The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, January 10, 1918, Image 4

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    ALMAWCK HERALD, THURMDAT, JANUARY 10. HUH
Hemingford News Items
(Held over from Inst week)
8. W. Pounds was in Alliance
Monday.
T. K. Evans la confined to his bed
at present with bronchitis.
-Mrs B. U. 8hephcrd und Mrs. Mc
Clung were In Alliance Saturday.
Jim Wilson returned here Sunday
niter a couple of months' r.baence.
Miss Devona Dlrklson visited with
friends here the first of the week.
Elliott Beaumont Is quarantined
with small pox at his home at Al
liance at present.
Mr. Utter and family returned
from their visit with friends at
Ausellno the middle of the week.
Leslie Bobb't returned Monday
And is at his post again n( the depot.
The smnll child of Mr. and Mrs.
Josse Scott, of Beread, Is reported
quite ill.
A'l irce Saturday, whore she bad
br-en visiting hr parents fng a week.
INTERESTING LECTURE
SATURDAY EVENING
(a plain 1oujther to Hpeak at the
First fUptlst Church at Seventh
and I irnmir Htreet
Miss IBla Moravek left here Mon
day for North IMnttc, where she has
a position
o
B. U. Shepherd and Walter Mar
shall autoed to Antioch Sunday, re
turning Mondny.
Misses Ruth Keaten and Ella
Moravek visited with Mrs. Charles
Hoot last week.
Howard Young, of Ellsworth, Is
visiting his brother, Oeorgo and oth
er relatives here at present.
Bill Elder returned the latter
part of the weok from Auselon,
where he spent Christmas with rela
tives. The 2-yep.r-old babo of Mr. and
Mrs. John Wlllsey, who has been se
riously 111 for some time, is reported
much better.
Misses Haxel Miner and Charlotte
Koten, came up from Alliance Mon
day to attend the dance at this place
Monday evening.
Mrs. I W. Hucke Is reported 111
at present. It seems thore is con
siderable sIcknesB around this
place at present.
Mrs. I. R. Walker went to Mars
land Mondr.y evening to assist with
the music for the dance at that
place Monday evening.
Frank Spellmnn was quite 111 for
several days last week with pneu
monia At this time Mr. Spellman is
much better and able to be out again.
Mr. and Mrs. Lyman wore incom
ing passengers on 41 Saturday.
They have been visiting Mr. Lyman's
relatives In the southern part of the
state.
D. W. Butler went up to Hot
Springs, S. D. New Lear's Day to
Isit with two nephews who are home
on furloughs. Both boys are In the
navy.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Brown are en
Joying a visit with Mrs Brown's
mother who came Mown from Van
Tassel Sunday.
o
Joe Waulk, Jr., and wife, who
have been visiting relatives out near
Uwn, returned to their home at Lost
Springs, i Wyo., the first of the week.
The Inst-lling t.?am of the L O. O.
F. lodg-j, went down tj Alllnnce
Tuesday to help with the installation
of the I. O. O. F. lodso of that place.
Mr.. Il.lll. o I, ......... .1 mm .1.1 llu I
.111.1 iiauir ii" i 'i' i, au uiu iiim-
resident of this place, and well known
here, came from Council Bluffs, Iowa,
last week for a visit with relatives
and friends here.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Curry and j
babies who have been visiting Mr.
Cr.rry's parents, returned to t!iir '
i home at Broadwater, Nebr., the lat-j
ter part of the week.
o
I K. L. Pierce went down to Lincoln i
J last week and accompanied Mrs. I
1 Pierce home. They came Friday j
i morning. Mrs. Pierce Is very much
! improved, but still quite weak.
o-
Mr. and Mrs. (ieorge Jenkins, of
Lincoln, are visiting relatives here at
present. Mr. Jenkins will asiifit with
the vork at the First State Bank dur-
ilng one of the clerk's absence.
Wh: t v ill be one of the best talks
of the season, on points of Interest
to all of us, will be given by Chap
lain Loughcr, Saturday evening, at
the First Baptist church, Seventh
and Lururale streets. The lecturo
will be about the present war, facts,
conditions and our position In the
ANNUAL FARM MEETING
WAS ONE HUMMER
(Continued from Page 1).
Fay, the oldest son of Mr. and
Mrs. Bob Curry, who is visiting with
Mr. Curry's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Will Curry, is very ill with rheuma
tism at present.
L. Copdand returned from his
TiBlt to Keellne, Wyo.. Friday. Mr.
Copeland has severed his connection
with the Lorkwood store and will
take a much needed rest.
Mrs. B. U. Shepherd spent the
greater part of the week In Alliance.
o
Mr. Clark Olds is reported very 111
at his home in the eastern part of the
city.
Rupurt, John and Lee Walker
wore Alliance business visitors Mon
day C. W. Graham and Vera and F.
Narelschneider were AUUm e visitors
Monday.
Mr. and Mrs. Quinn, f. .m up on
the table, were -mopping In town
Saturday.
L. Copeland was attending to busi
ness matters in Alliance a few days
last week.
Jos Duhon, of the Marsland
neighborhood, was In town the fore
part of the week.
Mr. and Mrs. Will Buchman, of
Alliance, visited friends here over
Sunday and Monday.
Richard Bevan, of Colorado, for
merly of this country, is visiting
friends In and around town.
' Rev. T. J. Brown came up from
Antioch Monday, where he had been
holding protracted meetings.
Mr. Clayton, of Alliance, came up
and spent a few days visiting bis
daughter, Mrs. Corey and family.
Mrs. W. J. Hughes and children
of Jereh, Wyo., arrived Sunday for a
visit with home folks and friends.
Mrs C. W. 8harp returned from
71 y j
Mrs. C. W. Graham nnd Miss
Freida Danborn went down to Camp
Funston the middl" of the week to
visit for a few days with Lfo Tookey
who Is In the Infantry St that camp.
o
Mr. and Mrs. W. Winchester, of
Cradron, came down for a vsir with
friends here laBt week. Mr. Win
chester returned to Chadron Sunday,
but the Mrs. remained for n logger
visit
A fire alarm was turned In early
Monday forenoon when It was dis
covered that the Arlington hotel was
on fire It sterns that fii had leaked
out of the kitchen range and hnd
burned hrough the flor Into the
basemen. The fir: ccn:p:.ny re
sponded promptly, but the fire had
been put out with a couple of buck
ets of water before the fire boys
reached the scene, with no damage
tO si -.,u of.
Si. H. LOUGHER.
conflict being dwelt upon by one, who
knows.
Chaplain Lougher Is an Interesting
nnd forceful speaker. His impres
sions are clearly expressed and any
audience will not find the time too
long while he is speaking. While on
the chautauqua course as a lecturer,
Chaplain Lougher was pronounced by
crltlcB as one of the most sincere and
interesting men that they had ever
heard.
The Kenyon (Minn.) Leader says:
"There is a man we could listen to
for another hour and not grow
wearied. We felt all i the time the
personality of the man a man of
high Ideals and far seeing Intellect."
Bingham News
H. A. Williams and wife spent the
New Year's holiday with friends In
Colorado.
Mrs. Pearl Davidson has been on
the sick list for a few days threatened
with pneumonia.
Rev. F. A. Williams returned home
Monday from Alliance much Im
proved, in health.
Mrs. Buelah tWIlley Jackson and
little son returned to their home In
Arizona Saturday.
Charley Barton returned to his
home In Lincoln after spending his
vacation with his brothers.
Harry and Audley Harp came
from Colorado Friday for a few days'
visit with their relatives.
Lester Bruce and Ira-Estle each
made trips to Rushville last week,
having been called by the local board.
L. E. Balllngcr had business that
required his presence tn Alliance
this week and Monday's train took
him thence.
Dewey Guy of the navy depart
ment, camo home on a furlough from
the great lakes to eat New Year's din
ner with his relatives here. This was
a happy surprise to his many friends
as well as to those who are nearer
and dearer to him.
Among those who have been In
vestigating the past week for potash
in this vicinity are P. A. Yeast and
Fred Molbring. We feel like when
the home folks begin to get busy that
something will surely happen and
Bingham may soon be In line with a
plant.
That all may know what the Bing
ham branch of tho Sheridan County
Red Cross has done, we print for
your Interest the following: We have
bought, made and shipped 85 sheets,
150 pillow slips, 166 compresses. 240
Nightingales, 25 pairs wool blankets.
16 sweaters, 4 pairs of box, 3 helmets,
3 scarfs and 8 pairs of wrlstleta. Our
membership is now 60 in number.
A School Course for 940
Forty dollars is the estimated cost
cf taking a special course, including
a'l expenses, at the School of Agii
enttttTO trls winter. From Januar'
21 to February 18 special courses In
nearly ull agricultural subjects will
be given. This four weeks' term
will be especially for men, and boys
over 15, who are able to get away
from the farm for only a month at
a time. Among the many subjects
to be taken up will be rural archi
tecture, beef cattle judging, animal
pathology, all branches of dairying,
entomology, farm management In all
phases, plant pathology, poultry
raising, and Nebraska soil condi
tions. Further Information may be
secured by addressing the principal.
School of Agriculture, University
Farm, Lincoln, Nebr.
How He Used Them
"Did you kill the nioths with the
moth balls that I gave you?" asked
the druggist.
"No, I didn't!" said the customer,
disgustedly. "I sat up all night and
didn't hit a single moth."
Hons of farmers for the promotion of
the following purposes:
(1) Increasing the acreage and
yield of the food crops common to
the locality.
(2) Assistance to farmers In se
curing good seed, fertilizers, live
stock, credit facilities ,and farm la
bor. (3) Effecting co-operative organi
zations for the economic purchase of
farm supplies and marketing of farm
products.
(4) Elimination of farm waste
such as losses caused by plant and
animal diseases, insect pests, idle
landB, and uneconomic systems of
marketing.
(5) Conducting demonstrations
illustrative of good agricultural prac
tices. (6) In general, to work for the
welfareof rural life.
The Food Production Bill enacted
by congress In August, 1917, pro
vides for a special appropiration for
the extension of county ugent work
to every agricultural county.
Already more than three-fourths of
the agricultural counties of the
United States have organized farm
bureaus und have county agricultural
agents at work.
Assistant Secretary of Agricultural
Carl S. Vrooman said recently:
"This wide and rapid development
(of county agent work) ts n military
necessity because of war conditions.
We need and must have a county
agent (or emergency food agent) in
every agricultural county In United
States by the beginning of the next
planting season."
Regular county agent work is car
ried on co-operatively between the
U. S. Department of Agriculture, the
State College of Agriculture and the
County Farm Bureau. In counties
employing regular county agents ex
clusive of emergency food agents,
$1,200 of federal and state funds are
contributed annually to assist the
county In carrying on the work.
The county agents do a great deal
of good by assisting In the fighting
againBt cholera in hogs and blackleg
in cattle. During 1916 enough hogs
died from cholera in the United
States to provide pork for an army of
one million men for a year, If each
hog had weighed 200 pounds.
A suggested county program was
given by Mr. Gunnels as follows:
I. County and Community A.
Social. B. Educational. (1) Win
ter meeting. (2) Demonstrations.
(4) Home demonstrations.
II. Marketing. A. Systems for
buying, selling and distributing
goods.
III. Farm Management. A. Sys
tems of land tenure and leasing. B.
Business methods. C. Labor.
IV. A. Seed Selection. B. Sys
tems for Preventing and Controlling
Plant Diseases. C. Crop Rotation.
V. Horticulture. A. Systems of
Orchard Management. B. Pruning
and Spraying. 1
VI. Live Stock. A. Disease Con
trol. (1) Hog Cholera. (2)
Black Leg. (3 Contagious Abortion.
B. Feeding Practices. C. Types
and Breeds of iLlve Stock. (1)
Associations.
VII. Soils. A. Methods of hand
ling the various types of soil.
VIII. Eradication of Pests. A.
nossssv
SEVERE HEADACHE.
"I once had terrible
headaches anl feared La
Grippe. I could not at
tend to my work. I took
gome of Dr. Miles' Anti
Pain rills and the pain
was quickly gone.. Then
I started using Dr. Milea'
Nervine and the trouble
vanished completely and
I felt well and active
once more."
HENRY FARNHAM,
Spring Valley, Minn.
Pain and 111 Health
rob you of all your
efficiency.
DR. MILES'
ANTI-PAIN PILLS
quickly relieve Pain, but
at the same time, when
over-work, or nervousness
is the cause,
Dr. Miles'
Restorative Nervine
should be used to relieve
the cause.
IF FIRST BOX, OR BOTTLE, FAIL3
TO BENEFIT YOU, YOUR MONEY
WILL BE REFUNDED.
Gophers. B. Squirrels. C. Insects.
IX. Appointment of Committee.
George Neuswager, county agent,
then presented his report. It was of
sjch interest that The Herald will
publish it complete In tho next issue
or succeeding one of this paper. The
report showed that on account of the
war the program for the year had
been changed. It tells of the organ
ization of the Box Butte Potato
Glowers' Association; tho market
news bulletin service; the Indian la
bor furnished during spud picking
season; the tight against hog cholera
and blackleg In cattle; tho exchange
bulletin which Is Issued free to
every farmer: and the Improvement
work in potatoes.
During the last four months the
county agent did the following work:
2345 miles traveled by auto.
2097 circular letters mailed.
2391 phone calls.
861 calls at office.
557 special letters sent.
105 farm visits made.
35 press articles written.
8 meetings held with 135 in at
tendance. 2 407 doses blackleg vaccine dis
tributed. Topics mentioned wore the week of
organized agriculture at Lincoln the
middle of this month January 15th
being Box Butte Day at which there
should be a large attendance of Box
Butte farmers. The income tax; ex
pense books for farms furnished
free; federal farm loans; crop sta
tistics; bean or live stock buUetins.
The annual elections were then
held and the following officers
elected: Art Grove, president; D.
E. Purlnton, vice president; J. A.
Keegan, secretary; M. D. Healy,
treasurer.
The following resolution was
adopted by an unanimous standing
vote:
i "Be it resolved, That we, the
! members of the Box Butte County
j Farm Bureau, representing the
! farmers of Box Butte county, do
I heartily endorse the excellent work
! accomplished by our county agents
j during the year 1917 and that we ex
tend our hearty thanks to Fred
Seidell and George Neuswanger,
county agents during the year, for
their unselfish and untiring efforts
which hnve resulted in a successful
year."
Home Makers' Ass'n. Elect Officers
At the meeting of Box Butte
County Women January 5th, the fol
lowing officers were elected:
Mrs. H. A. Grove, Alliance, presi
dent. Mrs. H. H. Pierce, Hemingford,
vice president.
Mrs. Davidson, Alliance, secretary
and treasurer.
The executive committee is as fol
lows: Mrs. Herbert Nason, Mrs. M. G.
Wambaugh, Mrs. T. A. Green, Mrs.
Fred Seidell.
The rest of the board will be
elected from their respective groups.
Miss Shcrwin, the Home Demon
stration agent, will be in Box Butte
county at her office in Alliance the
following dates:
February 3, 9, 10 and 16.
March 17, 23. 24 and 30.
April 28 and May 4.
May 5 and 11.
June 9,t5, 16 and 22.
We pay the highest market price
for chickens. A. D. Rodgers' Market.
5-tf-9380
Some of the naturalized are openly
claiming "neutrality," seemingly
unaware that neutrality in a nom
inal American citlzon is nothing less
than disloyalty.
We have received five new Vic
trola, the A rat shipment since No
vember 15th, from the factory. Be
sides these large number of new rec
ords have been received. By the leOth
of January we will have a complete
stock of machines. Wiker Musk
House, ii- 8rd. Phone 239.
fi-lt-9361
The Teuton in Belgium and the
Turk in Armenia will be remembered
throughout all time as the success
ful r'vals of the Hun of ages gone.
1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 ii i f 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 u n 1 1 1 1 1 ii n i n n 1 1 1 1 1 ii :n i n 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 n i n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 n n ii ii 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 mil 1 1 mil 1 1 n i n 1 1 1 n r n 1 1 1 n i n n n 1 1 1 1 1 1 i 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 x-i-s-tj-i-x-t
1st and 2nd AMATEUR TRAPSHOOTING AVERAGES for 1917
WERE WON WITH
Peters Shells
The known superiority of the "P" brand is a factor that trap and field shooters are quick to take advantage of. Sportsmen
a
of all classes and in every section of the country have been made strong advocates of PETERS Shells because of their exclus
ive and superior features. In the 1917 trap-shooting averages,-two representative shooters captured first and second honors,
and both depended upon the "P" brand in achieving this success.
1st. W. H. Heir, Guthrie, Okla., shot at 2050, broke 1917. Average, .9741
2nd. Woolfolk Henderson, Lexington, Ky., shot at 2570, broke 2502. Average, .9735
Six times in the past 8 years the Highest Amateur
Honors have been won with the "P" brand.
In the 1917 official professional averages, Mr. L. H. Reid, of Seattle, Wash., shooting PETERS Shells has an average of .9722,
winning second place and FIRST among the professionals using one make of ammunition thruout the year.
Remember the old saying
"the Best is the Cheapest
In the end" and insist on
having PETERS.
jKemember the old saying
a! "the Best is the Cheapest
VFin the end" and insist on
having PETERS.
HARDWARE CO.
v 1 i
i miii mmm