M I MV I HEHALD. TH RSDAY. DE4'. 27. 191 7. THE ALLIANCE HERALD l,I.O C. THOMAS. IMUor JOHN W. THOMAH. Ahjmx Int.- and Live-lock Elltr Leonard hartman. AxsisiiMit ti Manager PRANK B. H A RTMAN, llilsinrs. Manager ami PnbUshOf THE HERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY, Owners (Incorporated) Enteral .u tii. post office a' Allium, Nebraska, Km traatmlMloa through the malll as second-class matter. Published v ry Thursday. '' " Subscription Price, $1.50 Per Year, Payable in Advance Every Ubtcrlptlon In rewarded an an open fcCCOUnt Th names of sjubscrlbors will ! instantly removed from our mailing lilt i't expiration Of time paid for. if publishers ahull be notltled; otherwise the subscription Will remain in force a( the designated aubscription price. Kvery subscriber must understand that these conditions are made u part of tin contra. ( between publisher end subscriber. This paper is the official organ of the Nebraska Stock growers' Asso ciation It is sent each week as a regular subscription by the Association in each member. If you are a member, you should receive the paper HnUrlf. This paper Is also the official organ of the Nebraska State Volunteer Firemen's Association and Is sent regularly to each volunteer fire depart ment of the state belonging to the state association. If your ropy of The Herald does not reach you promptly and reglllarljr you should not Hesitate to phone 340 or write this office at ODce. We want nr subscribers to receive the best of service and wish them to advise lis When such Is not the case. News items are always apprciated, either by telephone or mall. gravely reminded that the Saviour Himself ionic, when u great principle was at stake, took a whip in Htfl hand and scourged evil doers. "And Jesus went up to Jerusalem," reads the 13th verse of the If chapter of John, "and found in the temple those that sold oxen and 'she p and the changers of money sitting. And when he had made a scourge of small cords he drove all out of the temple and the shep and the oxen. and lioiired out the rlianeprs' ninn.v and overthrew the tables, and said: "Make not my Father'! house an house of merchandise." Apparently the authority of the llolshcviki does not reach ns far as MesopeAamta, where Kussinn troops are still reported to be co-operating successfully with the British. The Germans only pretend to believe that England got the United' States into the war, but everybody knows that Germany got Russia out of it. Hit LAST HAND S NEBRASKA PRESS ASS DEC. 27, 11M 7. OOATTONI those made at less costly than home. 5. Do not look upon the departure to the front of those dear to you as an abandonment. Be with them con stantly in thought, us they are with you, particularly in the hour of dan ger; and do all that you can to re place them in their former occupa tions. 6. Do not complain of the diffi culties, annoyances and privations caused by the war. Think of those who are dying for their country and complaint will halt upon your lips. 7. Multiply your activities, in your country by the work of your John W. t'ntrlght, editor of the hands, the warmth of your heart . and Lincoln Daily Star, in a recent issue i the clarity of your Intelligence. fail as the DhreWd paelflel congress men, because they foolishly imagine that they have much nt stake. But there is a way to teach them and they will be taught in due time. The most effective way Ib very pointedly suggested by t h litor of the Saturday Kvening I'ost. Re marking that til omen: ce from ene mies at home is steadily increasing and th: t the department of justice can cope only with those who com mit certain overt acts, he goes on to big danger mark on them, but there is not." On the contrary, the ubiquitous girl of this sort, instead of having loud manners and a flashy appearance. Is very pretty, engaging. sympathetic, and "you may thank 'riot's scorn yourself the only man she has ever loved, but you are not." Young women of this pleasing but BRIEF 01 MMMN1 Slackerism is not confined to young men anxious to escape mili tary duty. It Is at it3 worst among the obstructors who are ready only to preach pessimism, the unwilling who are not lifting a finger to help win the war. These may not be ac tually disloyal but only unloyal; they may not be taking the kaiser's blood money, but they are justly objects of suspicion. And they rhould be made to feel the sting of every real pa- If still in existence, the Nobel peace prize ought to go next year to the man who does the most to make a peact'-seeklng war vigorous and effective. We should not confuse the best Russians, nor cowed and suppressed, with the spineless Bolshevikl who have elected to lick Germany's boots. We've given the kaiser's agents in America plenty rope, but we needn't expect any hangings without our gov ernment's voluntary assistance. Chamberlain's Tablets Ex-Fresident Taft wisely recom mends no more deluded talk about a promiscuous sort have multipled the j short war; Hp woud havp evprv numbers of the innii tes of a certain hospital near Cherry Hinton. There fore Lieutenant McQuarrie says to body get busy in every possible way, for "we must settle down to a pol icy based on the prospect of a two or Tablets are also of great value for bil Chamberlain's Tablets are in tended especially for stomach trou bles, biliousues land constipation, anl have met with much success in the treatment of those diseases. Peo ple who have suffered for years with stomach trouble and have been un able to obtain any permanent relief, have been completely cured by the use oi tuese laoieis. v. namoenain say: "If you know your left hand the American preparing for foreign , fhrep year8. 8trugfjlp,- We should iousness. Chronic constitpatlon may from your right you can tell Prus sianism from Americanism. When you Unci a disloyal neighbor whom you cant' send to jail, shun him as if he had the smallpox. Keep out of his house and keep him out of yours. Let him Bee that he stands discred ited and disgraced that he is unfit company for loyal Americans. Let him be socially interned, cut off from all speech and traffic with decent men and women." The editor urg- sorvlce: I have given you some Straight tips, try and take them. You are the father of future Ameri cans. Don't sow foul impulses in your race. Give your children a fair chance. We are pretty bad in Europe, you know. You would be the same with war at your doors for three years. Your race is made up of our very best. Don't give us the fearful responsibility of ruining you and your nation. Forgive this be cheerful and confident, but it is better to face the truth, Indulging in no wasteful illusions. MIST LIKE 'I'll E U-HOAT THREAT ing this course concludes with good ( preaching." " Surely every young reason that the results will go fur- man of sense will not merely forgive war than but welcome such a timely warning. ther toward winning the would the annihilation of a dozen German army corps. half And even every prude ought to look with favor on this brief editorial Senator La Follette Is reported to be practically ostracized by the other members of the senate. Thin war will not be won until a similar re buke is meted out to the less famed, but equally busy La Follettes of thousands of American communities. be permanently cured by taking Chamberlain's Tablets and observing the plain printed directions with each bottle. So far as is known villainous Ger man agents had no hand in the frightful disaster at Halifax, but even if they had not we may be sure mention of a vastly important mat-i that they wish they had and that had the following: When a prominent German expert predicted months ago that America had a rope around its neck because Germany controlled the potash of the world, and potash is essential in War, he came about as near striking the truth as did the German states men who have kept predicting that the l'-boat will win the war. But ' American papers are still giv ing credence to that nonsensical Ger man prediction about potash A Ne braska paper of recent date says: "The I'nlted States needs 300,000 tons of potash annually. Yet last year, 'by our best efforts, we could produce but 10,000 tons. Next year We expect to get out 25,000. and It is figured that with all by-products Utilized wie may be able to develop 45,000 tons." It is mortifying to note that some Nebraska newspapers do not even hnow the resources of their own Btate. Months ago there was one Nebraska potash factory turning out 118 tons a day, or at the rate of more than 40,000 tons a year. And there are four or five other factories near by it to help in its tremendous war Work. Meantime great quantities of po tash were being extracted from sea Weed and other materials in other States, and in California has recent ly been discovered a lake holding twenty million tons of potash in so lution. Let us not worry about the potash BUppl as any threat that we will lose tlu war. It is a kaleer bogeyman. 8. Exhibit day by day and hour by hour the same courage a man shows upon the field of battle. In struct the ignorant, uphold the feeble, console those who are stricken; transmit your own confid ence to others. 9. No matter how long the strug gle last may, await victory with strength and patience. 10. If you tore stricken in your dearest affections, hear your sorrow nobly, that your tears may be worthy of the hero whose death you mourn. DIALOGUE of WAR FOR WOMEN "A new decalogue of war for wo men has been arranged by the pro tensors, of the University of Turin," ays Dr. Anna Howard Shaw, chair man of the woman's committee of the Council of .National Defo&ao "This decalogue, like that of the leiiptureo, applies to both men and Women, and by close attention to its GERMANY'S FREER HAND The release of large German forces from the Russian front, made pos sible by the armistice, is regarded with apprehension. It is supposed that the Germans can now employ two million more men on the west front and to be feared that the Al lies may be overwhelmed by num bers. But this Is Impossible, what ever may happen. Ex-Ambassador Gerard has said that Germany has twelve mllilon men available for war. but he doubt les3 included the forces of her allies, for it is stated by sup posed authorities that Germany it self has a force of only six millions, and, if one mililon has been sent ; against Italy, she has only five mil I iions to employ on the west front. I The total forces of the British and ! French, together with the relatively small American adidtion, are said to be nearer eight than seven millions Why, then, should tile estimate) ncreas in tin' German tones on the west be feared? Why have not the larger forces of the allies al ready driven the Germans out of Fiance? The answer given is that mere numbers have not yet begun to tell anil wil (not until waning man-power renders the Germans in capable of holding their long lines and forces the shortening of these Moreover, as has bH'u , shown at Verdun, a smaller entrenched army with great guns can stand off a much greater army for a long period. It is contended that if it were a matter Germany would rules, everyone will be able not only to do her part, but to do it so sys-1 ol mere numbers tematically and efficiently that there i already have been conquered. It is no demand the government could s ' ins to be manifest that under mod- make would not find us prepared to era conditions of war victory can be respond at once. If every family vvou ""' by the slow process of at wearing out of the contestant with the smaller as well as the j resources In men and supplies. the great kept this decalogue where it could be trlbutlou the gradual in view every day. It would remind them of their duty giory or snaring in tne great new struggle which we trust shall hriag I THIC WAY TO AMERICAN UNITY German propagandists and pro German "pacifists" have no intention of slowing up their efforts, but the spectacle of American unity of feel ing and purpose, a unity more com- lete every day, must give them mo ments of profound discouragement. I'his unity, with the president as its nurture!- and spokesman, is the stib- ect of comment in widely separated irts of the world. "The United States." says La Razon, a leading newspaper of Rio Janeiro, "occupies the most prominent place in world today because of the perfect alliance which exists between the,- people and the government." The j London Daily Mail goes so far as to say: No autocrat in history ever en- Joyed the power and authority freely ielded to President Wilson by the tmerlcan people. His voice Is their olee, his thoughts their thoughts to i degree that no comparison with any European country can quite par- illel. Whenever he speaks It as though America, with its 100,000. 000 people, blew a blast on a single trumpet. To read his latest aaaress to congress is to know immediately what are the ideals and purposes of the entire nation." What is most remarkable about this is its truth. We have not changed; our Institutions are pre celsely what they have been all ilong. Our country is a republic omposed of forty-eight self-govern ing states. Yet in tnis crisis one man does sit down pen in hand and peak for the whole nation, with the x. -option of a small, secretly dis loyal element with foreign sym pathies. Reading the president's re- ent address to congress, his re ponse to the pope's peace appeal, and his other important public ex- presisons since we entered the war. millions of Americans in the ranks of all political parties Have ap plauded not merely because both the substance and form of the president's utterances have compelled admira tion, but because lie said what t hev hemaelvee had more or less vaguely thought and had wished to sav. Woodrow Wilson has a mervolo'.is ear for "voices" from the farms, '.tie workshops, the counting-houses, the universities, the home fire sides, an 1 joined with this gift of perception ire many other talents befitting a great statesman. This is wny ue can speak, in a great hour, for a huu ii d million people and is freely yielded a power and authority no European monarch enjoys. ter. A "conscientious objector," dis approving of war under any circum stances whatsoever they will do the like whenever and wherever they can. We now have 2 2 , r, 9 6 m'lliona in s. was asked if he, one-third more than we had in 191n. The Soft Corn Question The Agricultural Extension Serv ice of the University of Nebraska has just issued an emergency bulletin, entitled "The Problem of Soft Corn." The question of feeding soft corn is taken up as well ns methods of dry ing it out. The bulletin is well Il lustrated with drawings showing ventilating devices for cribs. Free, copies of the publication may be se cured by writing to the Bulletin clerk. State Farm, Lincoln, Nebr. Nine Pounds of Iron and Steel In the equipment furnished each to us a fulfillment of the Spirit of Him who came to bring, 'Beace on Earth Good Will to Men." " The decalogue is as follows: 1. Do not chatter. Keep to your self the news you hear, your own Im pressions, and your opprehenslons. t. Do not listen to alarmists, or to those who would spread discour agement. Silence them. 8. Be moderate in your spending, neither lavish in gifts nor sordid In your economics. Let everything in your life, even your daily expenses, take on at this moment its true na tional Importance. 4. Encourage national industries, avoiding Imported goods, even though they may seem better and TEACH THEM WO have remarked that pacifist congressmen have learned much since they went home on a visit fOff one thing, that to be suspected of vote-hunting pro-Germanism is to lie damned for life. But what of those who come and go among us in almost every town, criticising preaching "pacifism" which is now merely a polite euphemism for near disloyalty? Even such of these as are not secretly influenced by Ger man ageuts, who are not literally disloyal but only unloyal, are labor ing to undo the work of a great gov ernment and a great people in an hour of national p rll. What of them are they also learning? Not so could be content to "turn the other The increase will not be so rapid now j infantryman bv the Ordnance Bureau cheek even in case the Germans that munition makers must nil or knocked out England, took Canada, 1 ders at rates fixed by the govern ment, whether for the American marched across the border, invaded his house and were about to attack army or for the armies of our alii, his women? He looked troubled,! but fanaticism still held him and he answered: "Yes, I would say Germany can be beaten, must be to beaten and will be beaten, says Gen- them: 'Can I not persuade thee not ' eral Pershing. Perhaps he did not to do this evil thing?" He was con- i add that Germany is now being beat- temptuously given up as a hopeles3 en merely because the genuine sol- me I ... . . . . . .. ease, nut ne ougnt to nave Deen dier never Doasts. I of the war department are 9 Ms pounds of Iron and steel. This is exclusive of the uniform equipment provided by the quartermaster corps Used in the bayonet stabbard are 2 ounces of iron and steel; bacon can, 0.04 ounce; bayonet, 15 ounces; front sight cover, 2 ounces; knife, 1 ounce: meat can, 0.03 ounce; pack carriers. 0.03 ounce; rifle, 107 ounces; shovel, 25 ounces. mnmmiwmimmmmmwwmtwmtmmmmnmnm a v ERY IMIORTANT MATTER Hector McQuarrie, a young Brit ish college man of long service in the Royal Field Artillery, has writ ton a book called "How to Live at the Front," which contains much in formation of the little known sort and much good advice which the young American soldier going aboard may well take to heart. Perhaps the most Important chapter is the one headed "A Curseof War," in which the author warns lonely American soldiers stopping In London or other cities that "there are a fearful num ber of women not necessarily profes sional women of a certain class going about in England, who have become quite unmoral and very kind hearted." Of course thz same Is true in France. "Thero ought to be a There's A Printer In Your Town QT The Herald Job Department is pre " pared to handle your Commercial and Job Printing. New Material New Machinery Experienced Workman ship. Give us your next order. THE HERALD Alliance PUBLISHING CO. Nebraska IMIIIIMllIIIIIHIIIIIMMIIHtMHM1""" """ 1111111 1 iiiiiiiiiilllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllil gjSJ