good to choice, $11.35U.G0; lambs, fair to good. $10.75011.35; lambs, feeders, $8.75010.10; year rings, good to choice, $8.5009 25; yearlings, fair to good. $7.5008.50; yearlings, feeders, $7.00(fj 8.00; weth ers, fair to choice, $7.0008.25; ewes, Hood to choice, $7.25".C0; ewes, fair to good, $("..2507.10; ewes, plain to culls, $4 0005.75; ewes, feeding, $4.50 05.75; ewes, breeders, all ages, $6.00 08 50. Dodicnte (Jcroian Lutheran School West Point. The dedication of the new German Lutheran school took place Sunday. Tho estimated cost of the structure is about $10, 000. It Is modern In every respect. Ditch Nearly Finished Talmnge. The big ditch of the Nemaha valley drainage district from Syracuse to this place, is fast Hear ing completion. The big machine constructing the main ditch is mak ing a record for that kind of work. NO GUT RATES ON LIQUOR LICENSES Alliance License Kipire May 1, 1917 mi Iam-mI Dealers Will Not be. Out as Omaha Dewier .Owners of saloons in Alliance are more fortunate than saloon men in some of the other "wet" towns In the stute. The llscal year for Alli ance ends May 1, 1917, at the same time the state becomes "dry." Sa loon liceuses in Alliance expire May 1, so that owners will experience no inconveniences in that respect. In Omaha, whore the fiscal year starts January 1, 1917, and licenses must be renewed on January 1, sa loon men will be compelled to take out licenses for the whole year of 1917 In ordti to operate during the four months until tho saloons must be closed. The license in Alliance is $1,400 per year, the six saloons paying a total of $8,400 a year. The Omaha license fee is but $1,000. The highest license now being paid lu the state Is at Lincoln, where the tax is $2,000 for the year. The Oma ha tax for running a saloon will be $1,000 for four months or $250 a month, which is practically $10 for each day the saloon is open. Some liquor dealers paid their li cense foe supiMistng that they had the authorization to operate until midnight, but the 8 o'clock closing law was pa.sM-d cutting off a third of their business hours, but no rebate or allowance is allowed on the li cense money. Tho lawyers agree that in those cities where the fiscal year starts on January 1 no new 11 ceus cau be grunted after the first of the year for less than the full year's fee, although the license can serve its purpose for but four months. Section 3869 of the statutes gov erns the issue of licenses to sell li quor in cities of the metropolitan class and provides that they shall be granted for the municipal year, which "in cities of the metropolitan calss. from January 1 of one year to January 1 of the following year." and that the amount to be paid for the license shall be "not less than $1,000 In metropolitan cities." The courts have also repeatedly held that the full license fee must be paid in before a valid license can be is sued, that the license money belongs to the school fund, and that there is no way of recovering any part of it back when the license lapses or is revoked. Only outside of incorporated cities of the first and metropolitan class es, is the Minimum license fee $500, and therefore the $500 exaction will apply only to liquor dealers doing business in a county oeyonu ine city limits. liii) a used auto at a cheap price. See Jack True, Itumer Motor Com pany. Forty-five thousand dead ducks, victims of wild duck disecse, were pirkod up on one marsh near Great Salt Lake. A little money Mill buy a good iihfd auto cheap. Se? Jack True, Kuiner Motor Company. The melting point of southern- made butter is higher where cattle are fed cottonseed products. Canadian Lynx Killed near Lindsay Lindsay. Fred Loeffler shot what the naturalists around here claim to be a Canadian lynx, near his home recently. How it got into this part of the country is a mystery. lloldrege Made Transfer Poiint Holdrege. lloldrege has been made a transfer point for high-line freight since the first of the month, which means that all freight intend ed for the high line will be reworked here by a night gang. I. 1. Train Hits Auto North Platte. Axel Lundgren, aged 35 years, was Instantly killed and his 6-year-old son was fatally Injured when a Union Pacific passen ger train struck their auto at a grade crossing at Sutherland. Dance on New Paving Superior. The dancers of Super ior were given a municipal dance on the new asphalt paving before It was turned over for traffic. The Superi or band furnished the music and the proceeds were donated to charity. Second-hand cant for sale cheap. See Jack True, Itumer Motor Company. If you intend to have a aale get our prices Sale Bills PRINTED Office supplies at The Herald of fice. Phone 140. (Df We are fixed for turning out work of this kind lti . . in double -quick brae. V IL V A L -Sum 1 V -1 f v;;' fv.'.t? 4 f 4 4 4 , j Hit inr-- -" ,J - I 'v...:'".' ..'-.'x ' " "N... ........ w .. . i. : . v . v, ;.,,T;,Jj 1. V .'...' ...,.-! :. 5,". .. . V.. , ,1 " i. t 7 We are the largest monument dealers in the state, consequently we are ia a position to give you the best values, both in execution and cost. Let us send you free our Booklet of Artistic Illustrations, which is very helpful in making a selection. Kimball Brothers ESTABLISHED 1887 C3 1700 O STREET, LINCOLN, NEER. JUMP Fill BEB MIC HIT WATEB Open sluices of system each morning wash away the poisonous, stagnant matter, says authority. and glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it, drank each morning before breakfast, keeps us looking and feeling fit. Life is not merely to live, but to live well, eat well, digest well, work well, sleep well, look well. What a glorious condition to attain, and yet how very easy it is if one will only adopt the morning inside bath. Folks who are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when they arise, splitting headache, stuffy from a cold, foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach, can, instead, feel as fresh as a daisy by open ing the sluices of the system each morning and flushing out the whole of the internal poisonous stagnant matter. Everyone, whether ailing, sick or well, should, each morning, before breakfast, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoon ful of limestone phosphate in it to wash from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels the previous day's indigestible waste, sour bile and poisonous toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and puri fying the entire alimentary canal before putting more fowl into the stomach. The action of hot water and limestone phosphate on an empty stomach is wonder fully invigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases, waste and acidity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast. While you are enjoying your breakfast the water and phos phate is quietly extracting a largo volume of water from the blood and getting ready for a thorough flushing of all the inside organs. The millions of peope who are bothered with constipation, bilious spells, stomach trouble, rheumatism; others who have sallow skins, blood disorders and sickly complexions are urged to get a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from the drug store, which will cost but little, but is sufficient to make anyone a pro nounced crank on the subject of internal sanitation. i