THE ALLIANCE HERALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1919 HIGHER PRICES FOR POTATOES IN GHICAGO IVtrm About feV Higher Titan Clone of Trading I Ant W -k Oood V"hH ax a ItuK'. Chicago, Sept. 6. After the holi day which opened this week, the po tato) mnrket wan in better shap under a good movement, and prices opened about 2fic higher than those which prevailed at the close of trading last An was to be expected the receipts m. Tuesday after the Sunday and Monday hold-over, were quite liberal but they moved out readily under a good call and receipt thereafter were not considered heavy for this season of the year. As has been the case daring the last three weeks or so Minnesota has been the principal con tributor to this market. The move ment out of Wisconsin, however, la Increasing In volume and is expected to be quite liberal by the middle of the month. Michigan is now shipping is a limited way but state markets and markets to C-e east have taken practically all tbe offerings and but little Michigan stock has relied here or through here. The Dakotas are also moving quite a few cars daily ow altho the movement, especially of North Dakota, will not be on in earnest until after the 20th of the" month. The bulk of the stock now coming an from the nearby states is of the early varieties, principally Early Ohloe, altho Minnesota is now ship ping some late white stock and the movement is rapidly increasing. The flash of the harvest of Wisconsin late varieties will not be on until after tbe middle of the month. On the whole the quality of pota toes in the Qreat Lakes states Is very good this year but some sections re port that the tubers are running a lit tle small as to size because of light rainfall thruout the growing season. Tbia, however, has been purely sec' rional and is not true of the states as a whole. There have also been some reports of blight, leaf roll and leaf hopper but the districts effected are smaller than in an average sea It now looks like Minnesota. Wisconsin and Michigan will produce around 90 000,000 bushels of, pota toes of better than average quality. Tuesday the buyers who had held If last week m order to await the development of the market seemed to he back in the market for supplies as there was an active call at advanced prices f -om both the local and out side trade. Ungraded bulk Minne sota Early Ohios moved at $2.1 5 2.85 per cwt, r.nd sacked stock at $2.30fj2.35; bulk NoVl Minnesota Cobblers brot $2.40 ? 2.4 S ; Wiscon sin red and white varieties mixed, bulk, field-run, sold mostly at $2.10 (2.15, and the same stock sacked at t.lt0S.S6; ungraded South Dako ta Eorly Ohios sold : round $2.1.rfi1 25: New Jersey Cobblers, No. 1 VCii .65. Receipts were 108 cars and there were 208 cars, broken and unbroken, om track at the beginning of the day's trading. Wednesday the mark.-t was higher again under good trading with Min nesota bulk Early Ohios moving at $2.35 (Ji 2.40 with sacked stock sell ing mostly at $2.50! Wisconsin stock moved on about the same basis as Minnesota. Thursday the market held firm at Wednesday's prices. Receipts were 65 cars. Friday the market wan unchanged under a satisfactory demand. Receipts were rather llgni, total ing only about 40 cars. mjnjp v DEZNK JIOT TEA O FOR A BAD COLD uuatl package of Hamburg Tea, or as the German folk cull jt, "Hamburger Brust Thee," at any pl.ai .irncy. Take a tablespoonful of the tea, put a cup of boiling water upon it. pour through a sieve and drink a teacup full at any time during the day or before retiring, it is the moat Otic Live way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pore9 of the skin, relieving congestion. Also loosens the bowels, thus driving a cold from the system. Try it the next time you suffer from a cold or the grip. It is inexpensive and entirely vegetable, therefore Ml tend harmless. , IB BACKACHE AND LUMBAGOJRIGHT OUT Rub Pain and Stiffness away with a small bottle of old honest St. Jacobs Oil When your back is sore and lame or lumbago, sciatica or rheumatism has yon ...ene.1 up, don't suffer! Get a oent bottle of old. honest "St. ' Jacobs Oil" at any drug store, pour a little in your hand and rub it right into the pain or ache, and by the. time you count fifty, the soreness and lanie- rcwi is vone. Don't stay crippled! This 6oothing. penetrating oil needs to be used only una It takes the ache and pain right nt of your back and ends the mi - tf. It. is magical, yet absolutely harmless and doesn't burn the skin. . Nothing else stops lumbago, sciatica ud lame back misery so promptly! The First Cold Blast will remind you of Underwear and Sweaters We offer Munsing, Cooper, Lewis, Chalmers In Unions Bradley and Spalding In Sweaters. The Famous of course SUGGESTIONS IN DRYING GREEN VEGETABLES A Few Pointer on How to Dry Oreeir Vegetables Hnch an IWmiu, IVn. I'otntot v, Corn, CarottM, Etc. tMMni:tHniMiimtMmninmuimmmminniMiinuumtumimiimnimttn iimimmimmMmMMiimrtmti BOMB PLANTER IDENTIFIED SAYS FEDERAL OFFICIAL John Wilson, at One l inn- Haywood' fhyffDtWy. Identified as Man Who Planted the Hoinh. Chicago, Sept. 6. Michael F. Sul livan, assistant state's attorney, to day declared that .lontl '. . W ilBf.lt arrested last night, had been posi tively identified as having been impli cated in the planting of tbe bomb in the Chicago federal building. Kx plosion of the bomb killed four per sons and resulted in serlou injury to a score of others. Wilson is a member of the I. W. A'., and is said at one time to have beeu private secretary to Win. D. Haywoodf general secretary -; reas urer. In his announcement Mr. Sullivan said Wilson had been identified by four persona as the man seen run ning away from the Adams street en trance to the federal building shortly before the bomb exploded. He was described as "the man with the black Fedora hat who ran out of the build ing, escaped into a black automobile and was whirled away." Detectives who questioned Wilson, said he admitted that he was em ployed' as a bookkeeper by tbe I. W. W. and that he spent the gre: ter part of Wednesday in the federal iiullding, whither he went, he said, to arrange for the transfer of Haywoodto the office of the federal prosecutor in or der that Haywood might attend to some privute business affair. He denied any connection with the ex plosion. Attorney Geo. F. Vanderveer an nounced late today that he had fail ed in Ins efforts to obtain bail for 11 of the I. W. W. defendants con victed on a charge of conspiracy. Judge Landis declined to grant a fur ther extension of the order staying xecution of the sentences and the I'nited States circuit court of appeals refused to admit the defendants to bail. The 9 defendants sentenced to serve terms varying from one to 20 years in the penitentiary will be taken to a federal prison without further delay. Vegetables like corn, benns, peas, cabbage, potatoes, carrots : nd pars nips should be blanched before dry ing. They a-e blanched by being placed In a wire basket, a flour sack or in a piece of cheesecloth or towel, the ends of which hnvV been twisted to gether to form a sack, and then plac ed In boiling water for about eight minutes. They must 'hen be remov ed and cold-dipped by plunging them at once into cold water for one min ute. Swett corn should be blanched on the cob, then tho kernels cut off and spread to the defJlh of about one quarter of a nlnch upon Hie bottom of the drying frame. Carrots, parsnips and potatoes should be scrHped and sliced before blanching, then carefully drained of moisture and placed in trie drying frames. Only very tender carrots should be dried. Squash and pumpkin- Cut Into Inch slices, peel off rind, chop into pieces one-fourth Inch thick. Spread in rack and dry. Berns Never dry tough beans or beans with very much string on the pod. Break off tip ends, blanch and dry whole, pods and all. If some pods are tough do not tnrow' them nw:y. Hull them and dry tne beans. Peas Hull before blauchlag. Spread on rack to dry. In drying peas you will have some little peas and some big cnes. The little ones will shrivel up; the big ones wen't. Sort the pe: s. Put the big ones In one tray and the little ones In an other trny Five qu: rts or peas In I the pod will be sufficient when they ' are hulled to fill a frnme. j Cabbage should be cut in the same ' manner as for making kraut before bnjiu blanched. Do not cut off the outside leaves unless they have coin I menced to rot. The process to be observed in dry I ing other vegetables and fruits fol lows: Beets Do not blanch, :s blanch ing causes them to bleed and they lose some of their nutritive value They should be peeled, washed, sliced and laid in the frame to dry. Hhubarb Do not blanch. Wash, drain, slice in small pieces and dry. Rhubarb does not need to be peeled if it is tender. In vegetables, applet and peaches, the mineral salt and most of the nutrition are next to the peeling, and if we peel them we de stroy some of these qualities. (Jreens Do not blanch. Wash, drain off moisture and dry whole. Tbe only exception to this is that Swiss chard, or any other Rifle ni hav ing a tbick stem, should be cut up into half-inch pieces. Asparagus - Cut off all that por tion that would be tough when cook ed. Cut the remainder into one half or throa quarter inch lengths and dry without blanching. Cucumbers - Feel, slice, thin, spread out to dry without blanching. Tomatoes Select firm and rip, not watery, fruit. Wash, slice, la) in a rack anil dry. Look and Feel Clean, Sweet and Fresh Every Day Drink a glass of real hot water Before breakfast to wash out poisons. To Remov Discoloration. To remove tint' s ;uii dlacoloratloni from brass or Hit ornanwnU, picture frames, etc.. dis lve n piece f soft soap the size of an egg In a pint f boiling water, then add a htftUfpoonful of ammonia. Wring a cloth out of the solution and gently wipe the article to be cleaned; then sponge It with care, using cold water. Finally dry with u soft cloth. Life is not merely to Uve, but to live well, eat well, digest well, work well, sleep well, look well. What a glorious condition to attain, and yet how very easy it is if one wilt only adopt the morning inside bath. Folks who are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when they arise, split ting headache, stuffy from a cold, foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach, ran, Instead, feel as fresh as a daisy by opening the sluices of the system each morning and flushing out the whole of tbe internal poisonous stag nant matter. Everyone, whether ailing, sick or well, should, each morning, before breakfast, drink a glass of real hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it to wash from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels the previous day's indigestible waste, sour bile and poisonous toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the .stomach. The action of hot water and limestone phosphate on an empty stomach U wonderfully Invigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases, waste and acidity and gives one a M'lendid appetite for breakfast. While ou are enjoying your breakfast the water and phosphate is quietly ex tracting a large volume of water from tbe blood and getting ready for a thorough " flushing of all tbe inside organs. The millions of people who are bothered with constipation, bilious spells, stomach trouble, rheumatism; others who have sallow skins, blood disorders and sickly complexions are urged to get a quarter pound of lime stone phosphate from the drug store vhlch will cost very little, but is rufflclent to make anyone a pro I'ounred crank on the subject of 'ite real habitation. Always Ready to Serve You TAGG BROS. M00RHEAD Union Stock Yards, Omaha PERSONNEL A. W. TAtJG, Steer Salesman HI M J K I V N AM, Cow Salesman FRED LIGHTFOOT, Calf Salesmen BEAT ANDERSON, Hog Salesman OOLET WILKERSON, Sheep Salesman ELLIS J. WRIGHT, Feed Bayer H. W. JOHNSON, Cashier W. B. TA1, We have been sell ing Sand Hill and Kange Cattle 23 YEARS At this market all that time giving serv ice that satisfies. T. W. Farris R. F. Marcy R. W. Hanley Farris, Marcy Company Live Stock Commission 110-112 Exchange Building OMAHA, NEBRASKA Successful and Efficient in the Handling of Range Cattle