two THE ALLIANCE HERALD, FRTDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1921. Fjilli fltftltrn 14irilh vjajr Mumirr lirraiu TUESDAY AND FRIDAY BURR FR1NTING CO., Owners Entered at the po.stoffice at Alliance,1. , , Neta.. for trflnsnnrtatinn fhrourh th ln mlnuten. Bails as second class matter. Wr"t actually happened ? Why, ' I within fifteen minutes there were four CFfonGH 1 nCRR, Jr Editor or five hundred Alliance people on the EDWIN M. PURR Husiness Mgr. j0b, fighting the fire for all they were . . ... """'worth. There were a hundred men Official newspaper of the City of ... n ... , , , Alliance; official newspaper of Box ; f,om he B1'" hops, fifty volun- . . . I I H .... I .1 1 Alt! Butte County. Owned and published by The Burr Printing Company, George I Burr, Jr, iTCtiident; r,ilwin M. Burr, Vice IltsiUent. LOOKING AHEAD. The suggestion this week by a Her ald Hubscriber that the county super visor system be adopted in order to Inako it possible to build toads and Conduct the county's business with more fairness is a timely one. The regrettable thing -about it is that the law providing for the system is so framed that it will be impossible to put it into effect in less than three years. And every week's delay in adopting a road building program means thai Box Butte county is los ing out. So long as the road war keeps on wo long as the commissioners refuse to listen to the representatives of a ma jority of the voters forcing them to appeal to state authorities for a. voice in the spending of their own money. Just so long will it be impossible to make any progress in road construc tion. And the entire county will suf fer. Box Butte county has few enough roads, either county or ftate aid, right now, considering the money that has been expended in building them in the years that have gone. If there were co-operation between the commission ers and the public, ami a constructive road program could be cgreed upon, the money that is expended might build up a fine system of state and county roads within Box Butte.. As it is, there is no way to break the deadlock unless one of two things should happen. Either the business men of Alliance will have to remain quiet and give the commissioners a .free hand in doing what they please with the money raised by taxes and from automobile licenses, or else the commissioners will h:tve to concede that the public should have a voice in road construction. Judging from past discussions and the announced atti tude of those concerned, this cannot happen unless the millennium should roll around. If the pub'ic wants to look a lcnj; way ahead, the .upcvvior system of fers a possible remedy. But by the time it will be possible to put thu sys tem into effect, it will be time to re elect a majority of the present board of commissioners. However, with the supervisor plan adopted, the danger in the future of such deadlocks will be minimized. It's worth considering. Another possible remedy lies in the county manager plan. There is now ro law in Nebraska that will permit this being adopted by any county in the state, but legislatures over the na t;on have been qu'ck to pass laws au thorizing this husinoosl&e form of conducting the affairs of counties. It is not impossible that the Nebraska legislature will be willing to make it legal In this state. . . - - v O.t thing Is certain there should oe pome definite road building plan adopted in Box Butte county, without further delay. There are tate aid fund sufficient to maintain seventy five or more additional miles of road In this county, and there are aavi'::hle fund in excess of fifty thousand dol lars in federal aid. This latter will be lost if not utilized in 1!22. It is retrrrtl; Me that there should 1 e even a piospfct of ihl.i in Box Butte county, which need roi'ds as much cr more than any county in the state. If necessary, of course, a way can be found to force the county board to act, .6ro get action without their co-operation, but this Is the long and hard way around.. If the supervisor plan could only be put into effect immedi ately, it would solve the problem, and It is worth keeping in mind as an ulti mate solution of the present difficul ties. REAL FRIENDSHIP. What should be done to the fellow who is continaully saying that the business men of Alliance are fernint the farmers, and are interested only In getting their money? The charge has been made regularly, and is still being made by some fellows who haven't considered the matter very deeply, but last Wednesday morning there was an actual illustration of the way in which the Alliance merchants regard the fellows who live outside of the city. Along about 10 o'clock a fire alarm rounded. The information went out that a big prairie five was raging out south of the city. The blare was far enough away from Alliance so that it ,WflB no Particular menace to thin city. if th9 m.rehants were the son of fei- lows that they have been painted, they would have shrugged their shoulders and muttercl a few words of sympa thy and forgotten all about the alarm teen firemen, and the rest were Alii- ance business men and their employes. (And every business was represented. There were lawyers, doctors, bankers, merchants of all descriptions, these men in some cases closed up their business houses and put the key in their pocket. They forgot all about the profits they might lose, and dressed in their good clothes, hurried out to the scene to do all in their power to help their farmer friends. It was hard work nnd more or less dirty work, but the Alliance business men didn't figure about clothes any more than they did about lost business. Some of them, stripped almost to the waist, worked shoulder to shoulder with the men from the farms. The fii?ht against the fire fiend was won. They they went back to their homes, cleaned up, nnd in the afternoon it was business as usual. Some of these days we won't be hearing the wails from some of the farmers that the business men are all out of sympathy with them, and the minute they have the money forget they are on earth. You may write it chant Is friendly to every farmer, and n your hat that every Alliance mer- that he's going to work with him in everything that is to his advantage with the same sincerity of purpose and the same pep and vigor that were seen when the big fire started. The next time someone tells you that the farmer has no real friends in the city, call him down. Of course you know the reason why millions of men like Lucky Strike Cigarette because it's toasted which seals in the real Burley taste t ) Q.r p,..h. IMPERIAL MATINEE STARTS 2:30 TONIGHT Harold Goodwin, in "Hearts of Youth" USUAL COMEDIES Adm 9 and. 27c. and W. T. SAT. OCT. 1 GOUVERNEUR MORRIS' FAMOUS STORY "THE PENALTY" Featuring LON CUANEY The weirdest character ever presented on the screen. USUAL COMEDIES Adm 9 and 36c and W. T. "SUNDAY, OCT 2 OWEN MOORE, in "Desperate" Hero" USUAL COMEDIES Adm 9 and 27c. and V. T. MONDAY, OCT 3 - CARMEL MYERS IN "CHEATED LOVE" Adm 9 and 27c, and V. T. Governor McKclvie has branded as rank nonsense the claim of Former State Auditor W. H. Smith that state appropriations can be reduced ten mil lion dollars. The governor then pro ceeds to mention two items that alone would bring about a reduction of five millions. It may be true, as Governor McKelvie suggests, that somebody is playing politics by talk of such whole sale reductions, but if it is possible to bring about a reduction of half that amount on just two items, perhaps Mr. Smith is not so nonsensical as the governor would have us believe. Mr. Smith proposes to form a non-partisan league of taxpayers for the purpose of reducing appropriations and then frVino f Af ta Aln(tvM a f a I is not inconceivable that such an or - iraniVQlmn ..-ill . a . . . . 1 . ' " . w. vwvn M V 1 -..v.,,,. nui i'iuvc iuiHr, ana if enough taxpayers are attracted to u ranKs, noi many otlicehokJers will feel free to say that its aim is non sensical. Some day state officers will be elected who will find a way to re duce running expenses, even if some of their pet departments are forced to cut down their activities. Two Omaha youths, aged thirteen and fifteen, have been apprehended by La the police authorities after they had kept the coppers on edge for three days by means of their black hand methods in securing money to build a home wireless station. The long-suffering movies will probably be blamed for their precociousness by the long haired reformers who try to find a moral in every case that is a trifle out of the ordinary. History of the days before the movies, however, will show that boys were boys then, just as they aienow. One doesn't have to go back any farther than Mark Twain's "Tom Sawyer' to discover that nnrmol Knva " . ... J entertain a number of ideas of which ' their parents are kept in ignorance.' Despite the fact that the Omaha police . - I . . M . wro'e lot of worry was given Gould! T" " . I a i . ... i "Mt n VI I iru UIMJUL 1.1 1 HIIHIr DTWI O win nun oiner men wno received the letters, someone should see to it that 1 the kids get their wireless instead of a term in the state reformatory. THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE (Omaha Bee) Admitting all that has been said in favor of teaching a foreign language to the children of the parents who wish them to learn another besides the language of the country in which they live, it yet remains true that in Bonn Your Patronage Is Appreciated The First State Bank of Alliance has always been proud of the fact that it has been friendly and ever will ing to aid Union Labor. We appreciate the undoubted justice and importance of the cause for which Labor to day is struggling. We realize that the things for which Labor stands best working conditions at more than a ' living wage tend toward the elevation of civilization as a whole, and We Pledge Our Support to Aid Your Efforts The best means of helping you is to prevail upon you to begin now to strengthen your finances. Lay away a poi tion-af your earnings each pay day against any emergency, that may arise. We feel sure you will thank us for. the advice when the time comes that you need the money. Take our advice. Begin Now to Save Your Extra Dollars You will find this bank willing to cooperate with you and appreciate your patronage, large or small. Open a Savings Account TODAY! 5 Interest Paid on Time Deposits The First State Bank THE FASTEST GROWING BANK IN THE WEST. struction In the Nebraska public schools should be in English. Judge Button, in his decision holding the Ne braska language law unconstitutional, gave the very best reason for uphold ing the law when he said: "The soul of a people is reflected in the language they speak." No question will be made of his further statement that possession of a working knowledge of a language will give an insight into the life of the peo ple who habitually and naturally use it; nor that acquisition of a foreign tongue tends to broaden the mind. Yet the point is that the law that pre scribes was made necessary by the fact that in Nebraska children were and are glowing up in ignorance of the English language. At this time the Douglas county authorities are holding as a witness a girl 19 years old who was bom and reared in Ne braska, who is unable to read or write English, and has only a limited con versational use of the language. How can one such as she have any idea of the soul of America? The language does not strike at religion, nor education; it sets no limit on culture, nor does it interfere with the privilege of acquiring one or many other tongues. It merely and properly requires that a child be given instruc tion in the English-language that it will have full ability to take part in the ordinary affairs of life in the! United States and will not be forced ! to seek a foreign language in which to receive the knowledge it should have ' -tt rr of what is going on in the land where it lives. We are waiting to hear what the supreme court has to say on the point. The Wool Dresses for Girl?; are snappy. Highland-IIoIloway Co.. BIRTHS To Mr. and Mrs. Harry Nye, 'Sept 27, a boy. Those School Dresses are big values, at $1.29. Highland-IIoIloway Co. Wife: "Before we were married you: said that I would always look the same to you as the years rolled away." Husband: "Yes, and I meant it"' Wife: "O, 1 believe it. I have not had' a new hat or gown since the ceremony." New arrival of the bettei Canton Crepe Dresses. Highland-IIoIloway Co. "Who was the modest-looking young man, Cyrus?" "Modest looking? Sav what do you think he was?" "I don't know." "He was a moving picture maker. All he wanted was to borrow our church for a mock wedding and then have a bogus shooting affray oa the front steps." 3 ten