J v. tnvo TIIE ALLIANCE HERALD. FRIDAY, MAY 6, 1921 HEM1NGF0RD A. J. May was an Alliance caller thin week. Mm. Sulilith was on the pick lint l.t -k. W. I Clark was a caller in Alii fcc Monday. Mrn. Enyeart of Marsland was In town Tuesday. Mrs. Loer ami Mrs. Thompson are tn the Kick list. Mrs. Lackey of Marsland cpent the reek end in town. . Loyta Whelan spent Tuesday night milh Irma Wright. Lle Wynkoop was nursing the rheumatism tact week. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Harney were call T In town Wednesday. ITattie Oliver "pent the week end ith Miss Margaret Wilcox. Wayne Wilt spent the week end at the home of Newton Haynes. Gail Price of Alliance was in town Saturday transacting business. Mr. .Spray was a business caller in town Thursday between trains. Lona Baldwin has resigned her po tation at the First State bank. . Mr. and Mrs. H. K. Ford and little con were Alliance callers Sunday. The Women's club met at the E. C Kemlrick home Saturday afternoon. Margaret Keister was a caller at the Sam Graham home Saturday evening. Charles Sharp and family are spend ing a few days in Alliance this week. ' George Carrel I and George Jones were business caller9 in Alliance Tues day. Bessie Baldwin ppent Tuesday night mith Margaret Keister and Helen An drew. Earl Anderson and O. W. Andrew were business calleus in Alliance this week. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew and family were callers at the Joe Carter home Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Will Keister and. son Were callers at the Harve Keister home Sunday. The M. E. aid met at the church Wednesday afternoon, where sewing was done. Mrs. A. P. Haynes who has been on th .nick list does not show much im provement. , Loer Osborn and Mike Stevenson at tended the show at Alliance Satur day evening. The Congregational aid served lunch "Thursday at the store recently vacated by Mr. Warn. Loriene Kline and Bertha Carter Fpent Tuesday night with Blenne and ISeulah Kohrbaugh. Foster May departed Friday night for Belle Fouche, S. D., where he will ri oil v a e Y -t f i iv A Mr. and Mrs. Muirhead who spent e few days in Omaha last week, returned home Friday morning. Miss Violet Shanks of Alliance closed a six months' term of school at district No. 60. It was by mistake re potted that there was one pupil who was neither tardy nor absent a day, but it is corrected by saying that this pupil was absent a few days. Mrs. Embree demonstrated pies to the domestic science class of the high school Monday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Wright and daughter Irma, were callers at the Will Manion home Sunday. Fo4er May entertained a few of his friends at a birthday party at his home Thursday evening of last week. Mrs. Stiles was a passenger to Alli ance Tuesday. She will remain there a few days, having some dental work done. Mrs. William Cory and Blanche Wiltsey departed for Edgemont, Fri day, where they will take treatment for rheumatism. r Josephine and Elizabeth Miller were callers in town Thursday. Miss Eliza beth went on to Wyoming where she intends to work. Miss Veva Miller was very pleasant ly surprised Thursday evening when a number of her friends gathered to spend the evening with her. The Misses Blenne Kohrbaugh, Mar garet Keister, Irma Wright and Helen Andrew were callers at the Robert Embree home Monday evening. Helen Hung who has been visiting home folks for the past two weeks at Marsland, returned Monday to take i up, her work at the Walker millinery.1 The Wayulaha hiking club of the Camp fire girls hiked out to the Gra ham grove Wednesday morning where they cooked breakfast, returning in time for Rchool. The Epworth League of Heming ford will serve lunch at the Wm. Cory store Saturday from 11 a. m. until late in the evening. They will also have carnations for sale. Miss Mirrine Forsstrom entertained a few of her friends at a party at the Julia Forsstrom home Tuesday eve ning. The evening was spent in play ing various games and at a late hour a dainty lunch was served after which they departed and declared that Mir rine and Julia were most excellent hostesses. Those present were: Floy nnd Elva Bunce, Vera Friend, Francis Rosenberger, Blanche Oliver, Lovola Whelan, Irma Wright, Margaret Keis ter, Ingo Forsstrom, Helen Andrew and Bessie Baldwin. Cops Kept Busy Keeping Hoboes Moving Onward The Alliance police force and the Burlington special agents are being kept on the jump these days, keeping the annual spring influx of hoboes on the move. It's possible, of course, to curb the invasion by throwing every vag into Jail, and if there were plenty of street work, this might be profit able. Under present circumstances, however, the city would simply have to set up a boarding house. The number of hoboes riding the rods is said to be larger this year than ever before. Every freight tra'n is .infested with them and even. the passenger coaches are 'not immune. Chief JefTers estimates that as many as eighty have come in on trains in a single night, and the police authorities have been content to keep them leav ing as rapidly as they arrive. Every time a freight Is about to leave, the officers make a roundup and encour age the sons of rest to take a little trip onward and elsewhere. As yet, there has Wen no increase in crime in the city, due to this addi tional population, although the number of back door handouts requested !as been large. There has been but tne robbery, that of the Golden Rule, which is not attributed to the hoboes, and one reported holdup, which the cons say they are satisfied was a fake. The hoboes seem, as a rule, anxious to get on. They don't know where they're trointr. but they're on their way. One night last week twenty men applied for a place to sleep and were allowed to park their carcasses on the cement floor at the city hall. The cops prefer to have them sleeping where an eye can be kept on them rather than to permit them to roam the streets. On f)leasant nights, dozens of them are to e seen dozing about the railroad com pany's property. The hobo movement started about six weeks ago, and the number of those who have been rid ing the rods is steadily increasing. Lot's Ro fishin'. Get your fish ing tackle and rods at Thiele's. 45-46 Maybe some men like to go to prize fights because at a prize fight is one instance, , at least, of where men's rights are still on exhibition. It seer.is to be the consensus among the allies that this proposed disarma ment ought to begin with Germany. Slightly Used Pianos J AT A BARG AIN ' These pianos have been taken in on trades and represent an exceptional opportunity to get a good piano at a low price. $12.00 AND UP WIKER MUSIC HOUSE ' 'Everything in Music" WHO Indeed would want to vear a last year's garment before having it thoroughly cleaned and pressed? Remember those disease germs that live in clothes they live right through the winter. KEEP-U-NEAT CLEANERS D. C. BRADBURY, Prop. Phone 133' 207 Box Butte Two Frencji doctors have found an other sure cure for. hydrophobia and an English doctor is using a serum that brings the' dead to life, if the reader s credulity holds out. Buy your tickets for the May fes tival of the pupils and avoid standing in the long line at the Imperial ticket office, Wednesday, May 1 L 46 The "siuirtless" grapefruit is prom isd soon for our breakfast tables. But what we most need is protection against the pithy ones that come along about this time. The American dye industry might establish itself firmly by inventing a washable complexion. BAD BACK TODAY? Backache is usually kidney-ache and makes you dull, nervous and tired. Use Doan s Kidney rills for weak kidneys -the remedy recommended by your friends and neighbors. Ask your neighbor! Mrs. E. E. Bates, 114 Flatt Ave., Alliance, says: "I have great con fidence in Doan's Kidney Fills. They have saved me many doctor bills in the past twenty years. I have occasional attacks of kidney complaint and if I neglect it I suffer a great deal with my back. I get lame across the small of my back and I can hardly get arouml to do my work. 4 f I stoop over I get dizzy and can hardly see. I get Doan's Kidney Fills at Thiele's Drug Store and take them just as directed. They always cure me of the attack." Frice 60c, at all dealers. Don t simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan s Kidney rills the same that Mrs. Bates had. Foster-Milburn Co. Mfrs., Buffalo, N Y. Home Cook Shop serves coffee and waffles from 7 to 9 a ro. A general delicatessen. 11.8 West Fourth Si. Mrs. A. H. Robbins. Old Demon Rum continues to pose as first friend to those who figure in sensational tragedies. Trobably the world will not ask for "supermen" again until there is an other war. 1 mmm . m mmt,m n.. Tr-rrr-inTwi m I 111 n.ami -iib.iimm mix A pipe's a pal packed with P. A.! Seven days out of evcrv week vou'll p&t real smnlci joy and real smoke contentment if you'll get close-up to a jimmy pipe I Buy one and know that for yourself I Packed with cool, delightful, fragrant Prince Albert, a pipe's the greatest treat, the haooiest and most tizing smokeslant you ever had handed out! You can chum it with a pipe and you will once you know that Prince Albert is free from bite and parch I (Cut out by our exclusive patented process!) Why every puff of P. A. makes you want two more; every puff hits the bullseye harder and truer than the last! You can't resist such delight! And, you'll get the smokesurprise of your life when you roll up a cigarette with Prince Albert! Such entic ing flavor you never did know ! And, P. A. stays put be cause it's crimp cut and it's a cinch to roll! You try it! Frintt Albtrt It aaM in tuppy r baa, tidy rid tin, kandiama ptmmj mud hall pmmnd tin kumidurt mttdinthm pmnd tryttul f (oaa kmmidtr with " matifnw Up. The Chicago public library displays a sign reading: "Please do not sneeze in the books." Still, there are some that deserve to be sneeze at. It's getting so nowadays that if a fellow isn't held up hi? thinks it's a reflection upon his financial condition. Polltlor r r!ntrfi- ?r those !io arc trained! Stiidca's my woik fir board. Tu t en low. Ak tar catalog C. EOYl.r BUSINESS COLLCCE, Omaha, Nsbraa'ia. 3T (1 I - .nMltWarraiaiaMt.ltijyr,. fZL5LTF jyfy) ZZDx fcUiMiKaajmii,w..J mmi mini wwaWwi mini iwnmiuoa, mM 1 Decoration Day Hundreds of the Best Monuments in the Alliance Cemetery were bought from us at lowest prices. 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