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About The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 14, 1915)
r UniIiiritTTtIIilllltTtttlM;ill!rtTTtlt:itllMltlMTirilllllltlllillltTttTIttttTTttlTiytTtt1TtTTtHmt:tXWtttXXO Y BUY OF THE ALLIANCE SHOE STORE S. A. MILLER REASON NO. 2 lEffi W E H A V . E S H O E S FOR A L L ThoManVho Walks.By lilik When a man walks by vou on the way home to-nieht with a light, youthful steD don't envy him. Just make up your mind to come down here tomorrow and get the tame shoes he wears the famous Dr. A. Reed Cushion Shoes. Then, you can skip along yourself like a twelve year old. . , Reed shoe3 are the easiest shoes on earth. Nothing else like them if von have to walk much. No tired, aching left, then. For the soft cushion ins k-s puppott the arches of your ft et, distribute your weight evenly and maka walking a delight We'd just like to have yen try on one pa'u ani see how comfortably they fit the first time. Tha.'a convincing enough for everybody. And if you're "finicky"on style or leather we ve variety of both to show J35?Yu. Come in tomorrow. a wide HCC sn Shoo J. P. Swltti 8hM Co.. Mftv, CMf TOES t JUHWTS MOP 4 aw nu taunt iws "I L E G f W m A ii G S N A G A N S R U B B E R S 0 V E R S H 0 E ID Per i u cent BP MET MR CD .10 Per II E.IVIE.IVIEJ'E.U IU cent I a I I J1L 11 f Having bought a small place in the hills, I have decided to sell at public auction on the Britton & Parker ranch, 13 miles north and IV2 miles east of Alliance, at 10 o'clock a. m. . Thursday, October 21 MACHINERY 1 Grain Binder 1 Corn Binder 2 two-row Lister Cultivators 1 Double Cultivator 2 Listers 1 Potato Digger 1 Gang Plow 1 Potato Planter 1 18-foot Harrow . 1 Holler 32 HEAD OF CATTLE 30 Dlead of Bull Calves High Grade Herefords 1 Registered 2-year-old Bull 1 Grade 2-year-old Bull 25 HEAD OF HORSES I will place on sale twenty:five head of horses, consisting of the following: 2 3-year-olds 2 2-year-old Black Geldings 2 2-year-old Bay Geldings 2 2-year-old Sorrel Geldings 2 2-year-old Brown Mares 1 2-year-old Bay Mare 1 2-year-old Sorrel Mare 1 9-year-old Sorrel Mare with Colt 1 7-year-old Mare with Colt 10 yearling Colts (Mares and Geldings) 1 10-year-old Clydesdale Imported Stallion, wt. 1,800 lbs. PIQS 1 Duroc Jersey Boar Pig FREE LUNCH AT NOON A. Bomgardner, Owner H. P. COURSEY, Auctioneer R. M. HAMPTON, Clerk WATERING MILK FOR SWINE Sklmmllk Alone It Poor Food and Often Results In Digestive Trou ble Alfalfa Is Beat. It would make anybody pretty hot to know that the milk he Is buying Is watered Nevertheless, the addi tion of water to milk fed to the hogs Is often advisable. Where milk is fed exclusively, or In large amounts, as Is customary In most dairies, digestive troublea often result among the swine. Milk as an exclusive diet Is a harmful, wasteful and unwise piopoHitlon, but even when some other things are riven with, the addition of about one third water is, usually beneficial. Several of the best hog men add thla amount of water and let the milk stand In a barrel In as cool a place at possible during warm "Weather until the mixture begins to sour and then feed It. The advantage comes partly In diluting the feed so that when a hog has a Btomachfui there will not be the amount of food in It that there would be If pure sklmmllk were given. It also gives the weaker pigs a better chance at the food. It la a good plan to have some cor rective, like charcoal, wood ashes, etc., mixtures often recommended, be fore the hogs all the time, but thla Is especially necessary when much milk is given. As a matter of fact, sklmmllk alone Is a pcor business. Hogs are in de mand, and a dairyman could raise twice as many, and better ones, too, if he fed some alfalfa with the milk, and each pig would cost him less when ready for the packer. Alfalfa la best for hogs cut when about two-thirds aa far along as that cut for cows. It Is more tender and digestible, and as it is cut three times for hogs to twice for cows, as much cn bo secured per acre. The alfalfa m,. nd be cured, but not dead dry. A very tasty food is made by putting about' four pounds of Bait with each ton of thla, and the hogs will go to It quicker than they will to green al falfa. On a 20-cow dairy about twice the hogs can be turned off per year by such feeding of one acre of alfalfa, aa would be turned off If only sklm tnllk were ted, which is good bust OPBS. BOYS ARE IN COUNTY JAIL Ilroke luto Newberry's Wart House and Took Cartridge to the Amount of f 12 1'Al'fUIT DISPOSING OF KHKLIjH MULE MOST VALUAB .E ASSET George Manewal and Wm. Dunbar, two Alliance young men about 17 years old, are In the county Jail charged with breaking into the New berry Hardware Company's ware house near the llurlincton trrk Monday night and removing three cases of cartridges, the amount of wmcu was 142. The boys were ap prehended When thev unlft nnnin nf the shells, and their arrest followed. They were immediately lodged in the county jail, and their preliminary hearing: will be held before County Judge Berry tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock. It Is probable that they will plead guilty at that lime and throw themselves on the leniency of the court. Aa the amount of the theft makes it grand larceny, and with the breaking into the store room as a separate offense, the case looks any thing but hopeful for these young men. Animal Are Easy to Raise and No Better Way of Making Money Than by Breeding Them. Down South I used to hear them say "two sets of mules will iast a farmer a whole lifetime." Southern farmers recognize the value of the mule as a farm animal and would rather have a team of mules than a team of horses. Mules are easy to raise, and I don't knov of an easier way of making money than In raising and selling them, says a Missouri writer In the Farm Progress. Any Kind of a mu!o team that Is fairly sound Is market able right now and as a rule the price goes up along toward planting time lu the spring. I sometimes break a team of mules to work when they are two years and six months old. They sell well from that time on till tbey are from eight to ten years old. Sucking mules are always eagerly sought by buyers and feeders and It Is a fact that a mule Is about the easiest thing about the A GIANT LABORATORY New KdiNou Factory Is a Wonderful lMiu Ixllson Week to lie Cel ebrated Here Next Week October 21 will be celebrated by the EdlBon electric dealers as Edison Day. All of next week will be cele brated by the phonograph Jobbers and dealers of the United States and Canada as Edison Week. Geo. D. Darling, , proprietor of the Edison Shop in Alliance, has arranged for a number of demonstrations of Edi son's new invention and also entered an Edison diamond disc phonograph window display In the International Window Display contest which is be ing conducted by the Edison Jobbers' Association. Thomas A. Edison's extensive knowledge of chemistry has always been one of is greatest resources. Five years ago when he cet himself to the task of producing an Instru ment that would re-create sound so perfectly that the re-creation could not be detected from the original, he invoked chemistry In the final per fection of his new invention. To be sure, his vast knowledge of acoustics played an Important part In the work but the marvelous perfection of re sult was due largely to the chemistry that produced the materials used In the Diamond Disc record and the diaphragm of the Diamond Repro ducer. Strangely enough, the big fire that devustated his Orange factory In De cember last proved an aid. In re building and reconstructing, Edison turned his phonograph record plant into a vast laboratory and has so ntandardized and perfected laborato ry processes that he Is now produc ing the Edison Diamond Disc in un limited quantities. The significance of this has not been lost upon the merchants who sell this new product, and they refer to these new records as the Laboratory He-creation of mu sic, v At San Francisco on October 21, Miss Christine Miller, the celebrated contralto, will appear before the ex position officials and Invited ftneeU for the purpose of deiuonstratlsf whether the new Edison re-creatlea of music Is equal to the original. Ske will sing in comparison with several Edison records of her own voice. Will Attend Marabett lUlly Eleven Alliance ladles, members of the Indy Macabee order, went to Hr annls today to attend the rally of thai oraer, which Is being held today and Friday. A large class will be initi ated this evening. Those who msd up the party from here are Mesdame Ben Mullane, F. E. Allen, W. J. Ilasa llton, It. E. Drlscoll, T. Warner, Clyde Miller, Peter Young, J. hL Schlrk, F. W. Hargarten. J. W. Reed, and Mrs. L. J. Sisco, of Ellsworth. liclleven in Printer's Ink . The Oolden Rule store Is repre sented In this issue of the Herald with a fine half-page ad, setting forth many seasonable bargains. Mr. Bat nett, the manager, believes there is nothing like printer's ink for gettlaf the business. BROTHS TO START A MEAL Preparations Are Valuable Chiefly fe the Stimulating Effect They Have troths are not particularly valuable from a nutritive standpoint, but they have a decided stimulating effect la this way the extractives from the meat, contained In the broth, stimulate the gastric Juice in the stomach and prepare It for the food which follow. On the contrary the cheaper, lnferlot parts of meat yield more nutriment, The chief object in making broth is, of course, to obtain the largest possible amount of nutriment, and this is beal accomplished by observing the follow ing rules: Cut meat in small pieces. Soak ft ta cold water before heating-. Make. careful selection and proportion of meat, bone and water. Usually one pint of water to one pound of mead Judicious seasoning. Long, slow cook ing. Simmer (not boll) in a steam tight kettle. Make the day before using, so that fat may be removed' more easily. Various nourishments may be added to broth rice, barley, vermleeUf, noodles and the white or whole of egg, etc. Cream soups have a greater food value. Just one caution when 1 advise broth before meats I mean not a onf plateful, but a small cupful to start the gastric Juices. Kansas City Star. Prevents Lumplness. Possibly those who have kept bouse for a long time know, but there are many others who haVe difficulty In making custards, cornstarch puddings and gravies smooth if there are e:gs In them. A simple way la to remove the rc"X, susar and other ingredients, supports It Is cornstarch pudding one is maklnc , from the stove to cool enough to slop tne Dniiing. A Dip a few spoonfuls of the hot n..lh Into the bowl in which there are well boaten eggs, stirring as es spoonful 1b added. This heats them gradually, not at lowing them to cook before they urs thoroughly mixed with the milk. Then they may oe added to tht larger quantity on the stove, stirred in quickly and the padding placed over the Are to finish cooklua. I Span of Farm Mules. farm to selL They grow up to work ing else quickly and the farmer hardly notices the feed It takes to raise them. I have found that a mule Is a gool animal as long as he keeps his teeth. When advanced age helps to destroy their teeth, their usefulness is pretty well at an end. but they will outlast most horses. The mule that weighs a scant 1.000 pounds will do fully as much work, live on far loss rations and last years longer at hard work than a good 1,200-pound horse. Silage, The Englishman raises roots and beats us at producing mutton. We cant raise roots profitably. But we have ted enough silage to know that It can be fed safely and with profit. We have learned that it should be perfectly cured and that It should be made from corn that is well matured. No other farm animal makes better use of succulence . than the sheen, Try silage for the sheep, feeding with caution at Prut if It has never been used before- Fall and Winter Samples Now on Display at Our Stcre STYLE AND QUALITY Is what you got at our Ktore. It will lake just a few M-contU time to convince you that the Suits we make will save yov. $10.00. Every garment we make hand-tailored by the best Tailors in America. You can't go wrong absolutely the greatest value in a Tailor Made Suitever produced. If you admire good clothes, let us be your tailor. Remember, we pat in all our garments the Bartell Patent Pockets, the poc kets that keep the coats in shape, and it costs you nothing extra. SUIT or OVERCOAT Made Strictly to Order UNION j jjjjOO MADE (For Market Week Only) Ladies' Suits Cleaned and Pressed for $1.00 FOR MARKET WEEK ONLY Alliance Cleaning Works L. B. JOHNSON, Prop. 403 Box Butte Avenue. Alliance, Nebraska.