The Alliance herald. (Alliance, Box Butte County, Neb.) 1902-1922, March 03, 1922, Page SIX, Image 6

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TIIE ALLIANCE HERALD, FRIDAY, MARCH 3, 1922
HOME GROWN
(Continued from page 4)
sale Ui swell velvet furniture h
jrour aecond-Mory front and running
water ratne Its nap for shame at tak
tag your money. Say, ain't that pretty
1 bet that'a the little lady from Dulutb
ln(tng for tlit suiting party."
"Swell."
"Listen 1"
!
.'t and low, and low,
Wind of the witro ;
Slow, blow, brc.ic blow.
Wind of the trn ata.
j "Come on, let'a Join In, Miss rink."
, I don't know that."
. Gee, 1 was raised on that lullaby."
I know a awtll lullaby aong. It'a a
wall trot, too."
Waan thr lar that rac-tlme' lullaby
. JuU-a br--7
tall a-by-y-y.
Ray, I could die trotting that"
Lay still, there, alster."
"Ain't you tired paddling, Mr.
JVokear
"Tired I r?e paddled twel?e houra
atralgbt op the Miami, and not In aucb
good company neither. At the last
convention at Bear Lake I paddled for
Ue Kansoa City lodge cup, and won
itr
"Tou're sure some big frog In these
puddles out beret"
II swui.g lightly about for the
borne ward cut. Through the mist of
lata evening the string of village lights
.-was without luster, like a giant lady's
necklace seen through the blur of her
giant teara.
"J I ain't much of a lady'a man,
Visa Fink It'a Just Ilka Gllly told
yoa; but, gee, thla has been great,
paddling you out here In . the moon
light"
"Say, I bet'yoa're the champion lady
killer of Miami."
"I ain't called on a girl In alz years,
that'a bow much of a lady-killer I
"That'a what they all Bay."
"You can ask anybody In our town.
I ain't called on a girl In six yeurs or
kept steady with a young lady since
1 used to sneak the hore out and take
Little Watts buggy riding when I was
eventei-n and ought to have known
better."
"You with New York twice a year,
cuffs on your trousers and your name
at the top of the lied Trunk stutiouery
aay 1"
"You got me wrong, sister."
"I con Just see the girls In your
town begin to wulk down High street
for their afternoon atxla before you
got the wax Indies In j ur ahw win
dow and $10.50 serviceable suits un
covered for the day."
"That'a where you got me wrong
gain, little one. I'm a funny sort of
fellow, I am. After the old folks went
I Just lived along In the place with
ilack Mary same as ever."
"Honest V
"Sure enough helpln' all the skirts
I vent to school with fix It up with
tbe other fellow and stlckln' pretty
clone to the store myself. Lordy, als
ter, I got more god-chlldren thnn Solo
mon bad wives."
"Look over there, will you. Mr.
Frokes? We're almost bnck again.
Say, wasn't that quick work?"
"I'll show you Koine real puddling
the next time I bring you out here."
Land swam out to meet them.
Houses and church steeples and the
ttotel reauined their shapes, and In
their nostrils the sudden and pungent
tan ell of pine needles.
"Thla was aur some ride, Mr,
Prokea. I klnda feel like we'd Just
twiddled out of tha world and left llv
la' behind us. Listen to be r say, ain't
be some little warblerr '
"We ain't left llvln' behind, a-tall
Miss fink this hera li the real kind
f living, peace and well. Just peace,"
i uoe, am i lire runny j
i Fr a little lady like you It ought
always to be aa tweet' aa wistaria."
Tit's a regular moving picture, ain't
ttl on blooming thing after an
other."
We should worry !"
"Two nights ago this time I waa
CSttln' under a gold leaf celling eat
Bir1 illllii
ny' i li h. ri-aife
wa
red Ink thrown In.
we wouldn't nae It for dye If
wanted to color the Miami pink."
"And look, tonight I'm out bere In
a canoe with a man from a town that
sounds like a patent medicine, so
clone to the stars I could kla 'em and
flontlng through the middle of a night
that'a got It all over the purple and
silver model I sold the day before I
left Gawd, how Malsle grudged me
that sale!"
"And you're getting acquainted with
sky over your head that you never
even saw before except between tall
buildings, when yon looked up to de
cide If you waa going to carry an umbrella."
"Sometimes when the Welnh-rahblt
ain't cooked enough or you've talked
your heart and soul out the day be
fore tryln' to sell a six-hundred-dollar
Import to a New-Rich, who used to
sell 'em himself and knows the game
aometltnea yon get to floatln' oft
like thla, too, but then you begin to
fall over the edge of things and
wake up.
"Oh-hl Be careful how you land,
Mr. Prokea."
"Easy there no hurry take your
time here now. your hand always
stand In the middle of a boat whoop-
la aol"
"Oh-h. I"
"Nonsense-i-look, you stepped out
aa neat as a sardine from hU can."
"It's been a awell ride, Mr. Prokes."
"What about tomorrow night, Miss
Fink paddlin you la the best fun I've
had at thla convention."
"Tomorrow I Ain't that a shame now
Mr. Gllly'a off duty at four and he'a
going to row ma over to a little Island.
But say I can be back by ten If It
ain't too late for you."
"8ia It ain't I'd wait later than
that to paddle a sweet little girl like
you."
"Qoodt"
"There's going to be a swell dance
a week from tomorrow night. Miss
Fink Instollln the new grand mas
ter and the closln' of the convention.
I ain't mnch on dnncln' and It'a a long
way off. but I'd klnda like to know
you're going with me."
"Sure."
"Great I This way, ulster; well take
the long rond .through the pines."
"Gee, alu't It black In there and
quiet 7"
She closed her hand over his rough
coat sleeve with the primitive gesture
of a child.
"You ain't srnred when you're with
me, are you, little alster?"
"Scored nothln'."
She linked her arm In his and her
laughter scuttled bnck over the water.
(To Be Concluded.)
Out In Miami diagnosed a typhoid fever. Give the
'h of this Twin, lh -. -
of water or germs In the water
being the cause. Now veverse
the statistics and aay that of a hundred
thousand who drank the water but for
ty remained alivo. Reason and lopic
point to the conclusion that in 1hUi
instance there is an unknown factor,
converts food into living; fe.,h
through a process of digestion, ab
sorption, circulation and assimilation
and that no outside agency h.os even
the power to explain, lot alone dupli
cate the process.
We know that the temperature of
the body is maintained at normal re
gardless of the frequency with which
and the unknown factor in the first the temperature of the air is changed,
(ntlnnia la t H a Anting vf fvw F a . ... .
but when a person Is Rick and thia
process of adaption does not occur, we
have been educated, quite illogically,
to look for the cau.e of the lack of
function outside of the body; and yet
we kr.ew the fundamental and my
instance In the cau?e of forty ca.s of
typhoid fever and in the second in
stance it Is the cause of forty sur
vivors. Livingr under the same environmen
tal ranHitinna nn rrwmrwr hu Vin?-t
trouble, another bronchial, a third liver difffronce, for example between ;he
anrt' a forth stomach trouMe, while a -",u ,cc nu "e warm sicateT must oe
fifth may suffer from aervousness, al8Ut and explained in terms of iife,
sixth from sciatica, etc. Science tells ' t inside power that intelliirently
us like causes produce like result, if , adapU the livinir orjranism to the
thla be true, if thin be natural law, ' change of temperature,
how can one who affirms that the Ag-aln we know that an arm, a
cause- of disease lies in the environ- brain, or a soul grow atronger with
ment reconcile the facta to that the- use, yet an automobile, a plow or a
oryT It is not a self-evident propo- wag-on grows weaker; in other words
sition that there is some other factor that which develops the living organ
which ia not environmental, that ac-. Ism to a high state of efTicency wears
counts for these different results? cut, or destroys, the efTicency of inan
Chiropractic teaches that this un- mate mechanism. Here again the re
known factor is found within, and that action of the normal living organism
the resistance or susceptibility of the to the stimuli of environment must
individual must be measured in terms be ex pained in the terms of the oentri-
of centrlfuiru force, 1. e. vitality or . fugal or life force from within.
Another illustration we mitrht use
is the hand that works the hoe. The
mental impulse.
What Chiropractie-Teachcs
Chiropractic teaches that when
hand is calloused by a process of ad
aption, the hoe handle wears smooth.
IB
Wa rnrp vorv littlo firintif Via on.
i-trpt ja: principle we call life, while
stronger. We would greatly prefer I natire reacts to stimuli because it h;u
to pee firmer esrsrs. tne ,lfe principle ana is the proauct
oi ine worKinp oi ouisiue loite j.us
Those who see and buy Harness! the adptation of made force.
from Uhcin say, "Best value we have I , The presence, or absence, of this
seen. Zo-SU'ti'O principle is me cause oi viiviuin
nature into the animate and inanimate,
China i an inrtance of a nation be-
r po biir that it can't mobilize; and
all big nations have that peril to look
cut for.
vertebra is subluxated and presses up-l : . d is daP to the work by an
on a nerve, thereby shutting- off the5nnate Power whlle th hoe
supply of centrifugal force (mental
impulse) to an organ, cell or tissue,
that organ, cell or tissue becomes sus
ceptible to the centripetal force en
vironment, and disease results.
Just as a chain is as strong- as its
weakest link, so is the human body as 1
strong as its weakest organ, and just
as you would strengthen the chain at
its weakest link po that it would be
able to stand the strain of the work it
has to do, so chiropractors are con
cerned with strengthening of the or-j
gan or parts of the body by adjusting
the misaligned vertebrae so that the
normal flow of mental impulse will en
able, the body to resist the stress of
environing; conditions.
While other professions are con
cerned with changing the environments
to suit the weakened body, chiropratic
is concerned with strengthening the
body to "suit" the environment
This is at once an explanation of the
fundamental difference in theory, ait
and practice between chiropractic and
other professions and an explanation'
of why chiropractic succeeds where all
other methods fail.
Animate and Inanimate Life
Nature has been divided by the stu
dents into the animate and the inan
imate. While the same chemical ele
ments are found in both, it is general
ly recognized that the rocks and metals
are the products of the working of
outside forces on a material that does
not react to stimuli because it has the
not react to stimuli because it lacks u
niniatc
wears away by the friction of the
hand.
So we may go through all animate
nature and explain the wonders of the
vegetable and animal kingdoms by I ho
law of adaptation, and if we do we
come to a clearer ami better under
standing of the fundamental difference
between chiropractic and all other phy
sical methods of ministering to the
sick.
A Fundamental Difference
It is the recognition of these funda
mental facts that distinguishes the
chiropractor form the back puncher
the straights from the mixers; for
to the cells and stirs them into life.
We deal with the magic power that
transform common food into living,
loving, thinking clay: that robes the
earth with beauty, and hues and scent
the flowers with the glSfy of the air.
In the dim, dark, distant long ago,
when sun first bowed to the morningr
star, this power spoke and there waa
life; it quickened the slime of the sea
and the dust of the earth and drove
the cell to union with its fellows in
countless living forms. Through aeons
of time it finned the fish and winged"
the birds and fanged the beast End
lessly it worked, evolving its forms
mixing of any kind Is but the u.e of It P1"?. cnK frlorjr
outside or centripetal force in the hope' ?f them all With tireless energy it
that the innate intelligence will res- the. bubble of each individual
pond by an expenditure of energy to W and then silently, relentlessly dis--
external stimuli. In some wav bene- viv i"c inn, mm w. cy.u
ficial to the patient
We chiropractors work with the
subtle substance of the soul. We re
lease the prisoned impulse, the tiny
rivulet of force, that emanuiates from
into itself again.
And yet you ask "can chiropractic,
cure appendicitus or the "flu"? Have
you more faith in the knife or the
spoonful of medicine than in the power
the mind and flows over the nerves 1 that animates the living world ?
Alabastine
ALLIANCE
DRUG CO.
214 Box Butte
THE WATER COLOR FOR WALLS YOU CAN FIND
ANY COLOR HERE
Announcing Our New
amess
This is a plain leather farm harness that is well con
structed throughout and offered at a low price. Made
in our own factory. . It contains the essentials of good
quality and high grade workmanship.
Bridles 7-8 inch. Lines 1 inch, 20 feet
long with snaps. Hames wood bolt.
Traces 1' inch leather double and stitch
ed, 5 link heel chain.
Pads 1-inch wide harness
leather, felt lined Japan side
bridges, 114 reversed skirts.
$45
Breast Straps inch single leather with
slide and snaps.
Japan (black) trimmed all complete with
tie straps see display in our south window
Back and Hips 1-inch sin
gle strap back strap and
through to I lame.
EXPLAINS ESSENTIALS
OF CHIROPRACTIC
(Continued from Pagel)
stream for a year and during that
year forty become sick with what is
yet for thousands of years those who!
ministered to the sick nave concerned
themselves entirely with the outside
force we call environment and disre
garded the inside force, which chiro
practors call innate intelligence.
Everybody knows that if the body
is injured, i. e., cut or biyned, that the
inside force will mend that cut or burn
and that no human being1 can aid or
hurry the process. 1
We all know that the inside force
y
1
n j- ,
8
Two Nights A90 This Tims I Was
Sittin' Undar a Gold Ltaf Calling
Eating Italian Spaghetti and Listen
ing to a Hungarian Band Play the
'Broadway Cllda.'"
lng Italian spaghetti and listening to
Hungarian band play the 'Broad
way Glide.'
"I know the kind seventy-five cents
table d'hotywith a wine bottle of
Get Ready
for Spring
Are you equipped to farm efficiently this
season? It's a good plan to "Get Ready Now".
If you argan need of
FARM MACHINERY
call and see us . Get our prices first because
our buying and selling organization insures
the lowest market price at all times. We
handle
JOHN DEERE AND AVERY
PLOWS AND DISC HARROWS.
See us when you have hog? to sell. We have topped the
market on our last four cars of light hogs. Phone us for
particulars. We will be glad to handle any quantity fcr you.
Complete Line of Tractor Oils for Your
Srring Work
We handle Polarine, Mutual and
Pennsylvania Oils.
The Farmers' Union appreciates the loyal and generous
business support given it in past seasons, and hopes every
patron is well satisfied; If not, we want the chance to make
it right. Call and see us.
Farmers' Union
R. J. TRABERT, Mgr.
Telephone 501
ANNOUNCEMENT
We have closed up the Eighth Street Market and
we have moved our stock of GROCERIES AND MEATS
to John Leavitt's Meat Market located back of Reuler's
store on East Fourth Street.
OPENING SALE
We are now open for business in our new store with
a complete line of meats. We have received a large sup
ply of all kind of meats for our opening sale.-. We will
sell only the choicest grades of meats.
PRICES TIIE LOWEST CONSIDERING QUALITY.
Phone 111 Free Delivery
anywhere in town promptly and
cat fully. If you can't come to the
store cell "One-One-One", and you
w?ll receive prompt service. Only
the best will be deivered to you.
Send Us Your Mail Order
and save money. You will be sur
prised at the amount that you can
save by trading here. Only the
best and freshest is shipped to you.
A
John Leavitt Meat Market
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
Phone 111 Free Delivery
THE BEST AND CLEANEST MEAT MARKET IN TOWN