The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, January 09, 1919, Image 4

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THE AELIMsGIHERALD
EliOTD C. TIIOMAS, Editor
JOHN W. THOMAS,
In England, U the moat aenslbls thing
to do. The harness of - president is
'sometimes a Terr 6 and harassing1
K. B. SMITH Associate Kdltr i in this case the breaking of pre
life Htnck Alitor
tfca ma
; cedent is sensible for a reason that Is
i very prettily illustrated in a remark
attributed to Charles Lamb. One even
ing in a company of his friends they
were discussing a person who was not
present and Lamb said, in his hesitat
ing manner:
'" I h-hate that fellow.
"' why. Charles.' one of his friends
Entered at the post oltlc at Alliance, Nebraska, for transmission through gaj(j . j jjj nol Know nat you knew
ails as second-class matter. 1'ubllshcd every Thursday. ,.,,
THE HERALD PUBLI3HIN0 COMPANY, Ownen
(Incorporated)
P V II L I 8 II i: I)
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Every subscription Is regarded as an open account. The names nt sub
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ftald for. If publishers .shall be notified; otherwise the subscription will reriain
in force at the designated subscription price. Every subscriber must under
tand that these conditions are made a part of the contract between publisher
snd subscriber.
crtber. '
Oh, he said, 'I, I. I d-don't. I
c-an't h-hate a man I know.'
I "And perhaps that 'simple and at
tractive remark may furnish a secret
i for cordial International relationship,
j When we know one another we can
not hate one another.
"I have been very much interested
before coining here to see what sort
of person I was expected to be. So
tf V Jnt.a-isM.Ll
i) NEBRASKA HHESS ASSOCIATION
Churches
riHvHBi'TKRIAX cmnrii
Services as usual next Sunday at
the Presbyterian church. Sunday
School at 10 a, m. It li hoped to
get several plans Introduced soon
which will add to tho Interest of the
school. Rev. Carl Klrcher will
preach at 11 o'clock on "A Lost
Christ". Special music will be fur
nished by the c' dr. The Christian
Endeavor Society will meet at 6:30
p. m. They are holding some very
interesting services. All the young
people should be present. At 7:30
the sermon will be, "Why Believe
the Whale Swallowed Jonah?" We
plan to have more of an Informal
song service Sunday night. It is
earnestly hoped every member of the
conpregatlon will be there at both
far as I can make out.T was exported I services, after this brief period with
to be a perfectly btoodless thinking out a pastor.
The Herald's Service Flag
ft ft ft ft ft
machine, whereas I am perfectly
aware that I have in me all the in
surgent elements of the human race.
I am sometimes, by reason of long
Scotch tradition, able to keep these
Instincts in restraint. The stern cov
enanter tradition that is behind me
sends many an echo down the vears.
,It is not only diligently to pursue
business, but also to seek this sort of
j comradeship that I feel that it is a
privilege to have come across the seas
Jand in the welcome that you have ac
I corded Mrs. Wilson and me, you have
'made us feel that comanionshlp was
accessible to us in the most delight
ful and enjoyable ofrm.
I "I thank you sincerely for this wel-
CIIUIW'II OF CHRIST
The first Sunday in the new year
started us ofT fine. It certainly was
gratifying to witness the splendid in
terest at all services. Another great
day next Lord's Day Is on the pro
gram. Those Bible Study lessons
are taking hold of the many who at
tend. There Is room for more in
each class. You are welcome and
will feel at home in every service.
As some one has said, "You will be
a stranger but once," and that is be
fore you come. The subjects for
the sermons are: "Tomorrow" and
"Servant of All." You can receive
your package of envelopes for the
AN KDITOKIAL
ON DKMOOtACY
With reference to the part to be
taken by thre United States at the
.peace table, a very able and enlighten
Jng editorial was 'printed in The
Christian Science Monitor, the well
.known and widely read Boston dally
on December 2nd, under the title
""Democracy". This editorial read as
follows:
In the International congress called
to arrange terms upon which the
peace of the world shall be re-established,
it is Qtting that the United
States should have a part. If there
were no other reasons, its participa
tion In conference upon matters aris
ing from the defeat of the Central
Empires, to which It contributed In
no small measure, would, no doubt,
bo invited as a matter of Internation
al courtesy. But there are other rea
sons, and perhaps the most potent of
them iskthe fact that, not only from
the time of t' e entrance of the na
tion Into the war, but from the very
beginning of the conflict, the United
States has been a most' Important
moral factor In the situation. It Is not
going too far to say that the attitude
of Washington toward all phases of
the war, from Its beginning, to the
drafting and signing of the armistice,
was watched with the keenest Inter
est by the statesmen of the world.
It was not throug'ii any act of the
nation or through any act of Its
vernnjent. looking to Interference
European affejrs, Ht the I'resl
nt was taclW agreNJHinn biJLhfl
ledprrrtwrs as their siiokesmkn In
dealing with communications from
enemy chancelleries. It was because
he had laid down, In addresses to Con
gress and In addresses to the people
certain fundamentals which so appeal
ed to mankind that, In time, he came
to be regarded as perhaps the clearest
?nunrlator and strongest exponent of
the basic questions Involved in the
struggle.
At the very outset he struck the
highest possible note in proclaiming
that the United States entered the
war that the world might bo made
safe for democracy. This was idealism
American idealism; and it was looked
ttpop, at first, in many quarters at
home and abroad, as simply an ora
torical flurish ;but as time went on
,tt sank In, and. as it sank in. it was
made clear that the only way in
which the world could be made safe
for democracy was C rough the des
Iruction of autocracy. From the mo
ment the United States entered t ho
war one point, at least, was settled:
the war should never cease until the
Ihe lloheuzollerns, the Hapsburgs,
and their kind, were driven from
power.
Idealism has' marked practically
very utterance by Wood row Wilson
since then, and at times it may have
sounded stranre to unfamiliar ears,
but it Mas, after all. only a harking
!back to democratic doctrines such as
the founders of the United States im
planted, not only in the Declaration
of Independence and in the Constitu
tion of the Republic, but in the heart
mnd ronsclence of the American peo
"Ple. Woodrow Wilson expounded
nothing new; he simply applied
Americanism to the solution of a
-world problem. To this Is due the fact
that he won at once the sympathy of
bis fellow tltlzens; to this Is due al-
'o me raci mat He soon won the at-1
tentlon, then the respect, and finally!
the friendly sympathy, of all peoples.
"Even the enemy nationalities sought
mis intercession and his influence.
3t was Woodrow Wilson, but the
founders of the Republic, and at the
very birth of the nation, who pro
nounced encompatible with free gov
ernment such conditions as exeisted
In the Central Empires when Europe
wasplunged Into the most terrible of
wars. Even nations essentially differ
ent in thought and purpose from Ger
many and Austria-Hungary had come
ta accept as inevitable, because ?mj
Tarently inseparable from self-pio-Sectlon
many of these conditions, and
the United States was regarded as be
ing rather backward than progressive
because it was not. and had no am
otion to be. great military power.
In the making of the United States,
standing armies were denounced by
the founders as dangerous to liberty;
wars for the extension of territory
were regarded as unjust; dishonest
diplomacy as reprehensible; bad faith
between nations as Inexcusable as bad
faith between individuals. Woodrow
bad imbibed the spirit of democracy,
one of the foundation stones of which
Is square dealing. It was this spirit,
ever alive in the nation, that set Cuba
free, and insisted upon her remain
ing independent; that paid for the
Philippines when It could have taken
them; that refused to apply the Box
er indemnity to its own uses when
China was seen to be in need.
Autocracy for, years sneered at
"the Idiotic Yankees" It. regarded
democracy as a failure. It heaped ri
dicule upon the alleged Inefficiency of
the United States. It taught for a gen
eration before 1914, in its principal
universities, that there could be no
suh thing as honor between nations;
that no nation should trust another;
that treaties were not safeguards and
were made only to be broken; In
short that everything the United
States held to be essential to the peac
and happiness of the world, to honor
and Justice among nations, to frater
nity among men, was puerile, non
sensical, weak, unworthy the consi
deration of a great and proud people
It is not one or the least, but one
come, sir and am very happy to Join year. JuBt ask for them. The an
nual meeting of the congregation
will be held next Monday evening.
There will be the election of officers
Our spirits are released from the and annual reports. C. E. prayer
in a love feast which is all the more
enjoyable because there Is behind it
a background of tragical suffering:.
darkness or the clouds that at one
time seemed to have settled upon the
world in a way that could not be dis
persed, the sufferings of your people
the sufferings of the people of France
and the infinite suffering of the peo
ple of Belgium. The whisper of grief
that has been blown all thru the
world is now silent and the sun of.Bantlst church of Alliance win .noir
hope seems to spread Its rays and' to .Sunday evening on the subject "Corn-
meeting each Lord's Day evening.
These, are helpful to all who can at
tend. Come to the church with a
message and a welcome.
STEPHEN J. EPLER, Minister.
FIRST BAPTIST CHVRC1!
Rev. A. A. Layton, pastor of the
change the earth with a new prospect
of happiness. So our Joy is all the
'more elevated because we know that
rpiiiis me uuw niiru qui or mat
valley."
COUNTY AOI2XT MAKES
EXCELLENT UIX Xltl
(Continued from page 1.)
larmers on wnlch they are payiup
fort for the Sorrowing and Sa dof our
Community and Nation." All such
are invited to be present.
Bible School, 10 a. m. Preaching
at 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Young
people's service at 6:30. Welcome
to all. A. A. LAYTON, Pastor.
dally.
One of the biggest problems during
the year was the supplying of fartn
labor. Although hundreds of men
of the greatest among the revolts of were taken from the county forms, for
the war that the moralities wOven In-' the army those who remained took
to the Declaration of Independence un ,her task nobly with the result
and the Constitution of (the United of a large increase in the acreage of
States, drawn as they were from the "opb as follows:
experiences and struggles or the En-' Crop 1917 acreage 1918 acreage
gllsh people during centuries, are to- '. Potatoes 7,616 11 037
day recognized not only by the dem-' Corn 21.382 -n'sn
ocracies of Eurone, but by the nations Wheat 9,000 21 000
until recently enamored of autocratic Rye 10,949 8 170
sway. It is hat strange that Great Oats 9.675 ll',524
Britain sndvVrance should Invite, and Barley r(g"7 2 357
rifTer unstinted welcome to, the high- Alfalfa 4,026 8 228
est reprosenttative of the American a larae nart of th ,,n
democracy; but that In a hurried a'nd tin., w.? taYeZfgm7 summer"
clumsy fashion the disintegrated au- and full In supplying labor to the f" r
tocracles are striving to set up govern mers. Great assistance was rend er
ments such as their rulers of yester- ed by the Alliance Community ri.th
lya?ema;kab.ettnd eondmMd ,B 8Ure , llVSvui
-arkable it that Pre.i- 1 "a'bouTo 1,
Zl ruSZll WpJE ; SETS' fi; HsrffS
Conference in which the destinies of ' crop th PUt0
the nations that oTTTy yesterday com- j During the past year the total loss
posed the most contemptuous and .r- from hog cholera in Box Butte Joun
rogant autocracies of modern times ty amounted to .007 per cent of the
are to be determined. These things, number raised., as compared to 04
and many others associated with the per cent, the average for the T state of
present day. constituting and they do , Nebraska in 1917. KdV.045 if wnt
the most extraordinary events in , the average for the United States for
modern histroy. are too great to be , the same period There was only
viewed from any narrow standpoint. one outbreak of hog cholera duHne
They concent the future of humanity the year. Quick act to. was "."JE
. 1 i , ' ine T, and the di88e eradicated on the
utwvituaat ui FtlUUJf Ktl liailUll
alities.
::
METHODIST CHI ItCII
The Sunday school is increasinc.
fVi per cent interest. Additional ap- ne K,r' ,n the grades told the pas
pliratious are being received almost ,or the other day she had secured
tne promise or two new scholars for
her class. Let each class secure as
many or more and we shall observe
a considerable difference In the size
of the attendance. After all, that is
the only way to build up a Sunday
school.
The pastor will use for his sermon
subject at the morning hour, "A
Crisis in the Life of Simon Peter."
Epworth League at 6:30 p. m. We
are glad to note the lively Interest
manifested in this fine service. All
young people are urged to worship
with us, and old people are welcome.
The sermon subject at the evening
hour will be, "The Most Fatal De
lusion of the Soul." Our Sunday
night crowds are growing, and the
presence of so many young people is
cheering. All who have no church
home are invited to worship with us.
The warmth of our hand shakes will
be the size ofysur welcome. Come
worship with us!
farms on Which it was reported. This
was undoubtedly brought In from
outside the county.
Over 200 county farmers during
1918 kept detailed farm records. The
example has caused many additional
to start the year t919 the same way.
rour exenange bulletins were pub
WILSON AN EXPONENT
OF DEMOCRACY
The front page space of the largo
and small dallies over the country,
formerly occuttled bv war new (a
now devoted largely to President Wil . 1'shed during the year, conies of
son and the leading part which he has i M hi n were a'tit to each farmer1 in
taken in the peace plan discussions ,ne i'ounty as well as to aU county
going on in Europe. After meetinc , Kents in the state. A total of 3.500
and conferring with the leading ' exchange bulletins were sent out dur
ing ine year, it Is estimated that
a total of $40,000 worth of transact
ions were made as a result of the
circulation of the bulletins.
The Box Butte county agricultural
exhibit at the state fair, prepared bv
the county agent, lead all the dry
land counties with a total of 32 prem
iums, including first and second on
potatoes; 11 prizes on corn, includ
ing five prizes offered on White Cap,
our chief crop; first and second' on
flax; first and third on onions; first
prize on alfalfa as well as other min
or prizes on the same crop in compe
tition with the entire state, including
the irrigated country.
The farmers of Box Butte county
assisted greatly in all war charities.
At the Red Cross Bale held In January
mis. mere were donated potatoes,
grain, poultry, dressed hogs, butter.
etc., which netted the local chapter,
1250. In addition to this Mr. A. II.
(Jrove. presideut of the farm bureau,
with the county agent collected a
carload of potatoes donated by the
farmers, which was shipped to. Lin
coln and handled by the Lancaster
county food administrator which net
ted the local chapter of the Red Cross
$425.
1918 can well be considered the
most successful in the history of tho
Box Butte county farm bureau. The
comparatively small abount of money
expended by the county for its main
tenance has been repaid a hundred
fold.
statesmen or France and Italy in
Paris the president went to Kngland
where he has been for the past week
conferring with British statesmen
and where he has been the guest of
King George.
The president in spite of the pomp
and glitter of the receptions which
have been accorded him since his ar
rival in Europe, remains the repre
sentative of Uie common people of the
United States, and his head has not
been turned by the honors showed
upon him. Saturday afternoon in his
speech at the lords mayor's luncheon
In Ixrtjdon the president said,"
"Mr. Iord Mayor. Your Royal High
ness, Your Grace, Ladies and Gentle
men: You have again made me feel,
sir. the very wonderful and generous
welcome of this great city and you
have reminded me of what has per
haps become one of the habits of mv
life.
"You have said that I have broken
all precedents In coming across the
ocean to Join In the councils of the
peace conference, but I ihlnk those
who have been associated with me in
Washington will teetlfy that that is
nothing surprising. I aald to the mem
bers of the press in Washington one
evening that one of the things that
had interested me most since I lived
in Washington was that every time I
did anything perfectly natural It was
said to be unprecedented.
"It was perfectly natural to break
this precedent, natural because the
demand for intimate conference took
precende over every other duty, and
after all, the breaking of precedents.
Wilson, like mot of his predecessors, tho this may sound strange doctrine
H Rttuni.
W cannot to back. The old ntartw
rs not the same if we revisit them,
the old pleasnres have lost somethtn
If w try to repeat them, the old groups
can never be regathered In complete
ness of presence and solrlt. Life ta n
kaleidoscope. It holds many beautiful
coramnations, nut when we have turned
one out of sight, no effort will bring It
back again.
Castes) Prm Natwrs.
Idesji for the colors In tns beat
Scotch tweeds are found In tbe bfd
of tha river Garry, In the Pass of KH
Jlecrankle. Granite, porphyry and Jas
per are found there In rich reds, grays
and greens, beautifully -mottled and
mixed In finely contrasted colors. The
first order of tweeds sent to London la
bulk was six pieces of black and white
check made In Peebles. .
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
First Church of Christ. Scientist,
which Is a branch of The First
Church of Christ. Scientist, in Bos
ton, Mass. Holds services as follows:
Sunday School at 10 A. M. Lesson
Sermon at 11 A. M. Testimonial
meeting Wednesdays at 7:30 P. M.,
Subject of this weeks lesson:
"God."
Christian Science Reading Room
is open to the rublic on Wednesday
and Saturday afternoon, from two to
four oclock. All are welcome.
OLD-TIME COLD CURE
DRINK HOT TEA1
Get a small package of Hamburg
Breast Tea at any pharmacy. 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 most effective way to break
a cold and cure grip, as it opens the
pores of the skin, relieving congestion.
Also loosens the bowels, thus breaking
up a cold.
Try it the next time you suffer from
cold or the grip. It is inexpensive
and entirely vegetable, therefore safe
and harmless.
ui nuriiMATiPi
nuo nncuiviH no
Ml
Town pleasures and country pleas
urea are only s stone's throw apart
if Joied by good roads.
li ri
iii ri
STIFF ACHING JOINTS
Rub Soreness from joints and mmclet
. with a small trial bottle of old
St Jacobs Liniment
Stop "dosing" Rheumatism.
It's pain only; not one case in fifty
requires internal treatment. Rub
soothing, penetrating1 "St. Jacobs Lini
ment" right on the "tender spot," and
by the time you say Jack Robinson
out comes the rheumatic pain. "St.
Jacob's Liniment" is a harmless rheu
matism cure which never disappoints
and doesn't burn the skin. It tas.
pain, soreness and -atiffnesa from ach
ing joints, muscles and bones; stops
sciatica, lumbago, backache, neuralgia.
Limber up I Get a 30 cent bottle of
Old-time, honest "St. Jaoobs Liniment"
from any drug store, and in a moment
youll be free from pains, aches and
stiffness. Don't suffer I Rub rheuma
tism away.
The Herald at $1.50 per year is
a .great reading matter bargain.
(w 0kjL3
3 r&.k;$M!&!&l eV
im sari Jrifi-Mviixjur-
our
Xmas
anliiiig
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Increase it
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nPYf
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You can also begin with 1 or 2 centa or 10 cents the finrt
week and increase your deposit the same amount each week.
In 50 weeks:
1- cent club pays $ 12.75 .
2- cent club pays $ 25.50 '
5-cent club pays $ 63.75
10-cent club pays $127.50
You can put in $1.00 or $2.00 or $5.00 each week and, in
50 weeks have $50 or 100 or $250.
Come in, ask about it and get a "Christmas Banking Club"
Book FREE.
You can start TODAY-START
FIRST STATE BANK
Alliance, Nebraska
How Spinal Defects. Occur-
MANY persons have asked how the spine caA press the
nerves and shut off the life-giving energy and cause
weakness and disease in certain parts of the body. Tho
spine protects the spinal
cord through which
energy passes from the iff
brain to tho net-work
The spine is made up of U 'W
separate moveable parts . - ' -
that aro easily displaced and are sensitive to every strain
and jar.
TTT
r
Causes of the Fatal Pressure
Tn fact there are many contributory causes that lead to
defective spines and they are present every day of life. Be
fore, during and after birth the weak and tender spine is
very easily affected. The manner in which a child sits at
the school desk, or the position of the man or woman while
at work is likely to cause defect and curvature. Strenuous
games, active play,1 falls, blows, sudden twists, or strains
from carrying or lifting heavy weights are all likely to
throw the spine out of plumb. This brings about the fatal
pressure upon the nerves and throttles or obstructs the life
giving nerve currents, thua leading to disease. '
CHIROPRACTIC CORRECTS SPINAL DEFECTS
It lifts the pressure from the nerves, permitting them, to
nourish the famished, worn
out and diseased tissues
and organs. "With normal
nerve function restored,
Nature brings about
Healthy conditions in the
organs effected. In
If
TnE BETTER WAY TO HEALTH
BS3SBBSBBSSBF-SJ
a
no drugs or surgery are needed Acute and chronic cases are l.nndlcl
in Nature's own way. Most cases in young and old respond quickly
to Chiropractic (KI-EO-PBAK-TIC). Learn what it can do for you.
DRS. JEFFREY
DR. WALTER A. STATES r
CHIROPRACTORS
Hotel Fontenelle
OMAHA
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