The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, July 26, 1921, Page FIVE, Image 5

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    THE ALLIANCE HERALD. TUESDAY; JULY 26th. 1921.'
FIVE
PERSONALS
Mr. and Mr. G. E. Davis and fam
ily ami MK Daisy Adams returned
last week from a tew week's trip to
the Yellowstone park and Thermopolis,
.Wyo.
t.. E. Eans of Antioch was a busi
ness vMtur in Alliance Friday.
ir. r.r.d Mrr. Lee Ba.-ye will go the
first of the week to Hot Springs,
where Mr. Ease has legal bu. iness.
Tne. w. I mtaiily take a short pleas
ire trip to Sylvan lake anil vicinity
while away.
Attorney Campbell of the firm of
Co.Tove & Caripbell of Lincoln, is in
the city this week on legal business.
Kbert Voi and family spent Sun
day with Kev. r.nd Mrs. S. J. Epler.
Mr. and Airs. R. T. Anabel left Mon
day night to visit Mr. Anabel's brother
near Grand Island, who is very sick, .
Harvey Whaley of Yake.side is quite
rick at the home of his sister, Mrs.
Clyde ro.-dicl;.
The little son cf Mr. and Mrs. Ben
Heboert has been quite tick but was
reported much better Monday.
Kbert Atz of Casper spent Sunday
in Alliance visiting friends.
Mrs. William W. Cutts and son,
Blllv, who have been visiting at the
home of W. E. Cutts left today for
Denver, where they will visit for a few
days and then return to their home in
Los Angeles.
Mrs. William Leetch of Crawford is
the guest of Miss Madeline Zediker
this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Blosser and family and
Miss Collins of Concordia, Kas., Mop
ped at the home of N. J. Fletcher
Sunday en route to Salt Lake City and
other western points.
Dr. M. J. Raskin returned Saturday
from a few days business trip to Den
ver. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Mohrman an i
Charley DeMoss spent Sunday in the
Pine Ridge on a picnic.
Miss Maude Nasori left Sunday for
Denver for a two weeks visit with her
sister, Miss Carol Nason.
E. C. Drake went to Bridgeport last
Friday on business, returning Satur
day. Mrs. A. Gregory and son, Clifford,
went to Bridgeport Friday to visit
with relatives.
Rev. B. J. Minort went to Angora
Friday where he preached Friday
evening.
Non-Partisan League
i Wants Referendum
on Four New Laws
Fifty-five thousand signatures
about 16,000, in excess of the number
required by the constitution to suspemi
a statute enacted by the legislature
have been secured up to this time to
referendum petitions against four of
the laws passed last winter, which are
being attacked by the non-partisan
league and several other organiza
tions, says the Lincoln Star.
According to C. A. Sorenson and F.
L. Bollen, in charge of the referendum
undertaking, signed petitions have
been coming in at the rate of several
thousand a day, and the two men ex
tct that the total will be pushed up to
76,000 when all returns are in. The
nly counties from which petitions
have not been received are Sarpy and
Dakota. All petitions were circulated
by volunteer workers who receive no
pay-
The labor union3 of Omaha, the
farm bureau federation, and a farm
newspaper assisted the non-partisan
league in getting the petitions signed
tip. They are directed against these
acts:
S. F. 305, requiring state wide reg
istration for voters.
H. R. C2, amending the primary law.
H. R. 617, the anti-picketing law.
A paragraph in H. R. 193, a bank
ing bill, which requires a certificate
of "public necessity, convenience and
advantage" before a new bank can se
ct"" a charter.
The petitions were filed with the
jcretary of state on Monday, July 25,
and the occasion was celebrated by a
meeting and speeches in Represent
tive hall at the capitol.
Between 800 and 1,000 were se
cured in Lancaster county and 3,000
from Douglas.
It cost about $3,000 for printing,
postage, clerk hire and other items to
pet the petitions circulated and signed,
according to Messrs. Sorensen and
Bollen.
HUMOR AND MATRIMONY.
(Chicago Herald.)
A man got up the other day and said
it was his opinion that a sense of hum
or was so important in life that it
ought to be put right into the marriage
ceremony.
! io noorltece in ndil that the man
who got up and said it w as a bachelor. J
If re hact been marrieu ne wouiun i
have been allowed to get up in the first
place, and even if he had managed that
he wouldn't have dared say anything
so radical.
This gentleman's suggestion was
that, since the "obey" had been ampu
tated from the service the loving
couple should be required to "love,
honor and have a sense of humor" un
til death do them part.
Undoubtedly, a sense of humor has
its place in the home, but we don't see
the advantage of thrusting it into the
wedding service.
If you really have a sense of humor
in working order you wouldn't be
doing anything so ridiculous as prom-
onvthinir. A man crettincr mar
ried is in no condition to enjoy a joke
-even if he is one.
When a man can hardly keep a wife,
the way prices are, how can he be ex
pected to keep a sense of humor?
Even if he did manage to scrape up the
remnants of one after the wedding it
would be knock ed out by the first of
the month, when the bills begin to
come in. ,
Generally speaking, a sense of hu
mor in matrimony is about as much
ie as a map of Europe, published in
1913.
Annther thins- the innocent people .
would like to know is whether jazz'
musicians really get any pleasure oct 1
f what they are deiaf. '
Alliance Post of the J
T. P. A. Organizing to
Bring Down Hotel Rates
The members of Tost M, T. T. A., of
Alliance are oitranintr to nut on a cam
paign in western Nebraska, the effect
of which will be to bring down the
cost of hotel accommodations, includ
ing" meals, in this territoiy. There
has been a committee unofficially ap
pointed, but the names will not be
made public, for obvious reasons. As
one of the traveling men who is in
terested in the cnr-ipalpn put it, "I
have no desire to be shoved into an at
tic bedroom and be given sowbelly and
beans for my meals for the next three
months." The situation is serious, hc- ,
cording to the traveling men. The
wholesale hou.es have be-n feeling
the pinch of rising expenses for sales
men during the past several months.
Railway travel costs no Icfr than 3.9
cents per mile, and the average price
for a room in a hotel, at the rates
given commercial travelers, is two or
three times what it was before the
war. It has got to the point, the
traveling men say, where they have to
bring In a lot of business before they
can show the profit on a trip to the
head of the firm.
According to the traveling men, the
hotel men themselves will be among
the chief losers if the rates don't come
down. The Alliance T. P. A.'s aren't
going to pull any raw stuff, but the
bosses Will present some facts to the
hotel men in clear, concise form, so
that the point can be seen and undef
stood. It's got to the place, they say,
where either the expense accounts
must be lowered, or else from f0 to 70
per cent of the men on the road will
be called in and told to hunt other
jobs.
One of the members has compiled a
summary of the supplies purchased by
hotels, showing that there have been
reductions of from 10 to 75 per cent in
the cost of practically every item.
Flour has decreased f0 per cent since
Mv, 1920; potatoes, 75 per cent; sugar
70 per cent; kitchen equipment, 22 to
by ler cent; taDie nnens, ju mi i
per cent; bed linen, 50 per cent; car
pets and floor coverings, 40 per cent;
foods and cooking fats, 20 to GO per
cent; and so on down the line.
The traveling men are also a unit
in favoring the passage by congress if
the Kahn bill in the house and tbe
Watson bill in the senate, -which pio
vides for the issuance of mileage
books, good on anv road, at the rate tf
1V cent3 per mile.
Mrs. M. P. Powles of Minatare, for
merly Miss Pauline Scott of Chadron
ind for several years a teacher in the
Alliance schools, stopped in Alliance
this morning. Mrs. Powles is on her
way to Chadron for a snort visit wun
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. P. ;.eott,
Mr. and Mrs. Gene Grisham of
Erskine, Alberta, Canada, who are
making an auto trip from Coffey ville,
Kas., to their home in Canada, stopped
in Alliance for a few days visit with
Rev. and Mrs. b. J. t,pier. j
The initiation of the Eastern StrJ
will be postponed until the third Tues
day in August. . 4
riai pnm Kchaffer left Saturday
for a few days outing at the Summer
camp or her lamer near nenry, isru.
I Mrs. J. A. Barnes accompanied her
husband to Hemington on a business
trip Saturday.
( A. L. Carrol of Hemingford was in
l town Monday morning and purchased
a new Reo six of the A. H. Jones Co.
i F. A. Roush of Chadron stopped
' over in Alliance last Saturday on his
way to Arthur on business. Mr.
Roush says the Alliance-Chadron road
i in fairly good condition and only one
bridge, the one at Pepper Creek, is
j washed out. The grading is progress
ing rapidly on both sides of the river.
To the business man, retail or wholesale; to the manufacturer; to the commis
tion man; to the trucking company, the Ford Model T One Ton Truck makes
an irresistible appeal because it has in its chassis all the merits of the original
Ford car; the wonderful Ford Model T Motor, the dependable Vanadium steel
chassis, and the manganese bronze worm-drive. A strongly built truck that
serves satisfactorily and lasts in service If these statements were not truer
the demand for Ford Trucks wouldn't be so constantly on the increase. We
will be pleased to take your order for one or more Ford Trucks, will see that you
get reasonably prompt delivery, and will give you an after service that insures
the constant service of the Truck. But don't wait too long. Get your order
in promptly.
n
XSSI
RANDOM SHOTS
We can't tell whether is the newest
stye in matrimony, or whether the
tired head-writer needed another word
to fill out the line, but Sunday's Lin
coln Star contained this one: "Miss
Fern McCorkle Becomes Summer
Bride of Ernest Hook."
The very pretty girl is at a decided
disadvantage in the business world,
says the society editress of a Nebras
ka daily, who interviewed a lot of em
ployers about their pulchritudinal pref
erences as applied to office help.
However, the pretty girls make up for
it outside the office, and the average
girl probably would rather be pretty
than be private secretary to John P.
Rockefeller.
T makes a man feel older when he
follows up the news of people he used
to know. Harry Wilcosrn has a
daughter that's old enough to get mar
ried, r.n( r rank Mills now is the proud
daddy of five babies, with two sets of
twins.
Today's Best Story.
One of his buddies has jut spilled
the best story we ever heard anyone
tell on Ed Reardon. It seems that
luring the war, Ed once got a Sunday
pass, and was a. ked by a young lady
he met on the street if he would care
to go up to her house for a cup of
coffee. Th girls were always doing
something like that during the war.
On arriving at the houe, Ed was
introduced to the girl's mother, who,
just as they always do. made apologies
for her appearance. They chatted a
minute or two, and then the mother
said:
"I'll go and put on the percolator."
"Don't bother about that," Ed told
her. "You look all right as you are.
Y'ou don't need to dress up."
Tom Gee went to church last Sun
day. This hot weather is causing a lot of
the boys to ponder on the hereafter.
Boiler-plate wit: "When a man
reaches for his hip pocket nowadays,
you don't know whether to shoot in
defense or get ready to kiss him."
Mickie, the printer's devil, quotes
Pop Brown as saying: "They's two
ways of wastin' yer breath one is
hollering down a rain barrel and the
other is tellin' a girl she looks prettier
without that red stuff on her face."
One of the Bayard newspapers re
marks that a "boiling alley" may be
established there.
Something New
FOR THE LADIES OF ALLIANCE
We are prepared to clean, dye and make over your high
priced dresses, suits and coats.' ' '
Your clothes, bought at high prices, now perhaps a
little, faded and out of style, will be the same as new
made over into well-fitted stylish garments.
j ; ' t
MOD
We Call For
Phone 18
THE UNIVERSAL CAR
Coursey &
cjocieu
Mrs. K. M. Tinkcom was hostess at
an attrmtive luncheon Friday a"er
noon. The guest li.t included 5es
damcs V. J. Young, J. B. Irwin, A. D.
Sturgeon. H. A. 1'uHuijue, A. K. Nel
son, Harry Feltrs, R. E. McKzie,
Ella Joi ng. Tho las K.iten, H. E.
Sims, Gtnrge Fbminr, F.' G. Hitch
cock, S. R. Mack-y, p. L. Sturgeon,
A. J. Cnle, George Potter, C. I. Tineh,
Harry IVtiick and J. H. Standard. A
four-courc luncheon was served at
3:30 oVock, after which Monte Carlo
wV?t Vai played, Mrs. George Potter
winning high honors. The tables were
decoruted in jwcet peas.
The M-sses Mnt'Ma Vrankle and
Maigaiet Karris gave a picnic at Dun
lap Satuidny evening for their house
guests, Miss Florence Hutton of
Hastings, Dorothy Whitehead of Mit
chell and Pauline Price of Hollywood,
Calif. The guests were the Misses
Florence Hutton, Pauline Price, Doro
thy Whitehead, Theresa Morrow,
Katherine Harris. Messrs. Hugh Mc
Vicker. M. Nolan, Edwin Morrow, Rob
ert Walker, Lewis Griggs, Mr. and
Mrs. E. I Potarf and Mr. and Mrs.
Geo. L. Burr Jr. ami Mr. Coupon and
Mr. Raymond of Scottsbluff.
Miss Mamie Collins entertained at a
ociock rtumcr tummy evening in
honor of Dr. and Mrs. E. J. Ha: kin
who arc leaving this week for Denver,
where they wiW make their home. The
decorations were yellow and white and
the color scheme was carried out in the
delightful three course dinner. Those
invited were Dr. and Mrs. E. J. Bas
kin, Dr. and Mrs. M. J. Baskin, Mr.
and Mrs. C. L. Finch, Mr. and Mrs.
John Beach. Miss Mabel Sward and
Pearly Beach.
Mrs. E. L. Totarf and Mrs. Geo. L.
Burr Jr., entertained at a luncheon in
the Palm Room Saturday noon at 1 :30
p. m. in honor of Miss Florence Hutton
of Hastings who is' visiting at the
Frankle home. Miss Tauline Prine of
Hollywood, Calif., a guest at the Har
ris home won high Xcore at bridge in
the afternoon. The guests were Misses
Florence Hutton, Pauline Prine, Doro
thy Whitehead, Theresa Morrow,
Matilda Frankle and Margaret Harris.
The Alliance Country Club will hold
open house on Thursday, July 28 which
ha3 been designated by the directors
as a time when members may enter
tain friends in the city who are not
members of the organization. The club
CLEANERS
and DYERS
and Deliver.
- 203 Box Butte
Miller
C0nri?ciA(
mm.
house, beach and dinning room will be
opened to the guests, who, however,
will not le permitted the privilege of
IL. 1 - rr n i i .
uic gnu course, incre win ne uancing
at if p. m.
Mrs. W. E. Cutts entertained n few
friends at dinner Sunday evening il
honor of Mrs. Wm. W. Cutts of Los
Angeles. Those present were Mrs. Wm.
w. oil is, iur. and Mrs. w. H. (Jlj.ss,
Miss Katherine Shriner and Messrs
Robert Atz and Ieslie Glass.
Countr Judire Tnsh nffirinted nt n
midnitrht weddintr Satunlav. when he
united in marriage William H. Leetch
and Miss Hazel Pipher, both of Craw
ford. The couple were accompanied
bv Bert Sattlory and Miss Madeleine
.canter oi tnis city.
William P. Haney o' Gainesville,
Ga., and Miss Babe Kelly of Kansas
City, Mo., were married in Alliance
Saturday evening. The bride was in
Alliance with the carnival company.
The couple will make their home at
Lusk, Wyo.
The marriage of Claude Hazel ton
to Miss Mab'e Rockey of this city will
Uike place at 7 o'clock tonight at the
home of the bride's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. C. H. Rtxkev.
The Lodeka Campfire girls will have
a ceremonial, meeting at the home of
their guardian, Miss Avis Joder, Tues-
THIELE'S
Thi Sttrt With a Guaranttt Without Rid Taft
GIFTS THAT LAST
The Ruby
July's Birthstone
A happy contented mind is indicated
by the Ruby, July's birtHstone. This
jewel, mounted.in rings, bar pins, brace
lets, scarf pins, or other jewelry, is a
splendid birthday gift for the one born in
this month.
We show attractive designs in Ruby
set jewelry for both women and men.
. -The enduring quality and distinctive
workmanship bring to youririend a de
finite feeling of good will.
Fancy Rings, $3.00 to 25.00
Your
Stationary
Crane's Linen Lawn is
a paper that carries itself
exceptionally well under
any social correspon
dence. It may be had in all
the different styles and
colors which appeal to
the eye.
For correctness in so
cial correspondence use
Crane's Linen Lawn.
We Have
The
Vidtrola
You Want
Whatever your taste,
whatever the size you
need, whatever tne price
you wish to pjy, we can
furnish an instrument
th-t will suit you.
" We" have the""style" to
match your furniture, in
any of the popular wood
finishes at a wide range
of prices.
All are Victrolas. All
will play Victor records
perfectly.
Let us show you our
assortment.
day evening at 7:30 o'clock at which
time honors will be awarded.
Mrs. M. A. Dickenson and Mrs. Blair
Beckwith will give a 1:30 luncheon "in
honor of Mrs. Shaw, Thursday after
noon at the home of Mrs. Dickenson.
Mrs. Ida Betts entertained a few
friends at dinner Sunday evening, the
occasion being the birthday of her sis
ter, Miss Lulu Benson.
Ralph J. Emmett and Miss Mabel
Gilbert, both of Chicago, III., were
issued a license to wed Tuesday.
Miss Theresa Morrow gave a lunch
eon today at 1 p. m. in honor of Miss
Florence Hutton of Hastings.
The W. C. T. U. will meet with Mrs.
J. J. Vance at 503 Toluca Thursday,
July 28. at 2:30 p. m.
The tennis tournament, which has
been engrossing the attention of rac
quet enthusiasts for the past twn
weeks, will be finished this week, if
the weather permits. The contests are
now down to the semi-finals. Fowler
and Dailey are in the country today
and will forfeit games to Bennett and
Black. If the courts are in shape to
night Bennett will play Vanderlas and
possibly Black will play Tippett. The
winner of the Bennett-Vanderla3
match wM pl-v Mnw and w--ner
of the Black-Tippett match will
meet Prince in the semi-finais.
Ain't We Got Fun"
"Going to Marry 'Arry"
(Harry Lauder)
Roamin in the Gloamin'
(Harry Lauder)
Tucker Up and Whistle"
(Billy Murray)
4
These are just a few of
the fast selling Victor re
cords. Get YOURS to
day. Price $110 with $10
worth of your choice re
cords. (Payment Plan.)
Price $40 , with $5
worth of your choice re
cords. (Payment Plan.)
1
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