i . THE ALLIANCE HERALD, JULY 25, 1918 lj l""""""""'"""""l"""""'""""JL1 " iiii'MiiiiiiiiiniirmmrmniHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiHiiiiiiii 1 rt C o w rt S 4 -SSgfafc It leads g Who h 9 2 H E 00 I OS 5 2.SqWeh C rn E 2 V rC o w p'5 u S r1 as o 2 hh 52 o T3 H ft eg rt w W W M "0 3 SB -a s -2 H SHhoo I H fa ST n H W -! k-H r ' S BB - v r- TT hh tS . 1 m A rt 2 5 h gpgfao i-wPSS -- ! Ph Z J S r .2 8 3 1.2 01 fl 7 5? P r 12 fs x ;j ; 1 n ; jj 2 ri 11 rJ il 11! H i II: s HI rh r. 1 r ... J M . -"V m . . , 1 j - pi its v 2 Ml 11 I Rl is 2 I 1K1I1 ill?! Knl C 111 s ssgss 111 Ph 5 a S" fin C C8 l j o.a LJi "5 HI gS s ifiZ HH p.o-r Q lie IIS IB sirt!-& m rl-Iu Q 11- il tetja? Cn lf$-ali. LE 91111 , . fes M g- l&IIcB r IS"li.fl rn ofjlg .Sol s 1J o .BE U Eff. L fiPi,;05 111" a ws ea 3 ) v 8il,a a I u5o o ) LLJ a. se tf a 9 w x: r lav c v c . s h a pw 0 1 r b o t 1 .t; (i 12 o 1 is ii:.2 1 S li E luS g I I S & 2 PCI 5 s fiS ri & hJ h2 Hill 6 li 15 W 1 i Q) T- r-i 1 Tr.jjr. 1" CI M 1 CJ -r-i T -r-l V V rt r- - grt 2 ipj HH S P IT. , C O-TJ 9 m m P C Z 41 rn ; a d k - v m o & -rH .5 rn 1 Lil fOrW- Wfll 1 -r- h- m r" " " " -h C 1 p rn j cj CO W B eai xxz ... & '2: .sc mi S.3 s w ll efag fl I 1. nf.J h il -B ora-ofl j -a a c r2 s g 5 3 a 2 ' JZ5 a a I S, fe ai li llrl O 1 If O Ph I SZ-l! USl Ji O III! c4 lifa i h !fi , in h ijfi p him fiiflij j i! ;! 1 IK -co usar Si Mull fcL S u ? M x w -S -sub 4) tf j H g g os oo JJliJl Ji lg CQ j J5 "Il O j If 23 & g S I ho5 5 - u 4 - 9 c ri; - g g; rt rt o .a .I Ills W I III M I!b.J biifls w T (U O w WE -IM"!--. W U T 1 .E " T7 IT. 1 5 ia o la's h - g u rt 5 h S -r-i rt C3 CI 2 .9 ' o Sgrtrta f o. p. -a sS.fr1 . ohS Cj S S um a r- a s r- r jp' . ou h v.. r " r. S t u tm m i rt. ?3 Q. o 1 SrC-uSie, . IVB. S -v 9 T? S NM ha r! rrt I I r- y , Li r- ( m L r HJ !!JKS H I s2 PS Use M ! &3 fjfig ft 5522 li 22 I 1 I bo -c B i si!' Si. 1 fa rrt "3 P as E ilj pi 1 1 4 t J S ? 1 b i .So a ; fa 9 3 g li I I If 1 J I B M I I ' 5 P CQ O S 08 J E t 4 y 0 S & b 1 1 o4 o fa k 5 3 s a T3 V , V n. 3 53 i oj rt N 3 Oc Hi I a a 9 i j rt w tun " s I -s i J o .9 a rt S 3 m 5 2 5rS I a A -rH S fc: - o ov p. -a E J rt BS i li H -y C 8 'w cn y O aj 2 rt m N rt I Eh " g MB. H rT r O Lh O O X Z .H Ph r9 rt il .9 2 01 hi: a V TO rH rrH S C rt an 12 ",b a m o 1 5 r? S rH C bo "S rt 2, H u IE Ho il i.i yu f C ftO s IB m 3s c B I o 55 p. JO. rH e -sa p gas o -s 3 rt r I a a rip 1 f?fl I it 93 II jrfj 11 g & al I m i -13 1 H H O K m Bj T) 3 r, 2 . " 1 V rCj rtCCClrHr g e .r I I a M J- a X3 rt C 0 g rt 2a; g Ell g -1 -s fl s 5 S J in i l Hi r WYOMING POTASH WILL NOT HURTTHE MARKET .(portal Find of Immrnw Dpolt In luriu- IUm k fej of BmIn Known of I'rrvlounly. NtblMlta prorturorn or potanh who bceanui oaeWhM alarmed or who t prtMad interest at leant, upon read inn ne-AH dlspatrhea the flrat of the wMk remirdlnK the finding of depot Hh of potaah In Wyomlnp? valued at MlllMI of dollar-, Imcmhc normal RKaln when they learned that the d potiU meant were those In the well known rnnfte of Ieurlte hills In Wy oming. The new.spaircrs of Monday carried the following dispatch regarding the Wyoming potash finds: Cheyenne, Wyo., July 22. The United .States and the bnl ance of the world will soon be Independent of Germany for pot ash supplies If the new depoaitfl of that valuable fertiliser Ingre dient discovered In the Laucite hill, north of Rock Springs, Wyoming, half way come up to predictions made for them by ex perts. This Leuclto rock appears In extensive deposits and over a wide area and contains, accord ing to tests made, between 10 and 54 per cent pure potash. Al ready plans are under considera tion for the erection at Green Klver of a refinery to coat be tween 12,500,000 and 13,000,- 000. "The German government hn been aware of these potash de posits for years and before the world's war started, a large corps of experts was sent to the Leuclte hills section to make an investigation and secure title to the lands. These experts were re called to Germany when the war started." The deposits of nntflnh In tUA Lcucite rocks have been known to geologists and scientists for several years ind the recent great demand for potash has caused them to turn Inquisitive and longing eyes iowards the billions of dollars worth of pot ash locked In the rocks and. although nnndfeda of thousands of dollars have been spent In experimenting dnrlB! past years, so far no feasible Or profitable plan has been evolved for taking the potash out of the rock and making It soluble and usable. Similar deposits of potash, locked in minerals, are known to exist in the form Of mountains in the Allegheny mouhWin ranges in the east, hut be cause of the fact that although tho rock may be crushed the potash still remains Insolublethese deposits are useless ror all practicable purposes. Some ; I me ago a carload of Ixuclte rock was shipped from the Wyoming tlelds to the Atlantic coast for the purpose of experimenting on the rock In an effort to tlnd a way to release the potash. The carload of rock be came sidetracked in an Ohio city and a keen eyed railway freight clerk mln tOOfc the word "Leuclte" for "Lyd dite," the latter being one of thW strongest and most powerful explos ives manufactured. A day and night guard was immediately placed around the car ami mialned on duty there for several weeks, until the people to whom the car had been consigned '.vere able o irace It down und r peed It on its way. Needless to sav. they were much pleased with the attention given their carload of rock hy the au thorities during its stay in the Ohio city. In the meantime the pushing of production of existing potash planta in western Nebraska continues, the pushing of completion of plants i both huge and little) keeps on at a rapid rate and every day or two witnesses the announcement of a new plant to be erected to produce potash from lakes and beds which h; ve not been touched before. The governmn: ia understood to have a ruling or ict .;.!- ly fixing the price at which polish j fertilizer shall be sold by th- fortil Jizer manufacturer $6.00 per potash illicit. The feitilizer munuf acurer : pay- the potash producer as small a portion as he can of the $6.00, now averaging from $4.50 to $n.oo per unit this leaves the fertilizer manu taetnrer a fair margin of profit. ioi Original William Tell Sermon. Siill another version of "William Tell" comae from Denmark. The self same story is told In the Danish le gends, two can foil M before it crops out in the Swis narrative, and furth er investigation showa, according to a Danish historian, that it was borrowed hy Danes, the original apple having been shot from the original chlld'a head by a German bowman named BlfUi when King Nidung sought to test the nuiu's skill and n rw. In that re mote story It is related that RgM OaaV ceuled another arrow In his bosom with which to kill the king If he In jur,"! bis child. mtmummu ,, imutritnmwiiiniiiniii u iiiiiiiiiiiitttmtf Tree Lore. ""-"' The reason most trees lean toward the northwest, says aa old tree trim mer, Is because In the summer our pre vailing winds are from the southeast; the ground then Is soft und the trees feafj-f in full leaf, the wind tilts them toward the northwest. In the winter the northern winds do not have thla efTect on the trees because they are denuded of leuves and the ground la froren or hard. Lines to Be Remembe.-ed. Host of all the other beautitul things In life come by twos und threes, by dozens and hundreds. Plenty of roses, stars, sunsets, rainbows, brothers and Sisters, aunts und cousins, but only one mother In all the wide world. Kate Douglus Wiggin. sMsfflwiH i m