The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, July 04, 1918, Image 5

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    THE ALLIANCE HERALD, JULY 4, 1018
BOYS' FIELD ftEET
Bronze and Silver Medals to be Given as Prizes
Hoys Field .M.o' wMek protect . even) (a Wat it' i luntsgnm. is 10
be he t aguin thin oar. To U.- toys winning brn..e medals last year, arid
winning all tout events this year, will be given a beau, ilul silver medal
Boys wliii: ne d i U b fits! time. t!u' t. in ftVCntr, will be gtveti a bronze medai
Boys of all apes are eligible, tic out and train lor the events at once.
Tim following ;re the four events
Running High Jump, Standing High Jump, 'binning. 100 Yard Dash.
All boys who want to win a badge mui come a ltd enti i the try-outs lr
thinning, jumping and running. The crewman, irbo la a real athlete, will
meet with you every morning, umpire your bail - .inc. go bll :ng with yon and
train you for the Field Meet Big held me.et last ua
Uet out and Ebaat a record tot our town. boys. ait All proud ol yo.. .
I BBaMk,
Behind the
Telephone Operator
There Is a Large
Invisible Army
A muster of the telephone forces of the country would
bring together nearly 200,000 men and women.
Over 100,000 young women comprise the operating
force alone a force now handling an intricate telephone
traffic of more than thirty million messages a day.
Telephone employees everywhere are playing a big
part in the war-time activity of the nation. They are
meeting each task with a spirit that at all times deserves
from the public a courteous appreciation of their efforts.
NEBRASKA TELEPHONE COMPANY
Snve- FihmI
Buy War Savings Stamp
ana Libert? Bidi
Chadron Normal
DRINK A GLASS
OF REAL HOT WATER
BEFORE BREAKFAST.
THE NATIONAL PARKS
OPEN SEASON 1918
Special Summer Tourist rates to all the Parks will soon be
announced. All facilities for the Summer volume of travel will
be ample and as eomfortable as usual.
YELLOWSTONE NATIONAL I'AKK is open from June 25th to Septem
ber 15th; circuit tours embrace all gateways, including the Cody scenic en
trance and the Burlington's triangle circuit mountain tour from Eastern Ne
braska via Denver in one direction, through Yellowstone or Glacier National
Purks, with Rocky Mountain National-Estes Park en route three Parks on
one grand circuit.
GLACIER NATIONAL I'AKK is open from June 15th to September
15th. The same genera) variety of Burlington circuit routes may be used
that include the entire east elope of the Kockies from the British boundary
to Colorado.
KOCKY MOUNTAIN N ATI ON A I - ESTKS PAKK is open from May 1st
to November let. No National Park has, in the past two years, anJojr d SVCta
wonderful increase of patronage au this Park, located just north of Denver
on the Burlington's Denver-Casper-Yellowstone-tilacier line.
PretidCfll Elliott went to Kushvllle
Monday night to uivc an address at
a reception in honor of mic ..en who
left fof lb irnlnlni camp,
A number of new hooks BAVG h en
received in the library. Including st t
eril hooks on ontemfM'nr.v drama
and the short story ;.ud hack llles of
ma l ;i zincs.
Them are between forty-live and
(if: students attending tiiis summer
who are doing advanced work ahOVS
i he course required for the advanced
liploma,
The temperature for the past week
shows that this part of the state Is
not so hot as the eastern and south
ern parts. I he minimum range of
temperature was ."h to t, aan the
maximum range 80 to 90. After all.
this is a prettjf COOl part of the state.
Marcia lcnnington. who will re
ceive her A. B. degree this summer.
has been elected to a position in the
high chool of this city as teacher of
English and history. Mabel Fair
head, one of the seniors, has been
elected to tench" domestic science in
the high school. Dora Argabrlght,
a former graduate, had been elected
to a position in the grades,
The class in primary methods,
which meets at 7 o'clock with Miss
Prazier, now has an enrollment of
sixty. The teaching or me work, aa
well as the actual doing of the work
and the materials used, ts studied.
At chapel last Friday, the Chadron
state normal trio played two selec
tions, the first one being front ".Sam
son and Delilah." by Saint Saens and
the other a beautiful pizzicato move
ment by Thome.
The week that Prof. O W. Neal
was here, Hazel Lynn, Vida Sutter
ti( Id and Violet Eaton, members of
the household arts das.i, served n
three-course dinner to Prof Nea.
some of the members of the faculty,
and a few of the citizeus of Chadron
The girls planned the dinner and the
decorations by themselves.
At the regular meeting of the Y.
M. C. A. Inst week Miss'Scovel sang
a solo and Supt. Pate gave a very
good talk, taking as his theme Van
Dyke's story of "The Other Wise
Man."
The war rookery class is having lU
It resting lessons in the imr or substi
tutes for flour. Thursday they made
several kinds of bread, and Friday
they had a sandwich sale. Mondy of
this week they made thirty kinds of
muffins, eiuht of which contained
three-fourths substitutes and one
fourth wheat flour, and the other 22
all substitutes. No sugar was used
in making the muffins, but instead
syrup was substituted. Government
rccipeB were used and the nttempts
of the class were all successful.
There are now 78 sturs in the nor
mal school" service flag.
Several casual detachments have
recently been sent east from the va
rious training camps. Among the
number were Ray Biglow and Wayne
Borton.
Rev. J. H. Mills addressed the
students at chapel Friday. After the
rehearsal of the girls' glee club Mon
day afternoon, Miss Cowan gave a
reading to the members nnu visitors.
The glee club Is developing nicely
and all are enthusiastic. The club
will take part in the Fourth of July
exercises at the normal next Thurs
day. The club will give a concert in
the near future. .
The normal trio is contemplating a
trip to Hot Springs soon to give a:
i oneert there.
A Fourth of July c I. bration will J
! held at the normal .ms Thursday
for. noon at 19 o'clock. All students!
and friends and citizens of Chadron
DAge been cordially Invll 'd to attend.
The celebration will co natal of a pa
triotic proprne. Prof. Wilson "ill
five the address.
Hujr War Savin;.' ftaraps
Says we will both look and feel
clean, sweet and freah
and avoid lllnesa.
Sanltnrv science hns of late made
rapid strides with results that, nre of
Untold blesstttg to humanity. The lat
est application of Its untiring r search
Is the recommendation that it ts an
necessary to attend to Internal sanita
tion of the drainage system of the hu
man body as It Is to the drains of tho
house.
Thone of ua who nre accustomed to
feel dull and heavy when we nrlse,
splitting headache, stuffy from a cold,
foul tongue, nasty breath, ncid stom
ach, can, instead, feel as fresh as o
daisy by opening the sluices of the sys
tem each morning and flushing out the
whole of the internal poisonous stag
nant matter.
Everyone, whether nlllng. sick or
well, should, each morning beforo
breakfast, drink a glnss of real hot
water with a teaupooofttl of limestone
phosphnte In it to wash from the stom
ach, liver and bowela the prevloua
day's Indigestible waste, eour bile and
poisonous toxins; thus cleansing,
sweetening and purifying the entire
alimentary canal before putting more
food into the stomach. The action of
bot water and limestone phosphate on
an empty stomach Is wonderfully in
vigorating. It cleans out all the sour
fermentations, gases, waste and acidity
and gives one a splendid appetite for
breakfast. While you are enjoying
your breakfast the phosphated hot
water la quietly extracting a large vol
ume of water from the blood and get
ting ready for a thorough flushing of
all the Inside organa.
The millions of people who arc both
ered with constipation, bilious spells,
stomach trouble, rheumatic stiffness;
others who have sallow skins, blood
disorders and sickly complexions aro
urged to get a quarter pound of lime
stone phosphate from tho drug store.
This will cost very little, but is suffl
clent to make anyone a pronounced
crank on the aubject of internal san
This romance of pure delight and
difference starts in
The State Journal
Friday, July 5
King Solomon to the contrary, it
is a new thing under the sun. It is
a fairy story for practical moderns
-a fairy tale that faces the facts of
life squarely. It brims over with
young love and ends with happiness
ever after, it gives the dairy-lunch
hero forty million dollars. Snatches
them back and restores them when
he has learned their use. it turns
the Fifth avenue heroine into a
hoarding house waitress and mal es
you her humble wors hiper. Bhe I I
a Cinderella who knows how to
make. the prince come across.
Shall we send you the story with
the Daily Journal al $4 a year or
Daily and Sunday at $5? Or three
months at $1 daily or 81.50 Da ly
and Sunday? Address
W
The State Journal, Lincoln, Neb.
Ask the undersigned for Summer fa fee, publica
tions; let him describe the circuit routes available
that will permit you to make a most comprehensive
scenic Rocky .Mountain tour during the 1918 season
S. H. COLE, Agent, Alliance, Nebr.
L. W. WAKELEY, General Passenger Agent
1004 Farnam Street Omaha, Nebr
SAGE TEA BEAUTIFIES
AND DARKENS HAIR
Don't Stay Gray! It Darkens
So Naturally that No
body can Tell.
McKee Quick Service
ELECTRICAL
207 Box Butte
Phone 133
Back of Roy Burns' Store
You can turn gray, fadud hair beau
tifully dark and lustrous almost over
night if you'll get a 50-cent bottle of
"Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound"
at any drug store. Millions of bottles of
this old famous Sage Tea Recipe, im
proved by the addition of other ingredi
ents, are sold annually, savs a well-
I known druggist here, because it darkens
the hair so naturally and evenly that no
I one can tell it has been applied.
Those whose hair is turning grav or
becoming faded have a surprise awaiting
; them, because, after one or two applies
I turns the gray hair vanishes and yaur
'ooks become luxuriantly dark and beau
tiful.
This is the age of youth. Gray-haired,
unattractive folks aren't wanted around,
so get busy with Wyeth's Sage and Sul
phur Compound to-night and you'll be de
lighted with your d.'rh, I sadSSSM hair
and your youthful appearance within a
few days.
This preparation is a toilet requisite
and is not intended for the cure, mitiga
tion or prevention ol disease.
M'Tli'L OF I'l HI l( A HON
Department of the interior
I S. Land Office at Alliance N b. j
June 14th, 1918.
NotlCg is hereby glTOU that Harry
BOOH, of Alliance. Nebraska, who,
on April 17th, 1913, made homestead
ry, Serial No 016,1ft, for lot! 2
1 3 and SVV -4 of section 22; loih
I -. and I and NKI4 . HWtf of see
tiog 27; lots 1, 2 and I in section 2
' wn hip 22 north, range 47 west of
H th principal meridian, has tiled n
t;e of BteatUl to make final thrcc
year proof, to establish claim to the
land above described, before register
and receiver, United states land office
at Alliance. Nebraska, on the 23d day
of July. 1918.
Claimant nan es as witnesses:
Victor K. Covalt. Jattidi H. Ron
H nry W Sagemilb r and James P
Murphy, all of Alliance. Nebraska
T. J. O'KKKKK. Register.
SM'ttl-St'fj
NtrTH K FOR IM Itl.H ATiON
IO 1
Department of the Interior.
I) S. Utad ollice at Alliance. Nebr.
June 6th. 191H
Notnc is hereby niven that S. O
p ebies. of Alliance, Nebraska, who
on Octoher 19, 1914. made homestead
entry, serial No. 016,989, for lots 6
and 7. lection 6; lot i. section 7, T
fl, N, R 48 W. and tne NK of
K of section 12, townsnlp 23
north, range 49 west of 6th principal
meridian, has filed notice of intention
to make final three yeir proof, to ea-
Soft Drinks and Beverages
BEVERAGES ON DRAUGHT
AT ALL TIMES
Order a case of 36 pints
sent to your home. De
livery made anywhere in
Alliance. Rehate for re
turn of cases.
Cigars, Tobaccos,
Candies, Lunches.
KING'S CORNER
a
JOHN HOIHJKINSON, Mgr.
Distributors for Hi idee n t Bottling Works
AT LAST!
A REAL drink
different from
the rest.
tf-C Mr J lESSI sbbbI sssnsfl
The Best Is NoneToo Good M
for Our Soldiers of Industry
EXCELSO will help keep you "in M
SVf I "i rWsV comes from fcaow f$L?WS
JL Af MBSt wlnninl bever- ) TBuWsVBfl
KslBSi 5sssdpVmWsfC
Order Your
Coal Supply Early
It is the wise thing to do
You'll say so this winter, too.
If we could make plain to you the altiuulon, tr katw
that you would put In yuur wlnter'a coal aupplr BtHi
We are not trying to scare you, but we are trying im t4l
you. The car shortage exlata. It may 100a tc you like
everything la moving, but you'll appreciate what we tell
you when winter cornea and It may be next tu Impossible
to get MMSla
We've got coal to aell you today. We've got coal today
to put Into your bin We can't promise more. It'a good
coal and lt'a a fair price. We urge you to get busy
thing act. It will prov to your advantage.
Dierks Lumber & Coal Co.
F. W HARGARTKN. Mgr. PHONE 22 111 Laramie Ava
iiblish claim to the land above de
scribed, before register ana receiver
of the United States land office, at Al
liance, Nebraska, on the 2 2a day of
July, 1918.
Claimant names as witnesses:
Robert Hrolles, Ward Miles. Geo.
Travis and Hen Hibbert, all of Alli
ance. Nebraska.
T. J. O'KKEFK.
Register.
9303-51-28
The Heavy Hand of Justice.
We read recentl) of a butcher who
A-iis discharged for being light fingered.
'Us band probably did not weigh
IBOUgb. to make it retail profitably.
argo ( '.nii ier-Nc a a,
hUY WAR SAVIN.. STAMPS
See Us, And See Best
the- t xutims weakness often results In
n p:urco bearing, weakened eyesignt,
bri ncbltls end other troubles, but If
Scott's Emalmon is given promptly.
"iT :e3 m sna tomeorsans
and mates rich blood to build
pi he depleted force.
jx-i t: .! ea S-atfiEmulsioa.
It U ! f from AkuhoL
DRAKE & DRAKE
OPTOMETRISTS
Glasses Accurately Fitted
We Can Duplicate Any Broken
S13fe Box Butte Ave Phone 111
t