The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, September 20, 1921, Page THREE, Image 3

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    THE ALLIANCE HERALD. TUESDAY. NEPTEMDEU 20. 1021.
nraici
Kailroad Shopmen In
Six Federated Crafts
Vote Favoring Strike
RANDOM SHOTS
'vill stick around until I close the- box
I niul lock it again." ,
Oorge Carrel: "There's no fun
!;uite I ke talking to h hunch of report
! ers. Two of tin in is a hunch. Those
i fellows are too numerou. There's
,Mme pe.i.-ure in plotting ug.i'n t the
white in A 11 m nee. nut I l like it oei
rs Sunday, according to recent press
iispatches.
Belief th:.t a stronger fight could
1e made, if a strike is eel led, with1
preservation of the shopmen's work-'
ing rulings as a goal A to the de-,
vision to withhold a strike call for the j
present, Mr. Jewell said. He ar.d
other union speakers counseled the
men to wait until the entire wage and
ules situation was before them rather
than ru-h into a strike which, Mr.
lewcll declared, the railroads desired.
"We can make a real fight on the
rules proposition when we might not
nave the full support of other
branches of railway employes on a
ivage fight alone," he said. "We must
.vait until the time is opportune. You
men who have been on strike before
don't want to rush blindly into this
thing. But if the labor board releases
all remaining rules to be acted on at
nne time then we will have the whole
matter before us. We will need one
tote to determine what will le done.''
Pain these people who aiv always
bringing up visions of the good old
lays. An ed'tor friend is always la
menting after this fashion: "Do you
remember when cantcloupo were
called t iui.sk me I ons and Mild six for a
;uarter?"
"Make all the fun of me you want
to," writes A. B. Wood in the Gering
Courier. "I'm going to wear a straw
hat till I pet enough ahead to buy a
new one.
We started out with the same senti
ments, but several things helped us
change our mind. George Snyder sug
Ole Buck: "1 am informed that
George Burr's golf game is improv-
-ix federated shop crafts unions hae around in i:.C. and expects to make it,t,r ''tn,v "Plc on,' tM' a lulu
...... I ... ... ..: l . : . . l. ... :i. l p .. i i..i.-m
I.Lfll Lll l 1 Kl' il! it! I L Iflt? Illliril.lll Itl L'llll llOTlirO IHA urv'l.ltl l w ..V.it' n-..
age reduction of July 1, but will de-1
er netion unt.l promulgation of work-1 An Ord Tragedy.
ng rules prr.d'ng befo'-c the railroad Bill Hoffman gilded one of his wife's
labor board, when anotner vote will be hi.-cuits and was using it in the bank
?akcn on act -eplr.nce or rejection of as a paper weight when nc diy his
.'he rules. Tlvs r.nnnunrement was wife happened in. The next d;;y nt
nlficially made by B. M. Jewell, head the bank they told us that B II w.vs
Ihe shop crafts organizations, at a trking his annual two weeks summer
nass meeting of Chicago shop-work-' vacation. Ord (.Juiz.
nt tne snop cran organizations, at m
S nen a man swears otv smoking
for three weeks, and then goes Iwc.k
to wooing Lady Nicotine, he smokes
a little more than twice as much for
the next three weeks. You can't leut
that game.
Tonight's future at the Imjierial i-.
"Idols of Clay," with Mae Murray in
the role of an Lnglish girl, brought up
in innocence on a remote South Sea
i.dand, despite the fact that her father,
a rofiu, i-i a pearl smuggler and,
with his disreputable partner, guilty
of almn.-l every crime on the calendar.
To the island comes I'ion Holme, a
oung Kngl'sh sculptor, played by
Ihivid I'owell. Holme is trying to
fojget an unfortunate love affair that
has virtually wrecked his career.
Through the South Sea miss, his faith
in his work and in women is restored,
and their romance leads from the
tropics to the resorts of London soci
ety nnd thence to the shadow y dens of
the Limehouse waterfront.
Pauline Frederick stars in Wednes
day's photoplay, "The Mistress of
Shenstone." She takes the part of
Lady Myra Ingleby, the wife of a man
older than herself, whft although very
gested that It was dangerous to spirt I regards her more as a pretty toy
that kind of a kelly with so many men lhan n ,h. pmwt. Her husband is re-
announcement was greeted ! armed w ith shot gun.-
5,,,.,i porc,eu Kiuen in an accicieni, anil wnen
vwini, " . .....,i... f i. i: ... .
aiiri iiiiiiilii ui lunriiiiuss, hjiu iiit-uvft
u o onnminromMit wjis irreeieil . ai men w iin snoi iruns.
..iL i i. .ni.;ni n ..iic inn ! nvlit in :i rain anil the tianama looks I
UcnXcZiir now- like a blanket. I, t, but mo,t , J
,avc the cooperation of other organi-! mpo, tan.we ,verl an J, cap I Hj;;
als with the way Myra met the sit-
rhoods. if a strike were called, and
jrged his audience to prepare for ac
tion. The strike vote, completed August
1, was announced as showing a con
stitutional majority against the wage
reduction which went into eirect July
1. This was the first official confir
mation of the result.
Condemnation of the operations of
the labor board and its division was
voiced by all speakers. Mr. Jewell
charged that the railroads were at
tempting to use the board to take an
mfaid advantage of the industrial sit
natnn. Mr. Jewell said he would de
mand of the board that "for once it
reet a situation in a practical way,"
ind announce the remaining rules
simultaneously.
"When the board announce. the
I dc
The newspapers, while crowding uallon'
every po-sible column with details of
the Arbuckle ca.-e, don't seem to be
living up to their past performances in
regard to puhli.iing photographs of
the victim. We've seen but two, and
both of those show a flapper in a
diaphanous skirt and those openwork
stockings. Not to defend Fatty at all
but maybe he figured he hud. some
encouragement.
If the victim wore that kind of
clothing to a hooz.e party well, draw
your own conclusions.
When one is being humorous, it's
just as well to label it. Last Friday
we mentioned the fact that the Ku
Klux Klan had entirely overlooked Al-
The Thursday attraction is "The
Journey's Fnd." The play tells the
story of a young girl delicately nur
tured and bred who leaves a convent
in Home, where she has been educated
to make her home with an uncle in
America. Through force of circum
stance she is forced into a marriage
with a man infinitely her inferior.
Then, when finally .she meets a man
who is in every sense of the word her
mate, conditions become intolerable,
and she leaves her husband. How fate
intervenes to straighten out the tangle
makes one of the most gripping, force
ful stories ever flashed upon the
silver-sheet.
oht;tute rules, our committee will liance. uur intention was to convey
tak a ballot," he said. "If the rules the thought that Alliance had every
sire not satisfactory and the ballot e ther kind of an organization, and it
Favs o. we will take the result to the should be no difficulty to get a big
railroads. If they refuse to grant our Land of members at a net profit of $ 10
veasonable demands they will have to each but two or three people thought
vtnnrl reennns ble and answer to tne ll was an invitation iu uiBauitcia w
General charges that the railroads
were opposing demands of the unions
as part of a movement which, he said,
was backed by "nine billion dollars
ir more," were made. The object, he
leclareC was "to cr"sh organized la-n-or."
Government Experts Say
Use of Whole Seed Smids
Will GiveJBetter Yields
Experts in the bureau of plant in
dustry. United States department of
agriculture, have conducted a series
of experiments in potato growth, the
results of which are published in a
lepartment bulletin which has just
been issued. The information con--tarned
is of interest not only to the
plant physiologist but also to the prac
tical grower, as a knowledge of the
relation of the setting and subsequent
-.levelopment of tubers of the potato
may, to a certain extent, be put to
practical use.
Tuber formation, the department
experts state, begins in general at
about the end of the period of flower
bud development although this is not
in cases an exact criterion. Experi
ments showed that the number, as well
as the size, of potatoes in a hill in
creased for several weeks after the
first potatoes were large enough to dig
A small increase in the weight of
rubers was found to occur after the
vines hail lieen killed by frost. The
maximum rate of growth of the tub
ers was found to occur about the last
of August or first of September, which
xvas approximately 0 days after
planting.
An interesting development of the
experiments was that the number and
weight of tutors per hill were found
to be influenced by the size and the
nted. Whole potatoes
used as seed yielded heavier than half
potatoes, and these more man quar
ters, and the larger the seed piece the
greater the yield per hill. A whole
lotato used as seed yielded more than
half or quarter potato of equal weight.
The experiments showed that ap
parently light soils are better for po
tatoes than heavy oils. The lowest
tu tiers, with respect to
both number and weight per hill, was
an the heaviest soil; the highest num-,
liers and yields were produced on the
lightest soil. The department experts .
deem it possible, however, that these '
results might be modified somewhat j
under different climatic conditions.
Two-year tests with irrigation in-'
dicate that the early application of
xsater before tuber formation had
started resulted in an increase in the
number of tubers, as well as in the
weight per hill. Late irrigation actu-
idly increased the weight but made lit
tle difference in the number of tubers
per hill. The irrigated experiments
were not carried to a final conclusion,
but indicate that each application of
water at almost any period in the
growth of the plant, provided exces
sive quantities are not used, may he
xpected to produce pn increase in the
v eight of the crop, but that little or
no increase in the number of tubers
is likely to resu't from irrigation af
ter tuber formation is well started.
call.
From the information at hand, the
rejuvenated Ku Klux Klan appears to
be anti-Jew, anti Catholic and anti
American. Its organizers ought to be
given the gate if they do show up.
Box Butte county neels the money.
Mickie, the printers' devil, says:
"A merchant who says he wants your
trade but won't advertise is like a dog
that both wags his tail and barks
you don't know how to take him."
The Inquiring Reporter.
The nuestion for today is, "What Is
Your Favorite Recreation?" As in
all other cases in this column, where
the person interviewed happened to lie
out of his or her office temporarily,
the iuestion was addressed to the of
fiice dog and his answer taken as
final.
E. Ci. (Bert) Laing: "It's a toss-up
between motoring and fishing in the
mountains or shooting duck in the
sandhills. Duck always tastes better
when shot in the sandhills. In the first
case, the fishing wears on your pa
tience, and in the second your clothes
p-pt iho werir. but (s-e E. O.'s Col
umn, which will be found in old files) ,
there's a remeilv for that." I
Terc Cogswell: "I take my recrea
tion in leading the songs for the Ko
tarians. Whadda I care what they call
it?"
J. S. Khein: "I think there's some
spice in life in being an officer in
two rival highway organizations. You
never know which one will want to
iiKih you next."
City Manager Kemmish: "When I
get a few minutes to myse!f, I ask
someone to show me the figures. If
there's nobody in sight to ask, I write
for 'em. Every once in a while some
one does it."
Sheriff J. W. Miller: "When I feel !
the need of recreation, I open the big!
sheet iron box in my offic. It doesn't J
take ten minutes for the odor to draw:
in half a dozen men. Most of them I
Tanlac, that wonderful medicine",
sold . in Alliance by F. E. Holsten. 85
Safety First! Sec our Wool
and Silk Dresses for $10.95.
Highland-lloiloway Co.
One thing the public cares nothing
whatever about is seeing any more
heat records broken.
Just
Arrived
We have received a new
line of Ladies Purses, Gents
Bill Folds and Pocketbooks.
The prices are right, too.
Also new line of Ivory
goods. The real French
Ivory. Come in and look
these lines over. Prices are
lower than last year and
rr.any new pieces added.
F. J. Brennan
For that matter, money is the root
of all industry.
m
. I
Out of a wide experience we offer funerals whose lx?au
tiful dignity and superb equipment appeal to those who are
about to arrange a burial service. We will see that the ap
pointments are correct and that an unostentatious dignity
will pervade the entire burial service. We have correspon
dents throughout the land.
Glen Miller
UNI) i: RT A K I N (i PA H 1.0 It8
Phones: Day, 12.1 West
Night. r22 or r.T Third Street
Mrs. Brida Shimek Is
Hurt in Runaway at
Ranch Near Marsland
lb niingford Ledger: Mrs. Urida
Shimek was badly hint in a runaway
Wednesday while riding a disk. She
is not .-tire just what happened, but
she think-" she fainted. The horses
ran and she fell off the disk back
wards, cutting the bark of her head,
receiving two long nbraisions down
h r bark and bruising her all
over. The horses were unable to get
lon e from the disk and became en
tangled in it so that one horse was so
badly cut up on the hind legs and hip :
that death was the result. Mrs.
Shimek will probably be at work again
Within a few days.
Veteran of Civil War
Still Hale and Hearty
New assortment of Vests and
Collars.
Ilighland-llolloway Co.
EXPERT CRITICISM.
Mother "Those little playmates of
ours look rather common, Robbie. 1
hope none of them swear."
l!ollie "Oh, some of 'em try to,
mother, but they ain't much good at
it" Life.
50good cigarettes
far lOcfron
one sack of
genuine:
Hi n i
kial
DURHAM
TOBACCO
We want you to havo tho
best paper for "BULL."
So now you can receive
with each package a book
ol 24 leaves ol ftilll'V.
the very linest cigarette
paper in the world.
.. , ;.-r7, t;jr '..,.' ; -.V
i
GEORGE I). SllAW. Springfield. Mane.
"To say that I feel twenty-five years
younger, twenty-five years healthier
and twenty-five years stronger express
what Tanlac has done for me lietter
than any other way 1 can put it," said
George I). Shaw, veteran of the Civil
War, who now lives at 321 Walnut
street, Springfield, Mass.
"I am now seventy-eight years old
n nd I don't hesitate to say I have
never known a medicine to eiual Tan
lac. For fifteen years I was subject
to uttacks of indigestion that were so
bad at times I would have to lay up
for a week or two. For a long timo I
lived on crackers and milk alone as
nothing else agreed with me.
"When I started on Tanlac I weigh
ed only one hundred and seventeen
IKiunds and my days were thought to
be numbered. I've been so wonderful
ly built up. I now weigh one hunirt&
and foity-threc pounds and my stonv
(ich is as sound as a dollar. In fact, I
believe I could eat the old army ra
tions again without hurting me in the
least.
"I never miss a chance of sayinj?
good word for Tanlac and I would lilt
to urge the boys of the "Sixties" wfc
arc not feeling right to give it a trial
for I am sure it would put them in lima
again just as it has me. For a man of.
my ug to have no physical ailment
to be well nnd strong and enjoy life aat
he did twenty-five years ago, is cer-.
tainly something to be thankful faP
and there is nothing too good I cant
say for Tanlac."
Tanlac is sold in Alliance by F. E
Holsten and all good druggists every
where.
A Real
.iioe
.Barg
aim
i LfesSTJ r""'iii:!."iu'!i'ii.iiiiiiniiiPMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iih wrffilaii
i w, . $$xr i
I
M . A.-..mDiMM,.yiiilij.i?:l-i.-i!toi
400 PAIRS
Of Ladies' Shoes in Black, Brown and Grey Kid.
Cloth Top, also Gun Metal Calf. Lace and Patent Kid
Lace and Button. These sold at $8.50, $10.00 and $14.00.
All sizes, 3 to 8 and A to D width. All Dorthy Dodd
grade. For this week only
3
rr tt
Horace
.Bogiie
Store