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About The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 31, 1916)
WILSON TELLS WOMEN HE'LL WORK FOR THEM trm heri'lnn mikI rhrrle" nr th prlnrinnl product mii1 Mip work 11 IihihIIciI by four iiimi. Including tho I(m- luminous from Imp pond In winter. Krl-iill S'ii1 Inn-ill!" IImiI from lln Prr-I.li M llcforp riiKr Or- KiinlJilloll Women Inn with a flni fronl. Mr. Lowry ex pert to have 11 leal kIioc palfire. Hp will have a repair man wj that hp ran devote hln entire tlnip to (hp bus iness of pelline allocs Kelnp a (ira'tiral shoemaker himself, and having rut leather so many years, he knows how to tiny kIioi-h and leather t l.-iir Skin Coiii'-n from Within It is foolish to think you tan gam Hood Hear conipb xlon by tho use land wo wish hltn success In Alliance In a letter to the .Line Jefferson Club of Colorado, the pioneer organ ization of Democratic women voters in the I'nlted Slates. President Wil non explains fully hi interest in woman sufTratie and ledp h his sup port of the cause aloiiK Hie lines of Plate action. This letter was delivered to the club at Its banquet recently held at 1 Denver. Colo., by S. II. Thompson, assistant atortiey general, who went to Colorado on this mission for the president. The letter follows: TIIK WIIITK HOUSK Washington, August 7, 191fi. My Dear Friends: 1 wish I could meet you face to face and tell you In person how deeply I appreciate the work vour organization nas none ami of face powder. let at the root of the trouble and thoroughly rleansn the svstem with a treatment of Dr. King's New Life Pills. Gentle and mild in action, do not gripe, yet they relieve the liver by their action on Mr. Lowry cane to Chadrou from Uufhrville fourteen years ago with a small Mock and little capital and in -pile of the handicaps which he has iiad to meet In the way of poor loca tions, frequent moves and too many the bowel, and aged. Ion lodav. Adv 1 (Sood for young, adults I competitors, he did a good business. (So after a clear romplex 2T.c at your druguist. Wp heartily commend Mr. Lowry to Alliance. OUR LINCOLN LETTER jitet News of the State Capitol llepiililicaii Candidates IfohIiik IIon of the Klcctlon (fly Herald Correspondent) Lincoln, Nebr, Aug. 30 Fire nui nosp to do for the cause of De-1 Commissioner Itidgell has recently mocrarv and popular government. ruled that all merchantable gasoline I am told that yours was trie nrsiiwneiner Kepi tor saie in garages, Woman S Democratic voieiB ui hi- i mures ur timer i-mn innirn, mum ue Ktion In America, and 1 am sure that placed In underground receptacles us such it must have been the Inst ru- I The commissioner holds that the so nient of impressing your convictions I called safety portable tanKB are not very deeply upon the politics of your sulllciently safe, and the fire commls- BiHtp sion nas ruieci againsi tneir use. One of the strongest forces tieiiinn t Commissioner Jttageu reports tnat the equal suffrage sentiment of the fully 95 per cent of gasoline kept for country is the now demonstrated fact retail Is now in underground tanks. that In the suffrage states women in-land a strenuous eiiori is Demi? mane terest themselves In public' ques-j to make It 100 per cent before the tlona. study them thoroughly, fornl year Is out their onln'ons and divide as tnefl do J The 'Live Stock Sanitary Board concerning them. It must in frank- will have charge of the sanitation of noun be admitted that there are two the horse barns at trie state fair sides to almost every important pub- grounds this year. This is the first lie Question, and even the best in- year that the sanitary board nas tak- formed persons are bound to inner en up this work at the rair grounas, in Judgment concerning it. Well Children Are Active If your child Is dull, pale, fretful and wants to lie around, chances are It is suffering from worms. Klcka poo Worm Killer, a pleasant candy confection, liked by all children. Is what your child needs. You only give one-half to one lozenge at a time and you get Immediate results. Ev ery mother should have a box on hand. 2 Be at all druggists. Adv 1 Dated August 26. 1916. L. A. BERRY, (SEAL) County Judge. 39-4t-768-7f.52 THE PUREST OF CHEWS IS "OLD KENTUCKY" Perfect Plugs Produced by the Most Wholesome Methods OllDC.lt (r III.AItlM. State of Nebraska, Ilox Butte County, as. IN THE COUNTY COURT In the Matter of the Estate of Charles M. Lotspelch. On reading and filing the petition of Izetta B. Ixitspelch, praying a fin al settlement and allowance of her administratrix account, filed on the 26th day of August, 1916, and for distribution of the residue of the estate. Ordered, That September 20, A. D. 1916. at 10 o'clock A. M., Is assigned for hearing said petition, when all persons Interested In said matter may appear at a County Court to be held in and for said County, and show cause why the prayer of peti- u'lih I ,..i i ia ,i,,o 1 1. ia vr with u view I loner should not be granted; and I ninj " ...... j ,u.. euch differences of Judgment, It Is I (, establishing as high a percentage not only natural, but right and put- r protection to the exhibitor as it Is riotlc. that the success of opposing possible convictions should be sought through Secretary of State Pool has been political alignment and the measur-1 compelled to order G.000 more auto- ing of their strength at the polls mobile plates This brings the mini through politicul agencies. Men do I ,er up to 100,000 plates for the this naturally, and so do women, year 1916. In 1914 the secretary of though it has required your practical Utate Issued 40.&48 numbers. In demonstration of It to convince those 1915 Mr. Pool Issued 59.140. So who doubted this. In proportion as rar In 1916 he has Issued 92.000, and the political development of women jH sending out on an average 250 continues along this ling, the cause ,,iHtPB a day. His order for 1917 of equal suffrage will be promoted. wm be 130,000 right off the bat, and Those who believe In equal suff-1 he Is a little doubtful as to whether rage are divided into those who be-1 this will be sufficient to supply the lieve that each state should deter-1 demand mine for itself when and In what dl- Auditor Win. II. Smith has among rection to extend the suffrage and other things established the high those who believe that it should be water mark of any former Nebraska immediately extended by the action state auditor in the bond registering of the national government by means business. Auditor Smith, during of an amendment to the federal con- eighteen months of his present ad stltutlon. Both tho great political ministration, has registered bonds to parlies of the nation have In their the amount of $6,060,160, as against recent platforms favored the exten- $4,r,io,000 by his predecessor In two slon of the suffrage to women years. A goodly number of these through state action, and I do not see i)0,l(9 wt,rP purchased by the state, how their candidates can consistent- ttll(i UI, to August 1. the amount of ly disregard these official declara- state-owned bonds bought with the Hons. I shall endeavor to make the permanent school funds was $8,926- declaration of my own party in tins 7;o.33. This brings Into the tern matter effectual .by every Influence I porary school fund, for distribution that I can properly and legitimately j the various school districts of the exercise. I state, an annual interest income of Woman's part in the progress of I around $400,000 the race, It goes without Baying. Is -ri,e disorganized condition of the quite as Important as mans. 1 he republicans in the state has put old notion, too, that suffrage and something of a damper on the aspir service go hand In hand Is a sound I mlons of some of the republican one, and women may well appeal to state office seekers. The state corn- It. though It has long been Invoked niittee which has its headquarters in against them. The war in Europe , Llndell hotel. Is making frantic has forever set at rest the notion efforts to secure Theodore Roosevelt that nations depend In times of stress If or several speeches In order to stem wholly upon their men. The women the tide of disaffection In the ranks in Europe are bearing their full 0f the Bull Moosera. The elephant share of war's awful burden In the j,le wooing of his mastodonlan high daily activities of the struggle, and nes Is having so little effect on the more than their share aa sufferers. I uioosers that republican office seek Their fathers and husbands and sons Prs are becoming frightened. Added are fighting and dying In the trench- to all the internal troubles which the es, but they have taken up the work committee has had to contend with, on the farms, at the 'mill and in this the federal regulation plank in workshop and counting house. They I their rdatform. which looms ud dark bury the dead, care for the elck nti and foreboding; the fact that Jua- that notice of the pendency of said petition, and the hearing thereof, be given to all persons Interested in said matter by publishing a copy of this order In the Alliance Herald, a weekly newspaper printed In said County, for three successive weeks, prior to said day of hearing. ITS FLAVOR A DELIGHT There's more genuine tobacco enjoy ment in a rich, mellow, juicy chew of huJi-Krailc plug than in any other form -'i tobacco. And tlicrc's no plug made that is so delicious and appetizing as Old Ken tucky. It Las the fresh, sweet, mellow taste that Xaturc gives the tobacco leaf. You get real tobacco flavor in Old Ken lucky and you get it pure. From the time the ripe Hurley leaf reaches our factory, until it goes out to clariricn jour taste with its rich flavor in gol.len brown plugs of Old Ken tucky, it is kept pure by the most mod ern methods ever applied to the mak ing of chewing tobacco. No factory could possibly be cleaner or more sanitary than the great, new factory in which Old Kentucky is made. For a good clicw get a plug of OIJ Kentucky. Try a 10c plug to-day. Old Kentucky No lrevi.iij( Percentage The average dressing percentage of hogs Is 7.ri. while of cattle It is f.3 and of sheep 4 8. Part of this differ ence is due to the method of figuring. In the case of the hog the hide, head and feet are Included In the carcass , weight, while In the case of cattle land sheep the head, hide and feet are I not. included. Then the hog is very i thick fleshed and has a small digest ive system. Cattle and shep havp I large paunches and digestive sys-l terns. Sheep dress out lowest due to I the wool and the rather light flesh ing of the carcass. The dressing percentage of ani niaU of each class varies widely. This is due to the amount of flesh, es pecially fat, present on the carcass and somewhat to the thickness of the hide and size of the head and legs, and to the amount of fill or the amount of feed and water present in the digestive tract at the time of slaughtering. For the hogs the dress ing percentage varies from 65 to 85 per cent with tin average of 75. For cattle It ranges from 48 to 70 per cent with an average of 53 and for sheep from 4 4 to 56 per cent with an average of 4 8 per cent. Camp bell's Sclent ilic Farmer. GUARANTEE CrTvH-Wood Bonl it nirmnted m to varp. buckla, ch.p. ermck or (all. If you are paying high Interest rates In the Building & Loan call on the Nebraska Land Company and jet the money at reduced Interest rate. A Hunch of BU's They are telling big stories about this year's wheat crop down in Kan sas. Here is one of them: A Dick inson county farmer planted 60 acres of wheat last fall. When he thresh ed it measured 60 bushels to the acre, and weighed 62 pounds to the bushel, but some say only 60, mak ing a straight string of 60's in the story. GIRL WANTE1 Inquire at Alli ance HI earn laundry. 38-tf-7512 Frontier Days Celebrations They have been a great drawing card in the last few years, but are getting to be so common there is danger of them losing their novelty. Let'a start something new now. What j do you suggest? ' ' I'M Give"Ybur 1,1 v, HOME Guaranteed Walls Ordinary walls require more repairs than any other part of the house. Thto constant expense can be absolutely eliminated and your home made more beautiful by the use of Cornell-Wood-Board. ComellUociBoarg For Wall, CmilingB and Partition Kails right to the studding or over old walls and stays there; application cost is very reasonable. Gives the new panelled effects and takes paint and kalsomine perfectly. PRICEj 4 CENTS PER SQUARE FOOT Ob fall ton-board f ) ft .l Urn tk fVwtl WniJ C (CO Krtabie, tTewdcnt) Chicago, and told bf Uki dealer lillM nara. S. A. Foster Lbr. Co. Alliance Nebr., i ; wounded, console the fatherless, and sustain the constant shock of war'a annalling sacrifices. From these, hid eous calamities we in this favored tice Hughes' campaign of abuse and denunciation of the Wilson adminis tration Is becoming a little disgust ing to even some of the old liners; and beloved land of ours have thus I that times were never so prosperous far been shielded. I shall be pro- under republican rule as they are foundly thankful If. consistently now; that Wood row Wilson Is be- with the honor and integrity of the coming more popular every day nation, we may maintain to ine enu among the rank and file of voters; our peaceful relations with tbe and finally not one of their spell world. binders can go out on the stump and Cordially and sincerely yours,. honestly criticise the present state (Signed) WOOIiKOW wilson. democratic administration with its To the Officers and Memhera of the Jane Jefferson Club of Colorado. I Iocs Sloan; Liniment Help Itheiiina tism? Ask the man who uses it, he knows. "To think I suffered all these years when one 25 cent bottle of Sloan's Liniment cured me." writes one grateful user. If you have rheu matism or Buffer from neuralgia, backache, soreness and stiffness, don't put off getting a bottle of Sloan's. It will give you such wel come relief. It warms and soothes the Bore, stiff painful places and you reel so much better. Buy it at any drug store, only 25 cents Adv 1 more than a million dollars of sav ing to Nebraska tax payers in the past two years, along with Its other achievement in state affairs. It Is no wonder that the state committee Is showing signs of a panic. Harlan County Has Pumping Plant In line with the work now being done in Box Butte county in experi mental irrigation by pumping water, the following dispatch regarding an outfit of this nature will be of Inter est to Herald readers: Alma. Nebr. According to a gov ernment expert on irrigation who re cently visited here. W. A. Sharpnack has one of the only successfully op erated small acreage Irrigated farms in his territory, which comprises Kanaas, Colorado and Nebraska. Tbe tract comprises twenty-seven and one-half acres and is watered from a pond 60x200 feet. The water is pumped from one well by a centrifu gal pump operated by gas engine and a windmill pump with a 10xl9-lnch cylinder. The water is carried by underground tile to all parts of the place and brought to the surface at seven openings or standplpes. The place Is a quarter of a mile south of town and is a good example of In tenslned farming and produces more than ISO-acre farms even at tbe present price of wheat. Potatoes run from $96 to $200 per acre. Sweet potatoes, ouions. cabbage, tomatoes, Will My Child Take Dr. King's New Dihcovery Thla best answer is Dr. King's New Discovery Itself. It's a pleasant sweet syrup, easy to take. It con tains the medicines which years of experience have proven best for coughs and colds. Those who have used Dr. King's New Discovery long est are its best friends. Besides ev ery bottle is guaranteed. If you don t get satisfaction you get your money back. Buy a bottle, use as di rected. Keep what Is left for cough and cold Insurance. Adv 1 LOWRY LOCATES HERE Former Cliadron Slne Man Now Max Finely Pitted 1'kcliit.ive Shoe Shop in ItedriUh Block George Lowry. a former Chadron shoe merchant, has located in Alli ance in the new addition to the Red dish block, on Box Butte avenue. Mr. liowry is fitting up his store today with new shelving and fixtures and is opening up a large stock of shoes. He will operate an exclusive shoe shop for the benefit of Alliance peo ple. The following regarding Mr. Low ry is taken from the Chadron Jour nal of last week: George Lowry is this week moving his shoe stock to Alliance, where he will have the only exclusive shoe store in town. He is very fortunate in leasing space in a new brick build- . -x NEBRASKA PROSPERITY LEAGUE A Stattwlde. Nonparlhan Organization of Tax pay tn VICE-PRESIDENTS WESLEY P ADKINe UTM OMAHA JOHN At irTtON MINCNAMT. pi Da DR. C. C. ALLISON aunotow etonac antil INVIBTMKNTS. BLAI Z. M. BAIRO MAWTmaTON J. L. BAKtN J. W. BINOC" ALPMaO PRATT IN VIST Ml NT B. QTNOA CHOI. H. BROWN W. J. lUMSItl INVCBTMCNTB HARRY V. BURKLCY PaiNTIR W. M. BUSHMAN BTOBABB ALBERT CAHN LOUIS . BEETS STOCK MAN, BCAANCV E. M. FAIRFIELD JOHN H. FRSNITR REAL EBTATE INVCSTMBMTa DR. ft. OILMORE PHVBICIAN ANB tuiaioM T. V. GOLDEN CAMTALIBT. OHIIIL FERDINANO fcAARMANN MANUFACTURER J. J. RAN IO MI N CONTRACTOR FREB t. HUNKER FRANK B. JOHNSON OMAHA FRINTINO CO. C. J. KARBACH HON. i. T. KCELEV ". J. KELLY FRANK B. KENNARO CAPITALIST JACOB KLEIN NCRCMANT, BEATRICE BUD LATTA E. M. F. LEPLANO CAPITALIST . W. MEOEATH COAL OPIRATOR JOHN A. MOHRBACHCR INVSSTMINTS. VMORS SOPHUS F. NEBLE PRANK A. NIMS BITIBIB Mill Patt CITE J. J. NOVAK BANKER. HVILBBR i. J. O'CONNOR ATTORNEY OEOROC FARM HON. WATSON k FURDY THEOOORE BEIMERS SIOCHMAM, PUllKRTON CARL BONDS JOHN C. ROSICKV PUBLiaxBR J. C. ROTM invebtob par M ONT JOHN SCHINDLER W. H. SCHMOLLER JOBBER THEOOORE H. B'RK B. I. SHOKtRT Manufacturer MARRY t. SI M AN VMNSIDB PAUL F. SKINNER A. F. SMITH JOBBER N. A. SPIES BE ROER WH1L BALER HON. P. F. STAPFKRD NORFOLK WILLIAM STORK INVESTMENTS. ARLINOTON ROdLRT C. SIRfMLOW CONTRACTOR GEORGE B. TVLl R (hVIITHINTI. HASTINGS A. J VICRLINd IRON WORKS THEODORE Wy ID A M AN S'OCK OUTIB AURORA r. B. Y.ILLEV ATTORNEY. RANDOLPH S N. MOLBACH Ml RCMANT, O A AND ISIANO R. M Y.OLCOTT MERCHANT. CENTRAL CiTV HON OTTO IUCLCW MAYOR. IU1UVIIR Does Prohibition Reduce Grime ? The Promise . - Advocates of State PROHIBITION predict there will be fewer criminals in the penitentiary and fewer boys and girls in industrial schools and reformatories, in case the people of Nebraska wipe out their Local Option, High License Law and adopt State PROHIBITION. Let us see what are the results in Kansas under 35 years of State PROHIBITION, and what the results are under 35 years of Local Option in Nebraska. The Actual Result SENTENCED INMATES OCTOBER 1, 1915 Reformatory Boys' Industrial School KANSAS NEBRASKA 830 326 330 None. 264. 191 .154 99 .1,578 624 Figures for Kanaaa are found on pases 2. M. S4 and IM. 1 irat Biennial Report Stats Board of CocTeotions. Figures for Nebraska ara found on page 77, Biennial Report Hoard of Commis sioners of auite Institutions I Mbr irH. 1, l-U: . ..Hi': ."h m...'ii (ThaUrollaaaBplato Hot of Ktato loaal aa4 Corrsettoaal laattratioaa la fha Iws alalBB. 1 ho f iaaroa a. a affioial. Nokraska . Haforaaalorp. lajaaatao) La ho foaaral frlsaa ara Ml iaoladaa la tho Kaaoaa total.) The Cost to the Taxpayers KANSAS, expenses of above institu tions for fiscal year 1914 $457,899.78 NEBRASKA, expenses of above insti tutions for fiscal year 1914. . . .777. $279,4 18.80 The Alley Joint in Kansas Warden J. K. Codding of the Kansas penitentiary says that the "LITTLE ALLEY JOINT' in the cities of Kansas makes criminals. "After being in the penitentiary for three years and nine months (the average sentence served) the KANSAS BOY who has gone wrong walks out of the institution under parole Cleaned, disciplined, re formed, he leaves the penitentiary walls behind him to return to his native city the city that permitted him to become schooled in crime He finds that his native city, the city that spoiled him, hasn't reformed any. IT HAS THE SAME LITTLE ALLEY JOINT, the same rendezvous where some of the men and boys slip down after night to play poker and shoot craps e resists it for a while, but the pull of the destructive fight of his native city is too much for hit. . He slips a little and keeps slipping, and some morning he wakes up ?(ter a debauch to find he has broken his parole " (Soi Official Hapart of tho Kaaoaa CoaforVaoo af Chariilso Bad CorrootUaa ho!d NoTombor, 1UI&. ao 43.) These are the conditions surrounding the men and boys of Kan sas. Is it any wonder thac the penal and correctional institutions in Kansas contain two and a half times as many inmates as do sim ilar inst'1 'Hons in Nebraska? The Nebraska Prosperity League OiM'OM'.l" TO STATK PROHIBITION. IX FAVOR Or LOCAL OPTION. HIGH LICENSE Secretary, J. B. IIAYNF.S OMAHA, NEBRASKA PresiJent, L. F. CROl OOT Sor.d for our literature. , Treasurer, W. J. COAD J Sill' : 1 m m fp-ij 4 44 31 ai a1 It rr-fl m m m i Fti " r " 0 I V