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About The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 15, 1918)
rfJ? THE E31 SAME THING y VISITORS PLEASE BRING YOUR SUGAR VniiMinl ReOMM n It. hull of !--dents of the Capital tt- May Al li OClMr title-. Too. Thi people of Lincoln are hospita ble In fact, noted for their hospWal itjr. They like to have their ac quaintances from the country and smaller towns In the state come to ee them when they visit the city. This la especially tru oof persons holding state offices tr In the employ of the state. To suggest that their visitor from the country should bring a food sup ply when -they come to see them, would! offend Lincoln people, but there is one little exception now and that 1b sugar. If the breads runs out or the meat Is short or the potatoes All gone, lt'a an easy matter to send out for a new supply or call up the baker or grocer or market and order whut 1b needed but sugar, nix. "When you go visiting, take your sugar along," advises the Lancaster county food administration. Queries have come to C. Petrus Peterson, administrator, in regard to the provision for sugar for visitors. In every case Mr. Peterson has relied that, unless they stay a month or more no sugar can be issued in Lin coln to folks from out of town. The only way they ccn get sugar is to take it along. Unless people out in the state heed the warning embarrassing situ ations are likely to arise in Lincoln at the time of the state f: ir. Dur ing fair week the "company" In a home is frequently larger than the family itself. Unless the visitor bring -their own sugar, issued fron their home county, they w.ll simply eat so much of the scant BUgar ra tion of the Lincoln homes. "We are Just as anxious as ever to ee our friends from out in the state during fair week," says Mr. Peterson, "but we would' appreciate H Im mensely if they would bring sufinr from home. If not. there is apt to be a sugar famine in Lincoln imme diately after the fair." The "brlng-your-sugar" sugges tion does not apply to persons who expect to stop at a public eating place while In Lincoln. Restaurants and hotels are given a sugar allow ance bused upon the number of meals erved. It is only in the private homes where sugar allowance is bas ed upon the number of persons in the family, that visitors may cause trou ble unless they bring: their sugar. If company BtayB for a month or Ere, special cards can be issued to m In Lincoln, so that they can get -he two pounds per person per month. The food administrator in the coun.'y from which the visitors come will then be notified, and they Will not be granted their regular al lowance at home. LIVESTOCK-PRICES AT SOUTH OMAHA Beet ihn fe.os'.ly Stead on a Slow, Dugg) MoilMt HOGS 10 TO ITCTS. HIGHER KITCHEN CABINET If wo are looklr.K for a controlling purpope In rife, what can be more comprehensive than tiiia nobility of characted? lulls Go at $18.2.r. 18.50, With a Top of $19.25 Largest Run of Sheep This Year Fat Lambs Steady to 10c Lower Feeders Steady. Happiness. I used to think it was great to dltf0 Card happiness, to prau to a high ;.':;! careless, disdainful of It. but now 1 see there Is nothing so greut as to b capable of lusppluess to plucU it UUI of ench moment, and, whatever h:ii pens, to find thut one can ride as gay ami buoyant on the nngry, nenaclnXi tumultuous waves of life us on those thut glide and glimmer under a clear sky; that It is nut defeat and vreieh edness which comes out of the storm of udverslty, hut streugth und eulm ness. Anne Gilchrist. Union Stock Yards, South Omaha, Neb., aug. It, 1018. Trade opiMti very slow and druggy on a moderate supply f S,90Q hrud of cattle, so oe 10,000 short of thp rnn Iat Monday. Prices wvre very wneven, but for the most jtHrt steady with last week's elose on the fens- beef offerings, choice t rrime aradee being quotable from lt. Ovf) 18.00, and anywhere from fH.OOsJ17.00 on the fair to choice of. fertngf. Rest yeaHIng sold at $17.00. Tbe hnteher market was nqually nr eTcn. tmt more active, price lanrelv steady to '.'So higher. Western rnnce r.fvc wotv draggy und about stea dy with last week's close. Quotations on cuttle: Choice to prime heeves. X17.00fr1R0O j good to choice heeves, 1SJ(Q17.00: fair to good beeves, f 14.00 1 "..00 comm-m to f-iir beeves. $10.00013.00: good to thole ycnrllnp. flS.OOfr 17.00 ; fal- to good yearlings. $10.0014..r0 1 com mr.n to fair yenrllng. $0.OOfl9. m; good to choice heifers. 10.0001 1.00; rood to choice cows. $S.7. 10 IiO j rSlr o good ww? $7.. Vt08.no cut ter. $0."07.2r: canner. ffV.VK, &Mt veal calves. l0.00O12.no ; nolo?, ns hu'ls. $7.00S.7.": he.f halls, $S.7T 010.00; prime feeders. S1V.OO01. good to choice feeder. $1O..V012.BO; .t1r to gmMl feeders. $M..riO01O IXI ; goml to choice stocker. $O..rO01 1 .SO j fair to gvod storker. $.OO0O.O'l common to fair gnide. $7.OO0S.OO; stork Ir lfers. S7.OO0S.OO: t v rows. $0.0007 00; good to prime gr. s beeves, f 14..V)01O..riO; fair to ei.oT grass beeves. 112:00014.00; common to fair gruss steers. $.00V.00. Tliere was n light run of :t.S0 hed of hogs, and shippers bought their or ' ders at a 10015c udvnnoe. nnd the packtr market was largely 10c high I er than last week, hulk of the sales' I relng from $1R.2r01R.riO. and choice shipping grad- s nt . 10.25. the top. Sheep nin wns the heaviest of the i year, estimated early at 10.800 head. P.ulk of the supply being made up of I western range feeding 1nmh. Trade ! on the f:it lamb offerings was nnomMe i steady to 10c lower, rood to eholrv Vtnds ?. Il'nir at 10..Vff 17.00 ; feeder reaching S17.7V Quotations on sheep :ind lnnbs: Lambs, good to choice. tlO.ROOlT.TS' Ipinh. fair to good. $14.00010.50: Jamba, feeders, sir.cr.0i7.oo: lambs, culN. $10,000 14.00 yeurl'ntrs. pood to ffco'ce, UtOfl14.fiO; yenrilncr. . f'r o good. 1'2.7.".0 13.00; yearlings, choice. light, feeding. 111.254 12J0; Hrllnys. f;iir. g(sel. feeling. $10.7" f 11.20; i wes. good to choice, tlLOOtf !.0O; , f;.!r to good. $10.00f 21.00; ewes culls, $5.0007.00. Kound soinething? N'o better we) of rinding the rightful owner than to Insert I wunt ad under the FOUND heading. THE GREAT AMERICAN DESSERT. With all the puddings and Ices which we have to tempt the appetite, nothing seems to take the place of the popular pie. Apple Pie With Cream Cheese. Line a deep pic plate with pastry, and All with tart cooked apple sauce. Bake with out a crust and when cold cover with a cupful of whipped cream, to which has been added a half of a cream cheese put through n ricer. This may be heaped on the pie with a pastry tube If so desired. Another apple pie baked without a top crust Is covered with marsh mal lows and returned to the oven to brown. Banana Pie. Fill a pastry shell with sliced bannnas, sprinkle with butter and lemon juice and a lltQe sugar. Rake, serve covered with whipped cream. Pineapple Pie. To one small can of grated pineapple add three eggs, one and a half cupfuls of sugar, a half cupful of cold water and two table spoonfuls of bntter. Beat the egga, separating the whites from thcyolka, stirring In the whites lightly. Bake with one crust. This will make two pies. Orange Pie. Beat the yolks of three eggs with a fourth of a cupful of su gar, add the Juice and grated rind of an orange and the juice and grated rind of half a lemon with a small piece of butter. Mix thoroughly and bake In a single rust. When done cover with a meringue made from the whites of the eggs and three table spoonfuls of sugar and a tablespoon ful of orange Juice. Prune Pie With Whipped Creams Bake a pastry shell and cool. Scald a cupful of milk, add a tahlespoonful of corn starch and cook until smooth; add the yolk of an egg beaten with a half-cupful of sugar, a dash of salt, and a cupful of chopped cooked prunes. Cook until smooth, then fill the shell. Serve cold with whipped cream piled over the top. Pastry should be handled lightly, fat cut Into the flour -with knives and chilled when possible before rolling out. M!CKIE SAYS ( IP PeOPLE'O JfeST TOV If'fHtNU.-TUa.T ADMEaTtStH tS THE NEVSSPfvPER. rAfcrs'6 STOCK IN -faAtoE , TheVo NEVER THIN TO IT tT FCK. NOtHIN1 UVCE fHEV DO SOMETIMES, NO rAOUE THAN THEY'D AiStt THE OROtea PER A PREE . SACK OF V LOUR- Paul A. Mendenhall HAY SPRINGS, NEBR. FARMERS' AND STOCKMAN'S DEMO CRATIC CANDIDATE for STATE REPRESENTATIVE of Sheridan and Box Butte Counties A resident of Sheridan county 27 years. Is an active farmer and stockraiser. Booster for northwestern Nebraska inter ests. Opponent of trusts, combines and monop oplies. If elected will oppose profiteering, favor the National Prohibition Amendment and support all conservation measures that will win the war. ' Your support will be appreciated at the PRIMARY ELECTION AUGUST 20, 1918 1 Grace Papu Insists that I Walt until I am thirty before I get mnrried. Maud la other words, he Insists that you never murrv. Famous Collins .Saddle The best saddle made. Have stood the test for 50 years. Write for free catalogue. Alfred Cornish & Company Successors to Collins A Morrison 1210 Kama m St., Omaha, Neb. STORY OF EARLY NEBRASKA RANCHING Old-Timer. Familiar With History of West. Writing Story of Baft? Days In Western Nebraska. Land Commissioner Shumway is preparing a story of early ranches, from Indians to grrngers. He has brief reminiscences of life and adven ture on one hundred of the ftet ranches from Dakota to Kansas and from Fort Laramie east across the sand hills of Nebraska. Anyone who has a pood story of low a ranch started, the brand by which it was known, and by whom owned, where it is located, and when, or some experience thereon, should send K to him. Thirty-three years in western Ne braska, trailing cattle, prangerinK in the lean years, and later under Ir rigation, p'ves him a knowledge of all the problems of ranchlnp and farming in that part of the state. Mr. Shumway is a candidate for re eleetion. and it will be difficult to pet ' anothoi commissioner of public lands who knows so well and will do the things needed to make this part of j Nebraska prosper. I The story of its early making, the i principal characters and events properly mentioned, and the glory and chivalry of that ape and class should be stamped indelibly on his ! tory. It can be better assured if you ! will do yyur part and pet into this j story the local color apd the touch i of ranch life as you know it by writ-. I ing Mr. Shumway at the state house, Lincoln. Jl The Lindell Hotel Palm and Palm, Props. LINCOLN. NEBRASKA Tq Our Popular Price Lunch Room and Coffee Shop All Modern Convenience Rooms $1.00 Up Under New Management Political Headquartere Live Stock Transit Insurance Live stock men over the entire west are forming the habit of INSURING THEIR LIVE STOCK IN TRANSIT. They do it for safety, economy and quick returns. The Hartford Live Stock Transit Policy protects shippers of live stock, and is the only company offering a broad policy easy to understand, clear in its terms, which gives absolute protection against loss from hazards of transportation including suffocation, freezing, tramp ling, lire, collision, train wreck and every form of killing or injury while the animals are in the custody of the common carrier. Wc are represented at all of the live stock markets in the United States and Canada, and locally by FRED E. FEAOINS Alliance, Nebraska C. W. SPACHT HemingfonL Nebraska SAMS & McCAFFREE, Scottsbluff, Nebraska W. B. CHEEK, Local Manager HARTFORD FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY Live Stock Department STOCK YARDS - OMAHA, NEBRASKA Children Operate furnaces. A certain element of romance in steel making is suggested in an account re ceived from England of the operation of a two-ton electric steel furnace at Sheffield, says the Scientific American. The furnace is ntlrely hand operated through a control worked la conjunc tion with recording ammeters; bat the chief point la the slse of the operator. A boy of fourteen or fifteen nana the furnace constantly, and other furnace of this particular type are now op erated in the same manner by girls, owing to the scarcity of male labor. The whole la an object lesson In the steadiness and simplicity of the new type of steel leaking furnace. Such results would have been ridicaled only a Cew years si o. I Know the Voice i WHICH TELLS THE SUFFERINGS PROM A SORE TOOTH I have to aee or read for the first time the works of any noted writer of the middle ages, anything that pertains to Dentistry. There could not have been the demand upon them then as in beiifg made today. THE SCIENCE OF MEDICINE AND DENTAL SURGERY Which has shown such wonderful progress in such a comparatively short time, has been compulsory so to apeak. Again NECESSITY WAS THE MOTHER OF INVENTION For twenty years every hour of every day, I have heard some one say, "Why does not some one invent something to relieve pain in a aafe and eaay manner?" The cry for this great necessity hah dwelt on my mind so long, that I finally solved the problem and have put It into use. Through Sturgia A Sturgis, Attorneys, I filed for a patent on this most wonderful method to relieve pain. I KNOW THE VOICE OF THE SUFFERER; I ALSO KNOW HOW TO ANSWER in a manner that should immensely please, advantage of. I will gladly ahow you. It'a here for you to take For Out-of-Town Patrons Appointments Made to Best Suit Their Convent- PHONE TODAY DR. G. W. TODD 40S BRANDEIS BUILDING OAMHA, NEBRASKA THE HERALD OFFICE FOR PRINTING