TWO THE ALLIANCE HERALD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1922. he Alltmttt Hrralb " TUESDAY AND FRIDAY BURR PRINTING CO, Owner Entered at the postoflict at Alliance, Kth for transportation through the nails aj second class matter. . . plan to have the facts. Without a personal knowledge of conditions, you are likely to make tome regrettable errors in Judgment SAUERKRAUT , Sauerkraut, the famous food of German origin, has always been the signal for a laugh. So much has this France is more than cursory. Their interest isn't assumed. Unlike the av erage American, who bluffs his way though most discussions of this kind, they know all there is to be read about every national and international prob lem. TfTey don't shrink from discus sion, but hunt for an opportunity to argue over debatable points. This knowledge of what is happen Wanted 100-lb. stock pigs. O'Bannon&Neus wangcr. 18tf r.rnnr.i? niTRTL Jr Editor EDWIN M. BURR Business Mgr. . form of cabbage been made the butt ing Jsn-t conf jned, as in America, to " : of humor that it has been laughed off a .mattering of the big political de- . . k m il. rn .... . . . Official newspaper or w ww the dinner tables of over hair tne Alliance : official Butte County. newspaper of Box homeg tn the country. velonments. the baseball heroes, and Somehow, we tne prjncpai, j the various munler have grown to think or the smell or and mov!e sandals. The street la n mr.A noMUliml hv The Burr sauerkraut as belonging solely to borer ln France were willinar and able V W MUM WM1 - . . .. Printing Company, George L. Burr, homes where rea cotton taoieciotna to anything from the league of Jr, President; Edwin M. Burr, Vica President KNOW YOUR FACTS. of coming into its own. Within a lew th. , hecl of ODDrCBf:0rg i8 still a years, perhaps, we shall not be com- very much alive 8Ubject Knowing, pelleu to elude tne wire ana sneaK down to the restaurant in order to in- lulge in this delicacy. For in this land of the froe and the home of the brave there are bold men who are pro claiming its virtues abroad. And, strange as they may seem, these cla rion voices do not belong to the nd writers. Their numbers include dieti cians, scientists, traveling salesmen and physicians. One of the thines that vexes and perplexes is the readiness with which the average citiien, of either sex, is no ready to criticise the courts and the law enforcement officials, and yet is so prompt to carry all troubles to one or the other. Criticism of the courts and the officers has become a habit one of the things that the av erage man indulges in without any forethought, just as he grabs his um brella when it's raining and leaves it the first place he stops after the shower has ceased. The habit begins, presumably, when the citiien, or some friend or acquaint ance is mixed up in a lawsuit. Natur ally enough, it's impossible for either side to be perfectly satisfied with a verdict, and the aggrieved one prompt ly noises abroad his conviction that the court was prejudiced, or that the jurors were a set of lunkheads. Again, In any prominent case, there are al ways those who want to see justice done, and others who hold that mercy should be shown. By the time a man or woman is old enough to vote these days, there is a fairly firm conviction that the courts are not to be trusted, and that the law enforcement officials are a pretty weak lot. And men who will stop and consider for fifteen min ' utes before spending fifteen cents will say, right off the bat, whenever given the opportunity, that "the court's too easy on these criminals," or "the coun ty attorney could have found twice that much evidence." True, if asked to tes tify to' help convict a criminal, the same man will hem and haw and hedge and get out of it some way, but ten minutes later will be willing to tell you, in strict confidence or otherwise, that "there's plenty of evidence to con vict these bootleggers if the officers will only keep their eyes peeled." Of course, there are times when something happens which gives color to the belief that the courts are not doing their duty. Take Borne of the bootlegging cases that were up for trial, at the present term of district court. One defendant was charged with illegal transportation of liquor, In county court, Judge Tash found him guilty. An officer had found a bottle of hooch in the car. A man was deputized to watch the car for a minute while the officer went across the street. While he was gone, the owner of the car seized the bottle and dashed it to the pavement. The man cn. guard admitted, on the stand, that he was a judge of whisky, and that the overpowering odor that arose was ample proof. The officer, returning, had the presence of mind to dip his handkerchief in the liquid and saved enough hooch for a test. The evidence was conclusive and unimpeachable, The judge assessed a fine. The case was appealed. The sheriff saved the bottle of al leged hootrh as evidence. He labeled it carefully and locked it up in his strong box, awaiting the time when it should be produced in court. Bottles of evi dence in other cases were in the same strong box. Something maybe the quality of the liquor induced moisture in the lox, the labels were soaked off, and the evidence mixed. The sheriff couldnt tell them apart. The witness who testified at the first trial was not in the city. District Judge Westover, in the face of the changed circum stances, and with the evidence of but one officer, and that verbal, could do nothing but discharge the defendant The result is, strangely enough, that the ultra-wet element in the county is censuring Judge Tash. "The judge is too strict too hard-boiled," they pay. "Why, he convicts on little or no evi dence. See, the district court sets aside his judgment' And the ultra dry element, knowing as little about developments in the case as do the ultra-wets, say, scornfully, "Judge Westover is entirely too lenient with these hooch peddlers. He lets all of them go." Actually, each court ren dered a just judgment with the evi dence produced. . : And so, the next time Mr. Average Citizen is inclined to censor the courts wait a minute. See if you know how the case stands at the time it goes to bat. Then you won't make another one of those foolish errors, but youH do your part in upholding pub lic respect for the courts and the law. They're needed now more than at any time in history. Censure, in the right place, is a good thing, but whea at tacking anything or anyone, it's a good adorn the kitchen table, which is also the dining.room table. It's no longer considered "tony" or good form to eat sauerkraut, unless all the doors and windows are barred and a lookout sta tioned at the front door. I But sauerkraut stands a fair show nations to the Einstein theory. And the discussion that ensued would be intelligent, on the part of the French man, at least There's probably some explanat'on for it In France the revolution which rescued the necks of Frenchmen from One of the most noteworthy feat ures in connection with Tanlac is the large number of men and women hn have reported an astonishingly rapid1 increase in weight as a result of itsi use. t k Holsten. 27 Wanted to Buy Your fat hogs or ship them on commission. O'Bahnon &Ncuswanger. 17-tf ATTENTION! Start a savings account with the money we can save you on your auto top repairing. We will re-cover your Ford top for $10.50, up. Other style top with Gypsy rear curtain and plate glass windows, prices arranged accordingly. e , use the best of material obtainable for this work . Let us ' tell you our prices on top work on any car. LAURENCE BROS. 210 West Third Street. HERALD WANT ADS BRING BEST RESULTS as they do, the inestimable value of freedom and a voice in their own gov ernment, they make the most of it With Americans, it's different Our revolution came a long time ago it is of hallowed memory and, until the world war, was brought out regularly on the Fourth of July, which holiday we still observe with firecrackers, ora tory and perhaps too many ice cream cones, uur vote is tanen as a mat Remember the story of the old Ger- of course. Americans have always man who was being questioned by a neighbor about his crops for the year ? The neighbor asked, "Did you put up any sauerkraut?" "Not so very much," was the sad reply, "the cabbage crop was almost a failure." "But you put up some?" the neighbor continued. "Oh, yes," said the German, "we al ways put up some. Just two or three barrels this year, though. We wanted to have some in the house in case of sickness." That story has never failed to bring enjoyed the franchise. So little is it valued that a large proportion fail to even cast a ballot There's no danger, , they think, that control of the gov ernment will ever get away from the people. And, in the face of such an , attitude, is it any wonder that the ; politicians are gradually centralizing their authority and hemming U3 about .with restrictions. The United States cries out loudly I about excessive taxation, public waste, red tape, inefficiency, bureaucracy, a laugh, liut, do .you know, it isnt a' ml kindred evils. The remedv lies joke at all. It might well have been in the haml3 of the voters ln fou, thetrutn. or and this ract may jar years. time tremendous results could you Fomewhat sauerkraut has a dis-( attained if there were the same in unci medicinal iaiue. ueorge won, .v. -f nf Amorran vnt- ... . i . o. .. . . i - manager 01 tne iioiei insane at wu-i - on thft nart 0r the French. cago, has made an investigation and proclaims to all the world that sauer kraut is the "great granddaddy of the wholesome diet" Sauerkraut, Mr. Wolf tells us, will cure a good share of human ills from colic to headache, from hardening of the arteries to diabetes. It will make women beautiful, for it is the most wonderful blood purifier we have, vast ly better than yeast It's a preventa tive of stomach trouble, a boon to a I disordered liver. It's the best doctor In this country, in addition to great indifference, caused by too much wealth, too strong a pursuit after the almighty dollar, a disposition to leave well enough alone, and other similar causes, we have the added sin of ig norance. No country on earth has better newspapers or more facilities for keeping the public informed, and in no other republic is the ignorance of every day questions so widespread, The Review of Reviews has just completed its second national current combat all disease. lor rneumatism, a Deiier ionic man vllAftPV WBi,v wna taken last fS ranlac. The bacteria in sauerkraut ,v K onn nnn yitry, cwi ill disease. They re more of ,.,, ln fln of the countrv. them and stronger than the famous SevCnty-nine questions were aked lactic acid bacilli discovered by Metch- fo A "rt answers to show whv W a ' m nuitA Blip nKnnf I . - " " " i"" nprsnns. nlarps and nrohlems or r I r . portance were .cussed. But im being currently dis of 1,580,000 possible nikoff. these vitamines, but sauerkraut has them. too. And it's also a blood and Done Duuuer. l,.,-rri,f has nnn nr At ns mt And sauerkraut has food value, too.' were marke, by teachers them- has double the energy value of j on2.000. or 59 ner cent. chicken soup, three times the energy were VTong or unanswemL By 20,- v&lue of tomatoes, more than will be found in asparagus, onions, . ono student s. over 9(1 ner cent was 6trin8: scored bv 115: from 80 per cent to 89 beans, vegetable soup or pumpkin pie. cent by 583; over g0 per cent by It's a fit food for athletes, for soldiers, 698. from 70 to 79 per cent by 1,234; for workers and for all who desire to1 keep fit Mr. Wolf has made another discov ery, and this is his own. The state ments concerning medicinal and food value are vouched for by chemists, physicians and surgeons, but the Wolf cocktail is his own idea. The alcoholic content in sauerkraut juice, he con fides, is delightfully close to the Vol stead deadline. He suggests that ev ery thoughtful citizen lay in a barrel or two before the authorities pass a law against it. "Just take the juice in a shaker," he says, "with some ice, you know, and serve very cold in one over 70 per cent by 1,932; under 60 per cent by 15,400, or nearly four fifths the total number. Of 200,000 possible right answers to ten questions about sports and movies, 92,000 or only 46 per cent were right Some of the answers to the ques tions are Hluminating. There were students who thought that Mile. Su zanne Ienglen was a French chemist, a representative of Japan at the dis armament conferences, or the only woman in our congress. Three out of of a hundred high school students in one city did not know who General Pershing is. Out of a thousand stu- ot those little glasses and you've got ,ents 630 m not know the meaning 0f the term "open shop;'' 690 could ance to a Bronx and tastes curiously . ..: viru,. t. ..... I ItUJ5HC O (IlLbUlC VI lilillU AlWl, me iemotu.de witn a kick in if . 490 m t know who H ti From now on, we care not what oth ers may say, but as for us, we are not going to smile at the mention of sauer- G. Wells is; 800 never heard of "Hell'n . Maria Dawes. All of the student who an . Kwerpd th (nifst mnnaire snent at least kraut until we have made a more thor- fortv minutes per w in so-called ough investigation of its possibilities htu,ly of current evenU J Maybe the joke has been on us all the Jt.8 fortUnate, of course, that no' time and not on the heretofore des- puch test has given to the moth. pised article of diet Oh, well, we live c aml fathera of the 8tuflents who and learn, and if all these things bemaue guch a poor owing for the ia, ii ,3 weu mat we nave .earned in iChances are that they would have made an even more miserable failure. time. KEEPING UP WITH THE WORLD Something is wrong somewhere. Courses of study can be arranged to teach student! the value of keeping' up with events in the world they live in, but what about the rest of us ? When One of the things that most im pressed the overseas veterans who saw an appeal for the passage of the bonus 'the "f! PUbHC ,osl" deslp? to bill, which everyone but the ex-sol diers seem3 to be heartily tired hearing about) was the way in which every citizen of our sister republic, man or woman or child above the grammar grades, kept in touch with current events. Soldiers who learned to speak the language and wandered Haroun-al-Raschid like, among the know what s coming on, it presents a serious situation, the more serious be cause there seems to be no possible remedy except a complete change in the mental habits of the nation. NOTICE We are selling the first eight quarts ef milk for 50c. Best milk in the city, people, found that everyone with whom ner Br8 PhoM 2Cl W w iney laixea was tremendously interest' ed in everything pertaining to the gov ernment - The Frenchmen read more than the headlines. Their knowledge Have you seen that $70 harness at Rhein's, 26-27 of what is happening In their beloved! to $70, Rheia Hardware Co. 227 WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A MESSAGE ANNOUNCING i. New List Prices on Fordson Tractors $395. 00 f. 0. b. Detroit EFFECTIVE FRIDAY, JANUARY 27 GET YOIJR ORDERS IN EARLY. Coursey & Miller "Wfotfis SHE 4iifHoBo? Statistics from a reliable source tell us that nine men out of 1,000 die every year. In many cases families are left in comfortable cir cumstances, but in others the widow and her children are nothing more than paupers public charges. IT IS SOMETHING TO THINK ABOUT Have you provided for the contingency: "What is she going to do?" Our suggestion is: Start a Bank Account TODAY. It won't take long to accumulate quite a sum that can be used nicely until your family adjust itself to the new conditions imposed upon it. Don't put it off until it is too late. COME IN AND SEE US TODAY! The First State Bank