THE ALLIANCE HERALD, ALLIANCE, NEBRASKA, NOVEMBER 20, 1919 PAGE SEVEN c a package before the war c a package during the war c a package NOW THE FLAVOR LASTS SO DOES THE PRICE! 187 I wish to dispose of the following property. It will be priced right. If you can use any article listed it will repay you to call phone 18 or come in person : , 25x28x42 Detroit Safe Flat Top Office Desk and Chair Oil Heater, medium size One Mare, four years old, weight 1450 W.W.NORTON First National Bank Building Alliance, Nebraska LAND I have several good propositions in Box Butte County Farms Prices range from $25 to $80 per acre Some of this land has been sold as many as three times this season and each time has cleared as high as $10 per acre for the owner. I have not sold a farm to a man this summer that has not made from ?3,000 to $5,000. These opportunities will bear investigation. Your money can just as well earn these big returns. Let me show you my list E.T. Kibble & Co. Real Estate MtmiowsT (muni The following new members were received into the church last Sunday morning, all by letter: Mrs. A. V. Newberg, Mrs. Elizabeth Howard, Thomas Howard, Miss Zelma Lock- man Rnd Miss Victoria Wilkinson. We were pleased with an attend- nce of 212 In the Sunday school last week. Next Sunday is rally day, and the superintendent has asked for n attendance of 312. Let all the members work and this can be ac complished. Next Sunday night will be ob served as "Boys' Night." A chorus of boys In addition td the regular choir and orchestra will furnish sev eral special selections. The boys are working to have a larger attendance than the girls can possibly have hen we observe "Girls' Nicht" a little later. The pastor will speak on the subject, "A Boy's Religion." We find that many people are ap preciating the splendid orchestra which haa so recently been organ- lied. Much favorable comment has been heard on the selections given last Sunday night, particularly "The Lost Chord." MEARL C. SMITH, Pastor. Remember the folks who used to worry, In the days when the automo bile Industry was In Its Infancy. about how long It would be before the horse was supplanted. That was at one time a favorite subject for debate In country schools. The same old story, only with a great deal more conviction, was spread still farther when the tractor appeared and came Into fairly general use. It has been predicted every year for the past decade that the time would come when homes would no longer be the chief mainstay of the farmer. Wise acres would nod their heads and In sist that automobiles- and 'tractors couldn't work In the mud, and that there would always be need of some horses on the farms, but even they didn't doubt that the era of the horse was In its decline. Wben the war broke out, and buyers from this and foreign countries Bcoured the United States, paying unheard of prices for draft 'animals for the transportation service and artillery, there was an other time of fretting about killing off all the horses needed on the farms, and again It was predicted that the horse was slated to go. But something has gone wrong with all these calculations. In spite of the fact that there are more automobiles and tractors In use than ever before, and despite the exportation of over million horses during the war, fig ures supplied by the bureau of crop estimates of the department of agrl culture show that there are now nearly a third of a million more horses and mules In this country than at the beginning of hostilities. It was expected, the bureau says, that the war would stampede the horse market and send prices high enough to draw from the farms an alarming number of much-needed work animals, but nothing of the sort occurred. tt HAS DONE ME A WORLD OF GOOD" Pee Kays It's Iloiiinrknhle How Quickly Tanlac Hits Marie Him Feel flight Again "My next door neighbor put me on to Tanlac and It certainly is remark able how quickly it has gotten me to feeling right again," said James H. Fee, a well known carpenter em ployed at the Rock Island Railroad shops living at 1345 F avenue, East, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, in conversation with a Tanlac representative re cently. "My stomach and kidneys have bothered me so much during the past three years," he explained, "that I often had to lay off from work, as I was In bo much pain I could not get out of bed. Gas would form on my stomach after eating and cause such awful pain that I could hardly stand it, and while I tried many different medicines nothing did me any good. "So I got a bottle of Tanlac, on the advice of my neighbor who had been greatly benefited by it, and soon after starting on it I began to straighten right up. I have taken three bottles now and am feeling like new man. I have no more trouble with my stomach nor any more pains in my sides and back. It Is without doubt a great medicine for It has certainly done me a world of good. talk so much about my wonderful improvement and what caused it that my friends often call me 'Tanlac' I never fail to recommend it to any one who is not feeling well. I could name several who have taken It on my sayso and they all tell me it has relieved them of their troubles, too. ' A dull, dragging feeling of the body, a sluggish mind, dull memory, depression of spirits, nervousness, ir ritability, stomach trouble, indiges tion, backache, headache and that tired feeling, are among the numer ous symptoms of a condition from which a surprisingly large number of people suffer. Tanlac proved of great benefit to Mr. Fee because it contains certain WHEN YOU SUFFER FROM RHEUMATISM Almost any man will tell you that Sloans Liniment means relief medicinal properties which combat these very troubles. Thousands are now using this famous meoiclne In nil parts of the United States and Canada and in each case the prepara tion Is accomplishing surprising re sults. Scores of testimonials are re ceived dally from men and women of unquestioned honesty and Integ rity expressing deep gratitude as a result of having found such a great source of relief. Tanlac Is sold In Alliance by F. E. Holsten, in llemlngford by Ilrmlng ton Merc. Co., In llofflnnd by Mal lery Grocery Co. Advertisement. Two American fliers recently passed over the town of Ennenada da Todos Santos del Distrlto Norte da la Baja California and dropped exhausted Record. A bolshevlst caret nothing about collective bargaining. He omits the bargaining and simply collects. HEAD THESE PRICES -J on genuine For practically every man has used it who has suffered from rheumatic aches, soreness of muscles, stiffness of joints, the results of weather exposure. Women, too, by the hundreds of thousands, use it for relieving neuritis, lame backs, neuralgia, sick headache. Clean, refreshing, soothing, economi cal, quickly effective. Say "Sloan's Liniment" to your druggist. Get it today. 35c. 70c, $1.40 Firestone Tires Special Moulded Fabric Cases Guaranteed 6,000 miles. Plain Non-Skid 30x3 -in $11.60 30x3i,-in 15.10 18.00 32x3!o-in 17.50 , 21.00 (with war tax) All sizes of wrapped treads guaranteed 6,000 miles; prices in proportion. All sizes of cords guaranteed 8,000 miles. These prices are made possible by the large stock we carry, which now represents an in vestment of upwards of $35,000. This is your first opportunity to select from a com plete stock of all sizes of tires including cords. C0URSEY & MILLER The Ford Garage The nrivates didn't have all the grief during the late war. The offl cers were soaked good and plenty for every purchase they made, and even at times when they would have been glad to economize, the dignity of their position made It Impossible And. now that the war is over, the ex-offlcers of Uncle Sam's army are meeting with a flood of requests for contributions to this, that and the other thing, and all of them begin by reciting that they were Just a lit tie bit the nick of the flock, and therefore, being of a higher intelll gence, ought to appreciate more the particular scheme that is being pre sented. One of the latest of these, ac cording to an officer friend, is just a little bit the richest yet. In a let ter mailed November 1 to a man liv ing at Alliance, Neb., he is invited to join the proposed National Army and Navy club, to be located at New York City, and to forward a check for 10 initiation fee, for which he Is to receive free the privileges of the club, still located In New York City, as far away as It could be, for the remainder of the year 1919. It is understood that he is' to pay an other $10 for this privilege during 1920, and so on for the remainder of his natural life, if he is foolish enough to do so. Not only this, but he is urged to constitute himself a membership committee of one, and rope all his friends in. It's a grand scheme one that Barnum would have heartily favored and will probably succeed for the same rea son that Mr. Barnum did. Don 't Buy a New One Have It Welded By one of the best welders in the Middle West, with the Oxy acetylene process. No Job Is Too Large or Too Kmall for Me to Do My tient I make a specialty of repairing Clyinder Blocks, Frames and Trans mission Cases Any Kind of Metal. GEORGE H. BRHCKNER With the Carroll llUM-ksmlth 8hop After yoa eat always take ATONIC L2 Instantly relieves Heartburn. Bloat. mi Catty Feeling. Stops food souring, repeating, and all stomach miseries. Aid. diaaatioM ud appattta. Kaapi atomach awaat and troo. Incraawa Vitality and Pap. EA TONIC la tha boat ramady. Tana of thoo aanda woadarf oily booafltad. Only eoata a eaat or two a day to bm it. foaitivaly ruarantaad to plaaaa or wa will raf und nauuay. Gat a ha box today, Yea will aaa, F. J. BREXWAK, Alliance, Xebraaka L : La? S k 22 1 VV - J rolling 'em with I 4' - the national joy smoke " ROLLING your own cigarettes with Prince Albert is just . about as joy'us a sideline as you ever carried around in your grip ! For, take it at any angle, you never got such quality, flavor, fragrance and coolness in a makin's cigarette in your life as every "P. A. home-made will present you! Prince Albert putt new smokenotiona under your bonnet t It's so delightful rolled into a cigarette and, so easy to roll I And, you just take to it like you been doing it since away back t You see, P. A. is crimp cut and a cinch to handle I It stays put and you don't lose a Jot when you tart to hui the paper around the tobacooJ Youll like Prince Albert in a jimmy pipe as much as you do in a home rolled cigarette, tool Bite and parch are cut out by our exclusive patented process. You know P. A. is the tobacco that has led three men to smoke pipes -where one was smoked before. Yes sir. Prince Albert blazed the way. And, me-o-my, what a wad of smokesport will ripple your way very time you fill up I AwaMnl yoaf ajy-eo, rtmt tad topmy tad baja. Hay tad ton a, liindtoina pound and matt pound tin hamtdorw madtmat ciaaay. practical pound aryatal flaaa hamudor antm aponga moiatanar top that tpi Prinaa Albart amca patiact aondttton I R. J. Reynold Tobacco Company Whateo-Salaaa.N.C 3 fa 0