TITE ALLIANCE HERALD. FRIDAY, APRIL 22, 1021 ni:MiN;iOki) Mrs. Cn;ne Vims been on the n'ck Uf. Vo.ta Mav lias been oil the t-irk liM. Miss Ku ;-c!I was a caller in town Fi iil.iy. tiro i (rp Orr is f-pemlint: a few days 1n town. A. J. May was nn Alliance caller Moml.ty. Tom SiuM)s loft for l.imler, Wyo., Inst week. H. K. Herman was a caller in Craw ford Sunday. J. W. Smith find jlaui-.hter were in town Tuesday. C. O. Ho-enberjjer an Alliance r.l'cr Monday. I. ooisp Spuddieh relurnod to town Mond.iy morning. Will M tninn was a li'u-ines caller in town Monday. lilanclie Oliver spent Sunday with Margaret K'(v(er. . Vrva Miller was on the sick list the fir-1 of llio week. J. A. liarns is spending a few 'kiys in town this week. The little son of Mr. and Mrs. Wi.li! is on the sirk lit. Mr. and Mr--. V. II. Coil were callers in town Wednesday, t The Naz.-'ieiies me holding reviv al rif'ting this week. Mrs. Reiman was a Crawford caller the last of the week. IJev. Mr. Kiehaicho of Chadion Was In town Monday eveninjf. lev. Mr. Co returned home from I'urdt n Saturday morning. The M. K. ladies aid met with Mrs. Corey Wednesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. I'.oh Harvey ppent r few- days in town this week. Mr. and Mrs. Chirk ami Mrs. Corey were Alliance callers Monday. Leslie Hardy returned home from Chappcll the last of the week. Mrs. Klsic and Mr. and Mrs. F.aton were callers in town Thursday. Miss Murphy, the state nurse in the public healtii service, was in town last Friday and spoke to the school chil tlren and the ladies of the town and vicinity at the legion hall. Miss 'KEEP AN EYE 0 Y0UREYES& li m 5co If If 5e 1 LBauman andi Better JL 2 CAN YOU CONCEN- 1 I TRATE EASILY? OR DOES YOt'R MIND ROVE? Perhaps you easily get nerv ous fidgety. Inability to concentrate is very often di rectly traceable to defective vision. Poor vision cruise eye. strain. Eye strain produces nervousness, headaches, "mental cloudiness." Have yours eyes examined. n m r z m e is i B. G. Bauman, 0. D. 5 Alliance, : Nebraska Murphy Is well known heie as she had been here Ik fore. Foster May and Mike Stephenson were Ciawl'oid callers Tbu'.-day. Charles Sailing moved his family The Woman's club met tt the Meth . ,.u .-on.ie a unlay altet noon. Funeral servires of Mr. Charles Tifhek was at Hay Springs Saturday. The 15ny Senuts held the'r meit;nf lit the school house Monday even!nsr. Mr. nndMis. Anthel Newliloom vis ited at the (IcoTgo Jenkins' home Sun da v. Ulanrhe Wilttey who lias been on the s;ck list is much impioved at this writing. Mr. Hunter and Mr. Norton of Alli ance were transacting business in town Tuesday. He-sie Athey departed for Sioux '.y la t week where he will sirnd a '(' W"o';s. A liun ber of peoide were rere'ved np iieml)cr by the Kcbckah lodge Mon lay night. iMr. and Mr'. John Krid and little daughter Doroihy, were Alliance sl.op er Tuesday. Mrs. Hayle of Lincoln is spending 1 few days in town visiting Mr. and Mrs. Embree. Mrs. J. W. Smith is on the sick list tnd will leave Thursday for the hos pital at Alliance. Ora Marvel was a passenger to Crawford Sunday afternoon, reluming! .Monday on rso. 41. Emma Jensen departed Sunday night 'or the eastern part of the slate wheic die will attend school. . Earl White is confined at the St. Joseph's hospital in Alliance from an attack of appendicitis. 1'lanche Oliver and Margaret Kies '.er were callers at the Tom Kosmiski home Saturday nfternnon. Clara Christensen has resigned her position at the central office and Mrs. Lloyd Mullen has taken her place. The .nlay, box social and dance which was held at district No. 51, taught by Miss Minnie Lew's, was well attended. Mr. and Mr. Hughes, Julia Kobali and Mr. and Mrs. Jim Fotmesil nt 'ended the show at Alliance Monday night. Mr. and Mrs. Luther Wiley of Ther man, Iowa, arrived the first of the week where they intend to make their future home. Walter Jones was an incoming pas sfnger Saturday afternoon from Alli mce. His father accompanied him back Sunday. Mrs. Reeves who has been visiting her Fon Paul for the past week re turned to her home the last of the week at Silver City. Funeral services for Harold Schnei der, the little two-vear-o'd son of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. J. Schneider were held at the Congregational church Sunday at 2:.")0, interment being in the local cemetery. He leaves to mourn his death, his mother, father, brother and many relatives and friends. The Wazula Hiking club of the La-Ta-Poahon campfire girls were enter tained at a six o'clock dinner Saturday evening at the honie of Reulah Rohr- haugh. Loriene Kline and Reulah Rohrbau'ih were hostesses. All present had a very enjoyable time. Their council fire was held Wednesday eve ning. Mr. and Mrs. Pay Graham were very pleasantly surprised at their home on Tuesday evening, when some thirty of their friends p-athered to spend the evening with them. They expect, to leave in the near future for Kearney, Neb., where they will make their home. The evening was spent in a social way and at the midnight hour a delicious lunch was served, after which the guests departed, all declar ing an excellent time. .AT Tllli MOWKS "The Husband Hunter," with Eileen Percy in the title role, will be fhown at the Imperial this evening. The pic tuie teils the s tci y of a vivacious young rociety belle, Myra Hasting.-:, who Mt out to capture the henit ami hand of a man who at the time is a total stranger. The man, Kent Whit ney, ho.iis that she is a chionic hus band hi nter, and a plot is laid to de feat her plan. How Myra visits Whit ney's country home, meet his "par ents" ami then turns the tables on the plotters is told in exceedingly fun ny si'uitjons, leading up to a sur prising climax. i John W. Guthrie had the honor of get;in,g one-tenth of the number of applications for life insurance in the E(U table company, in a recent cam paign ithiittbtrnm pjjn ystaged in honor of their president, W. A. Day, who had held that position ten vears. They tried for K0 applications in the ten first, working days of this month, rnd John carried o'f the hifhett hon ors with ten'applications in his terri tory. John was gone when the letter car.ie and when lie got back lie haj only five days to turn th trick. Rend The Herald's adv. columns. Saturday night's feature is "Trum pet I-I;u;d," ft urn the story by Gv ercur Morris. Ih'pe lives, widely dif ferent and each p'ctureiiie in its en vironment, I'd pi the basis of . the doc ument. On?, a young g:rl, follows a path "of roses, intermingled with thorn.--. The second, a outh, starts ulong a rocky toad and finds at the ead ilower grow'ng among the stone due to the influence of the third way which is filled with mire and mud. The love interest is well handled. It is the type of love story that holds the attention and keeps one in su.--pen.-e. Justine Johnstone in "B'ackhirds" j scheduled for Sunday. Each was a thief, he the most skillful picture thief in Europe, she the most adept smug gler of stolen goods in the world. They met and loved at sk'ht ,each believing the other honest. How horrible their profession seemed to each one of them when love pointed the way to a clean er life. "All Dolled Up" is the interesting title of the Monday feature film. She looked like a million dollars to him. He was the living image of her dream prince. Did they get acquainted? Say! What happened when she found ho didn't own the big automo bile that had caught her eye, and when he found she didn't even have a bank account, makes one of the most amus ing and delightful screen romances ever seen. KEEP-U-NEAT Cleaning and Dyeing; Saving Your Clothes; saves you money. Ladies' and men's clothing carefully cleaned und pressed or dyed. Hats cleaned an dblorked. Telephone information gladly given. Out of town orders are given prompt attention. Prices are right. D. C. BRADBURY, Trop. Thone 1.,.'! 207 Box Butte Alliance, Nebraska M'naLare Free Press: Indication- are that quite a number of Masons from Minatare and vicinity will go to Alliance and take the Scottish Rite degrees, up to and including the !S2nd, on May 11, 12 and 13. This will in turn make them eligible for the Shrine. This work will hi? put on in Alliance in September by the Shrines from Omaha, Lincoln and Hastings, acting together, and it is certain that after September there will be more than one new Srtriner in Minalaie. The Scottish Rite work and the initia tion into the Shrine will both draw a great many candidates from this part of the valley. The. senate advanced the American Legion boxing bill after cutting out the section that limits admission price to one dollar. The senate also ad vanced the co-operative banking bill. "I I Mi IT'S Your Telephone deeds are Anticipated We must estimate In advance the number of telephone users, and where they will live in each part of the town. When a new telephone is ordered we try to have the wires in place, the switchboard equipped, and other intricate mechanism ready so service can be provided without unnecessary delay. We must add to our equipment ahead of present requirements, to provide for those who will some day want a telephone. 9 Building for the future is expensive but it is a . part of our job. Northwestern bell-telephone company OFF SALE A 1A 4 OFF SALE FECIAL SALE ON Aluminum Ut ens els ONE WEEK ONLY May 2nd to May 7th Thr Trade Mark Known in Every Home DISCOUNT ON UNIVERSAL ALUMINUM WARE r Cfh. N. Weed Good Pans d UNIVERSAL I AIUMINUM WARE j OFF SALE r OFF SALE omeFAGTS About THE UNIVERSAL CAR Here pre authentic figures from the Ford factory at' Detroit. They show you just how many Ford cars and trucks have Ijeen built each month since January 1, 1921 and how many have been sold to retail customers, in the United States. JANUARY FEBRUARY MARCH Produced 29,883 35,305 61,886 Delivered to Retail Customers 5703 63,603 87,221 Total Production 127,074 Total Retail Sales 208,032 showing that actual sales for the first three months of 1921 exceeded pro duction by 80,958 Ford cars and trucks! April requisitions already specify 107,719 additional cars and trucks and the estimated April output of the factory and assembly plants com bined calls for only 90,000! These facts clearly show that the demand for Ford products is growing much faster than manufacturing facilities to produce and were it not for the dealers' limited stocks, which are now being rapidly repleted, many more customers would have been compelled to wait for their cars. It will be only a matter of weeks, therefore, until a big surplus of orders will prevent anything like prompt deliveries. If you would be sure of having your Ford car or truck when you want it, you should place your order now. Don't delay. Phone us or drop us a card. ,kiUu' Coursey & Miller