EIGHT 1 A Birdie II in the 1 1 V I4M1CA Q f I FANNIE 8 g HURST 8 Co?r1ht, im. kf Tfe WtwKr Sfodioal. la. After several generations of the hot biscuit thnt several generations of mothers used to make, and after a Itroadway chef with a salary twlre that of a college president liml put the Newburg In lobster, tin entire na tion took' to talking In Its sleep and hnwed a coated tougne. (lluten bread, tiecf steak culws, predlgested tablets nnd painless pastries begun to figure largely In street car advertising. That dark-brown taste begun to as utne national proportions. Dietetics became a college elective. The old Cadillac Springs house. Just ready to jH-ter out In favor of ap pendicitis hospitals and neurasthenia snnnturlunm. was suddenly bought up liy an Indianapolis promoting com any 'and an elht hundred-thousand-dollar elKht-hunilred room hotel with three miles of veran la and golf course rose from the wood ashes of the for jner frame hostelry. Cadillac Springs water, which had prohobly for odoriferous anil sodium nulphatlc eons gushed up anil seeped taek Into the fliMr of the mild old In diana flntlands. was suddenly piped. nnul.vr.ed and advertised to the last !ccitllu of Iron oxide and inugnesl um carhonate. Men who had long since censed to approach breakfast except as a spirit ed horse Is led blind folded past a team roller, with quivering lips anil ready to take fright ai a broken yolk of the poached-on-toast or a tiny brown stain beside the percolator, learned here to linger over eggy dishes and market quotations. Thanks to the liver, life beenme once more worth living, and the great American porterhouse swam back Into favor on a sea of best cooking butter. Marcus Kessler, of Peoria, upon whom a corn flake lay none too light ly, retired fearlessly after three por tions of pudding a la Cadillac and a very black demi-tasse. For the first time In half a year of months, Mrs. Kessler slept as sweetly as a night curse on duty. At Mrs. Kessler rocked on the great veranda ber fingers flashed busily through the Intricacies' bf 'crochet, sunlight teasing at her needle." A smile rant out on her lips and a rose grew In ber pattern, and presently a sha dow lay across the 1 lace'- and she glanced up, still smiling'.''1''" "Good morning, Mrs1. Wa'shauerl" "Good morning, Mrs. , Kessler! I thought I was the only party bird." "Indeed, no! Stce seven I been up and downstairs with uiy crochet That's what a good night my husband tiad. Sit down by me, Mrs. Washauer, and be socluble." "I Bee, Mrs. Kessler, you do the rose pattern, too." She screwed herself with a rustling of black taffeta Into a -porch chair, laying her short anus out full along the sides. "Yes, my husband feels so much better, I got the heart right away to tuke up my fancy work aguln. Lace edging for Delia's shirtwaist I make." "I never, Mrs. Kessler, seen a man improve more as your husliund." ( "iVhen I tell you. Mrs. Washauer, that when we cutne here little more as a week ago, every time what- I looked at that man I busted right out crying, you can know how he looked." "Say, wasn't my own husband for two years such a yellow In color we didn't expect him to live? For twenty-one months, Mrs. Kessler, to sit down to our table at home was like to sit down to a funeral, ou such a diet he was." "Don't I know, Mrs. Washauer! My , own husband, what never In his life jrave Ms daughter or "me a cross word, hollered so at me I was ashamed for the neighbors, when one night ut sup per we wouldn't pass liliu the suuer ttruten like the doctor forbid." "Say, you can see for yourself, Mrs. Kessler, how even the big millionaires . m New Yolk come bora for the tu re." "1 should say so! Right next to our ti.'i.lr in the dining-room sits that Mrs. Van Uiti out of the newspapers, with her yellow hair so murceled, and eyes l!ke site was always louklng through Ue.r 'lorgnettes, even when she alu't." "Cut how plain them big bugs are, iilu't 111 At breakfast this morning not so much as a diamond bracelet did Mrs. Van Kits have on." -"Always at night she makes up for It." "When you come right down to It, I can tell you there's a few million dollar sleeps every night under this roof. Tom Riley, himself, to begin with. And they say, Mrs. Kessler, this hotel ain't one-third his holdings." 'You don't say so! Like to own such a gorgeous hotel alu't enough In ltsuT A large ruminative sigh escaped Mrs. Washauer somewhere from the deep recesses' of ber. She was tilting .vjoleutly her Jteud pat back against the rocker back. "Yes, yes. Mrs. Kessler, a few mil lionaires lay their heads down under this roof every night: Tom Riley. Herman Illrkhlmer, I'erclval Chal mers, Isadore Mange, L. Iobeni. When such men come all from the Kast. there's a reason. "User I" "The biggest names you find here. Why. two rears ago. right at aese i Springs. Mrs. Kesler. came the secre tary of state and his wife. Such a plain little woman, not twice would you look at her. Always she used to say good morning to me. Just like Just like I was an old shoe, so unas suming she was. And how that man Improved of rheumatic gout, Mrs. Kessler. it was a pleasure to watch." "Say, like I can't see It In my own husband. Just look at him down there 'u the park now. See, standing by Spring Two. talking with Max (lam. I can lell you when we left I'eoria, oser. such color he had." ""Just look at Mux Ganz, too. There's o bny could afford If he wanted It to go twice to Carlsbad, but every time Instead he comes te're. When 1 met him at home In S'ate street two weeks ego. yellow at jour gold rings he looked." "Ach, I alw ays forget I You know Max Cant from Chicago, don't you?" Mrs. Washauer threw a wide gest ure of hands and eyes. "Do I know Max Ganz! Ask him, Mrs. Kessler, Just for fun when you see him how many times he comes to Yendln Washauer's Friday nights for pinochle and rlnflerbrust. 'Do I know Mux CunzT she asks me! 1 know him this well, that If I had a daughter, twice over he could have her." "Ain't It so? I always say a young man like that who, they say, never sowed any wild oats and was so good to his mother while she lived, and on top of It all to- have built up all atone such a good business Is " "Good business I I can tell you, If I had a son, right away' would I put him In Just such a Nlnety-elght-Cent-Store business. Never I put my foot In the Ganz Nlnety-elght-Cent Empor ium that It ain't packed like sardines." "It's so funny the way we met him here at the Springs for the first time, and right away I Bhould find out his uncle, Jake Spitz, of Spitz and Spitz Feathers married my sister-in-law's sister, Rcua I.lndubaum." "I know, nice people, too. I can only say about Max Ganz maybe his digestion ain't so good, but, say, like he said himself last night, a good wife can make It better. Eh, Mrs. Kessler, eh?" "Ach, Mrs. Washauer, you you're a great one to make fun ! My Delia ain't got such thoughts yet. Like I say to her papa, 'she's so full of life, that girl, it's a shame she should ever got to settle down." "Relieve me, with such a match she so could set herself down In aoft feathers. I can tell you there ain't mother In Chicago wouldn't pick ber self out to be bis mother-in-law." ' "I don't say, Mrs. Washauer, whoa Mr. Right comes along that I ain't like every other mother, glad , when, her daughter makes a good marriage." " "It's Just a pleasure to see that girl. Mrs. Kessler, hardly her feet toucb the ground when she walks. "It ain't nothing the way she Is here now. So many people around she says, who think they are sick, give her the blues. Rut at home, If I do say it, Mrs. Washauer. that girl Is like a birdie in the house, singing and singing. Dtinclng around, so that even when her papa was too sick to hold up his head, didn't the doctor make her stay in the room to make him laugh. "I guess I told yon. Mrs. Washauer, the time, though, we hud to make her come along to the Springs with us. All of u sudden, Mrs. Washauer, girl that don't got to turn her bund except always I learnt her to inuke ber own bed on washday, all of sudden that girl makes up ber mind a business woman tshe wunts to be." "It's ail the style now, Mrs. Kess ler, for girls to learn business or kill their time In the social settlement work." "Stenography end shorthand that girl had to learn und I can tell you her papa was mud enough." "I always say it don't hurt a girl to know how to make her own living, even If she don't need it. God forbid anything should ever happen she alu't So helpless, God forbid ! "Rut for why, I usk you, Mrs. Wash auer, should our Delia work? I don't say her papa is such a rich muu, Mi's. Wusliuuer. but but " "Don't I know how Marcus Kess ler's daughter don't got to work for her living unless site wauts it?" "And bow we hud to beg until she would give up that position to come here with us. Only her father's sick ness done it. Gott sei Dunk, Mrs. Washauer, while 1 don't say ber pa pa's a rich man, he can afford his daughter don't have to " "I should say sol So, I ain't got no sons myself, but right away I heard the name Kessler. ask my hus band if I don't right away say, 'Roys' Rants'." "All by herself one day. Mrs. Wash auer, that child went down and with out one word gets herself, a position with the I'eoria Aero club, a concern what makes flying machines and files for prizes." "Gott In Hlmmeir "That's what we needed yet. I said, on top of her papa's sickness. Flying machines In the family! Twice she went flying in one, Mrs. Washauer, till ber papa put his foot down." "Say, that's a trouble for you I We had a case, too, in Chicago. A grand fpx bojc well-off fatally, on the South, THE ALLIANCE HERALD, side. i.-.t .! up In one and breuk his neck coinlng'down In one!'' "Don't I know! At home we got such a boy, too. right In our block. Archie Meyer. Mrs. Washauer, what everybody says has got brains to make good In any legitimate business what he wants to. What does he do? For five years. Mrs. Washauer, with a young lady sister to support since his fa'her died, has the boy fooled around building a flying machine In Ms back shed. A boy like that who, with a five or ten thousand dollar start, could make hlniself one of the catches In I'eoria." "Flying machines yet! Like auto mobiles ain't dangerous enough. Just for fun, Mrs. Kessler, ask my husband how he begs we should get ao automo bile, and how I am too afraid." "My Delia Is " "There she comes now. Say, don't she Icik sweet In that pink shirt wolst ! How cute for her to dress that way all the time In stiff collars like a little boy. Dont she look sweet!" Around the elbow of the veranda. ardently, the silm feet of her too light to linger long where they touched. danced Miss Delia Kesler Into her parent's vision, bending daintily as a bird to drink, for the matlnal kiss. "Morning, mommy dear! Morning, Mrs. Washauer! Where's papa?" "Down by the spring already for his Second glass." Then he feels better?" "Cross like a bear, that's how good he feels. Such a grand night he had. Delia. Fix your hair smoother, baby, so curly It looks." Let her alone, she looks fine that way, Mrs. Kessler. Fine enough- to grab all the beaus. don't you, Miss Delia? Ach, there goes my husband after his last glass. I see you later down by the spring, Mrs. Kessler. Here, wait for me. Lax Lazl" And she waddled off, the rocker released of her weight swaying violently. Miss Kessler perched herself on the arm of a chair and sighed audibly, as If the siphon of her patience had been exhausted. "Mommy dear, haven't I Just begged you not to sit around with that old gossip pot?" "I guess. Delia, you want I should sit around with Mrs. Van Rltz and her crowd from New York, with their crimped yellow heads and their noses so high they must be smelling heaven. "The swell goy crowd, she thinks I can mix with yet! Mrs. Washauer Is a pluln woman like me, Delia. We talk the same language. Them goy swells " "Sh-h-h, mommy, you don't need to tell the whole hotel 1" "Mrs. Washauer ain't good enough yet ! Just let me tell you. Delia Kess ler, Lax Washauer can buy and sell your papa twice over. The pork busi ness maybe ain't so high sounding, but " "Is that papa down there by the spring now, mommy?" "Yes, talking with . Max Ganz. Just wish, Delia, you could have heard what Mrs. Washauer had to say about Max Ganz. The catch of Chicago, she ' it . s .-t .--i. . "Catch of Chicago!" says. Go down to the spring by pnpa u while, Pella." "C'utch of Chicago! If Mnx Ganz hud only one leg nnd that one In the grave, you'd still say he was a catch, as long us he owned the Ninety-eight-Cent stole." "It Isn't bis money, Delia, but " "Nothing els! I could take any one of tne boys at home you re so down on, Teddy Solomon or " "Loafer! With his Inventions what ain't worth the money he spends copy righting them. "Or Arch Meyer . "User, he cuu't take up our front porch room any more with his yellow hair so slick und his white puuts and his airship what never flies." "Just the same, let one of those boys add ten or fifteen thousand to his bunk account and see how quick he'll become a good catch." "Lucky, one of that crowd would be, with ten thousund cents. It Max Ganz, though. Is worth one cent, Del la, Mrs. Washauer says he is worth "Mommy, please!' "Delia, Is It a crime when It makes me happy for our little girl to move to a big city like Chicago and only four hours from home, where she can have her automobile and " "I'd rather have an airplane, mom my. Say, if he'd buy me a biplane and build me a hangar on the lak front, and " TUESDAY, MAY 23, 1922. "Two hangouts you could have on the lake front, baby." "Yes, I could not ! Last night about eleven o'clock he looked scared enough to faint when I usLed him if "Ach. baby, when you came tiptoe ing up In the rooms so late last night from sitting so long with blm on the lorch, baby, I I thought maybe you had news. Delia. Not once did I close my eyes waiting." "Oh, mommy, even If you are my own mother, you you're the limit, dearie." "I did think It, baby. 1 I couldn't help It; ask pnpa If I didn't." "Sh-h-h, mama, here comes Mrs. Rlumenthal 1 Sh-h-h !" "Good morning, Mrs. Rlumenthal, how you feel this morning?" "Not so well, Mrs. Kessler, Just this minute I come from my doctor. Twice he took my blood pressure " "Moiumy dear, I'll see you at break fust In an hour. I'm going down by the spring, dear, to to papa." When Mr. Mhx Ganz, glancing over Mr. Kessler' s shoulder Into the showy aisle of poplar trees which led frott the hotel toward the spring, am) In Its dappled shadows and coming toward them, beheld Miss Delia Kess ler In all her fluent motion, a smile full of short square teeth spreud In great width across his face. "Mr. Kessler, here comes your daughter." Mr. fvessler drained the last drop of his last glass, dry distaste pucker ing his features, so that his nose seemed to dip down Into the stubble of his mossy beard, but smiled even through a shudder. "Well, my little Lella-sha, you'm up for all duy?" "Every single minute of It, pa. Morning, Mr. Gunzl" "Good morning, Miss Delia. Just as fresh as a flower you look." "Rut, say, can't you two find a bet ter place to moon around than this smelly old spring? Ugh, that water smells like boiled Junk!" "Come, Delia, let pupa give you a glass and see how good it is for you." mui 8ium ia ruuier buck a com i fect on growth as butterfat, but in storage egg through a mouthful of no case did the vegetable fats s?u rusty nails." port the necessary growth. There is "It'll mn!:e those bright eyes even 1 something in butterfat wihch is not brighter, Miss Kessler." I ouna fats generally, but which is -"Thanks. Mr. Gunz. but If I had Solute y necessary for the mainten ,. J i .,,., ancc of hfe in the young or the adult. . . . ! i wnut to ao witn u. most economical food and the dairy "She should puss some of that ex- business is capable of infinite expan tra heulth on to you and rue, eh. sion. The dairy cow is the nio.-t per Uunz?" ' feet machine for producing food in the ... .... ' I.I CI . M . 1 , U I can ten you, Kessler, that when 1 look at Miss Delia's rosy cheeks und the way she dances around, like she was playing tag all day with the sun shine and the wind, It does me more good than nine glasses a day. Where do you get your bright eyes so early in the morning, Miss Delia? I tell you, Kessler, those are the things money can't buy." "Fee, fie, foe, fuml They're so I can see. So I can see, Mr. Ganz." , Mr. Kessler wagged an argumenta tive finger in proximity to Mr. Ganz's nose, eyes and mouth. "Like I was telling you, Ganz, with your dull eyes and bud color, 1 would n't be surprised If you got a little Jaundice. For years, Ganz, I doctored for yellow color and " , "Pa, please. Pleuse! Quit swapping symptoms and let's trot to the links and Join the crowd down there for a sun bath before breakfast." "You, Delia, go with Ganz so far you like. I go up now by mama on the porch. Refore breukfust I got yet to breuthe in one hundred deep breaths like the doctor says for my circulation. Thut pain In your left side, yauz, ain't your heurt, It's noth ing but poor clrculu " "It ain't exuetly a pain, Kessler. Just like needle points up und down my " "Good-by Pa! Come, come, Mr. Ganz, let's go down past the De Leon siuing. If you wush your face in It. they say it makes you beautiful." "Then I tuke right awuy u bulh In It, Miss Kessler." He quivk-stepped hlsguit to hers. Ills timidity had suddenly rushed up lu u vuve oi color ubove his collar line, in his quickly withdruwn elbow when it brushed hers, lu his hitching Shoulders. "You you don't need no beauty spring like the rest of us. Miss Delia. You you're Just beautiful without It." "Whenever I fish bard for compli ments like that, Mr. Gunz, there's a fellow til home always says to me, he says. 'Cutey, you're a hurd-woiking girl.' " "Cutey! Thats a mighty fine little name lor you. Ihuts Just whut you ure, Cutey." They were In the green twilight of woods, the sun barely tuckering through except ut the remote end of the tan bark walk. Along thut shaded tan-bark wulk, men und women lu quest of a punucca for thut-tlred- feiiing und thut-ruu-down-look strode from spring to spring. "Look," cried Miss Kessler, quick eiilng her companion's pace to hers. "Just look ut them all over there by De Leou trudiug symptoms before sun- (To Be Continued) Proposed airplane line will make it possible to be rbbbed in Chicago one morning and shot in New York that afternoon. Newspaper enterprise as sociation. tn these tiirht times, labor wants to keen all hands across the sea they possibly can. Brunswick Banner German v and Russia may make treaties, but thev can't borrow money from each other. Bostoa Shoe and Leather Reporter. . . . IMPORTANCE OF DAIRY j BUSINESS AND PRODUCTS I (Continued from Page 1) harmful and disease producing; germ? to develop in milk or cream, ihe aci I that it produces kills off these injur , ious forms and thus aids in tnaKin. milk and cream a safe food for human consumption. During- the warm sum mer months we received a certai' amount of cream that is quite sour and were it not for present day scientific methods we would be compelled to turn out a poor quality of butter. The creamery with its special equipment is able to turn out a much superior grade of butter than the average farmer. R first practically reducing- the aculity of the cream we submit it to high tei peratures ami kill practically all of the bacteria .present. This heating process is known as pasteurization and is very essential in the manufactuie of a good quality of butter. It doe. away with all the injurious bacteii. tog-ether with quite a few of the lac'.ic acid bacteria. After the cream is again cooled it is innoculated with a special lactic acid culture which we ifolate and develop with special care. In this way we destroy all the injur ious forms of bacteria and then put back into the cream a useful form of organism which is very essential in butter making and which greatly j . proves the keeping qualities of the butter. Until recent years very little lias been known about the exceptionally high food value of milk as a human food. However, science has taught us by many feeding experiments and re search work that milk and it' products is absolutely essential to child welfare and body maintenance. Milk Important In Diet. Milk is especially important in the diet of growing children because it contains, in correct proportions all the food material needed lor growing bones and muscle tissue. As far back as 1912 Dr. McCullom of Johns Hop kins university made the d.scovery that he could with a certain diet secure growth of young animals when h: butterfat in it, but the same food mix ture would not support growth when lard or olive oil was used instead. This was the first evidence that fats in our foods are not of equal value. It was also determined at this time that fats of KST yolk had the same positive ef- "Dairy products are man s best ami world. She converts rougn feed, much of which would be otherwise wasted, into a perfect food and high priced product.. It is estimated by Profesror Erf, Ohio experiment station that a dairy cow produces as much food dur ing her life as do seventeen steers. The meat of one cow will furnish a sufficient amount of beef for two sol diers for a year while the milk from one eood dairy cow will Fupply an equal value for twenty soldiers for a ear. "Milk 13 the most important and tnost nerfect food for human consump tion and it is also a most perfect food for bacteria including a wide range f 9 t m 1111s new sugar-coated gum delight: young and old It "melts in your mouth" and the gum in the center remains to aid digestion, brighten teeth and soothe mouth and throat. There are the other WRIGLEY friends to choose from, too: of disease producing types. For this rea.'on it is vitally important that nil milk should be pioduced under the no.-.t strict sanitary conditions. From the time milk is drawn from the cow until final consumption it is constant ly subject to the intorductlon of germ life. Observation has shown that each drop of milk under average conditions is seeded with at least 2,500 bacteria or approximately 50,004 per be tween the time it is drawn from he cow ami finally bottled in the city plant. To combat with the injurious effect which might come from milk most of the large cities in the United States have what is known as u milk ordinance which requires all milk to be either pasteurized or certified. "The dairy industry 13 not only con fronted with the problem of producing the most important food to the nation, but also a food which must le pro duced under the most exacting condi tions in oixler to make it safe for the consuming public." Colonel Mahcr Speaks. Lion Abegg then introduced Colonel John G. Maher of Lincoln, who was the guest of Lion O'Keefe. Co!onel Maher told of early day: in Box Butte county nnd other parts of western Ne braska, having been a pioneer here. His talk, which lasted futeen minutes, was one of the most interesting ever heard by the local club, and included the following points "Hard T'mos" now ore good as compared witn tne , eniv tiays in thj., countrv; rac'ia will develop startling changes in coming months'; Box Butte county land will produce as heavily as eastern Nebras ka; this country is on the verge of a great boom ; money will be loaned ver soon in eastern Nebraska at 5 per cent and here at 6 per cent; the men and women who laid the foundations of western Nebraska are heroes the same as the men who fought in the great war. At the close of his talk, Lion LeRoy Gregg stated that he had been in Box Butte county for thirty-seven years. W. L. Parson of Grand Island, ar ciated with the Northwestern Bell Telephone company and a guest of Lion Basye, spoke for a few minutes on accident prevention by the big cor porations the Bett Telephone com pany. United States Steel Corporation and the big railroad companies. Thirty-nine per cent of accidents are by un skilled employees, said Mr. Parsons. Ninety-seven per cent of the accidents eaue loss of time. He told of the rapid increase in the phone company line forces during the recent sleet storm in central Nebraska, stating that the company increased its force from 33 i I to (5S0 men; that 10 accidents occurred, . . 1 1 j. . . 1 1 1 1 ' 1 01 wnicn was iarcu anu wnicn was caused by a one-armed tourist driving an automobile. W. L. Stele of Sioux City, a guest of Lion John Guthire, was presented by Lion Abegg and made a short talk with some good stories. The new cub member Tom Carney, was presented and made his "speech of entry" which was roundly applauded by his fellow Lions. "I believe," said he, "that my association with you fel low Lions will make me more fit to give better service to the Lions and phone subscribers of Alliance." The Republican army in Ireland .is so enthusiastic for freedom that is re fuses to permit an Irish leader to make a speech ih the market place. New York Morning Telegram. A 1 V