THE ALLIANCE HERALD, SEPTEMBER 5, 1918 GERMAN SAILOR WAS FOUND AT CAMP DODGE wkw crnzKNH NH'KAK ALLM- UIA ' AH OTIZIONM OF THW ramD KTATRH IS ARMY. 1 KLINQUENTS CARED FOR ftO.OOO to ftO.OOO Soldiers to Re ftaed in Forming Goddeaa of Lib erty in Human Mam. ifmj W. Jaxnlgan, Herald (rrr spondent.) Camp Dodge, Iowa, Bept. 4. The converting of thousands or untrained men. taken from every avenue of life. Into a well drilled military unit cap able of fighting by the side of veter ans across the sea, la the problem prevented at Camp Dodge. Two regi ments of regulars are to furnish the beets of the newly formed 19th di vision. These trained men nre dia tiibuted in aurh a way that their ma neuvers furnish n schooling for the tiw men. Offices, are ai inbllne frem all over the country to replace these who led the 88th division to overseas service. Another call has been issued for the assembling of tbeusends of other recruits In Sep tember, 8,000 of these to come from Iowa and a proportionate number from Illinois, Minnesota, the Dakotas and Nebraska. The tented city Is need for new men who must undergo quarantine, the latest Increment be ing something like 7,000 negroes. Many of these men are being sent to France an laborers and have had but little training. The newly allotted staff of officers for the 19-th division are: Camp surgeon, Lieut. Col. i: W. Rich, M. C, U. S. A.; camp sani tary Inspector, Major Hiram M. Read, M. H C; camp Inspector, Major Per cy Bordwell, N. A.; camp Judge advo cate, Capt. Adam Richmond, I. R. C; camp signal officer. Captain Royal H. Prummond, I. R. C. ; camp Intelli- reeeatly waa made for placing three ha plains in every regiment, or one l every 1,200 men A training school for army chaplains alao has been established at an eastern post where men commissioned for this work are given special Instruction in the work. Objectors Placed on Farm. More than 150 draftees at Camp Podge claiming conscientious scru- plea against entering any branch of the military work either combatant or non-combatant, were being fur loughed to farms In the north and central west Monday. The placing of these men on farms In accordance with Instructions from the war is- later Interned for the luratlon of the war. The Ouddcsis of Liberty. At each of the cantonments by the use of soldiers patriotic emblems have been formed and these have been photographed and are used on powlcards nnd vnrlouB other illustra tions sent out from the different ramps. A living goddess of liberty la to be formed at Camp Dodge some day this I IMlllJlUi Between 30,000 and 50,000 sol diers will be masaed to represent a replica of the famous statue which stands at the entrance to the New York harbor. Officials are glanning to outline the PW partment, temporarily at least solves , nKro on the ground and then mass one of the most trying problems with which the military authorities have had to dtoal. The objectors being furloughed must report each month to some disinterested person and their work must be aatlsfactory or the furlough will be terminated, the orders say. T" ey will receive no pay from the government, but are to be paid at the prevailing scale of wages In the community where they are em ployed. Any amount in excess of a private's pay of $30 a month, except In such rases where room and board Is not furnished, must be turned over by the objector to the Red Cross. Griffith floes to Camp Gordon. Capt. John L. Griffith, athletic di rector of Camp Dodge, like Mike Gib bons, the boxing Instructor, has re ceived orders to report; at Camp Gor don, Ga. Capt. Griffith does not know whether the change is perma nent or whether he has been sent to the southern cantonment only tem porarily. Soldier Finds Mother. The strange story of how a two-year-old baby boy became separated from his mother 24 yeara ago, was reared by foster parents and how at last his mother was located on the eve of his departure from Camp Dodge for France, Is related by Red Cross nurses at the cantonment. The man Is Verne Phillips, of Joplin. Mo., and the mother is Mrs. W. L. Maple, a Portland, Ore., woman. She is now racing across the continent In an effort to see her boy before his de parture for France. The mother was located thru the Red' Cross. Taking Care of the Delinquents. All of the men mentally deficient .. j i i l nose wno run 1101 rrnu niiu wine. the men so ns to bring out the gi gantic figure. A tower will be erected so that photographs may be taken of this wonerful picture. 'Similar demonstrations have been given at the Great Lakes training sta tion and at Camp Dlx when the flag and the Liberty bell were repre sented. Csmp Dodge hopes to make this presentation eclipse anything else ever attempted anywhere. Women Must Re Careful. y Ai t'-e time of the assault upon a young woman wnicn resulted in tne hanging of three negroes an order waa issued to the effect that women either with escorts or alone were not to be found In any of the side streets or along the highways or in unfre quented places after 9 o'clock at night. That meant after dark. Col. William Newman, in command at the cantonment, has issued a supplemen tary order that women may not enter the barracks at any time without spe cial permission from detachment manders. The order further provides that woiyen either with escorts or alone will not be permitted wajlWng about the encampment nt any time of the day except ulong the main travel ed strrets or highways. The orders put a restriction on the accessiblity of the cantonment to civilians which has not exiBted before since its construction. In fact it is known that Camp Dodge In compari son with other cantonments could al most be considered a public picnic ground, officers say. Alliance Gleaning Works CLEANING AND ff OP PRESSING SUITS Old prices are continued All other prices in proportion PRE-WAR PRICES gence officer. Captain Juckson R. Day I. R. Ci chief gas officer. Captain .the foreigner who cannot speak Eng- r. Bliss, chemical warfare service; liBh, those in poor physical condition oamp police officer. Second Lieut. J. because they do not know how to Mortenson, Q. M. C, N. A. i take care of themselves and in fact Col. William Newman, commander all of the human driftwood that has of the 163d depot brigade, is now been gathered Into the army from the camp commander following the de- operations of the selective draft have part ure of Brig. Gen. S. M. Foote, of been formed Into classes, placed In the 163d field artillery brigade. proper grades and ore being educated Kxonerated In Minuting Case. ' by men delegated for tnat Impose Ucoi.nni1 T?,.aait it..i i .... from iiniong the soldiers. This work WHEN IN OMAHA VISIT THE "Omaha's Fun Centre MUSICAL PCTRAVA6ANZA Bmnd Htm Show Erj Wk CUtn. CIsmi EnUrtaiaMMt. Evtrybody QottrAtk An,bodT. LADIES DIME MATINEE DAILY DO NT GO HOME BAYING i I DIDN'T VISIT THE QAYETY DELCO-LIGHT The complete Electric Linfat ana Power Pi"t Runs the washer. Turns the wringer. A real help for the housewife. At 'Cits A LYTLE, Alliance, Nebr. 418 Cheyenne Ave. Pbone 9M "Keep canning, sugar or no suger" says (he United States department of agriculture. If youn can't get enough sugar for home canning putup your fruit without It. The products will keep perfectly until a time when more sugar Is available or until a su gar substitute program has been worked out. Fruits put up In this way are excellent for pio filling and salads and may be used In deaaerts. puddings, Ices and punches. In can ning fruit without sugar, can the product the day it is picked. To Save Leftover Paint. After bousecleanlng. If one has part Ly used cans of paint or varnish left over, which would soon dry up sod become useless, try putting them Into mall cuns and cover with melted par affin. They will keen Indefinitely and can be used as ueeded. HEAD STUFFED FROM CATARRH OR A COLD Says Cream Applied In Nostrils Opens Air Plumages Right Up. Instant relief no waiting. Yovr clogged nostril open right up; the air pasugee of your head clear and you caa hreatbe freely. No more hawking, snuf fling, blowing, headache, dryness. No struggling for breath at night; your cold or catarrh disappears. Get a small bottle of Ely's Cream Balm from your druggist now. Apply a little of this fragrant, antiseptic, healing cream in your nostrils. It pen etratee through every air passage of the bead, soothes the inflamed or swollea mucous membrane and relief comes in stantly. It's just fine. Dent stay stuffed up vith a cold or aasty catarrh. aren and forty-ninth Infantry, Camp Podge, has been exonerated from re sponBlblllty in the accidental shoot ing Private John A. Heyerhoff on June 22. Heyerhoff waa allot in the hip when a gun held by Early was discharged accidentally. An artery was severed and the nam bled to death. Private Ole Egge, l3d de pot brigade, died at the been hos pital Saturday night from an lafec tion of a cut on his Cain, which re sulted while he was shaving. Blood poison net In and is said to have canned his death A Linrd of nSS, linn Yu't n n nnninti.il f., im ... i .....i... connection with the recitations. It amazing now many young men m this country can neither read noi ls under t lie supervision of the Y. M. C. A., headed by Prof. Harry L. Eells. a member of the faculty or the State teachers college at Cedar Falls. These fellows meet an hour in the forenoon and an hour in the after- j noon nt the various Y. If. C A. build ings. The Instructor from the army , are school men of experience. Some- j thing like 8,000 men will be In the various classes, Among the negroes colored teachers nre available, The value of a bath, the use of the tooth brush, pride in cleanliness of cloth ing and person, are being instilled in LADIES! SECRET TO DARKEN GRAY HI Bring Back its Color and Lustre with Grandma's Sage Tea Recipe. exact cause of liis il. ;.t ! 600 New fit inn. Svvenr Allegiance. All men in damp who applied for citizenship Wednesday reported at the naturalization office before Judge Thos. O. Guthrie. Thin laj afternoon to take th oath of alle giance as citizens of the United State giauro ga eKisens of the United .States. There wen about 00 m n in this list who became eitiSOttl of the wrke. The army is finding them. Mr. Bells lias made a very clear state ment of conditions to the commis sioner of education in Washington vith a view of setting the wheels. In motion that will obviate this serion condition in the future. jnpod Specialists on Dnty. Food specialists, to be known Sfl United States thru the BSD ruling of nutrition officers, are to be stationed tne president that men la the mili tary service may waive residence qualifications for naturalization. Draft IPtadjeiS Take Advice to "lie tiood." From r.O to 60 draft evaders have been brot to camp this week and placed under the ere of tne military police until they could be drafted in to the service. Some of thene men at l amp Dodge to personally super vise the rationa to be issued to sol dier of the 19th Cnited States army division, according to word received from the surgeon generals office re cently. It will lie the duty of these men to SOS to it that Uncle Sam's flghtini men receive a balanced ra tion. Much of the benefit to be deriv ed from the services of these food Common pardon page brewed Into a heavy ten. with sulphur nnil alcohol added, will turn gray, streaked and fn ded hair beautifully dark and luxuri- i. ant. Mixing the Sage Teg i ad Sulphur recipe at home, though, h tr.iubtesonie. An enfier way is to get the ready-to u c preparation improved by tl addition of Other ingredients, costing about 50 cents 0 lnrpe bottle, at drug ster known I "Wyetli's .ae and Sulphur Compound," thus avoiding a lot of BUMS. While gray, faded hair i not -infill, we all desire to retain our youthful appear ance and attractiveness, by darkening your i:air with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur ( iii.k.'uii l, no oae can tell, heeause it docs it so naturally, bo evenly. You just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through jour hair, taking one smull strand at a time; by morning all gray hairs have disappeared. After another application or two your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy, soft and luxuriant and you appear years younger. Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound is a delightful toilet requisite. It is not intended for the cure, mitigation or prevention of dicasse. SWEDES ARE BUILDING LINK Railroad Will Connect Scandinavia With Russian Territory Bridge Is Mile Lor g. A bridge nearly a mile long Is being built by the Russian and Swedish gov eminent over the River Tornen, which separates Sweden nnd Finland nt the apex of the Gulf of Bothnia. The. Swedish government Is doing the ae tnal work, having better access to ma terial. By this bridge the railway sys tems of the two countries will be unit ed, and one may then be able to travel from Stockholm to Vladivostok with-, out alighting from the railway couch. Already an elevated cable communi cation over the Tornen is nenring com pletion. It is intended to carry nails and parcels, of which enormous quan tities pass through the towns of Tor nen ami Ilnperundn. The lighters which have been used heretofore, over loaded with parcels, were useless In the spring or autumn, and In winter horses and sledges were slow and expensive. Hotel Fontenelle OMAHA Built By Nebraskans For Nebraskans MAKE THE FONTENELLE YOUR HEADQUARTERS WHEN IN OMAHA. UNFAILING COURTESY and SERVICE SEEM TO MERIT YOUR PATRONAGE 330 ROOMS-330 BATHS $4. OS i.oe D.Tyc I ONB PERSON . HA 1 r I TWO PERSONS . 2.00 t fS.OO M Man a qr -it nt H. Edgar Gregory HANDLE SPRINGS OF ENGINE Rack Also Can Be Used to Facilitate Handling Any Kind of Bulky o Unwieldy Material. On account of the weight nnd shnpi of locomotive driving springs, It Is dif fteult to handle them, especially In re moving them from the stockhouse. The rack shown In the illustration will Locomotive Spring Rack. simplify the problem of storing. Old car slits and scrap-rails were used in the construction. This rack can be used to facilitate handling nny kirn' of bulky or unwieldy material ot 0. similar nature. J. It. Mlnter, In 1'op- ular Science Monthly. Little i""on60iation. It Is little consolation for the saai whose pockets have been picked oi home eabbed to reflect that the money taken is nor worth as much as It used to be Indiana noils News. ,e Grid's Best Bevew HMl$ Try its good taste today. I ijjElirSSCjJ Let the whole family try it. gsjwjp-i See how you will all like that good taste nK BT IrnBi CfRVA is pure nutritious and non-in- Kg 'jflnki A very remarkable soft drink. Mjall ! IBbS l'-'1 tjf. At grocers', at druggists', etc . 'ilir - . in fact at all places when M who hav e voiced objections to serving specialists also will be the saving In Forty United Profit Sharing Coupons (2 coupons-each denomination, 20) are packed in every case. Exchangeable for valuable premiums. LEMP Manufacturers ST. LOUIS EVERETT COOK - Distributor Alliance, Nebraska food stuffs desired for shipment overseas. Officers any that there Is BO nucatlon btrt that an immense i quantity of such materials can be saved thru the proper preparation j and selection of various substitutes. to obey orders and join the The nutrition officers will work In i con junction with officers in charge of ! supplies, :nd with those directing the preparation of the food to be served. I Desertion Proved, H-Yenr Sentence. Private John A. Bach, a member of tho 349th infantry. Camp Dodge, has "been found guilty of desertion by in the army, have been lonvinced bv the advice of Capt. Per Lee and Lieut E. W. Crippen, commanding officer and adjutant of the provisional mili tary polios organisation of the camp, that the best thtnrr they could do would b service. Mtandnrdize Work for Anny Pastors. Recent legislation Inereasini the number of army eha plains In the mil kary forces of the United States will result in tlv gradual elimination of representatives of various creeds now known and authorized K nrmv na. general court martial and sentenced tors, according to an announcement to ,'nr'1 ,nuor nt ,he dl8- from division headquarters at Camp ciplinarv barracks ai Ft. Leuven- Dodge, Since the organisation of the wrth. Kansas. 88th division there have been from QnmaM Sailor luxated at Camp 16 to 30 men, the majority of them Ihnlge. ordained ministers, conducting; re- ' It requires constant watching by liglous work among the soldiers. A the best experts in the country to letter from the war department re- make sure that no enemy finds a cetved last week directing that these place in -the camp. On several occa men be notified of the departments i sions suspicious characters have been intention of relieving them of this j located and in every case an assumed work and placing the en-tlre religious j name -served to hide the identity of activities of the camp and the new the suspect. The latest arrest was ; 19th division in the hands of commis- that of a fellow giving his name as I stoned chaplains, resulted in a meet- John Bastie Oruber. The draft caught ing Saturday at which official not in- him at Carroll, Iowa. Investigation cation of the department's policy was shows that he has been going under comuiunicuted to the pastors. There I other names, such as John Lange and are representatives of 13 different sects here, numbering between 2 5 and 30 pastors. The work these men have done, is said, to have been of considerable aid and benefit to the men and officers. At the meeting Saturday representattives of the fol lowing sects were present : Presby terian, Baptist, Methodist, Lutheran, piscopal, Congregational. Swedish Evangelical. Swedish Evangelical Free church, Christian Reformed', Christian Science, Seventh Day Ad ventists and Catholic. In directing that the services of these army pas tors be dispensed with, t' e depart ment points. out the provision which John Schmidt. lie was u sailor on the German steamship Vaterlund, In terned at an eastern seaport in 1916. His strong German accent and the fact ho admitted Munich, Germany as his birth place, resulted in his ac tions being carefully wutched. When officers reported Gruber to the department of justice a compari son of data showed him to be the much wanted sailor from the crew of the Valerland. Investigation of Gruber'B action also showed him to be on Intimate terms with Otto Greenburg, another member of the crew of the same boat who was arrested in Des Moines and H. B. Brand Saddlery, Horse Blankets, Lap Robes, Whips, Etc Harpham and Fremont Saddles are handled by the following dealers Ainsworth, E. C. Ballard Alliance, Rheln-Rousey Co. Anselmo, W. W. Bass , Co Ansley, Comstock & Mills Ashby, J. Halloren Lbr. Co. Bayard, Henderson & Franklin Belmont, Relsdorfer Bros. Berwyn, G. C, Stanton Bridgeport, H. C. Burke Broadwater, J. R. Mlnshall. -Broken Bow, H. H. Squires Chadron, W. S. Glllam. Chappell, Chappell Lbr. & Hdw Co Cody, Stotts & Jarchow. Crawford, Crawford Hdw. Co CrookBton, Holmes Hdw. Co. Dalton, P. M. Cramer. Dlx, Phil Nelson. Gordon, Jos. Kocer & Co. HarriBon, Z. B. Johnson Hay Springs, Parsons Hdw Co Hazard, C. W. Trumble. Hehilngford, C. A. 8hlndler Hyannis, F. M. Spalding Lbr. Co Johnstown, E. E. Waggener Kimball, Gus Linn Lewellen, Rohlflng & Berquist LI sco, Ltsco Merc. Co. v Litchfield, H. L. Nelson. LodgepolS, K. Fenake. i ' Pine, M. J. Potter Melebta. Dutton & Sons Merna. A J. Read. Merrlman, Lesert Hdw. Co Mlnatare, C. E. Clough. Mitchell, Riley & Tyler. Morrill, Logan & Catchpole. Mullen, J. L. Roseberry. North Platte, A: F. Fink. Northport, Jesse Edspn. Ogallala, C. E. Bass & Co. Oshkosh, Quelle Bros. Potter, C. W. Johnson. Rushville, Coffey & Wasmund Rushville, 8. S. Connell. Seottsbluff, R. D. Owens. Sidney. Mrs. C. D. Esslg Sidney, Thos. Olson. Sutherland, E. C. Brown Valentine, T. L. Evans. Whitman, S. G. Wright. Whitney, Whitney Supply Co. Wood Ike, Wood Lake Lbr Co Lakeside, Crowther-Reed Co WE MAKE THE BEST LINE OP HARNESS STOCK SADDLES AND HORSE COLLARS ON THE MARKET. THEY ARB HANDLED BY SOME OF THE BEST RETAIL DEALERS IN NEBRASKA KANSAS, COLORADO, WYOMING, MONTANA AND SOUTH DAKOTA. HARPHAM BROS. CO., Lincoln, Nebraska