i) THE ALLIANCE HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1D22. Ilnrizon us a tumor. Tmmh I ...1. THE ALLIANCE HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 11, 1922. ANGORA Mr. nnl Mrs. Sylvester Wozny and children and Miss Franri Micek weic hhnpping in ScottsblulT Monday. C. M. Dove nd Frank Skrivan nu UmkI to r.i i(!(roiMrt Thuiwlay. Arthur Johns was attending lo busi ness in Ilayanl Saturday. Frank (ilan nnd Frcil Nickerbockcr were Bridgeport visitors Saturday. F. W. Wood was transacting busi ness in Scott sblu IT Saturday. Mrs. Jessie Jensen of Forsythe, NonU, was in town Saturday, looking alter her projerty Here. Miss Anna Daxon was entertained at the Venell home Friday. Mr. nnd Mrs. Harvey Edward of ScottsblulT were transacting business in this vicinity Friday. . The Community club will meet with Mrs. John Burry this week. Klmer Morehead and family moved Into their new home Thursday, which he Jias built to replace the one de stroyed by fire a few weeks ago. Nelson Elliott erected a new wind mill on his place last "week. The priest came up from Bridgeport Sunday and held services in the Cath- illness U m. . SMILES, the Symbol of Good Health Health is the prime fac tor in happiness. For with out it all of life's Messings pale to insignificance. All of the ills to which the human flesh is heir is di rectly traceable to the brain (or spine, which is really an elongation of the brain). ' Now if the spine is only a slight degree out of align ment or obstructed in any way, illness of some kind is bound to result. It is a Chiropractor's function to see that such conditions are relieved. Dr. J. G. Robinson in charge of Drs. Jeffrey & Smith CHIROPRACTORS Over Harper's Store. olir church. I Mrs. F .V. Wood exports to go to; ScottsblutT this work, where die will ; take osteopathic treatments. j 'the dance which was given in the Dove hnll Saturday night was very j well attended. Mr. and Mrs. Ieslie Boodry went to! loder, Wyo., Saturday to visit with their son, Ilavid, and wife. Mr. and Mrs. I I. Carnine attend ed the declamatory contest at Bridge port Friday night. A real good, program is being pre pared for the next parent-teachers meeting Friday night Come and en joy a pleasant evening. Mr. and Mrs. George Venell and children, Mr. and Mrs. Omer Kingry and children and Mr. and Mrs. llos tetter attended the picture show in Bridgeport Saturday night. An Faster program is leing pre pared that will be given at Sunday Bchf-ol next Sunday. The eighth grade examinations were held here Thursday and Friday, with an attendance of fourteen. The Misses Vera and Thelma Miles, Vera and El nora Kloch and Tilly Carter, and Har old Wolki, were in .from the country. Rev. B. J. Minort came down from Alliance and gave a very interesting lecture Thursday evening. The infant child of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Morehead, who ha1 been ill for about ten days, died early Tuesday morning and was laid to rest in the Angora cemetery Wednesday after noon. Rev. B. J. Minort came down from Alliance and preached a very touching nermon. Mr. and Mrs. More head have the sympathy of the entire community in their bereavement. BINGHAM. Albert Williams was a passenger on No. 43 Tuesday for Alliance. The W. E. Ixtspeich family were marooned in Bingham during the blizzard. An Easter program Is being pre pared by young people of the church. Everybody is urged to come to this service. Several young hopefuls took the eighth grade examinations last Thurs day and Fridav under the supervision of Professor Dudley. Mrs. Davis accompanied. . Rev, . Mr. Davis Saturday on his regular visit here. They were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Euell Edmondson. The two hisketball games between Ashby and Bingham on the . Ashby grounds last Friday afternoon were won by the Ashby school. Extensive road improvement ouh of town is now under tray.' R. E. Kinkaid and C. V. Townson are on the job with eight horses and wheel scrap ers. They expect to do road work all summer. Stanley Williams left Friday for Laramie, Wyo., where he will visit for a few days with the L. N. Potter fam ily. He will spend a few days in Den ver on his return trip. Sheriff Bruce was in town Monday nnd Tuesday of this week. The only excitement was what he created him self when he dropped a cartridge into the furnace of the Kincaid store. The Bllard family have been heard from. Friends will be glad to know that they arrived safely at their new home, which is three mile from Wil mington, Vt., and seventeen miles from Brattleboro, Mass. "What to Eat in Cold Weather." I. it. Dige headline. How to eat in any kind of weather is a question assuming larger importance. W esfaon Leader. "Germany faces ruin." But we must remember that Germany has two faces. SU Paul Pioneer Press. in II IE TAW 3 I S SVfl 1 When You Plan Improvements Your Store, Offices or Bank Be Sure to Get Design and Estimates from This Strictly Western House with Years of Experience in the Manufacture and Installation of Fixtures, Walt Cases, Show Cases, Interior Work,' etc. All Made to Your Order at the Lowest Prices Consistent with Ex cellent Materials and Workmanship. We Have no Branches or Agents. We Deal Direct with you. r-H . . . iinuuAr OFFICE AND FACTORY .1232-46 ARWttHOE ST. ENVER.COLO. F.STAHLv.ciPiis ' LOUIS ANDERSON, Star. 1IEMINGF0RD The j;in;or class will present, "Dea con !ub:s," at the opera house on Fri day, April 21. This play will be tjuite dili'ercnt in character to any yet given. On account of the snow and stormy weather on Monday the Congregation al iicoplc did not begin the moving of the church but on luesday were busy. Mr. Matti.-on, who is superintending the job, says it will take two or three days to get ready to pull and then they will move it in half a day with good luck. Mr. Clipson. who was here last sum mer and tall and farmed on his place about two and a half miles east of town, is back again for the gpring work end he states that the family will come as soon as the school there is out. Mr. Clipson drove his Buick through and said he found lots of mud and Know until he reached Ogallala and from there on the roads were fine. The pastor of the Methodist crurch would like to have all the parents who wish to have their children baptised on Easter Sunday to notify him as noon as possible. There have been five or six reported already. Most of the flu cases have about re covered for the present at least. Mr. and Mrs. Keeves, from about sixteen miles north of town, came in and have rooms at Mrs. Hoppocks dwelling and on Thursday of this week had an operation for this son, orant, sixteen years old. Drs. Hurd and Moranville doing the worlc ana tne boy is getting along nicely. The home missionary society was well attended at the home of Mrs. Hoppock ana sne serveu a nne luncn of hot biscuit and creamed chicken with mashed potatoes and pickles and coffee. The work oa the Congregational church is progressing nicely consider ing the weather. Mrs. M. C fcrskine, wno nas Deen sick so long, is a little better today (Thursday) and there is hope now that she will not have to go to the hospital as was contemplated the first of the week. On account of the bad roads not many people are in town with cars this week. . . . Paul Reeves, who has had a severe attack of quinzy, is out aagin though not well yet.., He had .M-have, his throat lanced on both sides. Mesdames Kidwell and Rohrbaugh served to the-Methodist aid on Wed fine lunch consisting of chicken sandwiches, pickles, pineapple pie with whipped cream ana cottee. There was a good crowd and the ladies sewed for Mrs. Erskine. Agate Fossil Beds May Become Mecca of Tourist Hordes (C. Durant Jones, in Lincoln Star) Away up near the beginning of the Niobrara river, in Sioux county, is a little country village called "Agate. On a ranch near that place lives Cap tain John Cook, and his son, Harold. But this is not a story of ranching, interesting tonic, does not indicate the purpose of this sketch. Vnr out of the daily round of the mnrWa life there may come an in teresting tale of other things than cat tiik m rminH-uns. or shiDDing. it is a brief tale of a fossil bed, one nf th two createst in the United ct.taa th nther beintr located in Cali fornia. If the average Nebraskan had spent a season in California, and had visited the fossil beds there, he would Vi a ua a nrttv tale to tell of his sight- uainv nrnhahlv unaware that he micrht )iav seen something just wonderful in his home state. In fact, many thousands have seen the Agate fossil beds, ana many outers win vj a visit to this curiosity when they learn more about it and when the roads in that part or tne siaie are put in Brh shaue as to invite tourist travel. . The possibilities of pulling tourist travel to Box Butte and Sioux counties are just now beginning to be realized by the boosters in tnai par vi us ciafA MIA of whom is Harold Cook himself. He recently visited Alliance ml told the business men there the lutaelhl It M OT lOUriSl USfCI. WUI dl' To i-owl unon the value of the fossil beds as a drawing card in that direc tiAH ThA Rlak Hills drew twenty- six thousand tourists last year, and it is believed that if the natural attrac tion In urAatArn Nebraska can be era- phasiied, both by development aim au vertising, it may become the mecca of rrn hnnlM of siarhtseers. About thirty-flve hundred tourists visited the fossil beds last year, and with the ex penditure of practically no enoir, ana ft is believed that if effort were to be made in that direction, it would mean mnrh t tttfrn Nebraska, It may be a surprise to most peo Vim that thousands of skel nrA-historie animals have been v.. , , . . . . taken from tnese Deas ana muiipcu w all parts of the world. These have been of inestimable value to scientists every where, in helping them to de termine the origin or tne various sTwwies. The library in the University of Nebraska contains a number of lantern slides, showing these skeletons, nd the "restorations," exhibiting what the appearance of those animals must have been in tne pre-niunc uays. The Cooks have a small workshop, AM) THE TOT CALLED THE KETTLE BLACK By HANNY WM SJ FUNNV 1 Mi J n w mmmwm )u ' j i i . in which they have a number of ex hibits stored, but which is totally in adequate for exhibition purposes. Not only are they cramped for space, but the relics are in constant danger of destruction as there is no protection against fire. The loss to the scientific world would be incalculable from such a disaster, and so the father and Fon are planning the erection of a museum, constructed of fireproof material, but which will be amply commodious to properly house the exhibits. It is proposed to make the museum replica of the old Fort Laramie, as is appeared in 1836. It is to be a hollow square, the two ends to be equipped for the display of the speci mens that have been taken out of the bed. It is hoped that some of the uni- erities or scientists or both may be interested to the point where they will assist in procuring funds with which to finance the enterprise. Cap tain Cook has already created con siderable interest among friends in the east, in the project, and it looks feasible. It is hoped t raise a fund sufficiently large so that the interest will be adequate for the completion of the museum and for the work of fuither excavation. Under the state law, the park com mission might -accomplish something toward this end if there were any funds for that purpose. But there seems to be none, so if these wonder ful fossil beds are to be developed, and "played up" so as to attract tourist travel, some independent agency must be employed. Considerable interest has been aroused at Alliance, for the business men of that town realize that if the fossil beds can be featured as a strong attraction, a cut-off from the Lincoln highway to the Black Hills can be con structed through that section, so as to include Agate and the fossil beds in the routing. This will mean some more agitation for good roads and th expenditure of considerable money for road building, for just now, in order to reach the Cook ranch, it is neces sary to traverse some of the worst road3 in the country. However, the Agate fossil beds are but one of the many natural attrac tions to be found in Nebraska, and there would be a pronounced increase in state -interest and state pride if each citizen would take as a slogan, on his sight-seeing trips, "See Ne braska First." Mrs. Asquith says that American women are inferior to American men. Don't kid us, Margot Kansas City Star. If the soldier gets the bonus, we don't know how long hell have it, but let us hope it will be as long as it, will take him to get it. American Lumberman. You'd Be Enthusiastic WE DELIVER "4 TIMES A DAY As We Are WE DELIVER 4 TIMES A DAY If you were as familiar with the Quality Meats that we sell at a moderate price. Not a few people have been curious about our quality, and - NOW THEY ARE SATISFIED CUSTOMERS Try our Quality Meats for your Easter Dinner. Plenty of dressed chicken, beef, pork and veal, eggs, butter, bread and whip ping cream. This Market Is No Farther Than Your Phone. For Quality, Price and "Service With a Smile." If in Doubt, Call Phone 30 Jones Will Do the Rest. MODEL MARKET E. K. JONES, Proprietor. Next to Fourth Street Market LiiiniiiiiiiiiimiHniiiiimnHiiiii'ii'i iniiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiimuniimiiuiiiiiiira iiiiiiiiiiiuimtss: tmmmfll till HHI iiiiininiiiiiiiimmniminiiiiinmi'ii!mi 2nd. Boxitl or Bout at the Roof Garden, Friday, April 2 1 st Panke and Flvnn were sunnosed to ficht in Denver April 12th for The American . . ' ... - , til! 1 Legion, but postponed the Denver liout to come 10 Aiuance. RINGSIDE SEATS WILL BE CHAIRS ALL BOUTS TO A DECISION. Alliance Post, The American Legion Main Event 10 Rounds JOE ' WOP" FLYNN vs. BILLY PAPKE SEMI-WINDUP "KID" FLORENE of Alliance vs BATTLING JAEGER of Omaha PRELIMINARY LLOYD DOTSON of Alliance vs COWBOY WYLAND of Yale Admission $1.00, $1.50, $2.00 No War Tax tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiNiii'niHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1'''1'" ;ilimillimilHlllllnmillllllllllHlllllllllllllin miiMiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiinimiiiiii-mrmtnt 'THllllllllllliMi llUUUltt