Thursday, July 31st, 1919. THE ALLIANCE (NEBRASKA) HERALD BIG JOB TO FIND JOBS 'KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS GET THOUSANDS. iEven Badly Disabled Men Are Quickly Placed by Earnest Workers Veterans Paid to Find Work. When Jnnios White, U. S. Marine, -was operating a machine gun nt Cha teau Thierry, lie did It with vigor ami vim, as every good Marine always does everything with vljror and vltn. Now. .Jimmy White, instead of blazing away with n nmehlne trim of war, is Mazing away with n machine gun of peace operating a high-speed mimeograph machine In a high speed way, and with one arm, Jimmy got his at Chateau Thierry 'three pieces of shrapnel In his arm. It had to come off to save Jimmy's lllfe. Nothing daunted, he Jet It part company with him. And he was blue, very blue, for a long time. Until, in the hospital, looking dolefully at the place where his arm used to be, Jimmy was accosted by a Knights of Colum bus secretary, who told him to cheer tip and figure on getting a nice, snappy .Job when he returned home. Jimmy White was a cynic. lie didn't believe nice, snappy Jobs came to one-armed men. lie thought he was through as a useful citizen. He was disillusioned once he struck home. The K. of C. lined him up with 09 other veterans, put them In automobiles and ruId them $4 per day to scout for Jobs for their comrudes and themselves. Jimmy found a Job the second day out In a big advertising plant, operat ing the mimeograph the busiest :mimeograph In the world, Jimmy thinks. This Idea of the K. of C. of paid veteran Job finders Is resulting in six hundred jobs each day for demobilized soldiers and sailors, and the same fig ures. In proportion, holds good in hun dreds of other cities. The Knights conduct more than 1,700 employment bureaus throughout the country, lte .milts on a proportionate scale are be ing obtained throughout the country. It was rather a lold idea which the Knights of Columbus put ''in, effect -when they recruited hundreds of ouij -veterans of the war soldiers, sailors and marines and put them on the Knights of Columbus pay roll at the rate of $4 per day to find jobs for their comrades uud Incidentally for them selves. While the Knights, through their secretaries uml individual members of their organization, had already found hundreds of jobs for ex-service men, the same story of doing'the right thing liy the returned men was beginning to lose something of Its punch. So Jos eph C. I'elletier, K. of C. supreme ad vocate and a member of the K. of C. eommlttee on war activities, hit upon the Idea of letting the returned men present their own arguments to em ployers. The scheme was Instantly adopted, and within a week Peter W. V)lllns, late government Industrial ex pert, who Is director of the K.-C. em ployment and reconstruction bureau, liad enlisted the one hundred men he needed, and the drive was started Against the,) out-of-work line by the arae men who had helped smash the Hlndenburg line. Dividing the city Into cones of man vfecturlng and commercial centers and splitting up the small, compact army of 100 Into squads of ten, each squad beaded by an experienced K.-C, work er, who coached the veterans In their manner of approach, the attack was made. The men presented themselves fn talking teams of two and three before mployment managers In large offices and factory superintendents In large plants. In as few words as possible they presented the reasons why the men they represented should be given Immediate employment. On the first day, with a record of 300 plates vis ited, a total of 5S7 Jobs were captured. All told, the Knights have placed over 35,000 veterans In good Jobs all over the country. There are 37,200 Knights now organized U find jobs fur veter What Settled Him. She "You'd think he'd cut more tee! He's a Son of the. Revolution, and " He "I know but he mar Tied a daughter of the resolution." Judge. Real Leisure. Leisure Is time for doing something useful. This leisure the diligent man vlll ov,ain, but the lazy never; for "a life of leisure and a Ufa of laziness are two things." Benjamin Franklin. KEEP IT SWEET Keep your stomach eweet today and ward of! the indi gestion ot tomorrow try KWIOIDS the new aid to digestion. As pleasant and as safe to take as candy. yiM by corr & bownc HOLDING BONDS IS THRIFT. Sailing Liberty Issues for Lets Than They Are Worth Is the Heicht of Tolly. Two things are true when a Liberty Bond changes hands for lens than th.. highest market price. One person is selling something for less than its value; another person Is lucky In strik ing a bargain; one Is a chump, the other is fortunate. You may argue the one Is forced to sell, rnssibly true, but his banker will lend him nearly the amount of hii in ves'ed capital on his bond, or will show htm a way to get the highest possible value. The record of the s;ile and purchase, of Liberty Honds shows one thing plainly, that virtually all the Liberty Bonds that are sold are finding their way Into the hands of thrifty persons who realize that the bonds are selling for less than their real value. These purchasers will hold the bonds until maturity when they will be at par, and undoubtedly at ronsiderabl.v above par In narly every case. If there Is a more decided example of tfirift than this, the Treasury Depart ment at Washington would like to know of It. Harb nger of War Fable. Since ancient dny the locust has been the flying wing of superstition. People forget from 1012 till 1910 that the locust has markings on his wines which carry n distinct letter W, which, when itoced, usually results In many s.orles that war Is at hand, the letter W being supposed to stand for the word, war. Hut the fallacy of such a supposition Is In Itself evident from the fact that the word for war In French does not begin with W, nor docs It In Italian or Spanish. youth away from it. On the other hand, the habit of saving money, while j It stiffens the will, also brightens the I energies. If you would be sure that you are beginning right, begin to save." Theodore Roosevelt. Work for Explorers. ' Vast expanses of grazing land and Immense forests await exploration In tho northwestern part ot Paraguay, known as the Gran Chaco. which' is Inhabited mostly by nomadic tribes of Indians. It is estimated that Para ruav has a imputation of 1.000.000. Sugar Cane tcng Grown In India. In the tra.'n of Alexander the Great during his Asiatic conquests vers tome observant persons who made notes of wt.it they saw, when not too uisy killl.ig o!T the Inhabitants, and In these written documents Is told Mie Ptory of ' a reed growing in India which produces honey without bees." Thus sugar cane evidently was well known In that part of the world In 130 II. C. Optimistic Thought. The hero lifteth his sword against die enemy that rcsisteth. but no sooner toea be submit than he Is saUAed. Decause the hostilities are over, do not shift Into careless spending, bul thrift forward into wise saving. Buy w. a. s. Just at Hand. "The best things are nearest, brenth In your nostrils, light In your eyes, flowers at your feet, duties nt your hand, the path of God Just before you. Then do not grasp nt the Mars, but do life's plnln, common work as It comes, certain that dally duties and daily bread nre the sweetest thing of life." Marcus Aureliis. W. J. LEO PLUMBER PHONE 1-6-1 Delicate Mechanism Despite its scope Swift & Company is a business of in finite details, requiring infinite attention. Experienced men must know livestock buying with a knowl edge of weight, price, the amount and quality of meat the live animals will yield. Each manufacturing operation must be done with expert skill and scientific precisiont A highly perishable product must be handled with speed and care to avoid loss. Chemists, engineers, accountants, and other specialists are required to take care of our intricate problems. Alert wisdom and judgment must be used in getting stocks of goods into the open channels of demand through our four hundred branch houses. Branch house organizations must show activity and energy to sell at the maflcet in the face of acute competi tion from other large packers, and hundreds of small ones. All these requirements of intelligence, loyalty, devotion to the task, are met in the personnel of Swift & Company. Yet the profit is only a fraction of a cent per pound with costs at minimum. How can the workings of this deli cate human mechanism be improved upon? . Do you believe that Government direction would add to our efficiency or improve the service rendered the producer and consumer? Let us tend you a Swift "Dollar". It will interest you. Address Swift & Company, Union Stock Yards, Chicago, 111. Swift & Company, U. S. A. I 1 ilii Q 9 THE AVERAGE 00LIAB j ll Ary vbW B ' t'CEIVED BY I fiEavimsyM swift & company J ! f6ji't J Oil H NDSY MOOUCIS If"'"' U.V07, y amm w J I D cims it aio torn tmc I Ivmtm y yj QlM 1 UVI ANIMAL 1 WTi 7i frul fiMii ft cit ro itMt M J? Jjf II m (I.CMICS AMO PSC6nt Then and Now. Said the facetious feller: "In the elden days when the automobile was designated as 'one lunger I suppose the eimp who owned one had a Rood deal if trouhle with his lung, hut now Ms chief complaint Is either gas-trltls or that tired feeling." To Carry Heavy Loads. One way of carrying two buckets of water with the least possible expend iture of energy Is the hoop-carrying method of Macedonia. There a small ooy will carry a man's load by walking inside a hoop which keeps the weight ree from the body and distributes pressure. 1 Often T After sixty It Is useless for a man to try to look young. He only succeeds In making himself look foolish. Ne braska Stnto Journal. His Poor Start. Fond Aunt "Toll lue, William, did rou start In well at Harvard?" Wil liam "No, Auntie, I was suffering from a slight col4." Harvard Lampoon. Country Wants Bigness. The Mpger the man the more room there Is for him out In the country. Not much room there for the small Souls. Wealth of Africa. The wealth of the resource of Af rlca Is thought rqunl to any two of th other continents of the world. For instance, she has "son,oo square mile of coal field, ft.'.OOO.tKK) acres of fertile farm lnnds. Iron ore equal to five times the output of North America. 00 per cent of the world's diamonds, f 10.0OV mm worth of rubber eacb year, ami uncounted millions In Ivory, nuts and oil, copiM-r and gold." DRAKE & DRAKE OPTOMETRISTS Glasses Accurately Fitted We Can Duplicate Any Broken Lens. US ft Box Butte At Phone ill Who Works for You? Why? Do You Carry Insurance? Why Use a Check Book? 9 CrnCiAenf that's the answer. Generally speaking tba American people are trustful. OnilQCnCG The very nature of the government and of business practices tends to teach confidence. Taken Into daily practices It makes for better society, strong friendships and consequent prosperity. Resultant upon the war there has grown up a feeling ef economic unrest In Russia the spirit was capitalised by Lenlne and Trotsky and Is known as Bolshevism. In America It Is Socialism, I. V. W.'lsm or Anarchy. Hut It differs In degree; some are disciples of Karl Marx, while some are the willing followers of A. C Townlcy, Non partisan league dictator. A prominent physician told a patient that being sorry for one's self Is the most difficult disease to cure The preaching of the Socialist agitator tends to make the prospective victim sorry for himself, breeds discontent and promises a paradise of chaos Instead of organized government. A Constitutional Convention will be held In Nebraska In December. Nominating petitions must be tiled for delegates by August 0 election In November. Who will represent you at that convention? Who would ynu hire to manage your business If you were sick? Better apply the same reasoning to tho election of a delegate to the convention that you would to the man who handles your money or your horses! There is danger that a dominant minority may control the convention and dictate policies to a subservient majority. The New Nebraska Federation urges the election of delegates who are broad enough to legislate la the Interests of all the citizens of the state; men who are actuated by patriotic Intelligence rather than class prejudices. If you are interested in the purposes of our Federation we solicit your membership in any of the three classes $1, $5 or $25. THE NEW-NEBRASKA FEDERATION O. G. SMITH. President, Kearney, Nebraska. W. T. THOMPSON, Lincoln, Chairman Executive Committee. HORACE M. DAVIS, Sec.-Treaa. Ord, Nebraska. Another Big Sale of ors.es M M lies To be held at the Alliance Stock Yards Aug a Hd 6th Southern buyers have opened another big market and we have the assurance that there will be plenty of buyers for this sale. We will need all we can get. Bring in Your Horses and Mules For further information call or write J. E. WILSON & SON Alliance, Nebraska ma rum or corra emulsion i