THE ALLIANCE HERALD, AUGUST 1, 1918 Soft Unnks and Beverages BEVERAGES ON DRAUGHT AT ALL TIMES Order a case of i6 pints sent to your home. De livery made anywhere in Alliance. Rehate for re turn of cases. Cigars, Tobaccos, Candies, Lunches. KING'S CORNER JOHN HODGKINSON, MCr. Distributors for BftlfSSXI B) ttlinc Works Watch Your Battery Our service department will Inspect your battery free of charge nt any time if you will only brin it in. Om (..ii not 'give too much atention to this part of tho car anil if UM battery i"j in siood condition you cannot help but notice Um ease with which the car will run. SAVE THE TIRES by having it vulcanized before the fabric is entirely worn through. When the tire begins to wear vulcan izing before it is too late to do any repairing will add several thousand miles to your mileage. It Will Also Save You Dollars r!F" 111' .,r Schafer Bros. TIKK AND BATTKHY SHOP Service on all makes of Matteries New Batteries in Stock. ttiTtsitittmit!' w NOTICE On and after August 10. tjj work will be strictly cash on delivery. This will enable us to install more modern machinery, thereby giving quicker service. We take this opportunity of extending our thanks to the public for its generous patronage of the past and we hope to continue the cordial rela tions now existing between us. Alliance Steam Laundry nmtttttttmm 500 Now at Fort Robinson WILL MAUPIN TELLS OF SOME NEW AND INTERESTING FACTS ABOUT THE GREAT STATE OF NEBRASKA A NATIONAL CEMETERY THE "WAR ANGELUS" (My Will If. Mmipiii. Xiate Publicity Director) The W9T department has at last recognised Fort Robinson, Dawes county, by Betiding a battalion of troops, 500 inr, to Be trained there, .Inst why this beautiful military I'ort ami reservation lias not been BX 1. nsively Utilised lonr ago is a mystery. It has ample building! and equipment now for the training of from 1,600 to 2,000 men. There is no more heautifnl milit ;n reservation in the country. It possesses ample railroad facilities, affords a scope of country diversified enough in contour to afford every Kind of field training has a splendid water supply and is in a ectioii of Nebraska noted for its climatic conditions. A few thousand dollars would oquip Fori Robinson for the training of ten to fifteen thousand troops. .Many of the buildings are practically new, and all of them are in excellent repair, Kurt Knlnnson should lie utilized mure fully, and Nebfaskans interested in winning the war' should endeavor to impress the real real facts upon the authorities nt Washington, Ron many Nebraskans know that tliere is a national cemetery In ttils state? It is located near Maxwell in Lincoln county. Bight humlrcd kOl diets are buried there, each vrave be ing Marked with a little white atone" in which ia engraved tho name, date of bllth, date of death and regiment and company of the deceased, it in a beautiful spot. The cemetery is en closed by a ht(b brick wall, and the government maintains a caretaker who keeps it in line shape. The cem etery It on the old Fort Mel'lierson military reservation. All the praves an those of veterans of the Civil and Indian wars. o The bureau of publicity's reports from the ptotato crop are not tin riost encouraging. Commercial prow last year lost money, and as a re sult the) acreage this year is much less than a year ago. I'ntoward weather conditions have damaped the crop somewhat. The acreage would have been very much less than it is had not Nebraska farmers pa triotically responded to the request for "more potatoes" in the face of their losses last year. Nebraska will have a surplus of potatoes, but not as great as the indications promised a few weeks apo. Newport, Rock county, ships more hay than any other railroad station in the United States, probably in the world. Arnold, Custer county, ships more silica than any other railroad station in the world, The bureau of corp estimates of !he federal povernment estimates Ne braska's winter wheat yield ttiis year at 40.000.000. Tho Lincoln Trade Review, edited by If. M. nushnell, in sists that this estimate is at least f. 000. 000 bushels tiit low. The bureau of publicity insists that it is at leaf?: 10.000,000 bushels too low. The iui reati of publicity is confident that the combined sorinc and winter wheat vield of Nebraska this vear will he in excess of 57,000,000 bushels. Tin mid-Aupust edition of the Popular Mags sine contain:! a tribute to Nebraska's potash industry and Credits this state with havinp made prop. ; response to (iermany's inso lent boas! that she would crush lrr cm I lei by Withholding potash and thus i cmlcrin g their fields unproduc tive. I'opular Magazine has a circu it a of upwards of half a million, and V brasha SJOtl some valuable public iiy therein. o i. ttttltS figure out a lot of things. Tiny tiiuiro the population center of tile I nlted Slates proper to bo BMiie Where in Indiana, and the geograph ical pi nter of the republic nt gome- whei in the fad fie ocean between Ban Francisco and Honolulu. They also ngfire man's highest mental, physical and moral development to Center somewhere near Hastings. Ada ma county, Nebraska. o - Have you a commercial organiza tion in your city? Does your city of fer any inducements for the location of any industry or Industries? The bureau of publicity wants to know.( The department is preparinp a book lei which will show the Industrial op portunities in every town and city of Nebraska that Is Interested enouph to co-operate with the department in making the facts known, 'M- Nebraska Is observing the "war angelua." At 11 o'clock every morn ing tbe anpelvs rings, and everybody Is nrperl to spend a full minute In si lent prayer of the success of our boys "over there" and their safo re turn The movement was Inaugurat ed by the rotary clubs. Every busi ness house In Nebraska is urged to participate and sound the signal promptly on the stroke of 11. iMiiiiiniiitnmmmtttttiimiiiiiiiiitiniiM MIMilllMimit Convert Your Useless Articles Into Cash for the Red Cross - Have you stopped to consider the cash possibilities of tho old metals, rubber ami rags that have been thrown away around your home? Have you though) what a vast amount of money that would bring in lor lied Cross work if you were to gather up all these artlclea and telephone for our motor truck to call at your door? Here Is an opportunity for you to help the Red Cross without It costing you a single cent A lltUe time spent in collecting the ar ticles Is all tin- work you will be put to. We will call for them and jiay you the highest cashprice. ) WE Mil: !'AYiNj ai.nn A HtnfMtBD I oil fin i: .s The Alliance Fur, Hide & Metal Company l'HONK 1222 HiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiniitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiumu Politics and geography make strange bedfellows. Garfield county has a Bryan township and a Roose velt township, and they lav side bv side. To date there have been no re j ports of strife between the peoples of ; the two townships. STATE PAIR WILL HAVE BIG AJ. RICULTCRAL EXHIBIT, Believing that progress ia largely made by emulation, says a bulletin of the Nebraska state board of agricul tuer. the finest exhibit of farm pro daetS is being planned that has ever been shown on the fair grounds at Lincoln. A campaign is belpg con ducted to interest farmers in exhibit ing and the result should be an un excelled showinp of food products. Nebraska has the reputation of havlgp one of the best state fairs In the country and one of her best ex hibits has always been the farm pro ducts. With added emphasis beinp placed on this exhibit this year food production should receive a stimulus of no mean value. OMAHA MAN HAD SUFFERED! 20 YEARS I d es Tnnlac and Troubles llegin to Disappear Wife Also Benefitted. Another Good Chance For an Irrigated Farm Write me soon about your chances of Retlinp hold of a Government-irrigated farm this Autumn in the new 12,000-acre irrigated tract near Deaver, Wyo., along the Burlington 'h main line through the Big Horn Basin. , The whole tract is right next to the prosperous llovernment-irri-gated locality at Powell, Wyoming. All a candidate needs to do is to look at Powell locality with its 200-per-acre farms to get an idea of the values ahead of him, if he is successful in securing one of these Government farms These lands when opened will be taken at once, but I consider it my duty to get this early word to the earnest candidate for an irrigated farm. S. B. HOWARD, Immigration Agent 1004 Farnam Street Omaha, Nebraska FOOD OA Ml AKIN BKINtJ U l n BY KTATK FA I It. . A "helping win the war by produc ing more food" campaign has been launched by the Nebraska gtate fair. says a bulletin of the Nebraska board of apriculture, and every farmer in the state is urped not only to attend the fair but to exhibit the best of his products This.mbvement should resnlr in unequalled exhibits and heightened enthusiasm for this most Important work. IF HAIR IS TURNING GRAY, USE SAGE TEA Hero's Grandmother's Recipe to Darken and Beautify Faded Hair. Hundred ..l people use THK HKHALJj'8 want un columns to sell or uv something-, to tlnd something that may have been lost. In fa. t Hum., p. . , i , have been known to secure a faithful, hardworking wile by advt-riiaiini la vast ail .columns. , That beautiful, oven shade of dark, glossy hair can only be had by brewing a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Your hair is your charm. It makes or mar a tbe face. When it fades, turns gray or streaked, just an application or two of .Sage and Sulphur enhances its appearance a hundredfold. Don't bother to prepare the mixture; you can get this famous old recipe im proved by the addition of other ingredi ents for 50 cents a large bottle, all ready for nse. It is called Wyeth'a Sage andj Sulphur Compound. This can always be depended upon to bring back the natural color and lustre of your hair. Everybody uses "Wyeth's" Sage and Sulphur Compound now because it dark ens so naturally and evenly tbjit nobody can tell it has been applied. YOU simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time; by MMralag the gray hair has disappeared, an I after another application it becomes heauti fully dark and appears glossy and lus trous. This ready-to use preparation ia a delitrhtful toilet requistc for those who deairi dark hair and a youthful appear ance. It is not intended for the cure, mitigation or pxuveation, of disease. "When my wife saw how much imod Tanlac das doing me. she want ed to try it -too, and now she is prais ing Tanlac as much an I am " ,., jdeorge H. Baust, who is employed by the Cudaby Packinp company, and oveB at ijib urexel street, Omaha, the other day. "For the past twenty years," he continued, "my system was all out of order, und IMSISjd to be petting , orae an tne time in spite of every thing I could do My stomach was badly out of shane not digest properly, and after eating anything I would suffer aponies for hours. My liver did not act right and I wan bilious most all the time, eumatlsm pot in n y left shoulder ltd it ached so bad I could hardly ad it, and I had an awful pain in back of my neck that worried nse nlffct and day. "After uy.ng aii kind of prepara tions without petting any relief, I pot bottle of Tanlac, and began to im prove almost from the first does. I have taken four bottles so far, and my troubles now are almost at an nd. My food dipests with hardly any ftftar effects, the pain in my neck is about pone, and my shoulder fe. l.s pretty pood. I would hardly expect that four bottles of any medicine Would enir,.lv r-.. I . ..... , a iitiiioie or iwoatj rears standlnp, but I am im ! oriag so steadily on Taalac that 1 aiii sure it won't be lonp before I ! shall be completely well." Tanlac is sold in Alliance by F. I Hasten and in HenlaSfOrd by the I Olds Drup company. Order Your y Coal Supply Early It is the wise thing to -do You'll say so this winter, too. If we could make plain to you the situation, we know that you would put In your winter's coal supply now. We are not trying to scare yon, but we are trying to tell ou. The car shortage exlaU. It may ima to you like everything Is moving, but you'll appreciate what we tell you when winter coioea and it may be next to Impossible to get coal. We've got coal to sell you today. We've got coal today to put Into your bin. Wo can't promise more. It's good Coal and It's a fair price. We urge you to gt busy thing act. It will prove to your advantage. Dierks Lumber & Coal Co. F. W. HAROARTEN. Mgr. PHONE 22 111 Laramie Are. Goat Immune to Dynamite. A w. 'stern household was terrlth ! recently by the dNcv.-ry that the 1 1 pet gont had eaten rw sticks of dyn inlet. The aafmal was earefulty drtv ss to a safe dlstaaae and tethered to i -take. Hut days and WOekj elupsed tad the poat did not ssptode. Soldiers' Superstition. Cavalrymen have a superstition of helr own. A mounted man rirmly be lleves that be will com.- tht..upli the deadliest char-e unscathed if he enr l I on his person the tooth of a war heraa, the only condition beinp that (he hois.- lis, f hi.s. at some time, been through, u etaugu unhurt rJwSStenJal Non-intoxicating. JlWtffl unOCS "Bear" In Mind jftJM)pWJ CjERVA JS? t The Most Satisfying Drink Make your meals complete with CRVA Have it at lunch and at dinner in the home. Call for it at hotels, cafes and restaurants. Pure. Nutritious. The soft drink with the delicious taste of hops. At grocers, at dru&'ist-. , in fact at all places where good drinks tire sold. LEMP Manufacturers ST. LOUIS EVERETT COOK Distributor Alliance, Nebraska Forty United I'rutit Sharing Coupons (2 cou pons each denom ination 2(0 packed in every case. Exchangeable (or valuable premiums.