The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, December 09, 1921, Page NINE, Image 9

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    TOE ALLIANCE HERALD, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1021.
NINE
3
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RAILROAD NOTES
:1
The smallpox epidemic is ftill rap
ing in Kansas City and new cares and
.deaths are being1 reported in Denver.
Over a hundred deaths in Kansas City
and nineteen in Denver resulting i nd
according to a newspaper article, Gen
eral Superintendent E. Flynn of Lin
coln has ordered all employees to pub
mit at once to vaccination. To date
no such instructions have been priven
out from this office and it is not prob
able that such will be the case as no
smallpox caes have been reported
along this division.
Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Dilard of Hal
Fey will visit at the home of Mrs. Dil?
lard in Lakeside for the next two
' weeks. T. V. Gorman, extra operator
of Lakeside is relieving Mr. Dillard.
Business at present is very slack
all the stock having been moved, lum
ber and fruit demnnd not very great
and the Sheridan Coal mines are turn
ing out but very little, business for
us at present. System coal and box
cars are being stored, but a recent
order for empty box cars to be sent to
Alliance for inspection looks like this
class may soon be used. Oil demand
a olsn voi-u litrVit nml tanks are beinc?
practically all Ftored for short periods
in Antioch and Alliance, being for
warded back to Casper at about the
rate of fifty per day.
Since the closing of night operators
position at Hyannis, December 1, Op
erator Guy King has been working as
night clerk at his home in Merna. M.
A. Keene, former, operator at Hyannis
is working as night clerk there which
position substitutes for the former
night telegrapher. The exchange how
ever for the rate of pay between these
two positions f alls nearly 300 short.
The recent drop in temperature to
gether with snow and sleet around
Seneca early Wednesday momnig
caused irregularities in telegraphic
work and dispatching but after re
pairing several broken wires between
Hyannis and -Ashby the wires were
soon back to normal.
Miss Frances Gadient of Whitman
nlnna n cVinrt. vacation durinor the
holidays, also Mr. and Mrs. Madden of
Seneca.
Alliance Branch of
Dicrks Lumber Co.
Makes Fine Showing
The Alliance branch of the Dierks
Lumber company is feeling highly
elated these days over the business
done here, as compared with figures
submitted by other branch companies,
of which there are fifteen scattered be
tween Alliance and Kansas City. A
summary of the business at the Alli
ance yard shows that the financial con
dition of this territory is exceptionally
good, compared with other localities
whei-e the company has yards.
According to F. W. Hargarten, local
manager, the volume of business at
Alliance ha doubled in the past seven
years, while the records for other
yards between Alliance and Kansas
City shows that the volume of busi
ness during the same seven-year per-,
iod has remained practically station-,
ery, and some yards report a decrease. ,
In comparing collections with the
volume of business, Alliance makes an
- 1 . . .Un;n TliA MmifinnM '
even ueinri ruiunjn m cim.v.n
from' thi3 yard to the head office for
the month from October la to Novem
ber 15 totaled more than the next
three largest remittances. The Broken
JJow yard, which ranks second on the
list, had about two-thirus the amount
of busienss in Alliance during the
month in question.
Dr. Woolis recently examined em
ployees in Ellsworth. Not all depart
ments require physical examination
but those that do are to be examined
in neriods of not less than three
years.
We will buy your furs
and hides. O'Bannon &
Neuswanger. 4-7
Will there be a
home Christmas?
Victrola in your
Come in and see
us, our terms are easy Thiele's.
Farmers' Union
Convention Was
Held in Alliance
The Box Butte County Farmers'
Union held their fourth quarterly con
vention at- Alliance on Monday, De
cember 6, at the I. O. O. F. hall, com
mencing at 10 a. m. ine morning wa
spent in appointing committees, and at
11:30 adjourned until i:3U.
Dinner was served by the ladies o.'
the order, cafeteria style, at which all
dil ample justice. Menu consisted o'
oysters, fried chicken ana all the
trimmings.,
The afternoon was spent in different
discussions for the benefit of the
farmers. H. L. Click the county sec
retary, also a member of the Stat
Farmers' Union board, gave a splendiu
talk on the trood work done at the Na
tional convention which met at Topeka,
Kas., November 15, 16 and 17, 1921.
A committee of five were appointed
to go to the Potato Growers Improve
ment association show held at Sootts
bluff the last of this week in behalf of
the potato growers on amendments of
the Dotato irrauinsr laws.
There were forty delegates from all
over the county and about sixty vi3it
nra inrlndinir ladies.
Delegates were elected to attend the
state convention to be held at Omaha,
Januarv 11.
The next meeting, a special, will l
held at Hemingford January 28, 1922,
and the next quarterly meeting will be
held at Fairview, on the first Monday
in March.
Iff ttwfr.ni: . 3P
Stationery In Fancy Boxes
Expresses Taste
in Selection.
A box of fine Station
ery is one of the most ap
preciated and useful gif t3
one can find.
A Complete Line
awaits you at Brennan's,
of Whiting's and Cook's
Exclusive Stationery.
50c to $6.50
It is a pleasure to show
you.
Rev. B. J. Minort
Talks to Rotary
Club Wednesday
Rev. B. J. Minort, pastor of the
First Baptist church of Alliance was
the speaker at the Wednesday dinner
of the Alliance Rotary club. Mr.
Minort spoke on some phases of the
character of Christ that are not or
dinarily emphasized. The Man of
Galilee, the speaker said, has been
spoken of by preachers since time im
morial as a man of infinite love, gen
tleness and meekness. The;e are out
standing traits of the Christ, he said,
but the manliness, the courage and the
strength of the Lord have not been
sufficiently emphasized.
Mr. Minort admitted that the church
did not appeal to men as much as it
had in days past, or as much as it
should. The fault was not with men.
but with the church. The church of
the present day, ho said, is not suffic
iently aggressive to interest red-blood
ed men. He agreed with a recent
speaker before the club, who chareed
that the narrow-mindedness of theolog
ical discussions operated to keep them
away from the church. Religion should
be made to appeal not only to women
and children but to men who are grad
ually falling away from the church,
and who are finding inspiration in
other associations. The crying need
of the churth today, he said, is for
more man, not simply more men. j
The entertainment committee of the
club is trying to arrange for a visit
and address by A. C. Luehring of Ihe
department of athletics of the univer
sity of Nebraska, who has been mak
ing a series of addresses over the state
the past week or two. If he can be
secured for next week, a number of
high school athletes will probably be
invited to be present to hear him. -
Colored Man Fined
For Carrying a
. Concealed Weapon
A colored man eiviner the name of
George Simpson is now languishing in
tne city bastile, awaiting the ime
when $30 falls down from the skv into
his lap. All that stands between
Ueorge and liberty is that sum of
money. He was arretted Wedneadty
night in the Burlington station, wlien
city police officers discovered that he
was toting a concealed weapon, and in
police court Ihursday morning, Judge
Berry assessed a penalty of j2j and
costs. George, who claims to have a
homestead fifty-one miles south of
uilette, Wvo., duln t have the money
to pay, and was taken to the cell room
until friends come to his rescue or
the fine is served out at so much a day.
Simpson drifted into Alliance via
the freight car route and he was well
heeled, carrying not only a revolver,
but a wicked-looking sawed-off shot
gun. Chief Jeffers was not, satisfied
with the answers he made to ques
tions.' The colored man claimed he
was headed for Omaha to get a permit
to carry the gun.
Imperial Theatre
Two Days, Dec. 12 & 13
liSmfK 1 ' AGNES AVRESanb
ImfMMK RUDOLPH VALENTINO
iSIS BfflJ W ' GEORGE? MPLP9RD
m'Fl Wvllt I PRODUCTION
A story of love that flow
ered in a desert oasis.
Out of hate, in a pam
pered society belle who
met her master.
Out of revenue, fn a wild
young Chieftain who
knew no law but his own.
Nothing approaching it
ever seen on the screen 1
Taken From the Book that Amazed and Thrilled the World
MATINEE DAILY, 2:30; NIGHT 7:30 & 9:15. Adm. 20 & 5Cc w. t.
IMPERIAL, MONDAY, DEC 19th
SEAT SALE STARTS MONDAY, DECEMBER 12th., AT IIOLSTEN'S
Admission 50c, 75c, 1.00 and War Tax
People You'll
Never .Forget;
Toilet Sets In Ivory
AMBER, SHELL AND EBONY
A Toilet Set is something
that is always appreciated.
We have the kind that will
be a lasting pleasure to the
recipient.
3
8
Sets, $15.00 to $58.00 f
Single Tieces in Ivory or We
Can Match Your Set
F. J. Brennan
Alliance, Neb. DRUGGIST 304 Box Butte
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t'iiU SAiNPCHJS
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They arc really only shadows'on a screen
of silver. They do not, nor did they ever,
exist And yet you will know them,
speak of them by their first names dream
of them, perhaps, and of the great human
drama their- lives constituted.
They are people you will
never forget: the principal
characters in the Rex Ingram
production of the masterpiece
of Vicente, Blasco Ibanez's
novels
METRO'S
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The FOUR HORTSEMH'
of the A PC .ALYPS'B
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