EXCLUSIVE FANCY WORK SILK KIMON AS CREPE KIMON AS BEAUTIFUL HAND CROCHET WORK HANDSOME TAPESTRY PIECES BUNGALOW APRONS CAMISOLES CLUNY LACE DOILIES NECKWEAR It is quite impossible to quote prices because each piece is different and is priced according to its value. If you are look ing for something different, you'll find it here. Mrs. A. Simmons WESTERN ORIENTAL STORK WANTED ! Copies of June 7th of The Alliance Herald Wanted A LIMITED NUMBER OF COPIES OF THE ALLIANCE HERALD OF THE ISSUE OF THURSDAY, JUNE 7, 1917, ARE NEEDED AND THE SUM OF 5 CENTS WILL BE PAID FOR COPIES OF THAT ISSUE BROUGHT TO THE HER ALD OFFICE. WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO REFUSE TO BUY COPIES WHEN A SUFFICIENT NUMBER HAS BEEN SECURED. The Alliance Herald PHONE 340 i I Use Herald Duplicating Sales Books 1 ir I have discovered that The Herald will deliver to me Sales Books ill the same price I pay the out-of-town companies. The hooks are made hv one of the largest linns in the conn try making sales hooks, ami they arc better than some made in Nebraska The Herald can supply any kind of duplicating hook made anywhere hy anybody at their prices. Here are some of the duplicating hooks The Herald sells: Duplicating Sales Books Triplicating Sales Books Special Order Duplicating Books . Duplicating Remittance Books Duplicating Receipt Books Grocers' and Butchers' Coupon Books Herald Publishing Co. Alliance, Nebraska SHAVES ARE TWENTY FIVE CENTS EACH NOW Alliance Hftriiers Hont I Vice Hair flit o-t no ( oul.-l'rl(s HalMsl on the 18th Who wants to be a mere man these days? First It is war ant) then It is what Sherman said war la. Any way, Wednesday whs the 13th, and that may account for some of the "luck." On Wednesday morning, June 13, the barbers of Alliance, by previous mutual agreement, shot up the prices on shaves, hair cuts, mas sages, etc. Whether or not the In crease will cause men in general to get out their old rators or purchase new ones, the writer does not pre tend to know. One thing is certain, a number of merchants seem deter mined to get all there is coming to them In the way of sales of raxors, safety razors, shaving soap, creams, talcum powder, etc. A walk up un paved Hox Butte avenue and a look into several of the show windows will serve to demonstrate the fact that the merchants have been awake to their oportunlty. The new schedule of prices that went into.effect yesterday at all Al liance barber shops is as follows. Hair cut, ,r0 cents; shave, 25 cents; olive oil shampoo. 75 cents; Fitch shampoo. 65 cents; egg shampoo, 50 cents; tar shampoo, 50 cents; plain sh.Tmpoo, 35 cents; hair singe. 35 cents; electric and hand massage, 50 cents; massage, 3 5 cents; beard trimming, 25 cents: removing moles, each 50 cents; mustache trimming, 10 cents; head massage. 3 5 cents; tonic, 15 cents; razor honing, 50 cents. The barber shops of Alliance keep the following hours: from October 1 to April 1, open at 8 a. m. and close at 7 p. m. From April 1 to October 1, open at 7 a. m. and close at 7 p. m. Saturdays, open until 10 p. m. You are next! Celehrate July 4th in Scottsblutf. U. S. INSPECTOR TO LECTURE HERE TONIGHT Handling and Transportation of Fa- plostve lllld lilt la mumble- Sub ject of Free lccture II. N Sinteff, inspector for the United States Bureau of Explosives, is in Alliance today and will give a lecture tonight (Thursday) at the Phelan opera house, at 8 o'clock. The lecture will deal with the handling and transportation of expolsives and inflammable and other dangerous materials. While this lecture is pri marily for railroad men, it is open to the public and will prove both inter esting and instructive, not only to the railroad employees, but to the general public as well. The general public Is urged to at tend and gel the benefit of this lec ture. Stereopticon slides will be shown along with the lecture. The slides will make the lecture more in teresting and will be a material aid in bringing out the Ideas Mr. Sin teff desires to impress upon the minds of those in attendance. EMPLOYEES BUY LIBERTY BONDS BltMlng to Man. The teh J bOUC i I crent tlilntf !l mixes- many a lovesick )unu mini ft putting stuff down on paper hut would love him it breach or promise suit. Celebrate July 4th in Scottsbluff. OtliKD SHORN I.AST Kldeiiv neonle remember the time i when nearly every citizen, outside of 'the populous centers if not in them, oiled his shoes partly in order to soften .them but chiefly in order to Snake than last longer. A prosper- I .... . .. , i . . ,.i,I.r.iti,n Vt.iu OlIS illlll Ulllllirni. uriiriuiiuii in.r. lohl since forgotten all about this useful precaution, and in such times as these the department of agricul ture has done well to publish' a re minder The deiiartnient's bulletin reeoiiiiiiends eastor oil for finer pol ished shoes, beef tallow of pioneer memory being desirable or sufficient for rougher foot wear We learn also that soles should be treated with linseed oil oeacsionally . and every body is advised to have heels repair ed as soon as they show signs of wear. A commenting editor remarks that the department has not made any new discovery in domestic science or lold anything, that was not known be fore We venture to say that the proposition of Oiling shoes will be new to millions of the younger gen eration. ii any case the reminder is timet) and ought to be useful when shoes are likely to cost still more now that the government is Inlying them by the inillio.n pairs For this reason tin- newspapers ouuht to pass the suggestion and rec ommendations gtong for the benetit of the ugult Uncles never likely to aee the department 'a bulletin. The thrlf t man who sees to it that the aboea of his family are oiled as often as needful will be well repaiii for the small outlay in forethought and la bor. Celebrate July 4th in ScotlsMuff. NKItKASkA PATKMTB Official list of letters patent of in vention issued from tin- United States patent office at Washington. 1). ('.. to inhabitants of Nebraska for the week ending June i!i7. aa reported through the office of sturtes k si ni nes, registered patent attorneys, Suite :::!' Pea Bldg., Omaha, Kebf Ralph O. Denlen, Bridgeport Manifold for automobile engine! carl i CaHfcerg, Omaha Ureal? lag aaaehiae. Joseph liesse. Hartlngtog Bead corn drier. Charles II Simpson, l-tun-l liar icster attachment. Henry P'oeehe, Profton Tract oi wheel Benjamin F. Knerr, Oreaham Hog oler i m contrail fur a ileirnhlc ett) lot oil e;s payment. Tills will 1 1. Ilie lte(itiliillK of a fortune for ion. 'nil Ml Alliance National Hank today for further informal ion. Celebrate July 4th in Bcettabhjg?. Xewberry' Hardware Company A. ststs Kknpotye In Pwvhase of liliert) Honds on Payment Alllnnce's largest business estab lishment, Newberry's Hardware Co , Is assisting Its employees to purchase liberty Bonds hy allowing them to pay for bonds purchased through the store at the rate of five dollars per month, an order for $2,000 worth having been placed Tuesday. An agreement is also made by the com pany that if the purchaser of the bond Is called into the regular army the bond in to become his, free of charge The employees of the com pany are taking advantage of the oi fer in a liberal way and doing their share to make the bond issue a auc- CChS. In thla connection the Hardware Age of May 31 contained an excel lent editorial on Liberty Bonds. It Is impossible to re-print the entire editorial here, but we are quoting from it as followa: The average citizen of the United States knows very little about bonds. The clipping of coupons has been pructisvd by a comparat ively few financially fortunate citizens. It promises to become popular. Uncle Sam has asked all his t achers In all his hanks, in all his schools, in all his newspapers, and in all his magazines to start a course in bond salesman ship, and th- people are being rapid ly instructed on the subject. Folks who never used the word bond a doz en times in their lives are talking fluently on the subject .and have earned the right to talk because they have become bond owners. Every loyal citizen or the United States who can scrape up $50 or more owes it to his self-respect to buy a bond. The Liberty Ijoan means Just what the word in. pie Thla la a time for short cuts. But up or shut up. No mun has the right to cheer for the Stars and Stripes unlcaa ho is ready to tight for it. Banner waving! and hlp-hlp hnrahrs ara always In order, but the time has come when we are going to do a little probing to see If the noise all comes from the lungs, or if it really reaches down to the heart. The Ural call to arms will sweep into the government's fighting serv ice 500,000 men. They will be men physically fit between the ages of 21 and 30 years. That leaves about 20 million male citizens In this country who are between the ages of 15 and 4 0 years. Practically every one of these men declares his loyalty to the Bag, Ask what they would be ready to do to preserve democracy. and they would answej- nnthlug. If they should all answer at once the noise of that combined reply could be heard farther than the swallows flew out to meet Columbus. We have already demonstrated that we are a dandy lot of vocal warrlora.'We are now up to the barrier which is the first teBt of sterner metal. In the national banks alone In the United States there are 15,750,000 depositors. In all the banks there must be twice that many depositors. Fully one-third of the people In the United States are bank depositors. We are indeed the big-monied peo ple of the world. We have been called money grabbers by a whole lot of outsiders, but way down deep we know that ae know how and when to spend, and we are going to demand a new respect for the Amer ican dollar because of what we are com. to do with it. Upon this huge army of bank de positors will hang the Weight of this war. The United States is now de pending upon this army to offer the llrst great service. The president has asked for it before selective con scription has drafted the men. Kv ery one of these depositors can buy at legal a $50 bond. We have a million or more citizens whose waist bands are too big for a belt with a brass C S on the buckle Did you ever notice that a waddler generally packs a smile and is sel dom a tight wad? There are some mighty keen minds in those big bod ies. Some of the brightest business brains in this country belong to fat men. Can't enlist? You bet they can enlist and they will toe the mark in this emergency . Then there's the thin man there's a million of him. He's under weight for the ar my, but a heavy Weight as an earner, and often the possessor of a brain more const ruclive than a hundred physically perfect huskies. He can and will join the big .army behind the lilies who Will keep the SliplicK coming up. Keep your eye on him! Kmployers all over the country are splendidly co-operating with I'n- cle Sam. In thousands of business house- employees are being advised that the boss will bu bonds for them and permit them to pay for them in small weekly installments It's the spirit of business America, and it rings true. We are going to bU bonds because we are a nation of earners. We are geared to it and glad because We till a need. Everything Complete. "Well Henry." I said to my neigh ber little hoy, "I uppns. yea will soon be running the new automobile "O. ho." be said. "My papa hough a chaufleur with the car. " Kxrhimge. Not Really an Escape. We often think that, if we bad been placed in the same ilillieiiltlcs which are see overwhelm other, we could llMVe gol out of lllelll. Just so; we might have aqueesed, or wriggled crept out of ii position from which other who would not stoop could have cciipcd. If cscuic lakes form of a temptation, they do not caic.-- ilary Choi month-Icy. or an not the es- The Tongue and Typhus According te p, Ketai lager, quoted in the Journal of the American Mcd- iai Aaanriatlim. eg infallible gtrthnri of telling Whether a patient has typhoid (or paratyphoid) or the much more serious typhus. Is to ask him to "put out your tongue." Th. uphold ..r paratyphoid patient 0MMM it without effort, but If he has typhus he can not pH n bejroaal his teeth. Men's and Boys' SHOES The tastes of men and ihe nccls of boys are usually widely different Inn our stock of shoes Is varied enough to .nit both to iierfcctlon. We have the latest BgftM In shoe for dress. Hie most durable for serv ice ami (he toughest leathers for boys who are especially hunt on shoe. We lit your fert. thir price are as low as iinilty will permit. Lowry's Shoe Store 204 Hot Hurtv AfMM M DO HI I' I It I i . -m M El aHk Wfll WflrW'; H HI fijr fwrnLwim Farmers & Dairymen Are you getting the top price for your produce? The Alliance Creamery is paying the following prices : 30c cash for eggs $2 per cwt. for whole milk 1 per cwt. for skim milk The Alliance Creamery makes il possible for yon to del a higher price for your cps awl milk titan you WOUld otherwise jrct. Creamery prices are 4c in advance of station prices. Then why not patron ize the creamery I All Cans Steamed, Washed and Sterilized. The Alliance Creamery Crystal Refrigerators Best in the World All Steel White Enamel Baked on Handsome. No Doors to Warp, Shrink, Crack or Check. Plate Glass Shelves Lots of Room. Absolutely Sanitary. Scald out with Hot Water. Will Last Indefinitely. Nickel-plated Brass Hinges and Fas teners. Reasonable in Price Ice Savers Well Insulated. RHEIN ROUSEY COMPANY WE SELL ALCAZAR OIL STOVES. SEE THEM