V I k V -A V VOLUME XXVII. ALLIANCE, BOX BUTTE COUNTY, Fill DAY, APRIL 9, 1920. NUMBER 38L -s t 'f -vV UNION MEN TO BREAK RAIL STRIKE! 2 Insurgents Meeting With Some Suc cess, But a Powerful Opposi tion Is Developing Four conductors and eight brake men, selected by Chairman Chlsholm of the Alliance local, B. of R. T.. left yesterday for Chicago, where they Trill take the places of striking 'in surgents" In an effort to break the strike and make good the word of their union. The railroad officials are co-operating with them in every tray. Three days ago traveling en gineers and trainmasters on every di vision were called back from their regular duties and went to the seal of the trouble. According to local railroaders, the Insurgents are men who 'are dissat isfied with the administration of the B. of It. T., the O. II. C. and the Switchmen's union, and a year ago made a big canvass in an effort to gain enough members to put the older unions out of business. Fail ing in this, they bided their time and the Chicago strike is the next step. Railway men out in this part of the country are loyal to the old organ ization, and realize that contracts, once made, must be kept if union labor is to maintain its supremacy. All over the country, news reports say, the strike is spreading, and it la Inevitable that traffic will be dimin ished somewhat. Union officials have characterized the strike as un authorized and illegal. Railroad officials and union lead ers here alike agreed that Thursday would bring the rea 1 test of strength between the strongly in trenched group of brotherhoods ana the "outlaw" unions which have sprung up under leaders who voice their dissatisfaction at what they de clare is the failure of the brother hood officials to get more money for their men. In the Chicago district, .where the strikes started eight days ago, the railroad General Managers' associa tion has set Thursday as the last Iay for the striking switchmen, en gineers and firemen to return. If they fail to heed the ultimatum, strike breakers will be brought In and the vacant places filled, it Is t said. I The striking switchmen said that engineers 'and firemen ha daban-i doned engines on the Chicago. Burl ington & Quincy; Chicago, Milwau kee & St. Paul; the Chicago & North western, and the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe railroads at Chicago. Arrangements were made for a conference today at CI eveland of the chiefs of the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, Locomotive En gineers' and Locomotive Firemen and Cnglnemen. Officers of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen continued with their plan of bringing loyal members to Chicago to take the places of strikers. A dispatch from Sheridan, Wyo., said that several members had . started from there to join those from other points nearer Chicago. INSPECTOR JOHNSON IS LOOKING FOR HEN Inspector F. R. Johnson was in Al liance yesterday, in searcb of some 200 men for work on the govern ment forest reservation near Seneca. He offers several month' work, an eight hour day, with good bunks and low food cost. A number of men were shipped out on No. 41 yester day, but not enough. Some ot the best men will be held for additional work at the close of the planting season. The pay is not very high. but living costs are exceptionally low, and ex-Boldlers and others in terested can secure information at the Red Cross home service bureau in the court house. NORA LAUDER HELD BY DENVER POLICE Nora Lauder, colored, who left Al llance Wednesday morning for Den ver, was arrested on-her arrival in the Colorado city due to a telephone message to the Denver police by Chief Reed. Bob Todd, colored, had complained to the chief that Nora had made away with a watch and other Jewelry belonging to him. No warrant had been issued for her arrest by the county up to noon today. On a wire from a cousin, O. McCracken, Chief Taylor Friday, afternoon arrested Walter MeCrack en, aged seventeen, but six feet tali lust as he stepped off of No. 43. lie la being held for further instruc tions. THE WEATHER Forecast for Alliance and vicinity: Increasing cloudiness tonight with warmer east portion; Saturday un settled; not much change in temperature. BEN SALLOWS 1IAS PAINKUL INJURY Ben" J. Sallows, editor ot The Times, suffered a painful Injury to his left hand Wednesday morning of this week. He was operating the lino type machine and due to the absence of a guard on the motor gears, the tips of his fingers were enmeshed. The bones are badly splintered as shown by an X-ray photograph, and the surgeon is yet undecided as to whether it will be necessary to re move the finger-ends. CHARGE OF FORGERY AGAINSTJELLIEHAN A warrant was Issued in county court Thursday morning for the ar rest of James Kelliehan. The com plaint, signed by C. A. Allen, owner of the Box Butte rooming house, charges that Kelliehan cashed a check for $15 drawn on Pete Mane wal at 3 a. m. Thursday, and that this check later proved to be a forg ery. Kelliehan could not be found, and it Is believed that he has left Ltown. Five blank checks had been taken from Manewal's book, and It Is possible that other forgeries will appear. Kelliehan was employed as cook on the night shift by Manewal. He was off duty about 3 a. m., and sh6rt ly after that time showed up at the rooming house, where he rented a room, paying for it with the check in question. He left immediately thereafter, saying that he going to get his suitcase. He returned a short time a'terward, and evidently went up stairs and out through the rear entrance. The room showed no igns of occupancy. REPUBLICAN ORGANIZER HERE APRIL 17 AND IS Miss Bauer of Rhode Island, who la speaking in different parts of Ne-. braska in the interest of the Repub lican party, will bo in Alliance April 1 7and 18. Miss Bauer has a national reputa toln as an organizer and public speaker. Alliance is fortunate to be able to have Miss Bauer two days. Her evening meeting will b efor both men and women and all should avail . . a - i li A memBeives oi uui opportunity iu. hear a most talented speaker. THE WINNING STROKE" ' AT IMPERIAL TONIGHT Tonight at the Imperial the at traction is a play tof college life, with George Walsh in the lead. And George, they tell us, is a pippin at depicting the harum-scarum, rollick ing college lad who performs some typical college stunts. George, It seems, attended college in his youth, and the stuff comes easy to him. rhe scenes are taken at Yale unlvei- Bity, and one of the features is the Yale-Harvard 'varsity boat race. It's interesting all the way through with a regular thriller as a climax. Also there is a Billy West comedy, 'Bright and Early," and a late batch of current events. Saturday night, "The Prodigal Liar" Is the play, and it has an in terestlng sound. We didn't get to read the synopsis, due to the care lessness of the management, but William Desmond plays the lead, and he looks like a good liar. There's a Mutt and Jeff cartoon, "Fishing," and a Snub Pollard comedy, "Tough Luck't to complete the bill that can't help but be good. The last episode of the thriller "The Invisible Hand." is billed for Sunday. The feature play is "The Invisible Bond," with Irene Castle In the lead. It's a dramatic photoplay of married life, based on "The See saw," and the producers say that it strikes a happy medium between the movies that make us think and those that do not. We don't exactly un derstand how it's done, but Irene Castle Is an attractive little thing Op, is she little? Op.: Never meas ured her, but it mak l no dlf., you can't tell by the plctui myhow) and her talent isn't all In her feet, as is the case with some dancers. Another serial will start Sunday, "Lightning Bryce," and a Big V com edy Is thrown in for' good measure. Higher financing. education needs higher RACE FOR AUTO IN HOMESTRETCH Vote Schedule Will Re Smartly Re duced a Week Fro niSitt unlay Night The Herald's auto and prize cam paign Is now In the homestretch but fourteen days remain. Pep, Push and Perserverance are the three keys that will un lock any door In the world. They will unlock the door to the valuable prizes offered by The Herald in its big auto campaign. They will unlock the master door that leads to the new Reo Six, and the inner door that guards the free trip to California. HAVE YOU THE KEYST Time for Action The time for action in The Her ald's campaign is at hand. The race has been going along at a pretty even pace but that can't last.' Some one is going to show a burst of speed and go right over the top. The opportunity to do that very thing is apparent. The vote totals are en tirely too small to stand long. Just a few subscription clubs would put anyone of the headllners away in the lead. Mpke up your mind that you MUST be FIRST when the list of contestants Is published again next Tuesday. Have You the "Bug"? Near the end of a campaign Just when everyone is working to put his or her nearest competitor away back In the last row under the balcony there is very likely to be an epidemic strike some of the candidates. There is a sort of germ or microbe that gets into neoDle's systems and makes them feel blue and pessimistic. That microbe is a mighty dangerous bug and the only way to keep that bug from losing YOU this campaign Is to feed It large amounts of real energy Hustle and energy are sure cures for the disease. Some contestants become discour aged when a competitor casts a larg! number of votes, the very object of casting these ballots being to weaken competitors. Then, sometimes for getful for the moment of the mag nlflcent prises, a candidate will stop by the wayside and bemoan his fate The result Is that those who possess more hustle, ambition and energy go around him while he is thinking it over. Second Period Important The second period of this cam patgn is equally as Important as th first. After April 17 the schedule goes down and that reduction may mean defeat for the very ones who are now planning on victory by standing on present votes totals. The sale of advertising and Job cards will be discontinued April 17. The last week of the campaign votes will be allowed for subscriptions only. If you have prospects for cards be sure those prospects are closed by a week from Saturday night. No votes whatever will be Issued at The Herald office the final week of the campaign. Subscriptions and cash to cover must be deposited in the ballot box which will be placed in a Jocal bank. The box will be locked and the keys delivered to the judges of the campaign. It will not be opened until the campaign la over and the final count begun. Victory Lies Ahead Victory lies ahead not behind Just two short weeks and the. race. will be over. You ran't depend on psesent vote totals or reserves to win. The last week of the second period is bound to' be a hummer. If you fail to take BIO advantage of it you are lost not matter what your present vote total may be. HOW TO GET A MILLION VOTES A five-year subscription now counts for 20,000 votes. EX TRA votes 50.000 of 'em are still Issued for every club of $20. Now then; Twenty-five-year subscriptions at 20. 000 votes each is 400,000 REG ULAR votes. Twenty five-year subscriptions at $12.60 each Is $250, representing twelve $20 clubs, (and $10 over) or 600, 000 EXTRA votes. Add the 400.000 regular votes to the 600,000 extra votes and you have a total ofl.000,000 votes for only twenty five-year sub scriptions. The sale of job cards ean also be applied to se cure a million votes. S. A BARTLETT IS HARBORINPUDGE Man Wounded In Antlorh Fracas Pays His Respects to the Man W ho Miot lllm S. A. Bartlett of Antloch, wounded by Marshall Frank Knight of that city last Saturday evenrng, Is not in kindly mood toward the marshal or the city authorities. Propped up in bed at St. Joseph's hospital yes terday afternoon, he told a Herald reporter his version of the story of the murder and the subsequent shooting of himself by Knight. Bartlett Is making a rapid recov ery. "I had to," he said. "After 1 was shot they took me to the Steam Heated rooms and left me. I had to wait on myself all the time. Two or three times I told them I wanted to be taken to the hospital here, and they promised each time that I'd be sent on the next train, but it was Monday evening before I got here. I wouldn't be here now If I hadn t told them that if they didn't bring me, I'd get out of bed and walk to the station." Despite the fact that he had a bullet hole In his chest, Bart lett Is able to get out of bed and walk about the room. The wounded man feels most bit ter against Marshal Knight, who, he sayB, has been trying to "get- him for some time. He objects strenuous ly to published accounts of the fray, declaring that the story that the mar shal's gun was accidentally dis charged is all bunk. Further, be de clares that he can prove his state ment by Mayor Warren and two or three other citizens, who were pres ent at the arrest. According to Bartlett, Knight was fully six feet away from him when the Bhot was fired, and that It was after he was shot that he roiliy be gan to fight. Then the marshal used the butt end of his revolved to club him Into submission. "I was afraid he'd kill me," he said, "so I pre tended to be laid out." Bartlett tells a straightforward story of the events of the evening "I wasn't present at the station when Flo came in," he said. "I was up at Jack Craven's Flo's first hus band. Flo and Jack and Marie drove over, pi the car and they waited while she came in to talk to me. She told me that she wanted to come over to the house: that she was afraid of trouble.' Jackson had already fired two shots in another room, and she knew I was a good friend of both of them and thought that I could make him be decent." The whole trouble was that Jack son was Jealous. He bad once told Bartlett, the latter said, that if Flor ence ever came to town with another man he'd "blow them both and then himself." "I toia mm ne wouldn't do any such thing that he'd been drinking a little and was just talking foolish, and. thought no more about it." luckH.m and Mrs. Feagln had been quarreling all the evening, but when they reached the house, everything went lovely for some time. "Flo was settln' on Jack's lap. and they were loving each other, like they al ways do," he said. "Marie was out In the other room fixing up a lunch. She'd been mixing the drinks for us. There had been quite a few of them I might as well admit it, we were pretty stewed the last drink she mixed with hot water and the others had been with cold water. Finally thre came an argument, and Jack told Marie and me to .clear out. Flo said to go ahead, she wasn't afraid of the coward, and out we went. Marie didn't even have time to put on her coat." They went out and had got nl' as far as the back porch when the first shot was fired. Five of them came in rapid succession. They went around to the side of the house, looked through the window, and de spite the drawn blind could see Flor ence Feagln's body huddled on the floor. Marie knocked at the front door and asked Jackson to let them n that she was cold, but they got no response. Bartlett gave wane am coat and the two of them decided to notify the authorities. "We ran all the wav." Bartlett confessed. "I was cold and maybe a little scared. knew if Marie and I went in there he'd smoke us sure." Marie got hold ot Night Marshal Schrader, and Bartlett confined his attentions to the day marshal. went into the garage where the fire denartment'a apparatus is kept," be said, "and called him at his home Then I went to Shepard's pool hall and later to Donahoe's, where 1 go a coat. I was trying to get a poae all lined up so that when Knight came down town we could all go hunt for Jackson. I was Just going Into the bowling alley when KHpht ratne up and arrested me for being drunk. "When we got over to the Jail. Knight was going away to leava me, and I asked him If he wasn't going to build a fire. Ho said he wouldn't --he'd betmck after a while. I told hl.u he wouldn't lock me up with out he built a fire. I told hlin 1 d rather be Bhot than freeze to dath. Mayor Warren and three other men were there at the time, and the mayor told Knight to go ahead that he'd take care of me. Then Knight said that he'd look out for me himself. When he started to shut the cell door, I came out Then he shot me, and he was standing abo-it six feet away when he did it ti fired three shots. One of them grazed my head and another hit me in the chest. Then he hit me with th butt end of the gun." (Continued on Page 12.) OFFICERS MADE GOOD 0NK. P. DUTY About fifty members of Alliance post No. 7, American Legion, an swered mess call at the armory last night and made the chow (which would do Justice to an officers' mess) look like "sank sahnteems." If you were not numbered among the fifty you certainly missed it; it was like the first feed you got after arriving home with your discharge in your pocket. Everything was Included in the menu from ham and wienies down, or up, to ice cream. Ex-officers and "shave-tails" were on K. P. and made a new record in the way of service. Mike Nolan was right there at the coffee boiler and didn't hes itate a second to fill your mess cup full (maybe that's the way thejr do it In the navy). K. P. Burlington was a little late but got "extra fatigue" when it came to the clean up. Mess Sergeant Meyer and K. P. Morris and the rest are all very com petent and we are going to suggest to the government in the next army we join that only officers be put on K. P.; they can do the job well enough. The next meeting of the Alliance post will be at the city hall on Tues day evening. April 13, when the new constitution will be voted on. There are a number of important changes in the constitution and every legion member should be present to record his vote for or against the proposed changes. The Initiation of new members will be brought up M this meeting, also the organisation of a base ball team. The room committee will have a definite report. With a piano and a victrola already, it won't take long to furnish a room after we get one. The women's auxiliary, for mothers, sisters, wives and dauab ters of ex-service men, will probably be organised about April 21, but definite announcement will be made later. HAPLAIN SQUIRES SPEAK HERE APRIL 17 Chaplain Squires, a noted veteran of the great war, will give an ad ress In Alliance April 17. He will speak in behalf of the candidacy of General Leonard Wood. The local republican central committee is tn charge of the arrangements, and an nouncement of the time and placo of the meeting will be made later. USE NEW TRUCK IN DRAGGING THE ROADS C. L. Hashman, chairman of the board of county commissioners, was in the city yesterday. He reports that the county's road force Is now using one of the big ex-army trucks. recently purchased, as well as sev eral graders, in getting county roads n shape. They are not at present doing any work on the state high ways. SINCLAIR REFINING CO. MAY ESTABLISH BRANCH The Sinclair Refining company, one of the largest individual refining companies in the country, is planning the establishment of a distributing branch in Alliance, according to Sec retary Rufus Jones of the chamber of commerce. Mr. Jones has held several conferences the past week ith George Wallace, of Chicago. lease agent for the company, and it a suitable location ean be procured, the work ot construction will be started. The company plans to erect a warehouse 24x40 feet, a garage for three motor trucks and three steel storage tanks with a combined ca pacity of 86.180 gallons. The Alliance Herald, $2.50 a year RESULTS OF CITYJECTION Hacker, Moore, Henry and Sturgeon Klotted to City Council Take Office Tuesday H. S. Hacker was elected to the city council over A. V. Gavin in the First ward at Tuesday's election. O. C. Moore was re-elected over L. Tl Burrowes in Second ward; Ed Henry defeated A. Wright in Third, and A. B. Sturgeon won from L. H. High land in the Fourth ward. The new councllmen will go into office Tues day. Official totals have not been com plied, but unofficial figures show that K. A. Harris and K. J. Stern were elected as members of the school board. A dark horse developed in the race, Mrs. Mose Wright securing a big vote In every ward. No filings wero made for the school board, but no other names had been suggested for the place than those of the in cumbents, Harris and Stern. Interest was slight and there were no evidences of any campaigning at the polls or on the street. There was a small proportion ot women voting. fourteen out of a total of seventy seven In Third being reported. The official count by the city coun cil will bo made Monday evening and the official tabulation will be printed in Tuesday's Herald. BUSY WEEK AHEAD FOR CITY COUNCIL Next week bids fair to keep tho city council pretty well occupied. Monday evening the present council meets for the last time, and on that occasion they will count the votes cast on Tuesday and announce the result. Tuesday evening comes the reg ular meeting. The new members will assume their offices on this oc casion, and there is a whole lot for them to do. In addition to the build ing ordinance, there is the rearrang ing of committees, and a rather full program is the prospect. Wednesday evening, according to Mayor Rodgers, the council will meet with representatives of the Nebraska Telephone company and another ef fort will be made to thresh out the franchise question. E. K. Haldeman of Grand Island, district manager. was in the city yesterday, and the upshot of his visit was the setting of a date foe the meeting. There'll be discussion, pro and con, of all the ' little problems that have been mulled over before, and the probabilities are that when the meeting . adjourns, something will have been accom plished, , COUNTY CONFERENCES ARB CONCLUDED TODAY Rev. J.. Orrln Gould, dMrict fi nance director for the inter-churcb world movement, returned to Alli ance this morning from trip to ' Crawford and Bridgeport, where h attended county conferences. Team No. 13, composed of Rev. A. J. Kearns of Alliance, Rev. S. J. Epler, Rev. A. J. May of Hemlngford and E. C. Newland of Chadron, had been in charge of a series of these county conferences, and the last one will be held at Valentine today. Plans will be announced shortly for the work for Box Butte county. Rev. Mr. Gould has received word that the quota of each denomination in the county will be $18,575. and the other quota $3,161. This totals less than $22,000, about $5,000 short of previous estimates. MRS. JAS. HUNTER PAINFULLY INJURED Mrs. James Hunter suffered a painful injury to her right band last evening. Mr. and Mrs. Hunter and son and Mrs. E. T. Kibble had driven out to the ranch to bring in the boy's pony, and he was being led behind the ear, Mrs. Hunter holding the rope. The pony stopped suddenly at the edge of a small mudhole, and Mrs. unter, who had the rope wound about the fingers o( her hand, suf fered broken bones In two of the fingers. NEW TENNIS COURTS AT TIED HIGH SCHOOL Two new tennis courts are being erected north of the high school building. The ground was being graded Thursday, and within a few days there will be available another form of athletics for the students. Herald Want Ads get the business. f;"l