The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, June 11, 1914, Image 4

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    THE ALLIANCE HERALD
JOHN W. THOMAS, Editor
Lloyd C. Thomas, City Editor
Published every Thursday by
THli HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY
Incorporated
Lloyd C. Thomae, President J. Carl Thomas, Vice Pres.
John W. Thomas, Secretary
Entered at the poet office at
through th malls as second-class
Subscription price, $150
THURSDAY,
value op sweet tiiovun
Ranchmen Who Have Tried It
Forage Requested te Teal
Herald Readers
for
A great deal has been printed
within the last few years regarding
aweet clover and Us value te stock
mejs, especially In the sandhills coun
try. The Herald has beca disposed
to discount these claims te a consid
erable extent, not that we doubt the
good Intentions or veracity of those
making them, but there la a possibil
ity, perhaps, that they are mistaken
in their opinions. It seems that if
the plant Is as valuable aa Is claimed
by tome, "ranchmen would have
found it out and now be crowing it
extensively for feed.
In this connection we wish to ask
readers of The Herald who have had
any experience in growing and feed
ing sweet clover to write us what
they know about it for publication
In order that others may be inform
ed aa to its value or lack of value,
aa the case may be.
The following editorial from the
Omaha World-Herald of June 6th
gives' information regarding aweet
clover and its growth in eastern Ne
braska. The Herald .wants Informa
tion directly applicable to the cen
tral and western parta of the state.
World-Herald on Aweet Clover
On account of the great interest
shown by Nebraska farmers in sweet
clover the state experiment station
has issued a bulletin entitled "Sweet
Clover in Nebraska." The analysis
of the plant shows that K has the
same food value as alfalfa and clov
er. It will grow in many places
where alfalfa Is a fallnre, as it re
Quires very little moisture, and it
enriches the land as weH aa does al
falfa or any of the legumes.
It grows wild all over the eastern
portion of the state and In some por-'
tions of the northwestern part. It j
is a much more pleasant crop to
raise along1 the road sides than weeds '
and is of as much value aa a corn
crop. There Is one thing about!
weet clover that but few know. It'
is a biennial and not a perennial like '
alfalfa und clover and will disappear
at the end of the second year unless
the lust crop is allowed to go to seed
KtAi.1i- will nr. out It u , A.nt K..t '
.... , ' A. I
ii mry ro given no omer iooa mey
... ... ... ... ,
will IkPlHn tn Ant It wilLin tw -
... ... .
three days and afterwards prefer it
.v . . i. ,
to any other Bort of hay. It requir-
.... ...
. om m. same amount oi seea to
the acre as alfalfa and can be sowed '
u ouiun flairs vu uupiuwtHl laUU.
. There Beems to be something more
about sweet clover than la stated in 1
this bulletin. In Omaha the cut I
down lots within a year or tw all
grow a big crop. The owners of
lota declare they never sowed any
sweet clover on them, bat evenr-'c
. . , ' ""
where over the city they are grow
ing heavy crops of hay. How the
seed got there no one seems to know.
Jf all the sweet clover hay that is
growing in Omaha was harvested It
would feed a good share of the
horses of the town. It produces
(wo crops a year and must be cut be
fore It becomes woody.
Every time the closet of your
neighbor is opened a little, do you
strain your neck to peek, and then
afterward strain your tongue in talk
ing about it?
There is no place in a pretty little
city such as ours for rubbllah piles
or "dump" piles as they are some
times called. They mar the looks
of a town more than one would lm
agine until one visits a strange town
and finds these piles of rubbish.
They are far more noticeable to us
in another town than la our own,
for here, knowing where they are
end accustomed to paastag them ev
ery day, we soon cease to notice
them.
1 ' i'obuiWy no town in oar slate with
av population not greater than is
claimed here, can boast of aa many
good horses as are owned by our lo
cal horsemen. Great as has been
the future predicted for the automo-
ile, man has manifested no great
desire to forsake his old friend the
hone.
The best man we hare la oar
town for the general good ot the
town is the one who yon will always
Alliance, Nebraska, for transmission
matter.
per year In adTance
JUNK 11, 1914
see on the front seat in the progres
slve band wagon. He Is the first
one to extend an open and warm
hand to greet the stranger and wel
come him to the best town in the
state.
You can begin to teach a child to
take pride in his or her home town
very early in life. Explain to them
how it detracts from the beauty and
value of a town to disfigure its side
walks by piling dirt on them or
marking them up with crayon.
We are not given to boasting, but
we are proud of the farmer boys of
this vicinity. They are, with rare
exceptions, a healthy, intelligent and
happy class of young men. We feel
like taking our hat clear off when
we meet them upon our streets, and
no clans is more welcomed to our of
flee.
An eastern clergyman suggests as
a forward movement among girls
that they stop chewing gum for i
year and give say half of the $20,
000,000 annually spent for the
quids, for foreign missions. It's up
to you, girls, to be good for the hea
thens' sake.
Column
Grand Island had four conventions
. . , , . ,
t one time last week. That town
In the center of the state. Is getting
. , .
,to be some convention burg. Some
. ... . ... . "
.of th?83 days they will be after the
c,
j A Now York preacher accuses the
divorce. A New York dally says:
"The Rev. Dr. S. I'arkes Cadman
has found the real reason for the in
i crease of unhappy marriages and
., ... . ...
.Speaking at the 4 o'clock Sunday
l meeting for men at the West Side
Young Men'a Christian Association
Dr. Cadman said that these increas
es may be directly charged to the
grocery habit.
" 'New York women are too prone
to dip their fingers into every pickle
jar of the corner grocery store in
stead of cooking a wholesome meal
for their husbands,' he said. 'There
is nothing that sends a man into the
day better prepared for victory than
a good breakfast and a clean shave.
" 'Good breakfasts, homelike
breakfasts, the kind of breakfasts
that do a man good, do not give
man the same satisfaction that the
goods of a delicatessen shop do, for
the delicatessen shop is catering to a
general trade and cannot make
things as each individual would like
them. A quarter's worth of sliced
ham from the grocery will not give
a man the same satisfaction that
home cooked slice of ham will.' "
Scottsbluff Is to have a big Fourth
ot July celebration this year. Unas
much as Alliance is to have no cele
bration on this date many Alliance
people will undoubtedly spend their
fourth in that fair city. Scottsbluff
people have always attend Alliance
affairs in full force.
Trappers in the United States get
$3,000,000 every year from skunk
skins. This is received for the skins
of four-legged skunks. There are
lot of two-legged skunks running
loose in the country whose skins are
w )
worth less than nothing. .
The world do mor, Sereral
large eastern department tores hare
nnounred that they will close all
ay Saturday during the summer
months. It was not so long a no
that the underpaid department store
clerks were compelled to work six
ays a week, ten hours a day.
A wholesale house in Norfolk, Va.,
hipped a No. 34 cheese to a retail
grocer which the grocer did not ac
cept and in returning it this is the
way he asked for the credit to his
account of the invoice of the cheese:
'Gentlemen: We are returning to
you this date one No. 34 cheese, this
being one of the two invoiced to us
on the 4th Instant.
'Simply lift the lid of the 'coffin'
encasing same, gaze upon the deceas
ed for a moment, Inhale a few of its
cantankerous' fumes, then without
any explanation you will readily see
ust why we have returned same to
its 'maker. Let us hope we will not
ave tc face our 'maker' soimllarly
uncleansed from the evil precepts of
sin-cursed world.
"Should there be a tomberected
at the head of the deceased and I
were called upon to write a fitting
epitaph, I do not know the exact
words I would use. But If I were
likewise called upon to Inscribe the
ate of birth, I should certainly go
back yonder to the days of Moses.
"But there is a bright side to ev
ery question. For even now me
thlnks that if the forbidden fruit of
Eden garden could have been of
like composition then certainly
Mother Eve could not have tasted a
sufficient quantity to cause the 'down
fall of the world.'
"But to make a long story short
as you repeat 'earth to earth, asheB
to ashes, dust to dust' in a fitting
burial of the deceased last but not
least bear in mind and mail us
your credit memorandum in the sum
of $6.54." Omaha Trade Exhibit.
Now that shirt waists are becom
lng so thin it will be necessary for
the young ladies to discontinue the
practice of carrying the latest letter
from their beaux over their heart.
People who speak of western Ne
braska as being in the semi-arid belt
should spend a few weeks in Alli
ance. A rain every two or three
days, combined with fine warm
weather, is bringing the crops along
at a rapid pace. Eastern Nebraska
will have to hustle some to keep up
with the pace western Nebraska is
setting for them this year.
The Alliance Commercial Club Is
making a record. It now has the
largest membership of any club in
the state outside of Omaha and Lin
coln, over $6,000 raised for use dur
ng the year, has already landed one
convention for the city and is on the
trail of several more. Who said that
Alliance wasn't full of the booster
spirit? We are no.w getting more
reading notices and free advertising
in the eastern newspapers and mag
azines than ever before.
J. C. McCorkle, familiarly known
as Mac , the Alliance land man.
has a white Ford which he has used
for several seasons and which he
claims has the record for economic
al running and mileage. Recently,
while out in'the country this car ran
out of water and the engine began
to neat, no larmnouse was near
and no water was in sight. "Mac"
was in a quandry until a happy
thought struck him. In the rear of
the car was a two-gallon can of but
termilk which he was bringing in
from the country. Taking the cover
off the can, he poured the buttermilk
Into the radiator, screwed the cap
buck on, and came into town on high
speed. The car made no protest
whatever on account of being com
pelled to use buttermilk for coling
Instead of water.
Will and Mary had been busy
courting for over two years, meetlg
every night in Hope street, Glasgow
About a fortnight ago Will, in part
lng with his beloved, made the usual
remark:
"I'll meet ye In Hope street tomor
row nlcht. Mind and be punctual."
"Deed, aye. Will, lad." replied
Meg with a merry twinkle in her
eye. "We hae met noo a lang time
in Hope street, an' I was Jist think
in mat u was nign time we were
shiftin' oor trystin' place a street far
ther along. Whit wad ye say to Un
ion street?"
There was company to dinner and
father was carving his prettiest on a
fine roast, when suddenly the knife
struck a skewer, made a sliding mo
tion and came out on top. Father
attempted to cover his real feelings
w'th jests, but there was an embar
rass! eg silence. Willie took ad van
tage of It.
' Cook has burned her nose orful,'
he said.
"Too bad," muttered father, still
wrestling with the roast. "How did
she do It?"
"Trying to pull those skewers out
v,ith her teeth."
To the Member of the Democratic
State Commlttee:
June 8, 1914.
In as much as the members of the
democratic press of the state will be
in Lincoln, June 20th, 1914,. and
knowing the pleasure it would give
you to meet them, you and each of
you are hereby called to convene at
the Llndell Hotel in said city at two
p. m. of said day, for the purpose of
hearing the reports ot your Chair
man and Treasurer,' and acting there
on selecting a place for holding the
nett Democratic State Convention,
appointing the delegates thereto, re
commending a temporary chairman
thereof, hearing reports aa to the
condition of our party in the respect
ive counties, and such other matters
as pertain thereto.
Each member of this committee is
requested to invite and urge the
Chairman, Secretary and the respect
ive members of the respective Coun
ty Central Committees of his senat
orial district to meet with us and aid
us by their presence, advice and.
counsel.
This being our first meeting under
the popular and efficient administra
tion of President Wilson and Gover
nor Morehead, may we not confiden
tially expect your presence?
W. H. THOMPSON, Chairman.
E. C. KEMBLE. Secretary.
Mrs. Ella Franklin has recovered
from her long illness of several
months.
You get more bona fide results
from a Herald want ad or you get
your money back.
THE ALLIANCE HORSE
COMMISSION COMPANY
would be pleased to have you list the
number of horses that you wish to 1
sell on June 25th and 26th.
At present, conditions look good
for an excellent sale. We have trie I
best sale ring that we ever have had,
plenty of yard room. We guarantee
you fair treatment, best service pos
sible.
F. L. Wright and L. E. Lewis will
do the selling, and they are on the
JOB ALL THE TIME for the HIGH
DOLLAR.
See R. M. Hampton or Oscar Bra-
man, to list your horses, or for any
Information you may desire.
26-3t-3598
are the little fellows that
bring the business. The
Herald guarantees more
bona fide replies than any
other Alliance newspaper
or you get your
Money
Back
Want
Ads
Special Sale of
Lands Near Cheyenne
40,000 ACRES OF WYOMING SCHOOL LANDS near Cheyenne, the
Capital of the State, will be sold at public auction June 17th to
21st, in tracts of from 160 to 640 acres, one-tenth down, balance
eighteen annual payments fertile 6oil, smooth surface, grass
covered, well suited to dairy and mixed farming.
Write S. O. Hopkins, State Land Commissioner, Cheyenne,
for plats and information.
SHERIDAN INDIAN AND PIONEER STAMPEDE, July 2, 3 and 4.
This will be one of the most exciting and interesting celebra
tions ever held in the West. Old-timers, pioneers and cowboys,
and from 800 to 1,000 Crow Indians will participate in the many
events. There will be racing and frontier sports, hold-ups and
Buffalo hunts.. Special railroad rates and arrangements from a
large territory.
ANNUAL REUNION, ORDER OF ELKS, at Den
Serial No. 015958.
Notice for Publication
Department of the Interior, U. S.
Land Office at Alliance, Nebraska,
May 28, 1914.
NOTICE is hereby given that Jos
eph R. Duell, of Alliance, Nebraska,
who, on May 15, 1913, made Home
stead Entry, No. 016958. for all of
section 6. township 22 north, range
48 W. of 6th Principal meridian, has
filed notice of Intention to make Fi
nal Soldier's Three Year Proof, to
establish claim to the land above
described, before Register and Re
ceiver, U. S. Land Office, at Alliance,
Nebraska, on the 20th day of July,
1914.
Claimant names as witnesses:
Frank H. Palmer, George B. Mc-
Olll, Samuel Shelton, George Curtis,
all of Alliance, Nebraska.
W. W. WOOD, Register.
26-7t-441-3597
SiB PilStitf III
ftrilsiti
allvtrtb
first clati
B. V. REEVES
Painting, Paperhanginp
and Decorating
511 Laramie Phone Black 85
Alliance, Nebr
Buy Snow
White
Bread
from your grocer or at
our bakery. We also
make all kinds of pastry,
and carry a complete line
of soft drinks and confec
tionery. '
Stephenson
& Reed
111 Box Butte Ave. Phone 133
Hiiniinininnmmntm:miiiiMiimm
All Kinds of
CEMENT
CONSTRUCTION
Sidewalks, Founda
tions, Curb, Gutter,
Retaining Walls, etc.
It will pay you to see
me before letting
your work
T. J. BEAL
PHONE 782
ver, July 13-19. Special reduced rates. Do not
miss this brilliant gathering.
J. Kridelbaugh, TICKET AGENT, Alliance, Nebr.
I.. W. WAKELY, General Passenger Agent,
Omaha, Nebr., 10O4 Faraam Street
CLASSIFIED
Advetising
WANTED
ISO head of horses or cattle wast
ed for summer pasture. Plenty of
range and water. Thirteen ranee
northeast of Ellsworth, Nebr. Ad
dress C. W. MATTHEWS.
13tf328S
WANTED Hired girl. Phone lit
or 435. or call on Mrs. E. W. Ray, at
the Flower Shop.
26tf360
WANTED 300 rooms for stock
men's convention. Alliance Oe-
merclal Club. Phone 74.
LOST Red cow with white face.
Branded right side. Phone 712 er
471. Robt Campbell.
FURNISHED ROOMS for rent fer
light housekeeping. Phone 539.
219 Yellowstone Ave.
W-may21tf3514
FURNISHED ROOMS for rnt.
129 Missouri Avenue, or phone Red
456.
177U4464
Coal office at Rowan's feed store.
ROWAN & WRIGHT, Phone 71. tf
SADDLE HORSE FOR SALE
Thorobred saddle horse for sale
cheap. Phone 340 or call at The
Herald office.
164-tf-4410
ABSTRACTERS
J. D. EMERICK
Bonded Abstracter.
I have the only set of abstract
books in Box Butte county. Offloe
Room 7, Opera House Block.
10tf570
MISCELLANEOUS
Money to loan on real estate.
F. E. REDDISH. tf
For nice clean Niggerhead Lunap
and Nut, and Eastern Hard nut ooal.
phone to No. 22.
Dlerks Lumber & Coal Company.
L. W. BOWMAN
Physician and Surgeou
Office In First National Bank P.ldg.
Phones: Office, 362; residence, 16.
50tri608
E. W. RAY, FLORIST
Cut flowers and potted plants.
Floral pieces made on short notice.
Mall orders given special attention.
41tf2549
Buy your coal of Rowan & Wright.
Phone, 71. tf
FOR SALE RE A L ESTATE
QUARTER-SECTION of land te
trade for an automobile. Inquire of
E. T. Kibble.
Rowan & Wright, coal, wood and
posts. Phone 71.
Dr. J. M. Willis
Physician and Surgeon
Over Mallery's Grocery
Phones: f,iceRt. 5;s
Alliance, Nebr.
"LET ME CRY FOB YOU"
HARRY P. COURSEY
LIVE STOCK AND GENERA.
AUCTIONEER
Farm Sales a Specialty
TERMS REASONABLE
PHONB 664
ALLIANCE KHBRASKA
HOUSES TO RENT
or lease. Land
to rent or lease.
Land or city
property for
sale. Phone 36.
C W. JEFFERS